Daily News (Los Angeles)

Hollywood Bowl

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The Hollywood Bowl got its start in a canyon then known as Daisy Dell in 1921, according to the book. That was the first time the L.A. Phil performed there, and when Artie Mason Carter, also known as the “mother of the Hollywood Bowl,” began to champion the location as a permanent home for affordable symphonic concerts that would cost no more than a quarter.

“One of the things I was vaguely aware of but didn't fully realize until this book was how the early history of the Hollywood Bowl was so informed by really progressiv­e women,” Ward said. “The very early origins were a combinatio­n of city boosters and typical city interests, but you had these bohemian theosophis­t women who wanted to do plays about all the world's religions.” Then there was Artie Mason Carter. “She came out of community choruses and she wasn't wealthy,” Ward continued. “She was a music teacher and just deeply passionate about her mission. She believed music was for everyone and should be accessible to everyone and she acted on that. In the first few years everyone thought it would fail, but literally penny by penny she collected the funds and made it a success.”

The book explores decades of operas, symphonies, ballets, theatrical production­s, film screenings, comedy shows and popular music concerts. It dives into legends of the venue, including that of Ella Fitzgerald, who sold out the bowl across five decades from the 1950s to 1990s, and conductor John Williams, who brought the music of “Star Wars” to a live audience for the first time. It was also the place where the Beatles set an attendance record in 1964, selling 18,000 tickets in just hours. In 1979, it became home to one of the longestrun­ning music events in the area, the Playboy Jazz Festival, which ceased in 2019 and is now the Hollywood Bowl Jazz Festival.

Ward said the Hollywood Bowl is definitely a place where every artist brings their A-game, and there have been moments working at the venue that have not only given her goose bumps but have etched themselves in her memory.

“It's amazing when there's a single musician onstage in front of 18,000 people and you can hear a pin drop,” she said. “Like when Yo-Yo Ma plays the Bach Cello Suites, it's just stunning. In 2014, when the Ferguson [Missouri] protests were going on, John Legend was here doing a tribute to Marvin Gaye and he came out and did `What's Going On,' and everybody knew what that meant. There was a feeling of solidarity and being with one another in a space of processing and healing that you weren't going to get on a couch alone at home.”

The L.A. Phil will also put out, in addition to the book, a limited edition vinyl box

Conductor John Williams meets movie alien E.T. — aka the extraterre­strial — during a liveto-film performanc­e with an orchestra at the Hollywood Bowl in 1982.

set, “Hollywood Bowl 100: The First 100 Years of Music,” which includes seven LPs featuring over 50 live recordings of classical,

pop, rock, film and jazz performanc­es at the venue between 1928 and 2021.

A 10-episode podcast series, which was written and is hosted by Traub, will be available for free through podcast platforms or can be accessed at hollywoodb­owl.com/first100ye­ars starting Friday. In each five to 10 minute episode, Traub shares the history of the 88-acre campus, with stories pulled from an oral history of interviews and thousands of documents from the venue's archive and historical collection­s throughout Southern California.

 ?? PHOTO BY ARTHUR FAST ?? Shown newly renovated in 1945, the Hollywood Bowl takes on more of the design characteri­stics familiar to today's audiences.
PHOTO BY ARTHUR FAST Shown newly renovated in 1945, the Hollywood Bowl takes on more of the design characteri­stics familiar to today's audiences.
 ?? COURTESY OF LOS ANGELES PHILHARMON­IC ARCHIVES ??
COURTESY OF LOS ANGELES PHILHARMON­IC ARCHIVES
 ?? COURTESY OF LOS ANGELES PHILHARMON­IC ARCHIVES ?? The Beatles perform in 1965at the venue, where they set attendance records.
COURTESY OF LOS ANGELES PHILHARMON­IC ARCHIVES The Beatles perform in 1965at the venue, where they set attendance records.

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