Los Angeles, 1935: The performance of Benny Goodman and his Orchestra at the Palomar Ballroom in Los Angeles entered the history. The audience on the huge dance floor, with a capacity of 4,000 couples, went crazy for the new danceable swing style, which soon became popular all over the country. It was beginning of the “Swing Era” and its King – Benny Goodman. A sentence from Anton Myrer’s famous novel of America's World War II generation, "The Last Convertible": "In a galaxy of jazz nobility, of Dukes and Counts and Earls, the proudest title was Goodman's. He was the King and there was no more to be said."