Arts and entertainment Capitol Hill has a reputation as a bastion of musical culture in Seattle and is the neighborhood most closely associated with the
grunge scene from the early 1990s, although most of the best-known music venues of that era were actually located slightly outside the neighborhood. The music scene has transformed since those days and now a variety of genres (electronica, rock, punk, folk, salsa, hip hop and trance) are represented. The neighborhood figures prominently in nightlife and entertainment, with many bars hosting live music and with numerous
fringe theatres. Most of the Hill's major thoroughfares are dotted with
coffeehouses,
taverns and bars, and residences cover the gamut from modest motel-like studio apartment buildings to some of the city's most historic
mansions, with the two types sometimes shoulder-to-shoulder. Capitol Hill is also home to two of the city's best-known movie theaters, both of which are part of the
Landmark Theatres chain. Both theaters are architectural conversions of private meeting halls: the
Harvard Exit (now closed permanently) in the former home of the Woman's Century Club (converted in the early 1970s) and the Egyptian Theatre, in a former
Masonic lodge (converted in the mid-1980s). There is also Seattle's only
cinematheque, the Northwest Film Forum, which in addition to screening films, teaches classes on filmmaking and produces film alongside Seattle's burgeoning filmmaking community. These theaters respectively host showings for the
Seattle International Film Festival (SIFF) and the
Seattle Lesbian & Gay Film Festival every year. The Broadway Performance Hall, located on the campus of
Seattle Central College (SCC), also hosts a variety of lectures, performances, and films. The cast of
MTV's
Real World Seattle: Bad Blood lived in and were filmed in Capitol Hill during 2016. Since 1997, Capitol Hill has hosted the
Capitol Hill Block Party annually in late July, an outdoor music festival that occurs on Pike Street between Broadway and 12th Ave and Union and Pine Street.
A "mystery soda machine", dispensing unusual drink flavors, was present in Capitol Hill from the late 1990s to 2018. Allison Williams of
Seattle Met noted several years after the machine was removed, that the neighborhood of Capitol Hill now has a more
corporate culture and may no longer be "weird enough for a persistent enigma." Multiple hip-hop songs have been written about Capitol Hill and its nightlife. Seattle rapper
Sir Mix-a-Lot, who hails from the nearby
Central District, recorded his hit single "
Posse on Broadway" about a night out on Capitol Hill.
Macklemore, who grew up in the neighborhood near Broadway, has written multiple songs about Capitol Hill, including 2005's "Claiming the City" (a serious track addressing
gentrification) and 2013's
"Cowboy Boots" (an ode to the neighborhood's nightlife).
Coffeehouses Besides the large Seattle-based chains—
Starbucks,
Seattle's Best Coffee (now owned by Starbucks), and
Tully's Coffee—Capitol Hill has been home to some of the city's most prominent locally owned coffeehouses. David Schomer's
Espresso Vivace on Broadway is credited as the birthplace of artisanal
coffee culture and
latte art in Seattle and the United States as a whole. The neighborhood is also considered a test market for coffeehouses by Starbucks Corporation, which placed two
stealth Starbucks stores on Capitol Hill in 2009 and 2011 that were later closed by 2019. ==LGBTQ community==