SELLER: estate of Sue Mengers BUYER: Allen and Deborah Grubman LOCATION: Beverly Hills, CA PRICE: currently unknown YOUR MAMAS NOTES: It was only a few short weeks ago that Your Mama and just about every other celebrity real estate and/or property gossip went bat shit crazy about the legendary John Elgin-Woolf-designed Beverly Hills, CA residence of recently deceased Hollywood über-agent Sue Mengers. The house, a touchstone of high-Hollywood real estate if there ever was one, was listed (mostly) to architectural oohs and aahs with an asking price of $4,995,000 just a few short weeks after the kaftan-clad pint-size dynamo went to meet her maker in mid-October 2011. The somewhat out-dated, old-school and divinely enigmatic property, according to the New York Post , has been sold to New York City-based law man Allen J. Grubman and his wife Deborah Grubman, a superstar slinger of swanky New York City condos, co-ops and townhouses. The sale price was not reported but Your Mama hears from an usually very well-informed Bev Hills real estate mover and shaker that Mister and Missus Grubman paid somewhere in the neighborhood of $6,500,000 for the single-story abode situated in a prime neck of the Beverly Hills woods just above Sunset Boulevard and–super conveniently–an easy stumble and bumble to the various hooch and food emporiums at the Beverly Hills Hotel . Miz Mengers , a star in her own right, purchased the house in the spring of 1988 and spent the better part of the last 20-some years kibitzing with everyone who is (or was) anyone in Showbiz. As far as we know, which is nothing, none of the Kardashians ever kibitzed with Miz Mengers but Fran Lebowitz, Barry Diller, Tina Fey, Warren Beatty and Angelica Huston, Elton John, Sidney Poitier, and Jennifers Lopez and Aniston did , to name just a few. The very modestly-scaled by Beverly Hills standards house
Posts Tagged ‘ wife ’
Is ‘M*A*S*H’ Star Harry Morgan’s Past Getting Whitewashed in His Obituaries?
Harry Morgan died yesterday at his home in Los Angeles, and most of the obituaries about his legacy mentioned his work on “M*A*S*H,” “Dragnet” and “Inherit the Wind.” But there was something troubling missing from the obits: a description of his relatively recent arrest for beating up his wife. more › Original post: Is ‘M*A*S*H’ Star Harry Morgan’s Past Getting Whitewashed in His Obituaries?
Memorial Run Honors Beverly Hills Drunk Driving Victim
More than 100 people, including policemen, firemen, family, friends and the public teamed up at Civic Center Plaza Saturday morning for a memorial 5K run/walk to honor the fifth anniversary of the death of Beverly Hills High School junior Vahagn Setian, and to raise money and awareness for the Vahagn Setian Charitable Foundation . In December 2006, 17-year-old Vahagn and two 15-year-old girls were riding in a Land Rover driven by 26-year-old actor Lane Garrison, who crashed the car into a tree, seriously injuring one of the girls and killing Vahagn. Garrison’s blood alcohol level at the time of the accident was twice the legal limit. He ultimately pleaded guilty to vehicular manslaughter and served two years in prison. “We simply want [teens] to hear about what one decision cost our son, and try and make them look at the potential consequences of their actions before they take them,” Vahagn’s father Karen Setian said. He and his wife Ida created the foundation in their son’s name. “We want kids to look to the proper role models and follow their leads to better decisions.” The 5K event raised money so the foundation can continue to spread its message of proper decision making. Through the use of a wide range of educational programs, events and scholarships, the foundation strives to show youth that their actions have consequences. “When my son was killed, he and I were best friends, but I didn’t know his world. I didn’t know the world of the teens,” Setian said. “Our kids need to be taught that making good choices is OK even if it’s not the popular thing to do.” Setian wanted to give special thanks to city police officers who have supported the foundation’s efforts. Members of the Beverly Hills Police Department’s Baker to Vegas relay started the day’s 5K run and acted as route guides. “The police officers of Beverly Hills have been there for us since the crash and their support has continued every day since then,” Setian said. “I want kids to realize what great people our police officers are and look at how they handle life’s different paths.” Member of the Beverly Hills Firemen’s Association were also on hand to support the charity and participants. Jake Lefkowitz, a childhood friend and classmate of Vahagn, said he ran for his friend’s memory. “I miss ‘V’ every day,” Lefkowitz said. “You never get over such a loss, but time helps some.” Setian said that when he returned home from the hospital after his son’s death, his neighborhood was filled with hundreds of people, mostly teenagers, who had heard of what had happened to Vahagn. “It occurred to me that my son had touched so many people so positively because he was such a caring, warm and loving person. There is not a day that goes by where we do not hear from someone who wishes us well,” Setian said. “We lost our son, but gained a thousand new family members. Giving back to our community seemed like the best way to make something positive come from the loss of Vahagn.” Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on Twitter and “Like” us on Facebook . View original post here: Memorial Run Honors Beverly Hills Drunk Driving Victim
Beau Bridges Lists (Again) In Horsey Hidden Hills
SELLER: Beau Bridges LOCATION: Hidden Hills, CA PRICE: $2,850,000 SIZE: 7,000 square feet, 6 bedrooms, 6 bathrooms YOUR MAMAS NOTES: Always working actor and Tinseltown scion Beau Bridges–his father is Emmy-nominated Lloyd and his younger brother is Oscar-winner Jeff–briefly had his house in the horsey Hidden Hills enclave in the far western suburbs of Los Angeles, CA on the market in the spring of 2010 with an asking price of $3,250,000 . Alas, there were no immediate takers and the 1.16 acre estate was taken off the (open) market. In real estate what comes around often (and doesn’t sell) often comes back around at a lower price and sure enough Mister Bridges and his wife Wendy have recently re-listed their long-time estate with a new and much lower price tag of $2,850,000. Mister Bridges successfully skipped around Hollywood since the early 1960s with a professional resume a mile or more long . Over the course of his long career he’s earned 10 Emmy nominations, mostly for guest appearances on hit shows ( My Name is Earl, Desperate Housewives, The Closer ) plus three Emmy statuettes for starring roles on a trio television mini-series ( Without Warning: The James Brady Story, The Positively True Adventures of the Alleged Texas Cheerleader-Murdering Mom, The Second Civil War ). The 70 year old actor shows no sign of retirement from the Business of Show. He’s got a number of film projects in the hopper and in the last couple of years Mister Bridges has appeared numerous times on both the big screen ( Rockford Files, The Descendents ) and the small screen, most notably on Brothers & Sisters , a guest starring role that earned him yet another Emmy nomination. Property records indicate Mister and Missus Bridges purchased his house in the upscale, semi-rural equestrian community back in May 1988 for $1,200,000. Current listing information shows the multi-winged Marshall Lewis -designed English Tudor-style residence measures around 7,000 square feet and includes a total of 6 bedrooms and 6 bathrooms. The open-plan main living areas have wood (and wall-to-wall carpeted) floors, stained glass windows, wood ceilings criss-crossed by heavy wood beams. Many of the main rooms pinwheel around a monumental brick and mortar fireplace and include country-casual formal living and dining rooms, a billiard room with curved carved wood staircase, and a massive L-shaped family room with wet bar and sunken conversation pit with fireplace. Despite the basket weave-patterned brick floor, heavy wood beams and lethal-looking pot racks, the eat-in kitchen takes on a (more) contemporary vibe with streamlined Shaker-style Poggenpohl cabinets, granite counter tops, and every high-grade appliance money can buy including Viking-brand warming drawers, double ovens, side-by-side Sub-Zero fridge and freezers. In kitchen dining and snacking can be done at the snack bar or in a greenhouse-style breakfast nook with garden view. Listing information indicates four of the six bedrooms are on the second floor and include three sizable family/guest bedrooms each with direct access to a bathroom, all with vaulted and beamed ceilings and at least one with a sleeping loft accessed by a tightly spiraled staircase. The expansive master suite has a massive brick fireplace, sitting area, high-pitched beamed ceiling, a stained glass window or two, multiple closets plus dressing room, private bathroom and adjoining office with steeply-peaked wood-beamed ceiling, green and black marble fireplace and wine closet lined with custom-built bottle racks. The acre-plus grounds are mostly landscaped and include a long drive way that sweeps around to motor court at the side of the house with three-car attached garage, wide-swathes of gently undulating lawns dotted with mature shade trees and at least one hanging tepee, extensive vegetable gardens, a greenhouse, a fountain or two, and a big ol’ brick-lined entertainment terrace with built-in barbecue that extends off the rear of the house. Between the house and the fenced tennis court there’s an azure blue heated swimming pool and spa. Beyond the swimming pool and spa there’s a tennis court but what there isn’t, unlike the vast majority of the other estates in Hidden Hills, are equestrian facilities. Currently listing information does not include many photos but the fine folks at Luxist presented the property back in April 2010 and many images of the interior spaces and grounds can be seen there . Property records show that Mister Bridges has owned a 6.25 acre spread a fair distance from the beach near Kilauea on the Hawaiian island of Kauai since at least May 1997. listing photos: Sotheby’s International Realty See the article here: Beau Bridges Lists (Again) In Horsey Hidden Hills
The Term ‘Role Model’ Makes Neil Patrick Harris ‘Cringe’
Bright, charming, charismatic, and out of the closet — what better characteristics for a gay role model? While Neil Patrick Harris might possess all of those qualities, he recently revealed that he isn’t exactly comfortable with being positioned as someone others look to for leadership. At the L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center’s 40th anniversary gala last week, where he and husband David Burtka were honored, he told E!’s Marc Malkin, “I sort of go out of my way not to be Soap Box Johnny.” Harris noted, “We’re super happy to lead by example, but even to define ourselves in any kind of leadership position I think is awkward… I cringe when I hear people say they consider themselves role models.” Burtka feels similarily. “We really don’t do anything,” he said. “We take care of our kids. We’re in a relationship. We love each other, but we don’t go out of the way to stand on a soapbox.” This isn’t the first time that Harris has spoken out about his reluctancy to be labeled a role model. When asked about being an advocate for the LGBT community during a 2008 Out magazine interview he responded: “My job is jester — not advocate… I’m striving to be an example of normalcy. Because I’m noticed as an actor, people are aware of what’s happening in my life, and that I can’t change, and if I tried to, it’d be an uphill battle. I’d be angry and bitter.” Excerpt from: The Term ‘Role Model’ Makes Neil Patrick Harris ‘Cringe’
Council OKs Trousdale View Restoration Rules
The City Council on Tuesday unanimously enacted view restoration rules that regulate foliage height in the Trousdale Estates . “The ordinance allows a resident … who believes that his or her view is being blocked by privately owned foliage on a neighbor’s property to send a certified letter to the neighbor … asking that they trim the vegetation,” according to a statement released by the city. If view and foliage owners cannot agree on a resolution, the view owner would offer mediation to the foliage owner via a neutral party to reach an agreement, the statement explains. If no agreement results after the mediation, the view owner may apply for a Planning Commission hearing and decision, which can be appealed to the city council. If the council denies a view owner’s appeal, he or she may initiate private legal action. Tuesday’s update, which reflected staff revisions to the proposed ordinance inspired by residents’ views expressed at the Nov. 3 council meeting, established the following: There is a 15-foot maximum height limit for foliage measured according to a property’s grade in relation to the height of a home’s roof. If a foliage owner denies access to his or her property in order to prevent a view restoration survey, “the survey shall be prepared using other available information,” according to a presentation by Senior Planner Michele McGrath. Regarding enforcement, “the city shall take such action as appropriate to ensure initial compliance with the view restoration permit,” City Attorney Larry Wiener said after council members requested a language adjustment. If the city determines a resident is in compliance with the ordinance, “any further dispute … shall be resolved by a civil action initiated by the view owner,” according to McGrath’s presentation. “The prevailing party in any such civil action … shall be entitled to recover its reasonable attorney fees and costs incurred in the litigation.” Planning staff will report back to the council within 12 months on the ordinance’s impact. Additional guidelines for the ordinance are in the works and will be discussed at the Dec. 19 Planning Commission meeting, according to the statement. The fully developed set of rules will be posted on the city’s website in January. Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on Twitter and “Like” us on Facebook . The rest is here: Council OKs Trousdale View Restoration Rules
Lorri L. Jean: Turning 40 Never Felt So Good… or Did So Much Good!
The L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center’s 40th Anniversary Gala & Auction, a star-studded celebration hosted by Leslie Jordan at the Westin Bonaventure on November 12, helped raise more than $680,000 for our many services to build the health, advocate for the rights and enrich the lives of LGBT people. Surrounded by more than 1,200 donors and supporters — and even one of the pioneers who helped found the center — I was awed by this incredible community and everything we have accomplished together. Our theme for this year’s gala was “40 Years of Family.” There are a lot of ways to define family, but one of my favorites is this: people with common goals and values who share a lifelong commitment to one another. That certainly describes the center, just as it does this year’s honorees and those who presented the awards to them: * Proud fathers of adorable twins Harper and Gideon, Neil Patrick Harris and David Burtka have put a new public face on families with same-sex parents. They have given generously to support our LifeWorks program, to which so many young LGBT people turn for support. We were proud to have Jane Lynch honor the handsome and talented couple with our Rand Schrader Distinguished Achievement Award. I was touched by Neil’s observation that the center is helping to create a world where, for same-sex couples, “being married and being a parent doesn’t have to be about making a statement, and it can be just about living our lives.” * Chaz Bono has been a dedicated activist in our community since his “first coming out” in the ’90s. Since his more recent coming out as a transgender man, he has become an even greater trailblazer. By bravely and publicly sharing the journey of his transition, and his family’s journey, he has set a courageous example that is helping transgender youth and their families around the world. David Arquette, who reflected upon the struggles his transgender sister, Alexis, faced in order to feel “comfortable in her own skin,” was proud to present Chaz with our Board of Directors Award. (Chaz visited the center for a tour he week before the event; I was proud to share with him how much the center has expanded our services for the transgender community since he last walked through the doors.) * We’re grateful to count Jane and her wife, Dr. Lara Embry, as part of the center family. Jane did the California AIDS Ride (a precursor to our present-day AIDS/LifeCycle) back in the ’90s, and Lara rode with us from San Francisco to Los Angeles for the first time this year. Though Jane’s star has risen stratospherically (and deservedly!), she hasn’t forgotten us; she continues to serve on our board of directors and to be there when we need her. The evening included many poignant moments: Surprising our longest-tenured woman board member, LuAnn Boylan with an award honoring her astounding 19 years of service to the center; board member Peter Paige’s heartfelt remembrances of turning to the center as a youth in need of support; Clinton Leupp recalling the early years of the AIDS epidemic and the anger that led him to create his alter ego, the drag star Miss Coco Peru, followed by a powerful rendition of “Those Were the Days”; and so many others. Plus, Leslie Jordan provided countless laughs as the emcee of the evening — perhaps most memorably in his Madonna-esque cone breasts. It was a night that made me exceptionally proud, not only of what the center is today but also that we are part of such an incredible tradition of activism. We’ve been calling it “40 Years of Family” because the center formally incorporated in 1971 — but in fact our roots reach all the way back to 1969. Our co-founders took action within months of the Stonewall riots; first was Morris Kight providing information and referrals and then Don Kilhefner creating a “Gay Survival Committee” for those in desperate need. Another co-founder, Jon Platania, opened several “Liberation Houses” to provide housing and employment services for homeless LGBT youth and adults — the first such residential programs in the world. And social worker June Herrle became the architect of the center’s focus on social services. And always, fighting for our rights as a key part of the center’s mission. Over the decades, we have held true to their vision of building a stronger and healthier LGBT community, taking care of our own and fighting for the equal place in society that we deserve. Now a resident of Berkeley, Jon recently came down to visit; he toured all of our facilities to see first-hand how the founders’ vision has been realized and built-upon. How very appropriate that on this special anniversary, Jon could reconnect with the center and even join us to celebrate our family at the gala. We stand proudly on his and all of our founders’ shoulders. Thanks to Jon and the other founders, the cnter has mattered to people who count on us. For more than 40 years, the center has been like family to countless members of our community. We have been there for people at their times of greatest sadness and happiness, in their times of greatest need and generosity — just like a family is supposed to be. I can’t even count the numbers of people who have told me that they found their “family of choice” through their involvement with the center. Moreover, the center has become a beacon of hope to LGBT people all over the world. We represent what any community of people can do when they set their minds to it. What was begun by a handful of volunteers with $35 in the bank has become a life-changing, life-saving institution that is making a difference to thousands of people every week and inspiring many more around the globe. I wish, after 40 years, we could say our work is done. But we know that isn’t true. We still don’t have equality under the law. All too often the rights we do have, and sometimes our very humanity, are under attack. So, as long as we are treated as second-class citizens, as long as HIV and AIDS continue to be on the rise in our community, as long as LGBT seniors needing outside care feel forced back into the closet, as long as misguided parents kick their LGBT kids out, as long as any LGBT person feels ashamed simply because of their gender identity or who they love, the center will be here. We must be here. And when you think about what we’ve accomplished in the first 40 years … just imagine the progress that the next 40 will bring. See more here: Lorri L. Jean: Turning 40 Never Felt So Good… or Did So Much Good!
Relaxed Parking for the Jewish Holiday of Sukkot
Following the Jewish holidays of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur comes the festival of Sukkot , which begins tonight at sundown. See the rest here: Relaxed Parking for the Jewish Holiday of Sukkot
Frederick Hertz: Same-Sex Divorce Barrier Lifted In CA Courts
One of the nastiest dimensions of the battle over same-sex marriage has been the lack of access to divorce courts for same-sex married couples that reside in non-recognition states. While you might think that anti-gay judges would be thrilled to help these gay couples break up, in fact that is not true. Judges in Texas, Oklahoma, Rhode Island and other states have refused to grant divorces to lesbian or gay couples who went elsewhere to get married or have relocated from the state in which they got married, on the grounds that granting a divorce would constitute a form of official recognition of their marriage. Mind you, most of these couples are not asking a judge to grant them any property or alimony based upon their marriage, since they’ve already settled those issues — they just want to get an order of dissolution. And the couples have good reasons for wanting the court order. Even if they have resolved their financial affairs, they need to get a divorce so they can be free of future liabilities, and so they will be able to marry or legally partner their new romantic interest. The legal origin of these problems stems from what is referred to as the “domicile” rule, which means couples ordinarily can only get divorced in the state in which they reside at the time of their break-up, regardless of where they lived when they got married. The purpose of this rule, which goes back more than a century, is to prevent nasty husbands (or wives) from evading the divorce rules of the state they live in, by simply hopping across the state line to get a divorce in another state. For example, if a husband in New York didn’t like the property rules imposed on him by the New York court, it would be unfair to his wife if he could simply drive a few miles away to a more lenient state and file for divorce there. While these rules may make sense for heterosexual couples who can always get a divorce in whatever state they live in, they wreak havoc for couples who live in states that won’t grant them a divorce under any conditions — even if they’ve reached a property settlement with their spouse. This is a vivid example of where the denial of the right to marry ends up as a denial of the right to get a divorce. Fortunately, the California legislature has just passed a bill (which was signed into law on October 9th by Governor Jerry Brown) that resolves this problem — at least for those who came to California and got married there in 2008. It will also help those who may in the future get married in California, if and when Proposition 8 (which bans same-sex marriages) is repealed or ruled to be unconstitutional. The bill is titled SB (Senate Bill) 651, and the full text can be found here. The new law will go into effect in January 2012. It provides that if a couple got married in California but lives in a state that won’t grant them a divorce (which is presumed if the state doesn’t recognize their marriage), the California court will have jurisdiction to grant them a dissolution. The divorce case will be filed in the county where the couple got married, and the dissolution is supposed to be adjudicated “in accordance with California law.” There is a lot that remains unresolved in this new legislation, especially what it means to adjudicate a divorce in accordance with California law if the spouses are not residents. But for those who have been able to reach their own private settlement agreement, this will enable them at least to obtain a formal dissolution. And, while there is also some uncertainty on the details, chances are the dissolution will be honored in other states, even non-recognition states. This will allow the ex-spouses to enter into contracts as a formerly married person, and to be treated once again as an unmarried person. It’s a long ways from full marriage recognition in every state, but at least the couples that married in California will now be free to get divorced, wherever they live! Go here to read the rest: Frederick Hertz: Same-Sex Divorce Barrier Lifted In CA Courts