Times Colonist

Chaplin once lived in Cecil B. DeMille home

- NEAL J. LEITEREG and JACK FLEMMING

LOS ANGELES — A home of early filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille is on the market in Los Feliz’s Laughlin Park neighbourh­ood at $8.9 million US.

The classical-style house, designed by architect William J. Dodd and dating to 1915, was purchased by DeMille in the 1920s and combined with the home next door to create his estate. During his ownership, which spanned about four decades, the property was used as DeMille’s production office, screening room and guesthouse.

Actor Anita Stewart and comic actor Charlie Chaplin and his first wife, Mildred Harris, were among other residents.

Sited on half an acre of grounds, the two-storey house has been updated while maintainin­g its early character.

Vaulted and beamed ceilings, picture windows with diamond grilles and walls of built-ins are among details of note.

The living room is anchored by a grand fireplace with an ornate surround.

A chandelier-topped dining room, an eat-in chef’s kitchen, a screening room, four bedrooms and 5.5 bathrooms also lie within nearly 7,000 square feet of living space.

Outside, loggias surround a long swimming pool and spa. A lawn and mature landscapin­g complete the grounds.

The property was owned by the DeMille family until the 1980s, when it was sold with the adjacent house that made up the estate.

The homes were eventually returned to separate residences, the larger of which was purchased last year by actor Angelina Jolie for $24.5 million.

Sweet dreams in the Hollywood Hills

Singer-songwriter Annie Lennox of the Eurythmics has snapped up a stellar midcentury modern-style home in the Hollywood Hills for $4.375 million.

Designed by Buff and Hensman, the gated 1960s residence spans three-quarters of a hillside acre.

Walls of glass meet walls of wood in the stylish post-and-beam interior, which has more than 2,700 square feet of living space.

The spare, open floor plan includes a modern kitchen with clean lines and an indoor-outdoor dining area. A painted brick fireplace touches up the living room, a space that extends to an expansive balcony overlookin­g the canyon.

Down a gallery hallway sits the master suite, one of three bedrooms and 3.5 bathrooms. Flat lawns flank the home, and an infinity pool runs along the side.

Lennox, a native of Scotland, studied at London’s Royal Academy of Music before forming new wave bands the Tourists and the Eurythmics.

She found internatio­nal fame with the latter; the group’s hits include Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This), Here Comes the Rain Again and Love Is a Stranger.

Riding a new wave out of the desert

Gerald Casale, the singer-songwriter and multi-instrument­alist who founded the new wave band Devo, has sold his place in Palm Desert for $950,000.

Designed and built by architect-developer duo Ross Patton and Albert Wild, the midcentury modern-style home originally hit the market last year at just under $1.5 million.

More recently, it had been listed for $949,000.

The sweeping single-storey house, which dates to 1963, has been well-kept and features slate and cork floors, walls of glass and a split-rock fireplace that extends from floor to ceiling in the living room. A mosaic tile and glassblock wall in one of the bathrooms is original.

A vaulted-ceiling living room, two kitchens, an office, four bedrooms and four bathrooms are within roughly 3,200 square feet of living space.

Outside, the landscaped backyard holds a saltwater swimming pool, a succulents garden and a fire pit.

Casale, 70, co-wrote much of Devo’s material, including the seminal hit Whip It.

The musician turned his own design talents to helping create the band’s energy dome hats and radiation suits. He has also directed music videos for Rush, the Cars and the Foo Fighters, among others.

Atwater Village duplex is dead to her

Actor Morena Baccarin of the Deadpool films has sold an investment property in the Atwater Village neighbourh­ood of Los Angeles for $935,000 US. That’s $86,000 more than the asking price, real estate records show.

The property, fronted by a gated courtyard filled with cactus and succulents, includes two sideby-side Spanish-style residences dating to 1925. The characterf­illed units each have one bedroom, one bathroom, a kitchen and a living room. There is 952 square feet of living space between the two.

A detached studio/office now sits in what was once the garage.

Redwood decking, a treetopped patio and privacy hedges fill out the backyard.

Baccarin bought the duplex in 2007 for $649,000 and lived there for a period before using it as a rental property. Baccarin, 39, has television roles that include the shows Firefly, Homeland and Gotham.

She has played the part of actor Ryan Reynolds’ love interest in each of the last two Deadpool films.

And just like that, it disappeare­d

The home of magician-comedian Justin Willman, whose new show Magic for Humans premièred on Netflix last month, has quickly found a buyer in the Hollywood Hills.

The Mediterran­ean-style house, dating to the early 1920s, hit the market in late July, and was listed as pending less than a week later and sold for $1.618 million — $119,000 over the asking price.

The 2,134-square-foot house was updated by Willman’s wife, interior designer Jillian Sipkins, who introduced new elements while maintainin­g many original details.

Features include arched doorways, exposed beams and Saltillo floors.

The kitchen has been refreshed, save for a vintage stove.

A living room with a fireplace, a formal dining room, a library, four bedrooms and 2.5 bathrooms complete the floor plan.

Additional flex space lies on the basement level.

Outside, mature trees and landscapin­g provide cover for decking, a circular spa and an alfresco dining area. Further up the hillside, a lookout takes in the surroundin­g hills.

Willman, 38, has been a frequent guest on such talk shows as

The Tonight Show, Ellen and Conan.

He’s also hosted the cooking competitio­n show Cupcake Wars and the game show Win, Lose or Draw.

A historic play, but off the field

Former Los Angeles Dodgers slugger Adrian Gonzalez, who was playing for the New York Mets earlier this year, has bought a grand estate in L.A.’s Hancock Park neighbourh­ood for $10.5 million.

Set on two lots totalling about an acre, the Mediterran­ean revival-style home was built in 1926 for J.B. Leonis, a banker and industrial developer who founded the city of Vernon. It remained in the Leonis family until the sale to Gonzalez, which closed toward the end of August.

The two-storey mansion, which blends Palladian and Italianate elements, was designed by architect Richard D. King.

Within the 8,500 square feet of interiors are a beamed-ceiling entry hall, a panelled library with a fireplace, five bedrooms and staff quarters. Built as a showplace for entertaini­ng, the home boasts large-scale living and dining rooms and multiple loggias set beneath groin-vault ceilings.

On the basement level is a holdover from Prohibitio­n: a walkin liquor vault. Recreation and media rooms also lie on the lower floor. Rolling lawns, specimen trees, fountains, a swimming pool and a pool house make up the grounds. A three-car garage and detached cottage sit at the rear of the property.

Gonzalez, a five-time all-star, was released by the Mets in June after appearing in 54 games for the team. The 36-year-old was traded to the Atlanta Braves by the Dodgers in December. He was released by the Braves two days after the trade and signed by the Mets in January.

 ?? JAMES BUTCHART ?? Devo founder Gerald Casale sold his modernist home in Palm Desert for $950,000. The single-storey house, designed by builders Patton and Wild, boasts such midcentury design staples as slate and cork floors, walls of windows and a split-rock fireplace in the living room.
JAMES BUTCHART Devo founder Gerald Casale sold his modernist home in Palm Desert for $950,000. The single-storey house, designed by builders Patton and Wild, boasts such midcentury design staples as slate and cork floors, walls of windows and a split-rock fireplace in the living room.
 ?? ADRIAN VAN ANZ ?? Magician-comedian Justin Willman and his wife, designer Jillian Sipkins, sold their home in the Hollywood Hills for $1.618 million, well over the asking price of $1.499 million. The Mediterran­ean-style house was updated by Sipkins, who blended new design elements with 1920s character details.
ADRIAN VAN ANZ Magician-comedian Justin Willman and his wife, designer Jillian Sipkins, sold their home in the Hollywood Hills for $1.618 million, well over the asking price of $1.499 million. The Mediterran­ean-style house was updated by Sipkins, who blended new design elements with 1920s character details.
 ?? HILTON & HYLAND ?? Ex-Dodger Adrian Gonzalez paid $10.5 million for this Mediterran­ean Revival-style home.
HILTON & HYLAND Ex-Dodger Adrian Gonzalez paid $10.5 million for this Mediterran­ean Revival-style home.

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