'Hollywood' is a
district in
Los Angeles, California,
U.S.A., situated west-northwest of
Downtown. Due to its fame and
cultural identity as the historical center of
movie studios and
stars, the word "Hollywood" is often used as a
metonym for the
American film and television industry. Today much of the movie industry has dispersed into surrounding areas such as
Burbank and the
Westside, but significant auxillary industries (such as editing, effects, props, post-production, and lighting companies) remain in Hollywood.

The Boundaries of Hollywood, as established by the California Legislature (AB 588)
Many historic Hollywood
theaters are used as venues and concert stages to premiere major theatrical releases, and host the
Academy Awards. It is a popular destination for nightlife and tourism, and home to the
Walk of Fame.
Although it is not the typical practice of the City of Los Angeles to establish specific boundaries for districts or neighborhoods, Hollywood is a recent exception. On February 16, 2005, Assembly Members Goldberg and Koretz introduced a bill to require the State to keep specific records on Hollywood as though it were independent. For this to be done, the boundaries were defined. This bill was unanimously supported by the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce and the LA City Council. Assembly Bill 588 was approved by the Governor on August 28, 2006, and now the district of Hollywood has official borders. The border is shown at the right, and can be loosely described as the area east of
Beverly Hills and
West Hollywood, south of
Mulholland Drive,
Laurel Canyon, Cahuenga Blvd. and Barham Blvd., and the cities of
Burbank and
Glendale, north of
Melrose Avenue, and west of the
Golden State Freeway and Hyperion Avenue. Note that this includes all of
Griffith Park and
Los Feliz—two areas that were hitherto generally considered separate from Hollywood by most Angelenos. The population of the district (including Los Feliz) as of the 2000 census was 208,237. The median household income was $33,409
in 1999
[1].
As a portion of the City of Los Angeles, Hollywood does not have its own municipal government, but does have an appointed official that serves as "
honorary mayor" for ceremonial purposes only. Currently, the "mayor" is
Johnny Grant. Since this is a non-elected, honorary position, Grant has held this position for decades.
[2]
History

Hollywood in 1885
In 1853, one
adobe hut stood on the site that became Hollywood. By 1870, an agricultural community flourished in the area with thriving crops.

Glen-Holly Hotel, first hotel in Hollywood, at the corner of what is now Yucca Street. It was built by Joakim Berg, a famous artist back in the 1890s.; 1890.
A locally popular etymology is that the name Hollywood traces to the ample stands of native
Toyon, or "California Holly," that cover the hillsides with clusters of bright red berries each winter. But this, and accounts of the name coming from imported
English holly then growing in the area, is not confirmed. The name Hollywood was coined by
H. J. Whitley,
[3] the Father of Hollywood. He and his wife Gigi came up with the name while on their honeymoon (from Margaret Virginia Whitley's memoir).
3 Another story refer the name to Harvey Wilcox who bought land in the area for development of homes. His wife Daeida met a women on a train who mentioned that she had named her Ohio summer home to Hollywood. Daeide who liked the name gave it to their new development. The name first appear on the Wilcox's map of the subdivision, filed to the county recorder on February 1, 1887.
[David Wallace, ''Lost Hollywood'', ISBN 0-312-26195-0]
By 1900, the community called Cahuenga also had a post office, a newspaper, a hotel and two markets, along with a population of 500. Los Angeles, with a population of 100,000 people at the time, lay seven miles (11 km) east through the citrus groves. A single-track
streetcar line ran down the middle of Prospect Avenue from Los Angeles, but service was infrequent and the trip took two hours. The old citrus fruit packing house would be converted into a livery stable, improving transportation for the inhabitants of Hollywood.

Hollywood Hotel, 1905
The first section of the famous
Hollywood Hotel, the first major hotel in Hollywood, was opened in 1902 by
H. J. Whitley, eager to sell residential lots among the lemon ranches then lining the foothills. Flanking the west side of Highland Avenue, the structure fronted on Prospect Avenue. Still a dusty, unpaved road, it was regularly graded and graveled.

The intersection of Hollywood and Highland, 1907
Hollywood was incorporated as a
municipality in 1903 . Among the town ordinances was one prohibiting the sale of
liquor except by
pharmacists and one outlawing the driving of cattle through the streets in herds of more than two hundred. In 1904, a new trolley car track running from Los Angeles to Hollywood up Prospect Avenue was opened. The system was called "the Hollywood boulevard." It cut travel time to and from Los Angeles drastically.
By 1910, because of an ongoing struggle to secure an adequate
water supply, the townsmen voted for Hollywood to be annexed into the City of Los Angeles, as the water system of the growing city had opened the
Los Angeles Aqueduct and was piping water down from the
Owens River in the
Owens Valley. Another reason for the vote was that Hollywood could have access to drainage through Los Angeles´ sewer system.
With annexation, the name of Prospect Avenue was changed to Hollywood Boulevard and all the street numbers in the new district changed. For example, 100 Prospect Avenue, at Vermont Avenue, became 6400 Hollywood Boulevard; and 100 Cahuenga Boulevard, at Hollywood Boulevard, changed to 1700 Cahuenga Boulevard.
Hollywood and the motion picture industry
Main articles: Cinema of the United States

Nestor Studios, Hollywood's first movie studio, 1913
In early 1910, director
D. W. Griffith was sent by the
Biograph Company to the west coast with his troupe consisting of actors
Blanche Sweet,
Lillian Gish,
Mary Pickford,
Lionel Barrymore, and others. They started filming on a vacant lot near Georgia Street in Downtown
Los Angeles. The Company decided to explore new territories and traveled several miles north to the little village Hollywood that was friendly and enjoyed the movie company filming there. Griffith then filmed the first movie ever shot in Hollywood called ''
In Old California'', a Biograph melodrama about Latino-Mexican occupied California in the 1800s. The movie company stayed there for months and made several films before returning to New York. After hearing about this wonderful place, in 1913 many movie-makers headed west. The first
feature film made in Hollywood, in 1914, was called "The Squaw Man", directed by Cecil B. DeMille. All the films made in Los Angeles from 1908 to 1913 were
short subjects. With this film, the Hollywood movie industry was "born". Through the
First World War it became the movie capital of the world. The oldest company still existing in Hollywood today was founded by William Horsley of Gower Gulch-based Nestor and Centaur films, who went on to create the Hollywood Film Laboratory, which is now called the Hollywood Digital Laboratory.

Hollywood movie studios, 1922
Modern Hollywood
On
January 22,
1947, the first commercial
television station west of the
Mississippi River,
KTLA, began operating in Hollywood. In December of that year, the first Hollywood movie production was made for TV, ''The Public Prosecutor''. And in the 1950s, music recording studios and offices began moving into Hollywood. Other businesses, however, continued to migrate to different parts of the Los Angeles area, primarily to
Burbank. Much of the movie industry remained in Hollywood, although the district's outward appearance changed.
In 1952,
CBS built
CBS Television City on the corner of Fairfax Avenue and
Beverly Boulevard on the former site of Gilmore Stadium. CBS's expansion into the
Fairfax District pushed the unofficial boundary of Hollywood further south than it had been. CBS's slogan for the shows taped there was "From Television City in Hollywood..."
During the early 50's the famous
Hollywood Freeway was constructed from
The Stack interchange in downtown Los Angeles, past the
Hollywood Bowl, up through
Cahuenga Pass and into the
San Fernando Valley. In the early days, streetcars ran up through the pass, on rails running along the central reservation of the highway.
The famous
Capitol Records building on
Vine Street just north of Hollywood Boulevard was built in 1956 . It is a recording studio not open to the public, but its unique circular design looks like a stack of 7-inch vinyl records.
The now derelict lot at the corner of Hollywood Boulevard and Serrano Avenue was once the site of the illustrious
Hollywood Professional School whose alumni reads like a Hollywood Who's Who of household "names". Many of these former child stars attended a "farewell" party at the commemorative
sealing of a time capsule buried on the lot.
The
Hollywood Walk of Fame was created in 1958 and the first star was placed in 1960 as a tribute to artists working in the entertainment industry. Honorees receive a star based on career and lifetime achievements in motion pictures, live
theatre,
radio,
television, and or
music, as well as their charitable and civic contributions.
In 1985, the
Hollywood Boulevard Commercial and Entertainment District was officially listed in the
National Register of Historic Places protecting important buildings and ensuring that the significance of Hollywood's past would always be a part of its future.
In June 1999, the long-awaited Hollywood extension of the
Los Angeles County Metro Rail Red Line subway opened, running from
Downtown Los Angeles to the
Valley, with stops along Hollywood Boulevard at Western Avenue, Vine Street and Highland Avenue.

The Kodak Theater.
The
Kodak Theatre, which opened in 2001 on Hollywood Boulevard at Highland Avenue, where the historic
Hollywood Hotel once stood, has become the new home of the
Oscars.
While motion picture production still occurs within the Hollywood district, most major studios are actually located elsewhere in the Los Angeles region.
Paramount Studios is the only major studio still physically located within Hollywood. Other studios in the district include the aforementioned Jim Henson (formerly Chaplin) Studios, Sunset Gower Studios, and Raleigh Studios.
While Hollywood and the adjacent neighborhood of
Los Feliz served as the initial homes for all of the early television stations in the Los Angeles
market, most have now relocated to other locations within the metropolitan area.
KNBC began this exodus in 1962 when it moved to from the former
NBC Radio City Studios located at the northeast corner of Sunset Boulevard and Vine Street to
NBC Studios in Burbank.
KTTV pulled up stakes in 1996 from its former home at
Metromedia Square in the 5700 block of Sunset Boulevard to relocate to the
20th Century Fox lot in
Century City.
KABC-TV moved from its original location at ABC Television Center (now branded
The Prospect Studios) just east of Hollywood to
Glendale in 2000, though the Los Angeles bureau of ABC News still resides at Prospect. After being purchased by 20th Century Fox in 2001,
KCOP left its former home in the 900 block of North La Brea Avenue to join KTTV on the Fox lot. The
CBS Corporation-owned
duopoly of
KCBS-TV and
KCAL-TV moved from its longtime home at
CBS Columbia Square in the 6100 block of Sunset Boulevard to a new facility at
CBS Studio Center in
Studio City.
KTLA, located in the 5800 block of Sunset Boulevard, and
KCET, in the 4400 block of Sunset Boulevard, are the last television stations with Hollywood addresses.
Additionally it has once served as the home of nearly every radio station in
Los Angeles, all of which have later moved into other communities.
KNX was the last station to broadcast from Hollywood when it left
CBS Columbia Square for a studio in the
Miracle Mile in 2005.
In 2002, a number of Hollywood citizens began a campaign for the district to secede from Los Angeles and become, as it had been a century earlier, its own incorporated municipality. Secession supporters argued that the needs of their community were being ignored by the leaders of Los Angeles. In June of that year, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors placed secession referendums for both Hollywood and the
Valley on the ballots for a "citywide election." To pass, they required the approval of a majority of voters in the proposed new municipality as well as a majority of voters in all of Los Angeles. In the November election, both referendums failed by wide margins in the citywide vote.
Hollywood History Books
★
Nudelman, Robert &
Wanamaker, Marc. (2005) Historic Hollywood: An Illustrated History (Hardcover), Texas: Historical Pub Network. (ISBN 978-1893619463)
★
R. Jezek, George &
Wanamaker, Marc. (2003) Hollywood: Now and Then (Hardcover), California: George Ross Jezek Photography & Publishing. (ISBN 978-0970103611)
★
Gaelyn Whitley Keith. (2006) The Father of Hollywood: The True Story (Hardcover), Book Surge, An Amazon.com Company. (ISBN 1-4196-5387-3)
★
Gregory Paul Williams. (2005) The Story of Hollywood: An Illustrated History (Hardcover), BL Press LLC. (ISBN 0-9776299-0-2)
Runaways
One feature for Hollywood since the 1960s has been its attractiveness for desperate
runaways. Every year, hundreds of runaway adolescents leave their homes across
North America and the world and flock to Hollywood hoping to become
movie stars, as portrayed by the lyrics of the 1960s
Burt Bacharach song "Do You Know the Way to San Jose?" whose lyrics include the words: "All the stars / That never were / Are parking cars / And pumping gas." Such individuals soon discover that they have extremely slim chances of competing against professionally trained actors. Many of them end up sinking into
homelessness, which is a problem in Hollywood for adults as well as youth.
Some return home, while others linger in Hollywood and join the
prostitutes and
panhandlers lining its
boulevards; others go to
Skid Row in
Downtown Los Angeles; and yet others end up in the large
pornography industry in the
San Fernando Valley. This side of Hollywood was portrayed in
Jackson Browne's 1980 song, "Boulevard", whose lyrics include reference to a notorious hustler hangout of the 1970s, with the words: "Down at the Golden Cup / They set the young ones up / Under the neon lights / Selling day for night." This phenomenon is also portrayed in the books of
Charles Bukowski.
Richard Geib, a schoolteacher in the
Ojai Valley, recalled his experiences with Hollywood mentioning runaways and gang members as major presences in Hollywood
[1].
Revitalization
After many years of serious decline, Hollywood is now undergoing rapid
gentrification and revitalization with the goal of urban density in mind. Many new developments have been completed, and many more are planned, and several are centered on Hollywood Boulevard itself. In particular, the Hollywood & Highland complex, which is also the site of the Kodak Theater, has been a major catalyst for the redevelopment of the area. In addition, numerous trendy bars, clubs, and retail businesses have opened on or surrounding the boulevard, allowing it to become one of the main nighttime spots in all of Los Angeles. Many older buildings have also been converted to lofts and condominiums, and a W Hotel is planned at the famous intersection of Hollywood and Vine, which will serve to even further revitalize the area.
Hollywood neighborhoods & communities
★
Beachwood Canyon
★
Cahuenga Pass
★ Hollywood Downtown/Civic area
★
Hollywood Hills
★
★
Hollywood Heights
★
★
Laurel Canyon
★
★
Mount Olympus
★
★
Nichols Canyon
★
★
Outpost Estates
★
★
Sunset Hills
★
East Hollywood
★
★
Little Armenia
★
★
Thai Town
★
★
Virgil Village
★
Melrose District
★
Melrose Hill
★
Sierra Vista
★
Spaulding Square
★
Yucca Corridor
See also:
★
City of Beverly Hills
★
City of West Hollywood
★
★
Sunset Strip
Demographics
As of the census of 2000, there are 167,664 people in the Hollywood district. The racial makeup of the neighborhood is 42.82% White (non-Hispanic), 4.48% African American, 0.68% Native American, 8.98% Asian, 0.12% Pacific Islander, 22.23% from other races, and 6.76% from two or more races. 39.43% of the population are Hispanic or Latino of any race. The income per capita was estimated at $26,119, putting it ahead of
Burbank, California, and about the same as
Arcadia, California.
Education
Students who live in Hollywood are zoned to schools in the
Los Angeles Unified School District.
Elementary schools:
★ Vine Street Elementary School
★
Ramona Elementary School
★
Gardner Elementary School
★ Valley View Elementary School
★ Cheremoya Elementary School
Middle schools:
★
Bancroft Middle School
★
Le Conte Middle School
★
Taylor Middle School
Hollywood High School is the sole zoned public high school in Hollywood.
Christ the King Elementary School is a private school in the area.
For many years, the motion picture Industry had its own private
Industry-run institution for child actors, the
Hollywood Professional School.
Frances Howard Goldwyn – Hollywood Regional Branch of the
Los Angeles Public Library is in Hollywood.
Landmarks and interesting spots

Hollywood Bowl opening night 2005.

Grauman's Chinese Theater

The Ripley's Believe It or Not! Odditorium

Crossroads of the World
★
Amoeba Music
★
Barnsdall Park
★ Blessed Sacrament Church
★
Bob Hope Square (Hollywood and Vine)
★
Capitol Records
★
CBS Columbia Square
★
CeFiore
★ Charlie Chaplin Studios
★
Cinerama Dome
★
Crossroads of the World
★
El Capitan Theatre
★
Frederick's of Hollywood
★ Frolic Room
★
Gower Gulch
★
Grauman's Chinese Theatre
★
Grauman's Egyptian Theatre
★
Griffith Observatory
★
Griffith Park
★
Hollywood Athletic Club
★
Hollywood Bowl
★
Hollywood Forever Cemetery
★
Hollywood and Highland
★
Hollywood Heritage Museum
★
Hollywood High School
★
Hollywood Palace Theatre
★
Hollywood Palladium
★
Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel
★
Hollywood Sign
★
Hollywood Walk of Fame
★
Hollywood Wax Museum
★ Janes House
★ The Jester Comedy Club
★
KCBS-TV
★
KCET
★
Knickerbocker Hotel
★
Kodak Theatre
★
KTLA-TV
★ Lake Hollywood
★
Lasky-DeMille Barn
★
The Magic Castle
★ Masonic Temple
★ Max Factor Building
★
Musso & Frank Grill
★
Pantages Theatre
★
Paramount Studios
★ Pig 'N Whistle
★
Pink's Hot Dogs
★
The Prospect Studios (ABC Television Center)
★
Ripley's Believe It Or Not! Odditorium
★
Rock 'n' Roll Ralphs
★
Rock Walk
★
Runyon Canyon Park
★
Shrine Auditorium
★ Sunset and Vine apartment complex
★ Sunset Gower Studios
★ The Taylor Hughes Shrine
★
Yamashiro Restaurant
Special events
★ Annual
Hollywood Christmas Parade: The 2006 parade on Nov 26th, was the 75th edition of the Christmas Parade. The parade goes down
Hollywood Boulevard and is broadcast in the LA area on
KTLA, and around the United States on Tribune-owned stations and the
WGN superstation.
[2]
★
CINECON Classic Film Festival & Exposition (Annual timing is five days --connected to Labor Day weekend) Classic film memorabilia, expert presentations, author signings, and movie screenings with celebrity guests.
See also
★
History of cinema
★
Cinema of the United States
★
List of movie-related topics
★
List of Hollywood novels
★
List of movies set in Los Angeles
★
List of television shows set in Los Angeles
★
West Hollywood, California
★ ''(Most Hollywood celebrities are buried locally).''
★
Hollywood Principle
Other film production locations
★
Hollywood-inspired names
References
1. LA Almanac
2. Scott, Allen J. "Hollywood: The Place, the Industry," Princeton University Press, 2005.
3. Gaelyn Whitley Keith, ''The Father of Hollywood: The True Story'', ISBN 1419641948
External links
★
Hollywood Chamber of Commerce
★
Hollywood Historic Sites
★
Hollywood Visitors Guide