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Mahealani Uchiyama

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Choreographer; Dancer; Performer; Vocalist

Regional Roots; World

Ukulele, Mbira

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06/20/025

Mahealani Uchiyama

IC-US-CA-SanFrancisco

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Māhealani Uchiyama is an award-winning dancer, musician, composer, choreographer, recording artist, author, and teacher. She studied hula primarily under Kumu Hula Joseph Kamohaʻi Kahāʻulelio. She is the founder and director of the Māhea Uchiyama Center for International Dance (MUCID) of Berkeley, California (a non-profit organization) and is Kumu Hula (hula teacher) of Hālau Ka Ua Tuahine. She is the creator and director of the Kāpili Polynesian Dance & Music Workshops. 


She has led performance tours to Tahiti, New Zealand, and the islands of Hawai’i, and has taught workshops throughout the United States and Mexico. She has taught Hawaiian Language at Stanford University and authored the Haumāna Hula Handbook for Students of Hawaiian Dance, and The Mbira, An African Musical Tradition (both published by North Atlantic Books / Penguin Random House).


She has released numerous collections of Hawaiian and Tahitian music. Her CDs “Tatau” and “Pasifika” are widely used by Polynesian dance organizations worldwide. She has two recordings of mbira, the spiritual music of the Shona people of Zimbabwe, “Ndoro dze Madzinza” and “The Sky That Covers Us All”. Her CD “A Walk by the Sea” was awarded a Hawai’i Music Award for Best World Music Album.


She has been honored by the City of Berkeley with a proclamation declaring January 22, 2019, as Māhealani Uchiyama Day. Ms. Uchiyama has served on the panel of judges for the San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival (for which she is also a former Co-Artistic Director) and the Tahiti Fete of San Jose and Hilo.  She is currently using her unique perspective as a lineally recognized Kumu Hula and one of (possibly the only) Kumu Hula of African descent to inform her next recording project, Pōpoloheno: Songs of Resilience and Joy – The Untold Stories of Africans in Post-Contact Hawaiian History, supported by grants from the Gerbode Foundation and the Kenneth Rainin Foundation.

Mahealani Uchiyama

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