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1993 Hawaii Magazine article - "Five-O Forever"

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Mr. Mike

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Jul 19, 1997, 3:00:00 AM7/19/97
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FIVE-O FOREVER

Jack Lord and Company Continue to Bring Hawaii Fame

By RON JACOBS
Hawaii Magazine article, February 1993

------------------------------------------------------------------------


Hawaii Five-O debuted 25 years ago, replacing Juvenile Jury
on CBS-TV. Jack Lord starred in the first episode, "Full
Fathom Five," which aired on September 26, 1968. Lord played
Steve McGarrett, originally described by the series'
producers as "Head of the special investigating unit that
handles cases which are too big for local law enforcement
agencies. Tough on criminals but known to the citizens of
Hawaii as 'The Cop Who Cares,' McGarrett and his Five-O team
are ready to move quickly and efficiently in pursuit of
criminal elements on the Island."

The first program featured guest star Kevin McCarthy, James
MacArthur as Danny Williams, Kam Fong Chun as Chin Ho Kelly,
Gilbert "Zoulou" (formerly "Zulu") Kauhi as Kono Kalakaua,
Maggi Parker as May, and Richard Denning as the governor.

Today, a quarter of a century after the action-adventure
series premiered, Hawaii Five-O and its characters still are
recognized around the globe.

Veteran MidWeek columnist Eddie Sherman says there are
several reasons for its continued success. "First there was
Leonard Freeman, a brilliant producer and writer. The
network believed he could handle Hawaii Five-O, which would
be shot on location, like Route 66, which Lenny also
produced. He became Five-O's creative force and had the last
word on everything.

"The locale was another big reason. Five-O was the first
series filmed entirely in the islands." (Hawaiian Eye was
set in Hawaii but was shot on a Hollywood back lot.)

Sherman, who played everything from a corpse to himself on
Five-O, said, "The other key ingredient was Jack Lord. Lenny
liked Jack's acting in Stoney Burke, and knew he'd make the
perfect McGarrett."

Dick Kindelon worked on Five-O for the entire series,
serving as casting director for the last five. He remembers
Freeman's optimism: "At our first production meeting, Lenny
told us Hawaii Five-O would run for five years. Of course,
everyone thought that was outrageous."

Twenty-five years later, Hawaii Magazine readers continue to
ask the whereabouts of Five-O cast members and what they're
up to these days. Here is our silver anniversary Hawaii
Five-O report.

According to Marie, Jack Lord's wife of 40 years, the actor
is living the post-Five-O life he always imagined. "Jack
says he had his 15 minutes of fame and now he 's happy to
stay at home, leading a quiet existence," she said. "He was
a human dynamo from the age of 15. Nowadays he's content to
just relax, read and be quiet.

"Jack is really a very shy man. When he proposed to me, he
predicted that he would probably end up teaching art at a
small college somewhere. We have a beautiful home and he
enjoys it. He's happy as a clam."

Jack Lord has given few interviews since Hawaii Five-O
signed off in 1979, but Marie dismisses rumors of ill
health. "He walks three miles on the beach every morning and
he goes shopping just like always. I only wish that he would
keep on painting," she said.

Lord was born John Joseph Ryan on December 30, 1928, in New
York City. A seaman in his teens, he later ran an art school
in Greenwich Village and exhibited his work at American and
British museums. Lord's first screen credit was Cry Murder
in 1950. Before landing the McGarrett role, he also appeared
in The Court Martial of Billy Mitchell, God's Little Acre
and Dr. No.

Harry Endo (police chemist Che Fong), remembers Lord as
difficult to work with, but also a perfectionist whose chief
concern was quality. "Once, I didn't memorize a few lines
because the script said 'refers to clipboard.' I thought I
could read them Well, Jack didn't think so, and he chewed me
out, called me every name in the book. But afterwards, he
sat down next to me and said, 'I'm not mad, I just want you
to be good.' The next morning he went over all our lines
with me."

"Jack played the part of a tough cop and sometimes he came
off that way. But he accepted responsibility for everything,
even more so after Lenny Freeman died, No matter how
stressful things got, Jack knew his part. He memorized
everything, his lines were never written on cards. I had
three or four pages. Jack had to learn the entire script
every week.

"He called us his 'community of players.' We woke at 7 a m,
but he was up by 4:30. He worked harder than anyone.
Hollywood people said there has never been a show with such
good production values, and much of that is due to Jack."

Just as Lord's portrayal of a stone-faced cowhand caught
Freeman's eye, so did James MacArthur's performance in the
American "spaghetti western," Hang 'Em High. The producer's
instincts were excellent. For all but the last season, it
was MacArthur, as the clean-cut Danny Williams, who was
ordered by McGarrett to "Book 'em, Dan-O."

MacArthur began acting in summer stock at age eight. While
growing up, he worked on television when his school schedule
permitted. He appeared on Broadway and in films, including
Spencer's Mountain which he describes as "the forerunner of
The Waltons." MacArthur recalled the start of his Five-O
career: "Lenny Freeman asked me to be in it. He showed me
the pilot, which I liked from the start. It was colorful,
fast-paced and exciting. The next thing -- bang! -- off I
went to Hawaii. There I was with lines like, 'I'm calling
from a phone booth at the end of Ka-ka-ah-la-la-wah Avenue.'
In the beginning, I couldn't pronounce words like
'Kalakaua,' but I have a good ear. And the local guys helped
me."

The highlight of his Five-O years? "There were many great
moments, but we also worked long, hard hours. One funny
incident stands out. We were shooting in the middle of
downtown Honolulu. Our permit said we had to be out of there
by 3 p.m. Three o'clock passed and we were still shooting. A
Volkswagen van pulled up. Our director John Peyser yelled:
'Hey you, get out of my shot!'

"A man jumped out of the VW and yelled back: 'Hey you, get
off of my street!' It was Frank Fasi, the mayor of
Honolulu."

MacArthur enjoyed working with the local actors in Five-O.
"Some didn't have that much experience to start, but they
learned fast and before long, we had a little stable. They
turned out to be good actors and were great to work with."

MacArthur still maintains an apartment in Waikiki and
recently moved from Colorado to Palm Desert, California,
where he lives with his wife, former professional golfer
H.B. Duntz, and seven-year-old son Jamie. "We wanted to be
close to our mothers, so they could visit from New York and
share the warm climate." (MacArthur's mother is the
legendary actress, Helen Hayes.)

How does "Dan-O" feel about his home base for more thin a
decade? "Hawaii is extraordinary," he said. "There's no
place like it in the world I've travelled in."

Five-O was holding auditions for the pilot when a friend of
mine made an appointment for me to read for the part of Wo
Fat," said Kam Fong Chun. "When I walked in, Lenny Freeman
was talking with director Paul Wendkos. He looked at me and
said, 'That's him standing there, that's Chin Ho Kelly. He
looks like him, he stands like him, he smiles like him!"

"Chin Ho was supposed to be a Chinese-Irishman, but Lenny
liked how I looked. Can you believe that I was signed to a
seven-year contract as a regular without even reading for
the part That's why I keep getting those checks!"

The actor's lifelong interest in dramatics began at Kalakaua
Intermediate School . After graduating from McKinley High
School, where he was active in theater productions, Kam Fong
went to work at the Pearl Harbor shipyards. He arrived at
Dry Dock No. 1 within 45 minutes of the December 7, 1941,
attack.

On June 8, 1944, Kam Fong Chun suffered a personal tragedy
from which he almost did not recover. Two B-24 bombers
collided in mid-air over his Kalihi house. "Everything came
crashing down, barely missing Kalakaua School. My wife and
children were killed -- I lost my family in five minutes.
All I wanted to do was die."

Eventually remarrying, he joined the Honolulu Police
Department and served in the Patrol Division for 18 years.
After switching to a career in real estate in 1962, Kam Fong
resumed acting. "My first role was in a Honolulu Community
Theater production of

The Great Sebastian. I played a haole in that one."

More stage work followed, but the actor missed out on
several movie roles. "I had a beautiful part in The
Hawaiians with Charlton Heston, playing the head of the
Chinese. But they changed the story line and I ended up on
the cutting room floor. Then I got the part of a boat
captain with Elvis Presley in Girls! Girls! Girls!, but when
the producers saw me, he fired me because I was too big. I
was ready to go to Hollywood and work as a waiter." :'

As it turned out he didn't have to. Producer Freeman spotted
him and Kam Fong lasted 10 years on Five-O, the longest run
by a local actor. He still receives fan mail from around the
world. Recently, Kam Fong was interviewed on a Mainland
radio talk show. Listeners voted Chin Ho Kelly the most
popular character on Hawaii Five-O

Gilbert Kauhi has many names. To Hawaii Five-O fans, he's
"Kono Kalakaua," one of four original members of the elite
Five-O unit. To locals, he's "Zoulou," musician and stand-up
comic. Honolulu radio listeners remember him as "Big Z." And
classmates from Kamehameha (one of nine schools he attended
in 10 years) still call him Gilbert.

By whatever moniker, the ex-beach boy made a name for
himself. Zoulou was born in Hilo. When he moved to Oahu, he
performed in school plays before dropping out in his
sophomore year.

Zoulou is three-fourths Hawaiian and one-quarter Chinese. He
grew up loving water sports. By the age of 12 he was a
part-time beach boy. He teamed to play guitar and ukulele
and became the comedian in a group called "Zoulou and the
Polynesians."

After serving in the Coast Guard, Zoulou returned home. "1
worked on Waikiki Beach with the legends," he said. "Guys
like Chick Daniels, Turkey Love, Panama Dave and the
Kahanamoku Brothers." He performed briefly with the Sons of
Hawaii, calling the experience "My schooling in Hawaiian
music." He had gone from doorman to the main showroom stage
at Queen's Surf.

In 1966, Zoulou joined Don Ho at KHVH, then a Hawaiian music
radio station Two years later, he recalls: 'I went to a
casting 'cattle call' at the Hula Hut. They gave me the part
of Kono and 1 was on the pilot and then on the show for the
first five years."

These days I entertain on cruise ships all over the world
and people still remember Five-O. In South America they come
up and say 'Hawaiiano Cinco-Sero." I get letters from
England, Israel, Japan, all over."

When not at home on the Big Island, Zoulou plays the
international convention circuit and occasionally appears in
films. But not as a heavy. "No drug dealers, no pimps.
Playing a cop gives you a good-guy image, the fans are
always friendly. I enjoy meeting them and sharing their
aloha."

When Five-O casting director Ted Thorpe spotted him speaking
at an athletic banquet, Al Harrington's only stage
experience was in Honolulu high school productions and movie
bit parts in the Bay Area. For several seasons on Five-O,
the former Punahou and Stanford football star portrayed
villains . He says: "Heavies are more fun, you don't have to
hold back as much. Good guys are more controlled, they
require a subtlety of expression."

When Zoulou left the series in 1972, Harrington was teaching
history at his high school alma mater. Freeman was so
impressed with the rugged Samoan, he created a supporting
role for him: Detective Ben Kokua, a Hawaiian who returned
home after suffering a college football injury.

"The timing was perfect," Harrington said. "I was ready to
try my hand in show business after five years of teaching.
Lenny Freeman gave me my big break Working with him was the
greatest. He had a warm spirit for everyone and was a giving
person, always positive."

Harrington retired last spring after 20 years on the Waikiki
entertainment circuit He is working on a motivational book
in Provo, Utah, and preparing to co-star in a movie with
Jack Palance.

Harry Endo waited a year for his first Hawaii Five-O part.
"I was a bank executive, so they figured I'd make a good
teller," he said. "My big line was 'Do you have your
receipt?' I rehearsed it 5000 times. They liked it so much
they expanded the part."

Unlike most of the Asians and Hawaiians who appeared on
Hawaii Five-O, Endo was born on the Mainland, in Colorado,
and grew up in California. After serving in the Army, he
attended college and then opened a small business in
Whittier, California.

Although Endo's wife was from Hawaii, he had never been
there until he visited her parents in 1951. "I looked around
and realized I was in the majority, I would get acceptance,"
he said. Endo took night courses in radio and TV and wrote
Hawaii stations. "No one hired me, but we packed up and left
anyway. I arrived in 1955 with nothing, but luckily I got a
job right away at Channel 4."

Endo's career progressed through broadcasting, public
relations and banking for the next 14 years. When the role
of forensics expert Che Fong was created in 1969, the part
was his. "They built the police lab set at the Diamond Head
studio. I did most of my scenes early in the morning, so it
didn't interfere with my regular job."

After Five-O closed down, Endo alternated between city
government and private business. Currently, he is vice
president of marketing at Honolulu Federal Savings and Loan
Association.

Doug Mossman was perhaps the best prepared of ail the local
actors on Hawaii Five-O. The Honolulu native was on stage by
the third grade. "I was inspired by the applause," he said.
Mossman continued his acting at Kamehameha Schools, the
University of Hawaii and in the army, where he performed in
numerous special services productions overseas. Whenever I
had the chance, I trotted out my ukulele and did the
Hawaiian thing," he said.

After his discharge in 1956, Mossman became the first person
from Hawaii to attend the Pasadena Playhouse College of
Theater Arts. "There were no parts for Hawaiians. I read for
everything ethnic: Mexican, Indian, all of them."

Mossman was working at a restaurant in Monrovia when he was
called to audition for an Indian role in Broken Arrow. 'They
asked me if I could ride and I said yes, even though I'd
never been on a horse in my life." Mossman read his lines so
well that he got the part. A stunt man was hired for the
riding scenes.

In 1959, three weeks after he answered a casting call for a
new series called Hawaiian Eye, the young actor was, in his
words, "Living my dream. I went from being a busboy to
acting in a studio in Burbank. Besides that, I became the
show's technical director. I spent hundreds of hours
screening old films, looking for Island scenes. My job was
to 'Hawaiian-ize' Hawaiian Eye.

After the series ended, Mossman went to New York where he
coproduced the Hawaii exhibit at the 1964 World's Fair. He
returned to Los Angeles for several years, then came home
and worked in television and radio.

Mossman tested for Five-O's Ted Thorpe and was cast in small
parts for six seasons. Eventually he was offered the role of
a new character, Lieutenant Frank Kamana, a bomb expert who
transferred to the Five-O unit from the HPD.

Today, Mossman directs sales and marketing for what he
describes as "the ultimate movie," the Hawaii Imax Theater
in Waikiki.

Moe Keale's acing credentials were the opposite of Doug
Mossman's. He was working as an electrician at the Five-O
studio when casting director Bob Busch invited him to
audition. "I told him 'no thanks' and went back to rigging,"
he said. "He came back again the next day and asked me to
come in and read. I told him no again.

"The day after that, an executive came over and said 'Jack
Lord wants to see you.' When I walked into his dressing
room., he gave me that Jack Lord look. Then he said: 'You
will do it.' Hey -- I did it!"

Keale portrayed bad guys until he became Truck Kealoha for
Five-O's final two seasons. He describes the character as
"an educated Hawaiian, a policeman with some heavy college
degrees."

He credits the Five-O experience for teaching him
discipline. "Jack Lord was strict but everyone benefited
from that. We learned that time is money. People who worked
on Hawaii Five-O do well because Jack taught us, as actors,
to always be prepared. And we had the best-trained crew. The
local guys impressed everyone. They have a terrific
reputation."

A talented musician who began singing as a youngster, Keale,
like Zoulou, worked the beach and performed at Queen's Surf.
He was a member of the "Puka Puka Otea" Tahitian review.
Today the big man with the sweet voice is the leader of the
Moe Keale Band.

Hawaii Five-O continues to be seen around the world. Its
syndicated reruns have gained the show a wider audience than
it had as a prime-time original. Even the plots hold up
well; many of those same themes continue to plague law
enforcement officers today. And, a seemingly ageless Jack
Lord will forever appear as the tough but fair McGarrett

(HAWAII contributing editor Ron Jacobs regrets he was unable
to contact actors Herman Wedemeyer and Danny Kamekona to be
interviewed for this article. Mahalo to Viacom Enterprises,
distributor of Hawaii Five-O, for many of the photographs.)


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