Event Details

event-img
Alan Eichler & Chris Isaacson Present
The Marvelous MARILYN MAYE (Grammy Award-nominated Legendary Jazz Vocalist)
Tue | Dec 3 Doors: 7:00 pm | Show: 8:30 pm PST
Catalina Jazz Club - Hollywood, CA
$56.88 - $133.94 Buy Tickets

About This Event

MARILYN MAYE, the Grammy Award-nominated legendary Jazz Vocalist, returns to Catalina Jazz Club, #Hollywood! Join us. 

LIVE! Tues, Dec 3rd at 8:30pm. Dinner begins at 7:00pm. 

For One Night Only on Sunset Boulevard, Ms. Marilyn Maye will perform beloved Jazz Classics, treasures from the Great American Songbook, and fan favorites from her legendary albums and Late Night performances! This is NOT to be missed!!!

***

In the years since Marilyn Maye first appeared in the spotlight as a tiny pre-teen vocalist in a series of amateur contests in Topeka, Kansas, she has received an endless stream of kudos. The late Johnny Carson called her “Super Singer.” Ella Fitzgerald dubbed her “The greatest white female singer in the world.” The Houston Chronicle termed her “A National Treasure.” And the prestigious Smithsonian Institution chose her recording of “Too Late Now” (from her RCA Lamp Is Low album) for inclusion in its Best Performers of the Best Compositions of the 20th Century permanent collection, along with such other singing greats as Billie Holiday, Frank Sinatra and Judy Garland.

Tickets: $50-75, VIP & Artist Circle Seating Available.  Ticket online at CatalinaJazzClub.com or TicketWeb.com 

Catalina Jazz Club 
6725 West Sunset Blvd.
Hollywood, CA 90028

Proudly presented by Alan Eichler & Chris Isaacson Presents

*Tickets purchased online receive priority seating.
*Single Entree or Drink minimums apply for all tickets

***

"In the opening-night performance of her new show at Cafe Carlyle, in which she jazzed up nearly 30 vintage show tunes, her singing was robust even for a woman of 50. Ms. Maye has the remarkable ability to transform upbeat sloganeering into rousing affirmation, infused with such certainty and sense of purpose that she can penetrate the armor and melt the heart of the most hardened cynics."
- Stephen Holden, New York Times