Kenny Loggins performs in front of EMPTY Hollywood Bowl in COVID-19 charity show

Kenny Loggins performs in front of EMPTY Hollywood Bowl in COVID-19 charity show

Kenny Loggins performed in a streaming concert in front of a vacated Hollywood Bowl in a charity show.

The Danger Zone artist, 72, took the stage in front of no one in the audience and a very limited cast of people on the premises at all, including Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti.

The Footloose vocalist’s show was jam-packed with nostalgia, as the star of the film Kevin Bacon made a cameo to recall the creative process in interweaving the song withe the movie.

Not a  danger zone: Kenny Loggins performed in a streaming concert in front of a vacated Hollywood Bowl in a charity show Saturday 

‘When we were making the movie, we didn’t have the song yet,’ Bacon remembered. ‘In the middle of shooting, Kenny was still writing the song. It was just Kenny on an acoustic guitar, that was the demo … I heard the song and was like, “Yeah, That’s cool.” It just hits you.’

Bacon said the title track, which hit the top spot on the charts in 1984, was critical to the success of the film.

‘I did what I could, but I don’t think the movie would have been what it was without it,’ the veteran actor said.

The venue has been shuttered for the summer season this year amid the coronavirus pandemic.

For a good cause: The concert was put together by WME talent agent Richard Weitz and his daughter for their RWQuarantunes nonprofit, which uses Zoom for benefit shows

For a good cause: The concert was put together by WME talent agent Richard Weitz and his daughter for their RWQuarantunes nonprofit, which uses Zoom for benefit shows

Cruel summer: The venue has been shuttered for the summer season this year amid the coronavirus pandemic

Cruel summer: The venue has been shuttered for the summer season this year amid the coronavirus pandemic

The exhibition, streaming out of different locations, also featured outings from Seal and Rob Thomas.

The concert was put together by WME talent agent Richard Weitz and his daughter for their RWQuarantunes nonprofit, which uses Zoom for benefit shows.

Weitz told CNN that he and his daughter Demi, 17, have drummed up more than $3 million earmarked toward charity with their series of concerts since the lockdown began just more than two months ago.

Weitz said that ‘to think that two months ago when Demi and I started the RWQuarantunes that we would go from our kitchen to the Hollywood Bowl is not only surreal but very humbling.’

Monies raised from the concert have been earmarked toward causes including food banks and hospitals.