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Tuesday, August 19, 2008

"So You Think You Can Dance" at Level 4?

The highlight of my night at Level 4 last Friday, Aug. 15, was running into Mark Kanemura, the Hawaii contestant from "So You Think You Can Dance," pictured with me and a friend.  At right, are Level 4 dancers in the middle of a choreographed dance routine.

photos: Christine Hitt


I’m so tired of clubs that double as other venues.  RumFire, the W, Chai's Island Bistro, E&O Trading Company, Doraku, Skyline, and Senor Frog's are all restaurants by day and they double as a club or lounge at night. For those of us who like nightlife and dancing, we are being cheated by this Hawaii trend.  Restaurants are made for dining.  They can move the tables out of the way after hours but they still don’t have the seating of a proper lounge, or the dance floor and lighting of a true nightclub. 

So, I was counting the days till the Level 4 Nightclub & Ultra Lounge opened.  It’s what the Waikiki Nei multi-million dollar theater turns into after the show is over.  At night, the seating supposedly retracts and creates a 4,500-square-foot dance floor, complete with dancers and aerialists swinging above your head.  And, to hear that Level 4 was being put on the same level as a Las Vegas nightclub sounded like a dream come true, but dream on…

The Level 4 Ultra Lounge felt more like an industrial waiting room.  You have to wait in the lounge while the theater “transforms” into a nightclub, all while looking up at the lounge’s exposed piping in the ceiling and hard concrete floors below.  At least put carpet in the lounge area!  The three decorative bars around the room and the VIP sections against the walls seemed out of place in style next to the lounge’s boring walls and windows.  Many Vegas lounges are themed, and decorate using fabrics, fancy lighting and statues, which make you feel like you’re in a different world, time—or, dimension.  Take any Vegas nightclub—Tao, Pure, Body English, Ghost Bar, LAX—and you’ll experience a night that uses all of your senses.  This just made me wonder why I wasn’t on level 3 of the Royal Hawaiian Shopping Center getting a cheap drink at Senor Frog's, while I was waiting for the main showroom to open.  At least I’d know that I’d be entertained there.


You'll see DJ Mike D. from 104.3 most nights at Level 4.

When the waiting is over, Level 4 does get better. The showroom is immense with a 60-foot ceiling filled with dozens of lights beaming down and around the room through a foggy haze. Go-go dancers command the stage, dancing to hip-hop and the latest music hosted by 104.3’s DJ Mike D.  The dancers even do choreographed dance routines, which makes everyone else stop dancing to watch. It was disappointing to see that there was still stadium seating in the room and the dance floor felt more like I was stuck in an orchestra pit, with the wall to the stadium seating at my left and the four-foot high stage on my right.  The main floor also hosts more VIP tables and the DJ booth, taking away prime dancing space. 


Level 4 dancers on-stage.



The stage itself is off-limits to everyone, except the professional dancers.  But, that’s a lot of wasted space for just six dancers, so why not use it?  Put the DJ booth on stage—where the DJ belongs—and strategically place the VIP tables around the room, even on that large stage, rather than crowding the floor.


 

The venue was obviously created primarily for Waikiki Nei and then, as a distant second, for the nightclub.  So, go ahead and add Level 4 to that growing list of clubs that lead double lives.

I did find one thing that reminded me of Vegas.  All seating is reserved for VIP only, so choose your shoes wisely.
 

Want to check out Level 4 Nightclub & Ultra Lounge?  Here are the details:

HOURS:  Wednesday-Saturday following the last performance of Waikiki Nei.  The show ends at 7:30pm on Wed-Thurs, and at 10:00 p.m. on Fri-Sat, then it takes roughly 45 minutes for the theatre to transform.  My suggestion is to go on a Friday or Saturday at around midnight, then you'll more than likely miss the line, and not have to wait for the showroom to open.
COVER:  $15
DRESS:  Fashionable attire only.

LEVEL 4 Nightclub & Ultra Lounge
at the Royal Hawaiian Center, 4th floor, Building B
2233 Kalakaua Avenue
Honolulu, Hawaii 96815
 

 Have you been to Level 4?  Comment and tell me your thoughts below.

 

Posted on Tuesday, August 19, 2008 in | Permalink

HONOLULU Magazine invites you to comment on our articles and the issues they raise. Comments are moderated for commercial messages and off-topic posts. Comments with offensive language will not be posted.

Reader Comments:
Old to new | New to old
Aug 21, 2008 08:18 am
 Posted by  Anonymous

Hello there, I was disappointed when I went there too. I feel your pain, I was expecting a much larger dance floor and more seating for us "regular" people. I mean for $15 bucks you want more than just the front of the stage to dance in. I may go back again, but ONLY if I get in for free, LOL. Good blog though Id say you about summed it all up, Great Job! =) Oh love the pic by the way too.

Aug 22, 2008 12:20 am
 Posted by  Anonymous

Ridiculous blog from someone who obviously knows nothing about nightclubs. Great pic btw with Mark who loves LEVEL4! Please look around at the nightlife in Honolulu and truly tell me if anything even comes close.

Aug 29, 2008 02:31 pm
 Posted by  Anonymous

Level 4 is the closest we have to a Vegas style nightclub. No seating makes it more of a pain to stand around and you more likely to buy a table (it IS a business, after all). Who the hell goes as early as you did anyway where you had to wait for it to turn from Waikiki Nei into the club?? Hahaha. I do like the idea of the DJ booth on the stage, though...

Sep 4, 2008 05:10 pm
 Posted by  Anonymous

No doubt this is one of the better clubs here in Honolulu... but to say this is a Las Vegas style club is further from the truth... The club is cool but it still feels more like another pipeline cafe or World Cafe with alittle bit more glam. I was so eager to check this place out but got alittle disappointed... After a year people with money to spend will get sick of it and the polynesian connection will take over. To say that my friends and I will make it a weekly ritual? ... Don't think so not for $15 and driving in Waikiki, maybe if we get in free all the time we might check it out once in a while but I'd rather go Pearl or something else like the W... It might appeal more to the tourist and local crowd...

Sep 29, 2008 02:13 pm
 Posted by  Anonymous

Not true about missing the line if you go at 12. The line is actually longer if you go by then. If you don't know anyone, garrentee you'll be waiting in a hour to hour 1/2 line.
other then that, i guess the change of scenery from the hawaii typical club is actually cool.
Fyi if your a chic and your hot, the possiblity of getting in faster is quite high.

Oct 7, 2008 10:34 am
 Posted by  Anonymous

Good review in that it kind of sums up a few honest observations. The nightclub is NOT anything close to Vegas clubs, but that's mostly because the theatre setup makes the flow awkward and strange. I think a $15 cover charge is no big deal and frankly I think a lot of us that live here are pretty cheap but maybe that's understandable given our high cost of living and the economy right now.

What I liked: The DJ was good, the crowd had a lot of pretty faces (eye candy) and people were pretty well dressed up, although I think W and Pearl might still dress a little better. Nice staff for the most part. Most nightclubs have horrible door people too, and the door people here were dressed to the tee and generally a little nicer than most I have seen here in Hawaii.

What I didn't like: The flow is just bad, I can't really describe it any better. The place also just feels like an elegent version of Pipeline design wise, and that's not what I expected.

Overall, not bad, but not Vegas either. Somewhere in the middle, which I suppose is the best Hawaii can get...

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About This Blog

This Kamehameha Schools and UH graduate works as the Web editor for HONOLULU. In her free time she researches Hawaiian genealogy, when she’s not out and about or taking care of her 3-year-old son.

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