Tournament of Roses Parade Pasadena is home to the Tournament of Roses Parade, held each year on January 1 (or on January 2, if the 1st falls on a Sunday). The first parade was held in 1890 and was originally sponsored by the
Valley Hunt Club, a Pasadena
social club. The motivation for having the parade was, as member Professor Charles F. Holder said, "In New York, people are buried in snow. Here our flowers are blooming and our oranges are about to bear. Let's hold a festival to tell the world about our paradise." By 1895, the festivities had outgrown the Valley Hunt Club, and the
Tournament of Roses Association was formed to take charge of the parade. The Rose Parade, as it is familiarly known, traditionally features elaborate floats, bands and equestrian units. According to the organizers, "Every inch of every float must be covered with flowers, or other natural materials, such as leaves, seeds, or bark. On average a float requires about 100,000 flowers and greenery. Volunteer workers swarm over the floats in the days after Christmas, their hands and clothes covered with glue and petals." The most perishable flowers are placed in small vials of water, which are placed onto the float individually. Over the almost 3 hours of the parade, floats, and participants travel over The Rose Parade is satirized by the popular
Doo Dah Parade, an annual event that originated in Old Pasadena in 1978, and soon gained national notoriety. ''
Reader's Digest'' named the Doo Dah Parade "America's Best Parade", and was a recent feature in
50 Places You Must Visit Before You Die!. but the parade is now held in January. In 2011, after 33 years in Pasadena, the parade moved to East Pasadena for the first time. The Tournament of Roses also auditions local female high school students to be part of the Rose Court. There are in total 7 candidates that advance to the Rose Court, and one is chosen to be the Rose Queen; the others to be the Rose Princesses. The Rose Court's main goal is to support local communities and local stores. They visit small stores owned by local residents to boost the activity of the area and to keep them in the current flow of the economics. During the Rose Parade, the Rose Court members are also on a float, going through the parade together with the line of other paraders. The Rose Court princesses also represent their own local communities and the high school that they attend.
Rose Bowl Game The
Rose Bowl, a
National Historic Landmark, is host of the first and most famous
college football postseason
bowl game, the
Tournament of Roses Rose Bowl Game, every New Year's Day. In 1895, the Tournament of Roses Association was formed to take charge of the parade. In 1902, the association declared that a football game would be added to the day's events. This was the first post-season college football game to be played on New Year's Day and is known as, "The Grandaddy of Them All"; many other football stadiums followed suit. After two decades, the game outgrew its original facility, and a new stadium was constructed in the Arroyo Seco area. The new stadium hosted its first New Year's Day football game in 1923. It was soon christened "The Rose Bowl", as was
the game itself.
Performing arts The legendary
Pasadena Playhouse, the State Theater of California, is a member supported theater company that celebrated their centennial season in 2018. The theater puts on five shows a year. In 1937, the Pasadena Playhouse established a record as the only
theatre in the United States to have staged the entire
Shakespearean canon. Today, the Playhouse is known for their innovative productions. The
Pasadena Symphony, founded in 1928, offers several concerts a year at the
Ambassador Auditorium and the Pasadena Pops plays at the
Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden. The Civic Center also holds a few traveling
Broadway shows each year. Boston Court Performing Arts Center, opened in 2003, is near Lake and Colorado. Its resident theatre company, the award-winning The Theatre @ Boston Court, presents four productions a year. Music at the Court presents numerous music concerts each year, ranging from classical to
jazz. The Friends of the Levitt organization presents a free summer concert series in Memorial Park, with the 2008 summer season marking its sixth year. Beckman Auditorium and other venues on the Caltech campus present a wide range of performing arts, lectures, films, classes and entertainment events, primarily during the academic year. For more than ten years, twice annually Pasadena's cultural institutions have opened their doors for free during ArtNight Pasadena, offering the public a rich sampling of quality art, artifacts and music within the city. This has evolved into the yearly PasadenART Weekend, a three-day citywide event which, as of 2007, encompasses ArtNight, ArtWalk, ArtHeritage, ArtMarket, and ArtPerformance, a vibrant outdoor music event showcasing emerging and nationally recognized talent. Free concerts take place on multiple stages throughout Old Pasadena.
Ambassador Auditorium was built under the guidance of
Herbert W. Armstrong as both a facility to be used by the
Worldwide Church of God for religious services and as a concert hall for public performances celebrating the performing arts. In 2007, the native Pasadena band
Ozma reunited and produced the album
Pasadena in tribute to the city. The album photos and artwork were shot at the
Colorado Street Bridge. The 1960s song "
The Little Old Lady from Pasadena" parodies a popular Southern California image of Pasadena as home to a large population of aged eccentrics. In the song,
Jan and Dean sing of an elderly lady who drives a powerful "
Super Stock Dodge"
muscle car and is "the terror of Colorado Boulevard". The
Dead Kennedys paid a tribute to this archetypal song in the track "Buzzbomb From Pasadena" in the album
Give Me Convenience or Give Me Death. Pasadena was also the location of the 2012 film
Project X.
Visual arts A number of artists of national repute, such as
Guy Rose,
Alson S. Clark,
Marion Wachtel and
Ernest A. Batchelder, of the
Arts and Crafts Movement, made Pasadena their home in the early twentieth century. The formation of the
California Art Club,
Stickney Memorial Art School (later known as Pasadena Arts Institute) and the
Pasadena Society of Artists heralded the city's emergence as a regional center for the visual arts.
Museums and galleries Pasadena is home to a number of art museums and public galleries, including the
Norton Simon Museum. The museum's collections include European paintings, sculpture, and tapestry; sculpture from
Southern Asia; and an extensive
sculpture garden. The museum also has the
contemporary art collection of its predecessor, the Pasadena Museum of Art, which focused on
modern and contemporary art before being taken over by Simon in the early 1970s. Preserving and sharing the rich history and culture of Pasadena and its adjacent communities is the
Pasadena Museum of History. Located on a campus of , it has gardens, a history center, the Finnish Folk Art Museum, the Curtin House, and the Fenyes Mansion, a 1906
Beaux Arts-style architectural residence and a Pasadena Cultural Heritage Landmark. The Pacific Asia Museum, with a garden courtyard in its center, features art from the many countries and cultures of Asia. The nearby
Pasadena Museum of California Art (recently closed) hosts changing exhibitions of work by historical and contemporary California artists. The
Armory Center for the Arts has an extensive exhibition program as well as serving as a center for art education for all ages. Art Center College of Design offers exhibitions at its Williamson Gallery, as well as frequent displays of student work. Pasadena City College has an art gallery that shows work of professionals as part of their annual artist-in-residence program, as well as exhibiting work by students and faculty. The
Huntington Library and Botanical Gardens, with painting and sculpture galleries, is adjacent to Pasadena in the city of
San Marino. The innovative
Kidspace Children's Museum is located in
Brookside Park.
Literature Red Hen Press, one of the largest independent literary publishers on the US west coast, is located in Pasadena. The press publishes over twenty titles of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction each year as well as a biannual literary magazine called The Los Angeles Review. In 2002
David Ebershoff published the novel
Pasadena. The novel won praise for its accurate recreation of Pasadena before World War II.
Bungalow Heaven Bungalow Heaven is a neighborhood of 800 small Craftsman homes built from 1900 to 1930. Many of these homes are still occupied. Much of the area became a landmark district in 1989, and annual historic home tours have been conducted since that designation. Bungalow Heaven's borders are Washington Boulevard to the north,
Orange Grove Boulevard to the south, Mentor Avenue to the west, and Chester Avenue to the east. The neighborhood is usually extended to Lake Avenue to the west and Hill Avenue to the east. Famed architects
Greene and Greene built several of their Japanese-inspired bungalows in Pasadena, including the
Gamble House; the style of the homes in Bungalow Heaven show the effects of their success.
Orange Grove Boulevard The
Norton Simon Museum is at the intersection of Orange Grove and Colorado Boulevards. This corner is the official start of the Rose Parade route and the museum can be quite clearly seen every year during the parade television broadcast. Orange Grove Boulevard is one of several exclusive residential districts in Pasadena, and has been a home for the rich and famous since the early 20th century. Because of the number of landmark mansions, the street earned the name
Millionaire's Row, an appropriate sobriquet considering that the estates that once lined this spacious boulevard and the surrounding neighborhood read like a
Who's Who of American consumer products.
Historical estates The maker of
Wrigley's chewing gum,
William Wrigley Jr.'s, substantial home was offered to the city of Pasadena after Mrs. Wrigley's death in 1958, under the condition that their home would be the Rose Parade's permanent headquarters. The stately
Tournament House stands today, and serves as the headquarters for the Tournament of Roses Parade.
Adolphus Busch, co-founder of
Anheuser-Busch, brewer of
Budweiser beer, established the first of a series of
Busch Gardens in Pasadena. When Busch died at his Pasadena estate, his wife generously offered the property to the City of Pasadena, an offer the city inexplicably refused.
Henry Markham, who lived adjacent to Busch, was the 18th Governor of the state of California (1891–1895) and wrote
Pasadena: Its Early Years. The home of David Gamble, son of consumer product maker James Gamble of
Procter & Gamble, is located on the north end of Orange Grove Boulevard. The
Gamble House, an
American Craftsman masterpiece, was built in 1908, by architects
Charles and Henry Greene, as an exemplification of their
ultimate bungalow. It is open to the public as both an architectural conservancy and museum. The
Gamble House is a
California Historical Landmark and a National Historic Landmark on the
National Register of Historic Places. In 1966, it was deeded to the city of Pasadena in a mutual agreement with the
University of Southern California School of Architecture. Every year, two fifth-year USC architecture students live in the house full-time. The students change yearly. The home of Anna Bissell McCay, daughter of
carpet sweeper magnate Melville
Bissell, is a four-story
Victorian home, on the border of South Pasadena. Today the Bissell House is a
bed and breakfast.
Thaddeus S. C. Lowe's home of was on South Orange Grove. The house included a sixth story solarium which he converted into an observatory. Lowe was also a generous patron of the astronomical sciences. He started a water-gas company, founded the Citizens Bank of Los Angeles, built numerous ice plants, and purchased a Pasadena opera house. He also established the
Mount Lowe Railway in the mountains above Pasadena and eventually lost his fortune. The brilliant, but troubled, rocket scientist
John Whiteside Parsons sometimes shared his residence with other noteworthy people, including
L. Ron Hubbard, the founder of
Scientology. Parsons died in an explosion while testing a new rocket fuel in his Pasadena home laboratory, in 1952. ==Sports==