There are concert venues, and then there is the Hollywood Bowl. Nestled into the gentle curves of the Santa Monica Mountains in the heart of Hollywood, this iconic outdoor amphitheater has been pulling people up into the hills since 1922 — and a century-plus later, it still feels like the best-kept secret in Los Angeles, even though the whole world knows about it. That paradox is part of its magic.
My first visit was on a warm July evening, and I remember thinking I had stumbled into some kind of dream. The sky was deepening from orange to violet behind the stage’s famous nested-arch shell, the Los Angeles Philharmonic was tuning up, and all around me, people were spreading out checkered tablecloths, uncorking bottles of wine, and arranging charcuterie boards on their little box seat tables like this was the most civilized thing in the world. Because it is.
That’s one of the Bowl’s best-kept pleasures: you can bring your own food and drink. Real food. A proper picnic. There is something almost rebelliously civilized about sitting under the open California sky, eating cheese and grapes, and listening to world-class music drift up over 17,000 people. Whether you’re in the reserved box seats close to the stage or up on the grassy bench sections near the top, the acoustics are remarkable — and the view of the hills framing the stage becomes genuinely cinematic once the lights come up.
The programming at the Bowl runs from June through September and covers an extraordinary range. One weekend it’s John Williams conducting a film music night — think soaring Star Wars themes while fireworks burst overhead. The next it’s a legendary jazz artist, or a rock icon, or a full staging of a beloved movie with live orchestral accompaniment. The annual Tchaikovsky Spectacular, complete with real cannons for the 1812 Overture, is the kind of evening people talk about for years. Check the schedule well ahead of time because the beloved shows sell out fast.
Getting there is part of the experience, too. The Bowl runs park-and-ride shuttles from several Metro stations and parking lots around the area, and using them is genuinely worth it — the post-show traffic on Highland Avenue can test anyone’s patience. Arrive early, grab a glass of something cold from one of the on-site vendors, find your seat, and let the anticipation build.
The Hollywood Bowl sits at 2301 N Highland Avenue in Hollywood, just minutes from the 101 freeway. Tickets range from very affordable bench seats to premium box packages, meaning this is one of those rare world-class experiences that doesn’t require a world-class budget. On a warm Los Angeles evening, with the stars appearing one by one above the hills and the orchestra swelling below, it’s hard to imagine anywhere on earth you’d rather be.