Hollywood Is a District of Los Angeles Located Northwest of Downtown Los Angeles and West of Glendale. Due to Its Fame and Cult
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Hollywood is a district of Los Angeles located northwest of Downtown Los Angeles and west of Glendale. Due to its fame and cultural identity as the historical center of movie studios, the word "Hollywood"is often used as a metonym of American cinema, and it is also often used to denote the largest district of Los Angeles. His two nicknames "StarStruck Town" and "Tinseltown"refer to the interrelationship between the American film industry in Hollywood. Today, however, most production companies are scattered in other nearby neighborhoods, such as Westside, but several of the major studios such as editing, visual effects or post-production are still in Hollywood, such as studios Paramount Pictures. In the 1880s, a couple from Kansas, Harvey Henderson Wilcox (who made his fortune in real estate despite the loss of the use of his legs due to typhoid fever) and his wife Daeida Wilcox Beveridge, decided to relocate from Topeka to Los Angeles. In 1886, Wilcox bought 0.6 km2 of land in the countryside west of the city on the foothills of Cahuenga Pass. It Daeida Wilcox who chose the name "Hollywood" for the property, referring to a colony of German immigrants named and located in Ohio. She became acquainted during a train journey to the east, talking to a woman there. The pleasant sound of the word itself, the ranch was so named. The most famous avenue in Hollywood is Hollywood Boulevard. It extends from east to west from Vermont Avenue to Sunset Boulevard. It houses not only the Walk of Fame (the famous star with the names of stars), but also the Grauman's Chinese Theatre and the Kodak Theater which is awarded every year the Academy Awards. Front of this building, many celebrities have also left their mark by their footprints and hands and an autograph to Sid Grauman, owner of the theater. Chloé & Evy.