At the time Tau met Madame Claude Riviere, she was a professor of the French language at the
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, who had traveled throughout the Asia-Pacific area. Riviere's home adjacent to
McKinley High School was partially converted in 1927 into a theatre catering to the tourist trade. Local musicians, including Tau's uncles Tauvivi, Fuifui, and Pulu, were part of her show. In his 1990 biographical story for
The Hawaiian Steel Guitar Association Newsletter, Tau related how his uncle Pulu got him a $2-a-day job with Riviere to play on weekends. During the weekdays he still attended school in Laie; 1927 would have been his senior year of high school. The crowds soon grew to 200 attendees, and Riviere booked the show at the newly opened
Royal Hawaiian Hotel. Tau moved from Laie to Honolulu and worked at a full-time job. He took steel guitar lessons from
M. K. Moke, a friend of one of his uncles. Depending on when he related the story, it was either one lesson for $20, or multiple lessons for an unknown sum. Through Moke, he met fellow steel guitar student and future wife Rose Ka‘ohu from
Kohala, Hawaii. At the time, Rose was a seasoned performer who could sing, dance, and play an instrument. Along with her sisters, she was part of the
John Kameaaloha Almeida shows. When Riviere opted to take her show on a tour of Asia, Rose auditioned and became part of the troupe. Rose and Tau married shortly after the tour left Honolulu. She went into labor in the middle of a performance in
Kyoto, and their son Lani was born on July 13, 1929. Riviere's troupe broke up during the tour, partially due to her financial difficulties. Most of the troupe signed on with
Ernest Kaʻai. Tau and Rose split off into their own act. The Moe family spent the next decade performing around the world before World War II broke out, staying long enough in several areas to become fluent in multiple languages. By the time he was 4 years old, Lani was performing on stage with his parents. from Germany prior to
World War II, by dressing them up in the Moe family's stage costumes. At one point, the family lived over a Jewish-owned bookstore. They were captive witnesses when the
Gestapo made a late-night raid burning not only the store's contents, but also burned the store's owners alive atop the pile of burning books. The Gestapo had learned of the Moe family's underground efforts on behalf of the Jews and were in transit to arrest the family when, warned by friends, the family slipped out the stage back door and escaped.
Post war years The troupe performed for international figures including
Winston Churchill,
Aristotle Onassis and
King Farouk. They were introduced to
Mohandas Gandhi while performing in India. Daughter Dorian was born in Calcutta during the
1946 Bihar riots; Rose went into labor and was rushed to the hospital by the military. Tau and Lani finished their show, and afterwards also taken to the hospital by the military. While in Hawaii, they performed at Club Pago Pago on Beretania Street. After the war, the Tau Moe Trio (Tau, Rose, Lani) entertained at US military bases, booked through the Frankfort, Germany military post, "... Hawaiians who did one of the wildest routines ever to hit the EC." The Tau Moe Trio, and his uncle's Pulu Moe Trio, were booked for an extensive run in London with orchestra leader Felix Mendelssohn, namesake descendant of German composer
Felix Mendelssohn. ==Later life and legacy==