From Mausoleums to Movies: The Story Behind Hollywood Forever’s Iconic Screenings & Concerts

From Mausoleums to Movies: The Story Behind Hollywood Forever’s Iconic Screenings & Concerts

We tend to think of cemeteries as places of rest,— where we go when it’s over or to visit loved ones. Hollywood has its own place of rest— the Hollywood Forever Cemetery. But here’s the catch: this cemetery is host to a series of events such as movie watching, concerts and party events. We thought it might be time to take a deeper look into the movie screenings as summer has arrived as we now outdoor more than ever.

 A Resting Place for Legends

Founded in 1899, Hollywood Forever Cemetery is one of the oldest cemeteries in Los Angeles, resting alongside Paramount Studios. This sacred ground is home to stars like Judy Garland, Douglas Fairbanks, Rudolph Valentino, and Dee Dee Ramone, among many others. Once a glamorous landmark, the cemetery suffered neglect and bankruptcy by the 1990s, its marble crumbling and koi ponds drained. That changed in 1998, when a pair of visionaries—Tyler Cassity and his brother Brent—bought the property with an idea that startled traditionalists and delighted culture lovers: turn the cemetery into a place for the living, too.

Enter Cinespia: Cult Classics Among the Headstones

In 2002, a young DJ and film aficionado named John Wyatt pitched a bold idea to Cassity: outdoor movie screenings on the cemetery’s Fairbanks Lawn. That first summer, Cinespia was born, kicking off with a screening of Strangers on a Train for a few hundred curious Angelenos. It was eerie. It was irreverent. And it worked.

Today, Cinespia screenings draw thousands with curated cult films, DJs spinning vinyl, food trucks, vintage photo booths, and a picnic-friendly vibe that’s become a summer ritual. Movies like The Big Lebowski, Clueless, and La La Land now grace the very mausoleum walls that once sheltered silver screen royalty.

 Rocking the Masonic Lodge

But movies weren’t enough. The Cassitys restored the Masonic Lodge, a stunning Spanish Revival building tucked into the grounds, transforming it into an intimate venue for live concerts, literary readings, and spoken word performances. Acts like Father John Misty, Karen O, Phoebe Bridgers, and even Finn Wolfhard have performed here in candlelit intimacy few LA venues can match.

 The Philosophy: A Living Cemetery

Cassity’s vision is not about disrespect, but reinvigorating reverence. In his words, “People don’t come here because they’re morbid. They come here because they want to remember—through culture, through experience.” Hollywood Forever doesn’t pretend death doesn’t exist—it invites us to commune with it creatively, communally.

 What It Means to LA

In a city obsessed with reinvention, Hollywood Forever is the rare space that allows nostalgia, innovation, and irreverence to coexist. It’s where memory becomes entertainment, and where every summer screening feels like a séance in celebration of the past.

So next time you’re there—blanket down, wine poured, classic movie rolling—remember that you’re part of an experiment in memory, magic, and the weird wonder of Los Angeles itself.

For more information: https://hollywoodforever.com/culture/

Jun 28 Casablanca 9 pm ~$30
Jul 4–5 Top Gun & La La Land + fireworks 9 pm ~$52
Jul 12 It 9 pm ~$30
Jul 19 Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion 9 pm ~$30
Jul 26 The Addams Family 9 pm ~$30

Tickets start at $29.99–30; parking adds $24–36

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