Showing posts with label Italian Hall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Italian Hall. Show all posts

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Profile: Marianna Gatto: Preserving the Italian American Soul of Los Angeles

 




Marianna Gatto: Preserving the Italian American Soul of Los Angeles

By Christopher Forte
The Italian Californian

For anyone who cares about Italian American history in California, the name Marianna Gatto deserves to be remembered with gratitude and respect. As Executive Director and Co-Founder of the Italian American Museum of Los Angeles, Marianna helped turn a long-neglected dream into a living cultural institution. Through her leadership, historic Italian Hall in Downtown Los Angeles became more than an old building. It became a museum, a gathering place, a classroom, and a monument to the Italian American story in Southern California.

The Board of Directors of the Italian American Museum of Los Angeles recently announced that Marianna Gatto will step down as Executive Director at the end of June 2026. Their announcement described her as “the heart and soul of IAMLA since its very beginning,” and that phrase seems exactly right. What is today a vibrant museum preserving and sharing the history of Italian Americans in Los Angeles began with vision, persistence, fundraising, advocacy, and a deep belief that this story mattered.

Marianna Gatto is a Los Angeles native, historian, author, educator, and museum leader. She has spent decades working in public history, nonprofit leadership, museums, education, preservation, and Italian American cultural advocacy. Her work with IAMLA began long before the museum opened its doors. She began working on the museum project in 2005, helped lead the campaign to restore historic Italian Hall, and became director of the museum in 2010. In 2016, the Italian American Museum of Los Angeles officially opened to the public inside the restored Italian Hall, a 1908 building that once served as a social and cultural center for the Italian community of Los Angeles.

Los Angeles is not always the first place people think of when they hear the words “Italian American history.” Many people think of New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, or New Orleans. But Italian Americans have been part of Los Angeles from its earliest history, and the Italian presence in Southern California is far deeper than many people realize. That is part of what makes Marianna’s work so important. She helped remind Los Angeles, and the wider Italian American community, that California has its own Italian American story.

I had the privilege of meeting Marianna once, years ago, when the Italian American Museum of Los Angeles was still under construction. She gave me a private tour of the future museum space, and even then I could sense the importance of what was being built. It was not just about walls, display cases, or old photographs. It was about memory. It was about restoring a place where our ancestors once gathered and giving future generations a way to understand who they were, what they built, and how they shaped Los Angeles.

That tour stayed with me. At the time, the museum was still a work in progress, but Marianna spoke about it with the kind of seriousness, knowledge, and passion that made it clear this was not simply a job for her. It was a calling.

Under her leadership, IAMLA opened its award-winning permanent exhibition and developed into one of the most important Italian American cultural institutions in the western United States. According to the Board’s announcement, Marianna led the campaign to restore Italian Hall, opened the museum in 2016, created the museum’s award-winning permanent exhibition, mounted eleven original temporary exhibitions, built a collection of thousands of photographs, artifacts, and oral histories, and helped offer public programs reaching audiences across Los Angeles and beyond.

That is a remarkable legacy.

Marianna has also authored and curated exhibitions exploring the Italian American experience from many angles: immigration, identity, women’s work, food, invention, entertainment, regional traditions, and the wider Italian diaspora. Her work has helped move Italian American history beyond nostalgia and into serious public history. It has shown that Italian Americans were not only participants in Los Angeles history, but builders of it.

Her scholarship also extends beyond the museum walls. She is the author of The Italian Americans of Los Angeles: A History, a major contribution to the study of Italian American life in Southern California. She has appeared in documentaries, spoken widely, consulted on historical projects, and helped educate the public about the Italian American experience in Los Angeles and beyond. In recognition of her work, the Italian Republic awarded her the title Cavaliere dell’Ordine della Stella d’Italia, Knight of the Order of the Star of Italy.

But perhaps her greatest achievement is that she helped give Los Angeles Italian Americans a mirror. For generations, Italian Americans in Southern California often lacked a central institution telling their story. Families remembered pieces of it. Churches, restaurants, wineries, clubs, and neighborhoods preserved fragments of it. But IAMLA brought those fragments together and gave them a home.

Historic Italian Hall itself is part of that story. Built in 1908, it stands in the area that was once Los Angeles’ Little Italy. Today, surrounded by the movement and noise of modern Downtown Los Angeles, it remains a witness to another time: a time of immigrant families, mutual aid societies, feast days, weddings, political meetings, dances, music, food, work, faith, and community. Through Marianna’s leadership, that building was not only restored. It was given a voice again.

The Board has announced that Theresa Camille Adile Metzler, a member of the Executive Committee of the Board of Directors, will serve as Interim Executive Director. A search for a new Executive Director is expected to begin in the fall of 2026. This transition comes as IAMLA prepares to mark an important milestone: the 10-year anniversary of the museum’s grand opening and ribbon-cutting ceremony at its historic 1908 site in Downtown Los Angeles.

That anniversary should be a moment not only to celebrate the museum, but also to honor Marianna Gatto’s extraordinary contribution. Institutions do not build themselves. They require people willing to fight for them, raise money for them, explain their importance, endure setbacks, and keep going when the dream seems far away. Marianna did that.

For Italian Americans in California, IAMLA is more than a museum. It is proof that our story belongs here. It is proof that Italian American history in Los Angeles is not a footnote. It is part of the city’s foundation. It is part of California’s story. It is part of America’s story.

As Marianna Gatto steps into her next chapter, she leaves behind something lasting. She helped preserve the memory of those who came before us, and she helped create a place where future generations can encounter that memory for themselves.

Grazie, Marianna, for your vision, your scholarship, your perseverance, and your service to the Italian American community.

The Italian American Museum of Los Angeles is located at 644 North Main Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012. Admission is free, with donations encouraged. Readers are encouraged to visit, support the museum, and continue the work of preserving and sharing the rich history of Italian Americans in Los Angeles.


Profile: Marianna Gatto: Preserving the Italian American Soul of Los Angeles

  Marianna Gatto: Preserving the Italian American Soul of Los Angeles By Christopher Forte The Italian Californian For anyone who cares abou...