The Mortimer Levitt Foundation was created in 1963 by Mortimer Levitt, who set aside assets to support music, dance, the arts, educational institutions, nonprofits with which he was involved, and the Levitt Pavilion for the Performing Arts.
Mortimer had a long love affair with outdoor music. He grew up in an era when almost every community had Sunday afternoon concerts on the village green. Mortimer enjoyed outdoor music first in Prospect Park, then several times a day in Luna Park, in addition to summer afternoons on Manhattan Beach, a private beach east of Coney Island. Mortimer loved listening to music under the stars. To him, it was magic. On his 90th birthday, Mortimer sold the company he had owned for 60 years and decided to replace his 82 custom shirt shops with Levitt Pavilions around the country.
| Mortimer Levitt passed away in 2005 at the age of 98. The Mortimer Levitt Foundation lives on to support the Levitt Pavilions for the Performing Arts that Mortimer started. His wife, Annemarie Levitt, is now president of the Mortimer Levitt Foundation and his daughter, Elizabeth Levitt Hirsch, serves as vice president and develops the expansion of the Levitt Pavilion program. |
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Since the first Levitt Pavilion for the Performing Arts opened in 1974, families in Westport, Conn., have enjoyed a 35-year tradition of experiencing free concerts under the stars. Generous start-up grants from the Mortimer Levitt Foundation also have helped restore and establish two performance pavilions in California, in Pasadena and Los Angeles, as well as a pavilion in Harrisburg, Penn. An additional Levitt Pavilion to opened in fall 2008 in Memphis. All Levitt Pavilions hold steadfast to their core value of presenting a minimum of 50 free performances that purposefully connect families with neighbors.
All it took was one visit by the Levitt Foundation for them to know that Arlington was the perfect place for a Texas Levitt Pavilion. Local officials and dedicated community volunteers agreed. The Mortimer Levitt Foundation committed $250,000 towards the construction of the Levitt Pavilion as well as $100,000 a year for five years. In just a few short months, Arlington gathered support in the form of $1.2 million to make the Levitt Pavilion for the Performing Arts and Founders Plaza the crowning jewel in the revitalization of Downtown Arlington and a much needed community gathering place for everyone – all ages, all ethnicities, all backgrounds and all income levels.