PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Cynthia Laanui
rdfs:comment
  • Cynthia "Cyndi" Laanui (b. between 1912 and 1917, d. 1943) was the haole wife of Stanley Owana Laanui, Japan's puppet ruler of the briefly reconstituted Kingdom of Hawaii, which had been "liberated" in early 1942. Cynthia was noted for her beauty with her red hair, freckles and green eyes. She was also noted for her supposed lack of intelligence. Those who knew the couple assumed that Stanley married her for her looks (despite his resentment of haole rule of Hawaii). Since Stanley didn't have any real prospects at the time of their marriage, her reason for marrying him was more up in the air.
dcterms:subject
type of appearance
  • Direct
dbkwik:turtledove/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Appearance
  • Both volumes
Spouse
Name
  • Cynthia Laanui
Title
  • Consort of the Kingdom of Hawaii
Cause of Death
  • Gunshot wound
Before
  • None,
  • (last was)
  • John Owen Dominis
Years
  • 1942
After
  • (U.S. rule re-established)
  • Monarchy abolished,
Children
  • None
Occupation
  • Queen Consort
Death
  • 1943
Birth
  • Between 1912 and 1917
Nationality
  • Kingdom of Hawaii
abstract
  • Cynthia "Cyndi" Laanui (b. between 1912 and 1917, d. 1943) was the haole wife of Stanley Owana Laanui, Japan's puppet ruler of the briefly reconstituted Kingdom of Hawaii, which had been "liberated" in early 1942. Cynthia was noted for her beauty with her red hair, freckles and green eyes. She was also noted for her supposed lack of intelligence. Those who knew the couple assumed that Stanley married her for her looks (despite his resentment of haole rule of Hawaii). Since Stanley didn't have any real prospects at the time of their marriage, her reason for marrying him was more up in the air. Cynthia actually proved to be a fairly competent queen. She helped oversee the dispersal of supplies and did a fair amount of charity work. She also initiated an affair with Imperial Japanese Navy Commander Minoru Genda. When the United States returned to retake Hawaii in 1943, Cynthia realized just how tenuous her situation was. Nevertheless, she and her husband chose to remain in Hawaii rather than take a submarine to Japan. As U.S. forces prepared to overrun Iolani Palace, King Stanley and Queen Cynthia both realized that if they were captured alive, they would be made examples of by the U.S. Stanley shot Cynthia in the head, and then shot himself. Minoru Genda was present, and was able to mourn Cynthia only briefly before he committed seppuku.
is Spouse of