
Hawaii was a very special place for Shirley Temple, and not just because she danced the hula in “Curly Top” (1935)! Below, a seventeen year old Shirley gushed about it in her first autobiography, My Young Life (1945):
I’ve been able to do quite a lot of traveling. The three trips we’ve made to Hawaii were the best. I’m actually insane about Hawaii. The first time we got on that big boat I was so excited I nearly popped, and I’ve been hardly less excited on other trips. It’s definitely thrilling to go to sleep in a stateroom and know that while you’re sleeping, the boat is taking you closer and closer to Hawaii. The captain took me up to the bridge, and generally gave me the run of the ship. He usually let me hold the wheel at least once a trip. Then the boat gets in, and there’s a band playing on the dock, and everybody heaps you with flower leis. And the scenery is so beautiful. It’s the way a movie set looks when you see it on the screen—not like it looks when you’re working on it.
Shirley’s first trip to Hawaii took place after she wrapped filming on “Curly Top” in July 1935. It was the first time the little girl had left her native state of California.

Two years later, she would return with her family in July/August 1937. In the photo below, she poses with two local children at party held in her honor.

In the Spring of 1939, Shirley had no firm projects on the horizon and tensions had been building between 20th Century-Fox and the Temple family. As she described in Child Star (1988):
Summertime and end of school left me with nothing to do and a future utterly blank, a situation never experienced since my start five and a half years earlier at Fox. Also never before had I had a real summer vacation. To my parents’ surprise, I suggested that we go to Hawaii for a third trip, this time for change, not work.
As always, she was surrounded by the Press. Her expression says it all!

Describing her first trip to Hawaii, Shirley let it be known that these “vacations” typically meant she was still hard at work:
The concept of vacation was almost meaningless for me. Routines of work and pleasures of leisure had always been commingled. In fact, this was what the studio had in mind—piggyback a maximum publicity program on our private plans for a Hawaiian vacation. Photographic opportunities and official contacts were carefully interwoven with press and radio interviews. Intense public exposure was the objective, at minimum cost. It would be our vacation, and so were all the expenses.
By 1950, Shirley’s career had fizzled along with her marriage to John Agar. Looking for change again as in 1939, she chose to get away from it all with daughter, Linda Susan, by traveling to her beloved vacation spot, Hawaii.

In My Young Life (1945), she had prophetically written:
After the war, I want to go to Hawaii again. Maybe it has honeymoon possibilities.
On that fateful trip in 1950, she met the love of her life, Charles Alden Black. The two had a whirlwind romance and married that same year.

Flash forward to August 1969, and we find Shirley back in Hawaii, ready to embark on a new career:
Mrs. Shirley Temple Black smiles as she arrives at Kewalo Basin after a fishing excursion aboard the “Cutty Sark,” 8/29. Mrs. Black was named by President Nixon as one of the five U.S. representatives to the United Nations.

Although no longer the world famous “child star” of the 1930s, Shirley still generated her fair share of press coverage. From the Honolulu Star Bulletin, August 27, 1969:
[Postmaster General and Secretary of Transportation John A. Volpe] will attend the testimonial dinner for Sen. Hiram L. Fong Saturday night at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel, where they stand to be outshone by two other loyal Republicans, former child star, Shirley Temple Black and former governor, William F. Quinn, especially if the latter work up a duet, “On the Good Ship Lollypop in Blue Hawaii.”
Two days later, the Honolulu Star announced Shirley’s appointment to the United Nations:
President Nixon today named Shirley Temple Black, former child movie star, as one of five United States representatives to the 24th regular session of the United Nations General Assembly. Mrs. Black was deep sea fishing in Hawaii’s waters when the Presidential announcement was made at the Western White House. She arrived in Hawaii yesterday to take part in tomorrow’s testimonial fund-raising dinner for GOP Sen. Hiram L. Fong. She will share master of ceremonies duties with Gov. William F. Quinn. A top appointment by the Nixon Administration had been expected, and Mrs. Black has been sidestepping comment for days by saying she was not at liberty to discuss it.…Mrs. Black, who is now a society matron in San Francisco with three teenager-children, was an unsuccessful Republican candidate for Congress last year in California. She has been exceptionally active in public service. Mrs. Black is staying at the Halekulani Hotel.
How the Halekulani looked in 1969 when Shirley stayed there:

The event was held at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel, which I visited back in 2004:

The Honolulu Star gave this report of the evening:
At a fund-raising testimonial dinner last night, Republican U.S. Sen. Hiram L. Fong was praised, toasted and—in a surprisingly early turn of events—endorsed by the strong ILWU for re-election in 1970.…About 1,500 persons attended the $50-a-plate affair at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel highlighted by the appearance of two Nixon Cabinet members, top Federal employee union officials, and [Jack] Hall’s [ILWU vice president] electoral pats-on-the-back.
Below, Shirley poses with Senator Fong and former Gov. William F. Quinn:


Nancy Harlocker reported in the Honolulu Star Advertiser on September 1, 1969 about another reception that Shirley attended:
Washington Place was buzzing with a surprising number of Republican leaders at a reception Thursday night which seemed fitting considering Democrat Gov. John A. Burns’ and Mrs. Burns’ guests of honor. They were Postmaster General Winston M. Blount and Secretary of Transportation John A. Volpe, two of President Richard M. Nixon’s recent cabinet appointees. The two Washington VIPs and their wives were here over the long weekend to attend U.S. Sen. Hiram Fong’s testimonial dinner at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel Saturday night.…Shirley Temple Black was there — warm and friendly as ever and a standout in a two-piece white pique dress that showed off her tanned midriff. Lee Gray told Shirley that his father, Harry Joe Brown, a 20th Century-Fox producer, had directed her first movie, “Little Miss Marker,” a fact that Shirley, indeed, remembered. She was pleased to hear about Brown again. Mrs. Phillip Swatek told Mrs. Black that her 5-year-old daughter was a real fan of her early movies that are shown on local television Sundays. “I can’t wait to tell my daughter that I met you,” Mrs. Swatek told Mrs. Black. “Oh, don’t tell her you met me, just tell her you met my daughter,” replied the former child film star. Mrs. Black and Mrs. Emil Offer greeted each other like old friends, which they are. “We used to play with our Shirley Temple dolls together,” Mrs. Black recalled. The girls had played at the Diamond Head home of June Offer’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Renton when Shirley vacationed here as a child. “We even exchanged our dolls,” recalled Mrs. offer. “I took Shirley’s and cut off all the curls.” Mrs. Black was in Hawaii to be mistress of ceremonies at Senator Fong’s party.
Actually, Harry Joe Brown’s first Temple movie was “Young People” (1940), her LAST film at 20th Century-Fox, for which he served as producer. Shirley was obviously being kind in agreeing with Lee Gray. Alexander Hall directed “Little Miss Marker” (1934), which was made at Paramount, not Fox, and definitely not Shirley’s first film!
Back to Hawaii! Below is a shot I took of Washington Place back in 2004, which was designated a National Historic Landmark three years later. I’m sure my photograph played a part in that! Washington Place is best known as the home of Hawaii’s beloved Queen Liliʻuokalani. Later it became the official residence of the governor of Hawaii.

Dave Donnelly told an amusing story in the Honolulu Star Bulletin on September 1, 1969:
Star-Bulletin photographer Jack Matsumoto asked A.P. Bureau Chief George Zucker to snap a picture of him with Shirley Temple Black at Washington Place last week. Jack first met Shirley in 1935 when she was the curly-haired film star and he was a bellboy at the Royal Hawaiian. Her parents were concerned because of a flock of fans at the hotel so they asked Jack to carry her up to her room. He did and now 34 years later Shirley thanked him for it.
Even after Shirley’s vacation was over, the Honolulu Star Bulletin continued to report on Shirley. From September 17, 1969:

Shirley Temple Black has been sworn in as one of the 10 U.S. delegates to the U.N. General Assembly and will specialize on environmental and social questions. After the ceremony yesterday, the former child actress told a news conference she was concerned with “air pollution and water problems.…I would hope we could work toward peace and human brotherhood and to improve the environmental situation in the world,” she said.

We could still use Shirley’s help today!
See more photos of Shirley Temple in Hawaii at my main website.








































