La MaMa Kids: Hula Magic | April 25

Apr 25, 11AM

Community Arts Space
74 East 4th Street
New York, NY 10003

Tickets: $15 for kids, adults are free

 
Ticket prices are inclusive of all fees.

La MaMa Kids Presents
Hula Magic: Storytelling Through Dance

A Hawaiian Cultural Dance Workshop for Kids


As part of La MaMa Moves! Dance Festival

ABOUT

Children are invited to experience the beauty, rhythm, and storytelling of traditional hula in this
joyful, hands-on workshop led by Kumu Hula ʻAuliʻi Aweau. Through movement, chant, and
cultural learning, keiki will explore how hula shares stories of nature, place, and community.

This interactive session introduces basic hula steps, hand motions, and the meaning behind the
dance while nurturing confidence, creativity, and respect for Hawaiian culture. The workshop is
welcoming to all experience levels and encourages children to move, learn, and connect through
the spirit of aloha.

Perfect for young dancers, curious learners, and families interested in experiencing the living
tradition of hula. commitment to presenting diverse performance styles that challenge audience’s perception of dance.

ʻAuliʻi Aweau

Kumu Hula | Cultural Practitioner | Founder of Ka Pā Hula O Laʻakea

 

ʻAuliʻi Aweau is a Kanaka Maoli cultural practitioner, Kumu Hula, and the founder of Ka Pā Hula O Laʻakea. Born and raised in Kailua on the island of Oʻahu, she has dedicated her life to the protection, preservation, and perpetuation of the Hawaiian culture.

With almost three decades of experience in both cultural practice and community leadership,ʻAuliʻi approaches hula as more than dance—it is a living cultural practice that carries ʻike (knowledge), ʻike kupuna (ancestral wisdom), discipline, and responsibility. Her  teaching emphasizes the deeper foundations of hula, including protocol, intention, storytelling, and the relationship between movement, place, and ʻike Hawaiʻi.

In addition to her work as a Kumu Hula, ʻAuliʻi is the founder of Laʻakea Healing, where she
works with individuals, leaders, and organizations navigating healing, leadership development,
and cultural grounding. Her broader work bridges cultural practice, trauma-informed leadership,
and personal transformation, and has supported communities across Hawaiʻi, the continental
United States, and internationally.

ʻAuliʻi is known for her direct, grounded teaching style, her deep respect for cultural integrity,
and her ability to create learning spaces that are both welcoming and rooted in responsibility to
the culture.

Through Ka Pā Hula O Laʻakea and her workshops, she shares hula as a pathway for healing and
connection—to culture, to story, and to one another.

 

La MaMa Kids

La MaMa Program

La MaMa Kids 2025–2026 is supported in part by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature. Additional support provided by The William C. Bullitt Foundation, the Howard Gilman Foundation, The Jim Henson Foundation, and The SQA Foundation. Additional funding from The Venable Foundation and the Cornelia T. Bailey Foundation is gratefully acknowledged.

 

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La Mama is a world-renowned New York cultural institution dedicated to the artist and all aspects of the theatre.