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Hollywood, Los Angeles

Hollywood is a neighborhood in the central region of Los Angeles County, California, mostly within the city of Los Angeles. Its name has come to be a shorthand reference for the U.S. film industry and the people associated with it. Many notable film studios, such as Sony Pictures, Walt Disney Studios, Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros. and Universal Pictures, are located near or in Hollywood.

For the U.S. motion picture industry, see Cinema of the United States. For other uses, see Hollywood.

Hollywood

United States

1910

Hollywood, an estate in Illinois

354 ft (108 m)

Hollywood was incorporated as a municipality in 1903.[2][3] The northern and eastern parts of the neighborhood were consolidated with the City of Los Angeles in 1910. Soon thereafter a prominent film industry emerged, having developed first on the East Coast. Eventually it became the most recognizable in the world.[4][5] Los Angeles city neighborhoods that make up part of the Hollywood area are North Hollywood, East Hollywood, and the independent municipality of West Hollywood.

Geography[edit]

According to the Mapping L.A. project of The Los Angeles Times, Hollywood is flanked by Hollywood Hills to the north, Los Feliz to the northeast, East Hollywood or Virgil Village to the east, Larchmont and Hancock Park to the south, Fairfax to the southwest, West Hollywood to the west, and Hollywood Hills West to the northwest.[34]


Street limits of the Hollywood neighborhood are: north, Hollywood Boulevard from La Brea Avenue to the east boundary of Wattles Garden Park and Franklin Avenue between Bonita and Western avenues; east, Western Avenue; south, Melrose Avenue, and west, La Brea Avenue or the West Hollywood city line.[35][36]


In 1918, H. J. Whitley commissioned architect A. S. Barnes to design Whitley Heights as a Mediterranean-style village on the hills above Hollywood Boulevard. It became the first celebrity community.[37][38][39]


Other areas within Hollywood are Franklin Village, Little Armenia, Spaulding Square, Thai Town,[35] and Yucca Corridor.[40][41]

Failed trademarking attempt[edit]

In 1994, Hollywood, Alabama, and ten other towns named Hollywood successfully fought an attempt by the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce to trademark the name and force same-named communities to pay royalties to it.[42]

Radio and television[edit]

KNX was the last radio station to broadcast from Hollywood before it left CBS Columbia Square for a studio in the Miracle Mile in 2005.[51]


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 Public Prosecutor became the first network television series to be filmed in Hollywood. Television stations KTLA and KCET, both on Sunset Boulevard, are the last broadcasters (television or radio) with Hollywood addresses, but KCET has since sold its studios to the Church of Scientology on Sunset, and plans to move to another location. KNBC moved in 1962 from the former NBC Radio City Studios at the northeast corner of Sunset Boulevard and Vine Street to NBC Studios in Burbank. KTTV moved in 1996 from its former home at Metromedia Square on Sunset Boulevard to West Los Angeles, and KCOP left its home on La Brea Avenue to join KTTV at the modern-day Fox Television Center. KCBS-TV and KCAL-TV moved from their longtime home at CBS Columbia Square on Sunset Boulevard to a new facility at CBS Studio Center in Studio City.

Day School, private, 7300 Hollywood Boulevard

Temple Israel of Hollywood

Gardner Street Elementary School, , 7450 Hawthorne Avenue

LAUSD

Selma Avenue Elementary School, LAUSD, 6611 Selma Avenue

Grant Elementary School, 1530 North Wilton Place

Young Hollywood, private elementary, 1547 North McCadden Place

LAUSD, 1521 North Highland Avenue[63]

Hollywood High School

Hollywood Community Adult School, LAUSD, 1521 North Highland Avenue

School, private elementary, 6641 Sunset Boulevard

Blessed Sacrament

LAUSD, 1309 North Wilton Place

Helen Bernstein High School

Richard A. Alonzo Community Day School, LAUSD, 5755 Fountain Avenue

Beverly Hills RC School, private elementary, 6550 Fountain Avenue

Hollywood Schoolhouse, private elementary, 1233 North McCadden Place

Middle School, LAUSD, 1316 North Bronson Avenue

Joseph LeConte

Hollywood Primary Center, LAUSD elementary, 1115 Tamarind Avenue

Santa Monica Boulevard Community Charter School, 1022 North Van Ness Avenue

Vine Street Elementary School, LAUSD, 955 North Vine Street

Hubert Howe Bancroft Middle School, LAUSD, 929 North Las Palmas Avenue

elementary, 815 North El Centro Avenue

Larchmont Charter School

Cheder Menachem, private elementary, 1606 South La Cienega Boulevard

Annual events[edit]

The Academy Awards are held in late February/early March (since 2004) of each year, honoring the preceding year in film. Prior to 2004, they were held in late March/early April. Since 2002, the Oscars have been held at their new home at the Dolby (formerly Kodak) Theater at Hollywood Boulevard and Highland Avenue.


The annual Hollywood Christmas Parade: The 2006 parade on Nov 26 was the 75th edition of the Christmas Parade. The parade goes down Hollywood Boulevard and is broadcast in the Los Angeles area on KTLA, and around the United States on Tribune-owned stations and the WGN superstation.[64]


The Hollywood Half Marathon takes place in April (since 2012) of each year, to raise funds and awareness for local youth homeless shelters. The event includes a Half Marathon, 10K, 5K, and Kids Fun Run along Hollywood Blvd.