EVOLVE Business and Professional Magazine February 2019 | Page 16

by Charles Newbery In Volusia County, the beach is a big attraction, but so too is the arts and culture scene. From the historic Peabody Auditorium to the Daytona Turkey Run – arts and culture is a significant contributor to the County’s economy. With continued “out of the box” thinking from local arts leadership, the arts will continue to be a creative, economic force. I n 1919, a 2,200-seat concert venue opened in Daytona Beach, one of the largest in central Florida. While far from the cultural centers of London, New York and Paris, it attracted some of the world’s greatest artists, including the Russian ballet dancer Rudolph Nureyev and pianist Sergei Rachmaninoff. Destroyed by fire in 1946, it was rebuilt as the Peabody Auditorium, designed after the venerated Carnegie Hall in New York, with the acoustics on par, a lure for musicians and singers. The auditorium reopened in 1949 and was named after Simon J. Peabody, a businessman who lived in Daytona Beach from 1907 to 1933 and founded the original venue on land he donated with the aim of bringing the arts and culture to the beach city. It has. Elvis Presley, Louie Armstrong and Frank Sinatra, as well as Broadway musicals like Chicago Museum of Arts and Sciences (MOAS) Giant Ground Sloth | 16 | EVOLVE BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL MAGAZINE