The 29th Los Angeles Times Festival of Books returned to USC with a first-ever livestream of activities.
Many of the participants and guests stopped by our portrait studio: John Green, Henry Winkler, Sophia Bush, Max Greenfield, Lois Lowry and more poets, artists, chefs, journalists, celebrities and musicians.
Here are some of the best photos from the day of people who did their best to entertain our photographer Myung J. Chun.
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Actor Hannah Marks at the Festival of Books.
Actor Cree at the Festival of Books in Los Angeles.
Actor Felix Mallard at the Festival of Books in Los Angeles. (Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times)
Isabela Merced in the Los Angeles Times Portrait Studio at the Festival of Books. (Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times)
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Tina Nguyen the Los Angeles Times Portrait Studio at the Festival of Books.
Miss Los Angeles Kaelani Amputch-Curtis in the Los Angeles Times Portrait Studio at the Festival of Books.
Melania Luisa Marte in the Los Angeles Times Portrait Studio.
Tiffany Chang in the Los Angeles Times Portrait Studio at the Festival of Books.
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Molly McGhee in the Los Angeles Times Portrait Studio at the Festival of Books.
Airea D. Matthews in the Los Angeles Times Portrait Studio at the Festival of Books.
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Kristen Kiesling in the Los Angeles Times Portrait Studio at the Festival of Books.
Aida Salazar in the Los Angeles Times Portrait Studio at the Festival of Books.
Kaveh Akbar in the Los Angeles Times Portrait Studio.
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Elizabeth Crane in the Los Angeles Times Portrait Studio at the Festival of Books.
Allison Holker Boss in the Los Angeles Times Portrait Studio at the Festival of Books.
Bricia Lopez in the Los Angeles Times Portrait Studio at the Festival of Books.
Taylor Arthur was born and raised in South Lake Tahoe, Calif. She moved to Los Angeles in 2015, where she received her associate’s degree in journalism from Los Angeles Pierce College. Arthur joined The Times’ in 2017 and currently works as a photo editor for Daily Calendar, Envelope and The Times’ digital platform.
Myung J. Chun has been a photographer with the Los Angeles Times since 1999. He started as a still photographer and then moved to videography from 2007 to 2018. Chun won an Emmy in 2011 for his work on a multimedia project about innocent victims of gang violence. He previously worked for the Los Angeles Daily News, a position he started in 1988 while attending Cal State Northridge.