Articles Written By: jori2025@pomona.edu

Big Acts at Big Bridges

Since its ribbon-cutting in 1931, Bridges Auditorium—also known as “Big Bridges,” to distinguish it from Bridges Hall of Music (“Little Bridges”)—has been home to hundreds of concerts, speeches and events. Here’s our unofficial tally of the musicians who’ve performed most frequently at the 2,200-seat venue.*

Ella Fitzgerald performing at Downbeat

Ella Fitzgerald performing at Downbeat, New York in 1947 (Dizzy Gillespie looking on). Photo by William Gottlieb.

Six Times:
Singer-songwriter Ben Harper

Five Times:
Folk singer Judy Collins
Folk group the Irish Rovers

Four Times:
Singer-songwriter Johnny Cash
Violinist Isaac Stern

Three Times:
Country singer Willie Nelson
Pianist Arthur Rubinstein
Jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald
Pop/standards singer Johnny Mathis
The Preservation Hall Jazz Band

Other return performers include jazz legends Nat “King” Cole, Duke Ellington and Benny Goodman, as well as folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary. Mime Marcel Marceau also performed here six times!

Big Bridges has been the home to 90 performances from Inland Pacific Ballet, 86 performances by the L.A. Philharmonic, and at least 50 Claremont High School commencements.

Others who’ve spoken here: Bono, Amelia Earhart, Winston Churchill and the Dalai Lama.


*based on records taken from the Bridges Auditorium archive, in conjunction with the crowd-sourced concert repository website setlist.fm.

SageChat: Favorite On-Campus Concerts

The column where we talk to the flock on the Pomona College Alumni Facebook group and share a few responses. Make sure to join the group if you haven’t already.


What’s the best concert you ever saw at Pomona?

Jessica Sitton and Pamela Keene with Gordon Lightfoot

Jessica Sitton ’85 and Pamela Keene ’85 with Gordon Lightfoot (photo credit Diane Ung ’85)

“Gordon Lightfoot at Big Bridges in 1984!”

-Jessica Sitton ’85 (see photo on right)

“When Michael [Mahler ’74] asked me out for our first date, I said ‘yes’ before I even knew where we were going to go. We went to Big Bridges to see the J. Geils Band and the Eagles—and then saw the Eagles again for our anniversary in 2014. This year we are celebrating our 47th anniversary!”

—Vicki Paterno ’75


“The Ramones in 1979 at Garrison Theater [technically at Scripps]. The music scene was changing in good and exciting ways, at least for this Midwest boy. The punk and new wave scene was just busting out in a big way. KSPC was leading the way.”

—Paul Martin ’83


“I saw Maroon 5 opening for Guster in about 2001. Now Guster opens for them!”

—Stephanie Lawton ’03


“Seeing Ozomatli freshman year at Harwood Halloween was incredible, but it’s hard to beat 1999 with Digital Underground, which predictably got shut down, leading to their rapper Shock G leading a mob of us through Lyon [Residence Hall].”

—Adam Boardman ’01


“In 1992 Soundgarden performed in front of about 200 of us right before the release of Badmotorfinger [their first top-40 album]. They were about to go on tour with Guns N’ Roses. It was insanely good music!”

­—Ben Johns ’95


“At Scripps in 1998[ish] Michelle Malone played a small show at the Motley with a young opening act named John Mayer. I remember liking his songs ‘Neon’ and ‘Comfortable.’ A couple years later he played at Big Bridges with Norah Jones, before she’d won all her Grammys.”

Brian Daniel Schwartz ’01

3 Tips to Improve Your Golf Game

Gabby Herzig ’21

Gabby Herzig ’21

Take it from Gabby Herzig ’21, a former Sagehens golfer whose career orbits the best in the sport: a round of golf can be enjoyed without shooting a low score.

“As a competitive golfer, I’m always trying to play the best I can—it’s ingrained in me,” says Herzig, now a golf reporter for The Athletic, a sports website and now the sports department of The New York Times. “But ever since I graduated, I’ve been able to find more joy in playing recreationally with friends, co-workers and colleagues from the golf industry. I find I’m always happier and more present during the rounds when I’m not focusing on my score.”

Alternatively, for those on the course hunting birdies and low numbers, Herzig offers some advice to shave a few strokes off the scorecard.

1. Don’t overthink things
“Golf is such a mental game, but I feel some of the best rounds I’ve played came when my mind was really clear. You always hear the best professional golfers talk about their mentality: see ball, hit ball. Keep it as simple as that rather than trying to direct your body in the middle of your swing to do who knows what. You’re crowding your thoughts and distracting yourself from being an athlete and reacting to the target in front of you.”

2. Short game, short game, short game
“Emphasize your chipping and putting. Those are your scoring clubs so spend more time practicing around the greens than you do at the driving range. You’ll think back to some of the best full-swing shots you’ve hit—amazing drives, perfectly online approach shots—and remember you three-putted and bogeyed the hole. Amazing holes materialize if you’re sharp around the green. You don’t want to waste your great full shots on poor chipping and putting.”

3. Commit to your shot
“If there’s one thing you can do to increase your chances of success before hitting a shot, it’s to commit to a plan. Whether you’re deciding on the severity of a breaking putt or you’re in between clubs on a par-3, choose your path and then stick to it. Feeling committed over the ball will instantly make you more confident and comfortable, and therefore, more likely to make the swing you wanted to.”

Gabby Herzig playing golf

Top Three Annual Pomona Events (Past and Present)

Fun fact (via Rachel Paterno-Mahler ’07):
“Having a Smiley 2000s today would be the equivalent of having Smiley 80s when those of us that graduated in the 2000s were at Pomona.”

#1 Harwood Halloween

#2 Smiley 80s

#3 Ski-Beach Day

Other popular events include Death by Chocolate, Freshman Dance, Middle School Dance

Join the conversation on Facebook if you haven’t already.

We’ll Do It Live! A Timeline of Some of Pomona’s Most Memorable Concerts

Big Bridges stage, Taylor Swift concert, 2012Kurt Vonnegut, 1986

OK, this one’s only tangentially music-related, but besides speaking at Big Bridges, Slaughterhouse-Five author Kurt Vonnegut has an unusual Pomona connection. In 1997 he was incorrectly attributed to be the author of one of the first pieces of viral content: a commencement speech sometimes referred to as “Wear Sunscreen,” which later became the “lyrics” of a top-40 hit released by Moulin Rouge director Baz Luhrmann. The actual author? Mary Schmich ’75, who wrote its words for a Chicago Tribune column, and later turned it into a book.

No Doubt, 1990

Gwen Stefani

2015 photo of Gwen Stefani by Lorie Shaull

Gwen Stefani’s ska-punk band played at least five shows at Pomona in their early gigging along the Southern California concert circuit, including a May 1990 show that pre-dated their signing with Interscope Records. Three decades later, the group has released six studio albums that sold 33 million copies globally, while Stefani became a popular solo artist (and voice judge) worth an estimated $160 million. ’90s alums, relive the glory with this fan-captured video from 1994.

Rage Against the Machine, 1992

When Mike Lin ’94 paid the newly formed four-piece rap-metal outfit $325 to play Harwood Courtyard, they hadn’t even released their debut album yet. Lin remembers lead singer Zack de la Rocha eagerly passing out cassette tapes beforehand, as well as receiving a thoughtful “thank you” note from guitarist Tom Morello afterward. They’ve since sold 16 million records and were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2023.

Bright Eyes, 2000

Indie band Bright Eyes

Indie band Bright Eyes playing Walker Lounge in 2000

When the campus radio station KSPC brought Conor Oberst and his Omaha indie-rock outfit to play a show in one of the Smith Campus Center’s social rooms, station advisor Erica Tyron said that she paid them $800 in cash. Just a few years later, the Associated Students of Pomona College tried to bring them back, but opted against after learning that their booking cost had ballooned to $50,000.

The White Stripes, 2001

Jack and Meg White—the mysterious red-and-white-adorned garage-rock duo who eventually filled stadiums with arena classics like “Seven Nation Army”—hadn’t yet exploded on the indie scene when they performed that spring on Walker Beach. KSPC still has the original flyer from that fateful concert in their office in Thatcher Music Building.

Taylor Swift, 2012

Taylor SwiftTouring behind her fourth album Red, Swift launched an online voting competition promising to perform at the college that got the most votes proportional to their size—spurring some crafty Harvey Mudd kids to organize on social media to get Claremont Colleges students to vote for Swift to come to the smallest of the 5Cs (though she ultimately performed at Big Bridges). For the record, Mudd’s student body president claimed that they didn’t engage in any “illegitimate activity” like bot voting. We plead the fifth!

Letter Box

A Hello from Acting President Bob Gaines

Robert Gaines

Robert Gaines

Having been a faculty member here for more than 20 years, I’m deeply humbled by the opportunity to lead the College during President Starr’s sabbatical. I know the value of Pomona and the kinds of breakthroughs that are possible here, particularly as it applies to creativity—the theme of this issue of Pomona College Magazine.

The way I see it, Pomona has a unique combination of magical elements that make its educational experience pop—a delicate fusion of factors that include motivated students, intimate classes, broad resources and an emphasis on curiosity, interdisciplinarity and, yes, creativity.

I feel this dynamic deeply in my connections with peers. Our environment encourages engagement with others in how they see the world, sharing perspectives across disciplines with colleagues in art, music, history and beyond. I’ve had many thoughtful conversations with my colleagues about the vastness of time, understanding stories etched across giant landscapes, how we as humans sense and understand the world around us, and what it means to be alive on Earth. These kinds of dialogues have helped me shape, refine and better understand my own perspectives, as well as encouraging more out-of-the-box thinking about many of my own projects in geology.

This kind of cultivation of creativity allows faculty and students alike to adapt and approach challenges from new angles—where some of the most exciting and unexpected outcomes lie. Whether in science, engineering, humanities or the arts, thinking creatively is crucial for new innovation and making a meaningful impact on larger societal forces.

Indeed, creativity and its capacity for “transformative knowledge” is one of the three central pillars of our strategic vision, and a major point of emphasis for several of our future projects, like the new Center for Global Engagement that we hope to break ground on in the coming years.

My experience at Pomona is that creativity is not a finite resource, but something that begets more of itself when cultivated. In my mind it is the most important and essential of human traits—without it, we would be forever repeating the same patterns, rather than finding new paths of inquiry and exploration.

—Robert Gaines

Acting President
Edwin F. and Martha Hahn Professor of Geology

Write to Us at PCM

Pomona College Magazine welcomes brief letters to the editor about the magazine and issues related to the College from the extended Pomona community—alumni, parents, students, faculty, staff, donors and others with a strong connection to the College. Write to us at pcm@pomona.edu or mail a letter to Pomona College Magazine, 550 N. College Ave., Claremont, CA 91711. Letters should include the writer’s name, city and state of residence, class year for alumni and contact information. With rare exceptions, letters should be no more than 400 words in length. Letters are selected for publication based on relevance and available space and are subject to being edited for brevity and clarity.