With wildfires sweeping across parts of Los Angeles County, Hollywood stars are among the many who have lost homes amid the destruction. Billy Crystal, the star of Before, and his wife, Janice, lost their home of 46 years in Pacific Palisades,
The list of actors, musicians and other Hollywood fixtures whose homes were damaged or destroyed continues to grow by the day.
Stars, including Paris Hilton, Billy Crystal, and Milo Ventimiglia were mourning the loss of their homes and possessions in LA's devastating fires.
Fires burning in and around Los Angeles have claimed the homes of numerous celebrities, including Long Beach native Billy Crystal, and led to sweeping ... The Palisades Fire reaches beachfront homes in Malibu, Calif., on Wednesday. Credit: AP/Mark J.
Mel Gibson visited the rubble of his $14.5 million Malibu mansion Wednesday, one week after it burned down in the Palisades Fire. The actor, 69, was escorted through his neighborhood in a firetruck and then surveyed the damage done to his home of 15 years.
Celebrities who have lost homes in the California wildfires include Paris Hilton, Melissa Rivers and Billy Crystal.
Mandy Moore, Anna Faris, Milo Ventimiglia, Paris Hilton, Jeff Bridges, Bozoma Saint John, Mel Gibson, Billy Crystal and Diane Warren are among the celebrities whose houses were destroyed by the blazes.
Billy Crystal lost the Pacific Palisades house where he had lived since 1979. Paris Hilton watched her Malibu beach mansion burn down on live TV.
John Goodman, Billy Crystal, Anthony Hopkins, and Jeff Bridges lost homes in the Los Angeles fires, and as Malibu resident Mel Gibson told reporters, “I have
The California wildfires are burning in the middle of what's usually a busy awards season in Hollywood, home to many celebrities.
Pacific Palisades, a neighbourhood that is home to numerous celebrities, has become one of the hardest-hit areas in the California wildfires.
Four fires burned in the L.A. area as of Saturday. The Palisades Fire ripped through western neighborhoods of Pacific Palisades and Malibu, becoming the most destructive wildfire in L.A. history.