New York Post

CHRISTMAS CHEERS!

TV anchor lovebirds celebrate with two kids under three in a bright Westport home

- By KIRSTEN FLEMING

HE first time Craig Melvin visited the small-town western Pennsylvan­ia “homestead” of his future wife, Lindsay Czarniak, he was taken aback by her family’s Christmas Day tradition.

“At the end of the meal, they were like, ‘Oh, it’s time to sing ‘Happy Birthday,’ ” recalls Melvin, an MSNBC anchor who hosts “MSNBC Live” and co-hosts “Today” on Saturdays. “I thought it was a joke, but lo and behold, they went and got baby Jesus out of the manger and we sang ‘Happy Birthday.’ ”

”[My family] gets a cake every year,” says Czarniak, anchor of ESPN’s Sports-Center, with a laugh. “I don’t know if this is common. But we’re in the process of creating our own traditions.”

Not that they’re throwing out the song. This year, though, the couple and their children — son Delano, 2 and a half years old, and Sibby (short for Sybil), 7 weeks old — along with Czarniak’s parents and grandmothe­r, Ellie, are celebratin­g Christmas at their own home in Westport, Conn., which they bought in 2015. The fivebedroo­m, seven-bathroom modern-industrial house, situated on a quiet suburban street, is holiday-ready.

Their tree, which Melvin cut down at a local farm, is proudly displayed in the

gray-toned formal living room next to a striking zebra-skin rug from Lillian August. Stockings, crafted by Czarniak’s mother, hang on the large, marble fireplace in the modern family room, which sports sand-colored couches and beachy blue and green accents.

Delano “is so into it,” Melvin says of Christmas. “He gets Santa, understand­s gifts and knows family will be around.”

The affable couple met while working at an NBC-affiliate station in Washington, DC, in 2008. Czarniak had just returned from covering the Beijing Olympics when she met the “new guy” during a commercial break.

They immediatel­y bonded over a mutual love of Whatchamac­allit candy bars and live music. Plus, she loved the Delano South Beach hotel in Miami and, in a cute coincidenc­e, Delano is Melvin’s middle name. They married in 2011.

When Melvin and Czarniak purchased the 5,308-square-foot (excluding the basement) house — where their witty banter echoes throughout the open floor plan — last year, they attempted to meld their different design aesthetics.

They didn’t always succeed.

A photograph of Czarniak’s favorite musician, Miranda Lambert, which hangs on the wall of their modern-rustic dining room, is something Melvin, for instance, could do without.

“It looks absolutely ridiculous,” he says with a laugh. “[Lindsay] can sell it to you however she wants, but when you come over, you think, ‘Are you related to Miranda Lambert? Why is there a picture of her in your dining space?’ ”

Lambert photo aside, their interior designer, Michelle Hogue of Westport-based Hogue Interior Design ( has helped the busy journalist­s find common ground, and made the house functional for them as well as their two children.

“Michelle really deserves a lot of the credit. She forced us to step out of our comfort zone,” says Melvin. “She would make a suggestion and I would think, ‘That sounds ridiculous­ly expensive and . . . gaudy.’ Then you see it and you’re like, ‘Wow this is beautiful, whimsical and fun.’ ”

The most creative touches can be seen in the children’s bedrooms, where Hogue convinced them, among other things, to wallpaper the ceilings.

Sibby’s serene nursery features a puffy, white cloud-shaped light fixture by Søren Christense­n for Vita Copenhagen, a fluffy, white footstool, and a cherry blossom mural that Cznariak painted herself over three days.

“It was our way of making sure [Sibby] had a little piece of DC,” says Melvin.

The chevron-print accents and curtains were made by Czarniak’s mother, and the birdhouse hanging on the mural actually doubles as a night-light.

Delano’s room is both toddler-friendly and sophistica­ted — a Zuo Pure Kalise 7-Light ceiling lamp, a midcentury-style red chair — with a nod to Delano’s No. 1 passion: cars. A picture of him getting into a car at the Indy 500 hangs over his crib.

According to Czarniak, the tot’s favorite part of his room is that it holds his rideable fire truck, which he takes for a spin around the second floor on a nightly basis.

“He rides it into his sister’s room before bed,” she says.

Perhaps the crown jewel of the house, though, is the upscale basement — where the couple loves to watch football. A flat-screen television hangs on a wall fashioned from reclaimed wood and across from a handsome stone fireplace.

“The plan all along was to create a living environmen­t where we didn’t have to leave . . . so I can be a bit of a recluse,” says Melvin. “There’s a bar and a wine room for obvious reasons, and [we] put a gym down there so I didn’t have an excuse to not work out.”

The wet bar — which has a lit backsplash that changes colors with the push of a remote-control button — houses Melvin’s bourbon collection.

But his pride and joy is the plant wall, an idea he took from a Westin hotel in California. He says he snapped a photo of it and then showed it to the folks at Terrain, his favorite home décor store in Westport (

“I applied there to work on the weekends, but I’m still waiting to hear back,” Melvin jokes.

Like most homes, the heart of the house is the kitchen, a pristine, generously sized room that boasts a large island with a walnut countertop (the rest of the cabinets are topped with granite).

“At first I wasn’t crazy about the [island countertop] even though it was beautiful,” says Czarniak. “I had my mind set on granite or white marble, but it’s become one of my favorite areas.”

Maybe that’s because it’s a great spot to consume Melvin’s creative concoction­s, like shrimp and grits, marinated steaks and potatoes with shallots.

“He’s a great cook. He will do the main course and I’ll make a side,” Czarniak says. “Okay, I open the wine. Or I’ll buy dessert.”

“The plan all along was to create a living environmen­t where we didn’t have to leave . . . so I can be a bit of a recluse.” —MSNBC’s Craig Melvin

 ?? Photos by Tamara Beckwith/NY Post; Prop Stylist: Brice Gaillard ?? ESPN’s Lindsay Czarniak and MSNBC’s Craig Melvin deck the halls in newly renovated Connecticu­t digs with 2½-year-old Delano and newborn Sibby.
Photos by Tamara Beckwith/NY Post; Prop Stylist: Brice Gaillard ESPN’s Lindsay Czarniak and MSNBC’s Craig Melvin deck the halls in newly renovated Connecticu­t digs with 2½-year-old Delano and newborn Sibby.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? NEAR LEFT: Czarniak and Delano recently whipped up holiday cookies in the sparkling kitchen with its homey center island. FAR LEFT: Melvin cut down the tree himself at a local farm. It now stands tall in the formal living room.
NEAR LEFT: Czarniak and Delano recently whipped up holiday cookies in the sparkling kitchen with its homey center island. FAR LEFT: Melvin cut down the tree himself at a local farm. It now stands tall in the formal living room.
 ??  ?? ABOVE: The nursery for Sibby, who is 7 weeks old, includes a cherry blossom mural that Czarniak hand-painted. RIGHT: Toddler Delano has a jazzier setup topped by a chrome lighting fixture from Zuo.
ABOVE: The nursery for Sibby, who is 7 weeks old, includes a cherry blossom mural that Czarniak hand-painted. RIGHT: Toddler Delano has a jazzier setup topped by a chrome lighting fixture from Zuo.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The Melvins’ basement has a wet bar, big TV and gym.
The Melvins’ basement has a wet bar, big TV and gym.

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