San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Choir’s roller coaster ride

Singers who performed for 2002 Disney movie ‘Lilo & Stitch’ as children reflect on the experience 20 years later

- BY CHRISTI CARRAS Carras writes for the Los Angeles Times.

Longtime choir director Lynell Bright’s classroom is a shrine to Stitch, the fluffy, feisty pet alien from Disney’s “Lilo & Stitch.” The deceptivel­y adorable face of the mischievou­s extraterre­strial is “everywhere,” she says. And when students discover her affinity, they buy her stuffed-animal Stitches and draw her pictures of the beloved cartoon character to put on display with the rest of her collection.

The steering wheel and seats of Bright’s car — known as the “Stitch mobile” — are also covered in images of the fan-favorite fur ball. To some, the 57-year-old music teacher’s obsession might seem peculiar. Even incoming members of the Kamehameha Schools Children’s Chorus can’t help but remark, “Mrs. Bright, you really like Stitch ” upon entering her choir room for the first time.

But Bright and Stitch go way back — even further than the little blue monster’s cinematic debut. More than two decades ago, she received a call from Disney inviting the chorus to record music for the soundtrack of an animated project then in the works.

That project was “Lilo & Stitch,” a quirky and emotional family film about orphaned Hawaiian sisters whose newly adopted “puppy” turns out to be an escaped lab experiment from outer space. The 2002 movie features a pair of standout tracks — “He Mele No Lilo” and “Hawaiian Roller Coaster Ride” — sung in Hawaiian and English by Mark Keali’i Ho’omalu and members of the Kamehameha chorus. Their angelic voices add an extra layer of beauty and cultural authentici­ty to the story of two outcast souls that form an unlikely friendship on the island of Kauai.

“The kids have no idea the effect that they have on the audiences,” Bright said in a recent video interview.

“Sometimes we have performanc­es, and I see people touched and moved. And the kids, they’re like, ‘OK, where is our lunch?’ That’s important to them. But I always say, ‘Twenty years from now, they’re gonna see what an impact their singing had on people.’”

It’s been 20 years since “Lilo & Stitch” opened in theaters, and the former members of the chorus — who were not much older than Lilo when the movie was made — have indeed come to understand the collective power of their performanc­e.

“Especially watching it now as an adult, you see the impact that it has,” said Kamehameha alum Paul Iona, a 32-year-old augmented-reality graphics producer who splits his time between Honolulu and L.A.

“It’s one of those films that you can gather so much at different times of your life. It’s welcoming you into Hawaii as we would hope that people feel welcomed when they come to Hawaii. And I hope moviegoers were able to feel that, seeing that scene and then hearing our voices.”

Fond memories

Despite how young they were at the time, Iona and other former members of the chorus have retained vivid memories of working on the film. Getting selected to join the choir was already a big deal — but getting to sing original songs for a Disney movie was nothing short of “surreal,” said Leimomi Kanagusuku, a 31-year old family medicine doctor on Oahu.

The chorus is made up of 100 students ages 9 to 12, but for recording purposes, the studio had to cut that number down to 40. Auditions were held, and the most expressive singers who effectivel­y communicat­ed the lyrics were chosen for the gig, Bright said.

“That’s the hardest thing,” she added. “I hate auditions, because they’re all great kids, and they’re all good.”

Initially, the students were told only that they had been recruited to sing for a movie about “a girl and her dog.” They clung to the crumb of informatio­n about the mysterious project, fervently speculatin­g as to what the names of the protagonis­t and her pup might be.

“When finally we found out the title, it was just such an odd name for a dog,” Iona said. “I couldn’t fathom what it could possibly be at the time. It was such a funny progressio­n of finding out more about the film and the story behind it.”

As Disney fed them additional details, the lucky group of fourth-, fifth- and sixth-graders were sworn to “secrecy,” said Rachel Justice, a 33-year-old elementary school teacher at Kamehameha on Oahu. The sheet music for the first number they learned, “He Mele No Lilo,” was sealed in cryptic manila envelopes, and the kids weren’t allowed to talk with anyone about what was inside.

“I might still have it somewhere, the original music in that envelope, because it seemed like it had to be so private and secret,” Justice said. “We had no idea what the scope of it was gonna be or how it would impact my life. I mean, I was the oldest among us, but still we had no clue what we were getting into a small piece of a big puzzle.”

In a behind-the-scenes featurette for the DVD release of “Lilo & Stitch,” writer-directors Chris Sanders and Dean Deblois say they were “blown away” upon visiting the Kamehameha campus and hearing the chorus perform the music for the first time. Bright remembers that moment well: how the students crowded the door and couldn’t resist peeking outside as the filmmakers arrived. How they greeted their guests with leis and floored them with their performanc­e.

“The filmmakers just stood there kind of speechless,” Bright said. “We were like, ‘OK, that must have been special.’ ”

Enduring popularity

On countless occasions, Bright has heard “He Mele No Lilo” and “Hawaiian Roller Coaster Ride” wafting from a speaker at a shopping center or drifting through the breeze at her local park. And whenever Kanagusuku’s friends have children going through a “Lilo & Stitch” phase, they make sure to let her know they’ve been listening to the soundtrack over and over — and over — again.

“All of us, we’ve got some sort of beacon,” Kanagusuku says. “For me, it brings a sense of happiness. We have such great memories from it, and so I just feel joy. I always sing along to it. If it’s far away, I mosey on toward the situation — whatever it is — and I try to figure out what’s going on.”

“‘Lilo & Stitch’ and choir and music in general really shaped my life,” Kanagusuku said. “Mrs. Bright was saying the kids in the choir don’t necessaril­y realize how they’ve impacted the people in the audience. I don’t know if she’s actually realized how much she and music have impacted all of us.”

 ?? BEA OYSTER FOR THE LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Singers (from left) Leimomi Kanagusuku, Paul Iona and Rachel Justice in the choir room at Kamehameha Schools — Kapalama Campus in Honolulu. The former members of the school chorus recorded songs for Disney’s 2002 movie “Lilo & Stitch.”
BEA OYSTER FOR THE LOS ANGELES TIMES Singers (from left) Leimomi Kanagusuku, Paul Iona and Rachel Justice in the choir room at Kamehameha Schools — Kapalama Campus in Honolulu. The former members of the school chorus recorded songs for Disney’s 2002 movie “Lilo & Stitch.”
 ?? DISNEY ?? Lilo and her peers perform a hula set to “He Mele No Lilo” during the opening title sequence from “Lilo & Stitch.”
DISNEY Lilo and her peers perform a hula set to “He Mele No Lilo” during the opening title sequence from “Lilo & Stitch.”

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