CASE OHANA

Audrey's Photos
Taken in yard of Palolo Church
Good Samaritan Episcopal Church
Left to Right front row: Pat, Lillian, & Catherine
Second row: My dad, Rev. James Nakamura, Mom, Magdalene Hirata-Nakamura, me & my brother John
 
Taken at family home in Palolo.
Left to Right front row:
My Dad, me in my favorite yellow shirt and red shorts, & my Mom
Left to Right second row:
Pat, Lillian, John, & Catherine
 
Just da girls in Palolo at Good Samaritan Church.
Left to Right front row: Catherine & Audrey
Left to Right second row: Pat & Lillian
 
Audrey, Louise and Ed
 
Wedding at HPA Chapel
(where we first met in the 7th grade).
Left to Right: Megan, David, Audrey, Ed, James, & David
 
 

 

 

 

{LeftSideColumn}

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

THE CASE FAMILY

AUDREY CASE

Personal
Audrey Joan Nakamura Case
Born at Kapi‘olani Women and Children's Medical Center October 28, 1952. Daughter of Rev. James Saburo (born Honolulu) and Magdalene Hirata (born Kona) Nakamura. Youngest of 5 children: John Nakamura, Pat Nekoba, Lillian Dixson, Catherine Nakamura Gruenwald, Audrey

Education
Argonne Elementary School, San Francisco (K-6)
Hawai‘i Preparatory Academy, Kamuela (7-11)
George Washington High School, San Francisco (grad. 1970)
San Francisco State University, CA (B.A. Japanese 1974)

Hawai‘i Roots/Mainland Experience
I was born in Honolulu. We lived in Palolo Valley where my father was the minister at Good Samaritan Episcopal Church on 10th Ave. My earliest memory was spending the night all alone in the hospital because I was crawling over a pew during Sunday morning service and fell on my head.

My second clearest memory was when we moved to San Francisco when I was 5 years old, on an airplane that took all night. My father was one of the few bilingual Japanese Episcopal ministers and had an opportunity to minister to a predominantly Japanese congregation in SF.

My mother was all for exposing us kids to the mainland. She was a registered nurse and was able to attend nursing school in the mainland with the financial help of her brothers. My mother wanted us to have the same opportunity that she and my father had with their mainland experience. When we settled into church housing I was very upset because I couldn't find my favorite yellow T-shirt and red shorts. My mother conveniently misplaced them during the move and insisted I wear a dress with socks, shoes and little white gloves. It was very upsetting.

We lived in SF for nearly 6 years. It was a great time for all of us once we all adjusted to mainland ways. From around 8 years old I had to bus it to Japanese school and to the San Francisco Ballet Company for classes. We didn't get driven anywhere by our parents. It was either the bus or walk!

We moved back to Hawai‘i when my father transferred to a small church in Kamuela on the Big Island where I attended Hawai‘i Preparatory Academy (and met Ed). By then my brother and oldest sister were off on their own so it was just myself, Lillian and Catherine. They were there for one and two years, respectively. The summer before I turned 13, my parents, a sister and I were in a car accident on the old Saddle Road on the Big Island. My mother didn't survive.

For a few years my father and I made a life together in Kamuela before I left in the middle of my junior year to live with my oldest sister, Pat and her new husband, Lloyd (Nekoba), in San Francisco. I was determined to attend college on the mainland and, with very limited resources, this was an option that also kept me close to family.

College/Career
I worked my way through college; Pat and Lloyd returned to Kona when I was a sophomore. In my junior and senior years I worked at I.Magnin's in San Francisco. I.Magnin's was a high end retail store much like Neiman Marcus. I worked in nearly all departments and, when I graduated, was offered a management position. It was a daunting offer because I had no formal business background, but I really needed a job.

After two years of twelve hour days, I took a break and came home to Hawai‘i. My father had been remarried to Louise Nishimura-Nagata and it was nice to spend some time together. However, after a couple of weeks he said to me in an offhanded manner: "Why don't you work for an airline. You're tall enough. But work for one that goes to foreign countries so you can see more of the world." I think he was worried I'd never leave home!

His casual suggestions led me to a now-three decade career as a fight attendant, first with a charter airline, then Pan American, and since 1986 United Airlines. My first base with Pan Am was New York. Everyone should live and work in New York for at least a year or two! It's a fabulous place; very high energy and the people are great. I then transferred to London and finally worked my way back to Honolulu. In 1986 United bought Pan Am's Pacific Division. I thought I would only fly for a year or two, but the airline business has been a wonderful lifetime career for me, I have seen the world, and, after all these many years, I still love to fly.

Family Life
I’m still recuperating from my many years of shuffling kids to soccer, volleyball, music, school and some very intense years with Ed on the campaign trail and in both D.C. and home. With my free time I enjoy volunteer work, gardening, cooking and sewing. I've taught Megan to sew and during the school breaks we usually work on a couple of fun projects.

I like to cook. I have an extensive collection of recipes from newspapers, magazines or just friends and a wonderful assortment of local cookbooks. “One of these days” I hope to sort them out into some kind of order and actually make all of them. I used to experiment on the kids but I find they would rather have simple food and were never excited about anything new Mom decided to try for dinner! The kids like being involved with meal preparation and it often gets chaotic in the kitchen but the food tastes better with all their effort. Ed is quite a good cook, especially with fish and salads. He never uses any kind of a recipe. He just goes with the "moment" and amazingly it turns out really good!

I do tai chi and love to play tennis, but I can only fool around with the kids nowadays: no time, too old, bad back, bad knees, etc....I've had either dogs, cats, birds, fish, turtles and even chickens during most of my life, and I certainly miss their company right now with all the traveling I do in my job and also with Ed.

I also love my garden, but I don't have a green thumb. It's haphazardly productive. I've had marginal success with tomatoes, eggplants, peppers and herbs but, for some reason, Megan has been wonderfully successful with her own gardening efforts. She just has the knack.

Putting It All Together
Like Ed, I’ve had a full, diverse, rewarding and blessed life. We feel so blessed to have found each other again and to have these chapters in our lives together. I’m often asked what it’s like to be married to a politician, and I say it’s very similar to growing up as a “PK” (priest’s kid.) We do coffee hours, mail outs and most importantly, community service! I know Ed is good for Hawai‘i and our country, and we are truly enjoying our political lives and the incredible friends we’ve made along the path.

[back to top]

 
{CenterColumn}

Bookmark and Share

Paid for by Case for Congress, PO Box 1171, Honolulu, HI 96807 Copyright 2009 Case Campaign