Liberace’s Third Palm Springs House

Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (21 of 23)

Shortly after moving to the desert back in January, I took my dad to a doctor appointment and, while in the waiting room, happened to pick up the November 2012 issue of Palm Springs Life magazine.  It turned out to be a fortuitous choice because in it was an article titled “Living With Liberace” about a recently-remodeled Old Las Palmas-area residence that had once been owned by the legendary pianist.  The article, of course, piqued my interest, but, let me tell you, I just about fell out of my chair when I read that the property’s new owners, accountant Garth Gilpin and his wife, doctor Elizabeth Smalley, originally hailed from Pasadena, the city that I had just migrated from!  I decided I had to stalk the home as soon as possible – especially considering all of the hoopla that was then (and is still now) surrounding the recently filmed HBO biopic Behind the Candelabra (which finally aired this past Sunday) – and I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out to do just that a few days later.

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Liberace, who was born Wladziu Valentino Liberace and who was at one time the world’s highest-paid pianist, purchased the one-story desert dwelling on North Kaweah Road in 1968.  It was his third Palm Springs home.  Lee, as he was known to his friends, actually owned six Coachella Valley-area properties throughout his lifetime (including one that he purchased for his mother and another that he purchased for his brother).  Of his penchant for buying residences, he said, “Some people collect stamps, I like to collect real estate.  I am a firm believer in the good earth.”

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Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (11 of 23)

During Liberace’s years there, the four-bedroom, five-bath, 3,101-square-foot abode, which was originally constructed in 1952 and sits on a 0.33-acre plot of land, was decorated in a French Provincial style and boasted a Louis XIV room and a large fountain.  According to the Palm Springs Life article, Mr. Showmanship would play his piano nightly, much to the joy of his neighbors, and each Halloween, would pass out silver dollars, much to the joy of local trick-or-treaters.  Garth told the magazine that the man who formerly lived next door (he has since passed away), would share anecdotes of Lee’s time on North Kaweah, saying “He told us how Liberace would come over in the mornings, in his bathrobe, and go into his icebox and chow down on his fried chicken leftovers.  Then at night he’d hear him playing the piano.  It’s such a great Palm Springs story, isn’t it?  ‘I lived next door and got to hear Liberace playing the piano for free.’”

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Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (17 of 23)

Liberace purchased his final desert residence, which was named The Cloisters (you can read my blog post on it here), in 1967.  It was in disarray at the time and the pianist immediately began a long restoration process, to the tune of $136,000, while still living on North Kaweah Road.  He finally moved into The Cloisters in 1972, at which point he offloaded the Kaweah property.

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Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (19 of 23)

When the Kaweah house was put on the market in 2009, it boasted a price tag of $995,000 and was in quite a state, as you can see below.  There are quite simply no words for the monstrosity that the interior had become.  Wait, I take that back.  There are words.  Two of them, in fact.  Hot mess!

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Shockingly, the extravagant décor was not a leftover from Liberace’s days, but was the brainchild of the home’s then owner who was apparently a huge fan of both Mr. Showmanship and Elvis.  You can check out additional photographs of the residence’s unique interior on its real estate listing here.

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Garth and Elizabeth wound up buying the property in May 2010 for $625,000.  Of their first tour of the dwelling – a viewing which rendered the couple “speechless” – Elizabeth says, “There were painted cherubs on the ceiling, a room that was Dalmatian and cow print, fake flowers, red velvet, gold, with Elvis and Liberace everywhere.  It was the most dysfunctional house we’ve ever seen.  Nonetheless, we thought, how can we not do this?”  Shortly after purchasing the residence, they hired designer Christopher Kennedy to help them “honor and respect Liberace’s original vision without, you know, recreating it” and “to make it feel Liberace without looking Liberace.”  You can see the result – which is fabulous – on the Palm Springs Life website here.  Hard to believe it’s the same house as the one shown in the photos above!

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Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (20 of 23)

Thankfully, subtle reminders of the pad’s famous former owner were left on the exterior of the property, as well, including music notes on the front gates.

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Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (23 of 23)

And a piano-shaped mailbox, which I fell in love with!

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Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (13 of 23)

The house is even named “Piazza di Liberace” and bears a sign informing visitors of that fact.  Love it!

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Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (14 of 23)

You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Liberace’s third desert home is located at 1441 North Kaweah Road in the Old Las Palmas section of Palm Springs.

Edith Palmer’s Country Inn

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The final Nevada-area location that I stalked while visiting my grandmother in Reno last month was Edith Palmer’s Country Inn in Virginia City – the spot where my girl, Miss Marilyn Monroe, stayed for a short time while filming her last completed movie, 1961’s The Misfits.  I had actually stalked the exterior of the historic property once before, while vacationing at my grandmother’s back in June of 2008, and had also written a short blog post about it.  As fate would have it, the inn’s super-nice owner, Leisa Findley, happened to see that post and wrote a comment in which she mentioned that if I ever wanted to re-stalk the place, she would give me a personal tour of the interior.  Well, as you can imagine, I read Leisa’s words and had been absolutely itching to collect on her kind offer ever since.  Because I usually visit my grandmother at Christmastime, though, when driving conditions from Sparks, where she lives, to Virginia City are a bit unfavorable, I was not able to do so until my most recent trip to the Silver State this past July.

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Edith Palmer’s Country Inn was originally built in 1863 as a private home/cider factory for a businessman and cider/vinegar manufacturer named Ellis Morton.  In 1948, an award-winning chef named Edith Palmer purchased the premises with the intention of using it as her residence.  Edith, who was a member of the prestigious French gastronomic society Chaine des Rotisseurs, would host frequent dinner parties in the former cider factory area of the property (pictured above) and eventually decided to turn her abode into an inn, so that those guests who did not want to drive home after eating her culinary feasts would have a place to stay.  Word of mouth traveled quickly and Edith’s meals became so sought after that she wound up converting the factory into a public restaurant which she dubbed ”The Cider Factory”.  It did not take long for the Hollywood elite to come a-knockin’ on the door of Edith’s ultra-private little haven of an inn and its ambrosial eatery. Just a few of the luminaries who stayed or dined at the property include Liberace, Polly Bergen (who played grandmother Kate Allen on fave show Commander in Chief), Michael Landon, Lorne Greene, Dan Blocker, Pernell Roberts, Phil and Alice Harris, Yvonne De Carlo, Robert Goulet, and Dinah Shore.  In 2000, Leisa and her husband, Pat, purchased the inn, which had fallen into serious disrepair, from Edith’s heirs and and immediately set about a three-year renovation process during which they lovingly restored the place to its former grandeur.  Today, Edith Palmer’s Country Inn is comprised of three separate Victorian-style houses – the Edith Palmer House, the Silver Street House, and the Storey House – which feature eight guest rooms and two suites.

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As luck would have it, the inn was vacant during our visit and Leisa was kind enough to take us through pretty much every square inch of the property.  She began our tour in the Edith Palmer House, where we were shown the sitting room area;

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the Maggie Belle Room, which was named in honor of Pat’s grandmother;

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the Edith Room;

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the Evelyn Room, which was named after Leisa’s mother;

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and the Marilyn Room, which was where the starlet stayed for a brief time while The Misfits was being filmed in nearby Dayton, Nevada.

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As you can see above, the Marilyn Room is an absolutely adorable little space which is tucked away in a quiet corner of the inn’s second floor and features peaked ceilings, gabled windows, and a sitting area.

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It was in the Marilyn Room that Leisa showed me what I had been absolutely dying to see for more than three years – the inscription MM wrote to Edith during her stay at the historic property.

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The inscription reads, “To Edith Palmer and her oasis in the desert and warm hospitality – may I always be a welcome guest.  Marilyn Monroe.”  Apparently, when Leisa and Pat purchased the property, Marilyn’s autograph had become extremely weathered and faded, so they took it took a restorer who made two copies of the print in which the ink was darkened.  One of the copies currently hangs in the inn’s Marilyn Room and the other in Leisa’s main office.  The original is safely tucked away somewhere, far from sunlight and possible sticky fingers.  And even though it was a copy, I cannot tell you how exciting it was for me to see that inscription in person.  SO INCREDIBLY COOL!

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Next, Leisa took us to the famed Cider Factory, which is no longer in use as a restaurant, but is currently only available as a wedding and special events venue.  The front room of the Cider House is still set up much the way it was in Edith’s day and features an adorable little bar that one former waitress dubbed “The Biggest Little Bar in Nevada”.

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The walls of the front room are almost completely covered with autographed headshots and messages written to Edith on pieces of paper placemats, as had become the Cider Factory custom during Edith’s day.

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As you can imagine, I was absolutely drooling while reading the many inscriptions.

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I was most excited to see the inscription from Lee Strasberg, Marilyn’s beloved acting coach and founder of the Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute, who accompanied the star to Virginia City.  Lee’s daughter Susan also signed the placemat.

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The back room of the former restaurant, which housed the original cider factory, is a beautiful rock-walled space that seems straight out of another era.

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The room features a HUGE, floor-to-ceiling fireplace that was constructed completely out of rocks from the nearby hills.

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We also got to walk through the inn’s quaint garden area, which, as legend has it, was where Edith first met Marilyn upon the star’s arrival in Virginia City.  All in all, Leisa spent over an hour showing us her lovely inn and regaling us with tales of its storied past.  My grandma, my dad, and I all absolutely fell in love with the place and my dad is already talking about booking a room there for a few days next summer.  I told him to count me in, so long as he reserves the Marilyn Room.  Winking smile

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Edith Palmer’s Country Inn is located at 416 South B Street in Virginia City, Nevada.  You can visit the Inn’s official website here.

Liberace’s Former Home

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A couple of weeks ago, while doing some stalking in the Valley, I became a bit obsessed with locating the home where legendary pianist Liberace lived back in the 1950s.  I first heard about this location, ironically enough, from comedian and Whose Line Is It Anyway? star Ryan Stiles, who also owned the property at one point in time.  I got to know Ryan – and several other members of The Drew Carey Show cast and crew – after some extra work I did on the series in the summer of 2000.  For about a year I would fairly regularly meet up with “the Drew Crew”, as I liked to call them, after the show taped every Tuesday night at the now-defunct Dalt’s Grill in Burbank.  During one of those outings, Ryan mentioned that he lived in a Sherman Oaks-area home that had once belonged to Liberace and that the home had a piano-shaped swimming pool in the backyard, which I thought was just about the coolest thing ever!  Being that that conversation took place almost a decade ago, though, I’m not quite sure what made me think of it two weeks ago, but for whatever reason, as my fiancé and I drove through the Valley my mind flashed on that piano-shaped pool and I immediately pulled out my blackberry and started cyberstalking the place.  I fairly quickly stumbled upon this Los Angeles Times article from July of 2007 which listed the address of Liberace’s former house and immediately dragged my new husband right on over to stalk it.

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Liberace himself designed the L-shaped house, which, of course, was decorated with a piano motif throughout, in 1953 and he and his mother, Francis, moved in that very same year.  As his fame grew, fans would reportedly hop the fence into his backyard to catch a glimpse of the entertainer at home and the property was eventually deemed far too accessible for a man who was, at the time, the highest-paid entertainer in the entire world.  Liberace moved out of the 4-bedroom, 4-bathroom, 3,907-square foot home sometime in or around 1958 and migrated to the Palm Springs area, while Francis stayed behind.  Amazingly enough, the property still looks much the same today as it did when Liberace first built it over 57 years ago.  So darn cool!

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The residence made headlines in July of 1957, when Francis was attacked by two masked men while throwing away trash in the garage.  At the time, Liberace was involved in a $20 million libel lawsuit against Confidential Magazine which had featured a recent cover story insinuating that the entertainer was gay.  Liberace had given a deposition earlier that day and it is widely believed that the attack on his mother was a direct result of the lawsuit, although the perpetrators were never identified.  

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Sadly, the piano-shaped pool that I had so loved hearing about from Ryan Stiles cannot be seen from the street.  But thankfully it is visible via Bing’s aerial views and was also featured in a Life Magazine photoshoot from 1954.  Oh, what I wouldn’t give to see that pool in person!

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  🙂

Stalk It: Liberace – and Ryan Stiles’ – former home is located at 15405 Valley Vista Boulevard in Sherman Oaks.

Liberace’s Former House

This weekend, while visiting the desert, and thanks to my friend EJ at the Movieland Directory, I got to stalk Liberace’s former Palm Springs manse. His home is an absolutely beautiful Mediterranean estate and there is no doubt whatsoever that it once belonged to Liberace. Besides the large candelabra located in front of the house, there are several “L’s” strategically placed throughout the exterior of the property – including on the garage doors, in the driveway, and in mosaic tiles in the cement in front of the side door.

Before becoming Liberace’s home, the estate was a Palm Springs motel. Liberace named it “The Cloisters” as it reminded him of a monastery. The home was quite ornately decorated in Liberace’s day – he even had a “Safari Room” – and you can see pictures of the interior here. While you can’t tour this home, if you are dying to see the inside of it, you can see a re-creation of Liberace’s bedroom at the Liberace Museum in Las Vegas. Sadly, this Palm Springs home is where Liberace lived his final days. He passed away on February 4, 1987.

Until next time, Happy Stalking! 🙂

Stalk It: Liberace’s Palm Springs house is located at 226 W. Alejo Road, right on the corner of Alejo Road and North Belardo. The house is just a few blocks away from Frank Sinatra’s house.