Fifty years ago, the Hollywood Walk of Fame began as a gimmick to lure visitors to a Los Angeles neighborhood that had fallen on hard times in the post-World War II years.
In the same year that “Ben Hur” won the Academy Award for best picture, Hollywood leaders and actors gathered near the corner of Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street to install the first pink terrazzo stars rimmed with bronze to launch a $1.2 million venture that some skeptics called excessive.
Now, 2,400 stars later, business groups and local boosters say the sidewalk attraction has played a crucial role in making tourism the biggest industry in Los Angeles County, drawing nearly 26 million visitors and $14 billion a year.
The walk itself — which attracts an estimated 10 million visitors annually to an 18-block stretch lining Hollywood and Vine — helps make Hollywood and Los Angeles a destination rather than a brief stop on the way to bigger tourism hubs such as Disneyland or Las Vegas.
“The Hollywood Walk of Fame is an important anchor for Los Angeles and Hollywood,” said Eliot Sekular, a spokesman for Universal Studios Hollywood, another top Los Angeles tourist stop. “It establishes critical mass in Hollywood.”
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