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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, April 15, 2007

HAWAI'I'S ICON DON HO, 1930 - 2007
Don Ho dies

Post your condolences
Post your condolences
Don Ho Photo gallery
Don Ho photo gallery
Don Ho Photo gallery 2
Don Ho photo gallery 2
Links to information about Ho's life, career
Links to information about Ho's life, career
Audio clip of Don Ho's 'Tiny Bubbles'
Audio clip of Don Ho's 'Tiny Bubbles'
Audio clip of Don Ho's 'I'll Remember You'
Audio clip of Don Ho's 'I'll Remember You'
Don Ho: Spirit of 76, with song and interview audio clips
Don Ho: Spirit of 76, with song and interview audio clips
Don Ho's back on stage
Don Ho's back on stage
Don Ho goes hana hou
Don Ho goes hana hou
 •  Highlights of Don Ho's personal and professional career
Video: A video biography on Don Ho
 •  Don Ho's legendary legacy gift to Hawai'i
Video: 'He is aloha': Friends remember Don Ho
Video: Fans remember Don Ho
 •  Legendary crooner brought Islands to the world
 •  We'll remember you, loved king of Waikiki
 •  Islands' musical ambassador embodied aloha to the world
 •  Local entertainers, visitors remember
 •  He stayed young by never retiring
 •  Tears and memories mark the news
 •  Ho just did what he believed
 •  Hawai'i officials react
 •  The Don Ho experience
 •  Don Ho not just an entertainer but an activist, romantic, friend

Advertiser Staff

Don Ho

Advertiser library photo

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Don Ho may or may not have been Hawai'i's greatest entertainer.

But there was no doubt that he was one of its most beloved.

When he died yesterday of heart failure at age 76, those who knew him best remembered his genuine warmth the most.

Whether a lifelong friend,

a fledgling singer looking for a break, or a grandmother from Peoria with an exotic Island dream and an Instamatic camera, you mattered to Ho.

"I don't think he ever realized how important he was to Hawai'i ... how big he was," said one old friend. "I mean, he knew he had talent. But the other stuff ... he didn't care about all the other stuff.

"With Don, it's 'Ain't no big thing.' But he was big time."

He was often called Mr. Waikiki because he was the most popular draw there for decades. But Ho told Advertiser columnist Bob Krauss that the secret of his survival was to do what he believed in, despite pressures to do something different.

"Everybody has to have an identity, your own original thing," he explained. "Our thing was the way you sit around the garage on a weekend; play music, joke around. We just took it to the showroom."