Tour Marilyn Monroe's Brentwood House

marilyn monroe house

Despite living in many places in her short but highly productive 36 years, this was the first house she sought out and bought for herself and on her own while actively working. In the fictionalized biopic Blonde, Ana de Armas attempts to capture Marilyn Monroe in all her complexity. The hacienda sat on over half an acre of property, with a sparkling kidney-shaped swimming pool and a grove of citrus trees.

Marilyn Monroe's Home Temporarily Saved From Demolition - PEOPLE

Marilyn Monroe's Home Temporarily Saved From Demolition.

Posted: Mon, 11 Sep 2023 07:00:00 GMT [source]

Responses to “UPDATED: Inside Marilyn Monroe’s Dreamy Final Home in Brentwood”

Outdoors, lush lawns surrounded a brick patio and a kidney-shaped swimming pool. Mature trees, a guest house and a small citrus grove filled out the half-acre grounds. The Latin phrase “Cursum Perficio,” which translates to “My journey ends here,” adorned tiles on the front porch — a foreboding inscription after Monroe was found dead of an apparent barbiturate overdose in her bedroom in 1962. Set behind gates at the end of a cul-de-sac, the single-story home has four bedrooms and three bathrooms, The Times wrote when the house changed hands in 2017.

The Fate Of Marilyn Monroe’s House To This Day

He drove over and smashed the window next to Monroe’s bed with a poker from the fireplace. On the afternoon before her death, the actress called her psychiatrist, Dr. Ralph Greenson. Greenson recommended going for a drive and maybe visiting the beach to clear her mind. E. Murray/Fox Photos/Getty ImagesThe bedroom where Marilyn Monroe died on August 5, 1962. Finally, Monroe called Lawford one more time and said, “Say goodbye to Pat. Say goodbye to the president and say goodbye to yourself because you’re a nice guy,” with no mention of Bobby.

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The council unanimously voted to kick-start the landmark consideration process, and the Department of Building and Safety revoked the owner’s demolition permits. The Conservancy strongly supports this nomination and thanks Councilmember Park for initiating it. When we tell stories about the people and women of Los Angeles, it’s fundamentally more real and tangible when we root them in the places that help illustrate their lives, contributions, and connection to LA. Few places do this better for Marilyn Monroe than her former residence.

marilyn monroe house

The primary bedroom features a fireplace that leads to a small patio. The backyard boasts a large manicured lawn with a kidney-shaped swimming pool, surrounded by lush vegetation and a formerly separate guest house that has now been merged with the main dwelling. In last year’s divisive biopic Blonde, based on the 1999 Joyce Carol Oates novel of the same name, director Andrew Dominik recreated the bedroom where the former Playboy model was found. The four-bedroom, four-bath home has been sold several times in the five decades since Monroe's death, most recently in 2010), but the style and feel of the property remains largely unchanged, real estate agent Lisa Optican tells Vanity Fair. "There have been owners in the past who have made changes to the property but the overall feeling and aesthetic and vibe of what attracted Marilyn to it is still there and you can feel it," Optican says.

UPDATED: Inside Marilyn Monroe’s Dreamy Final Home in Brentwood

Marilyn Monroe's Brentwood home temporarily saved from demolition - CBS News

Marilyn Monroe's Brentwood home temporarily saved from demolition.

Posted: Fri, 08 Sep 2023 07:00:00 GMT [source]

The Spanish Colonial relic of bygone Hollywood is set to be demolished by its current owner, who bought the 2,900-square-foot hacienda for $8.35 million. Department of Building and Safety permit showed that, although officials hadn’t yet granted a formal permit, the early stages of the process were underway. The residence went under the ownership of other people over the years. Portia de Rossi lived in the Granville Towers penthouse during the 2000s.

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When Marilyn bought the house, it had three bedrooms and two baths plus a detached guest house. Today, the guest house has been connected to the main house, the kitchen has been expanded and several rooms have been added to the back, expanding the home’s square footage considerably. Built in 1929, the L-shaped house changed hands in 2017 when an undisclosed buyer purchased it for $7.25 million, a whopping $350,000 over the asking price. Unsurprisingly, the dwelling has been pretty popular with house hunters over the years, with six unique offers placed on the property immediately after the blonde bombshell’s death, per the Post.

That famous house was sold in 2017 to an LLC called Glory of the Snow for $7.25 million; in July, it was sold to the similarly named Glory of the Snow Trust for $8.35 million, the LAT reports. This home was recreated for Blonde, as the actual house was not available for filming. Here, director Andrew Dominik (far left) shoots a scene featuring Bobby Cannavale as Joe DiMaggio and Ana de Armas as Marilyn Monroe. The next morning, Murray noticed a light still on in Monroe’s bedroom. When the housekeeper couldn’t get in the bedroom, Murray called Greenson.

marilyn monroe house

Previous owners filed plans to build a new house on the site of Monroe’s 1929 Spanish, hacienda-style home in Brentwood, and current owners are seeking to have the house demolished, whereby clearance for a demolition permit was nearly in place. While identified in 2013 by the City’s SurveyLA program as being potentially historic, the house is currently unprotected. It’s unclear if anyone currently lives in the house, or why its owners want to destroy it, but as news spread of the plan, neighbors and preservationists sprang into action. A spokesperson for LA Councilwoman Traci Park says that their office received “hundreds of calls” asking her to step in, Reuters reports. And step in she did, introducing a council motion Friday asking the city’s Cultural Heritage Commission (CHC) to consider the home for inclusion in LA’s list of historic cultural monuments.

The owners of the house have recently announced their intent to offer the house up for relocation. While never a first choice, the Conservancy appreciates this consideration and believes HCM designation can not only allow for possible relocation but also help guide it appropriately. Good news, on March 5th, at the City of Los Angeles Planned Land Use and Management Meeting (PLUM), the Marilyn Monroe Residence cleared yet another hurdle on its journey toward Historic-Cultural Monument (HCM) designation. Although her life was tragically cut short, Marilyn had at last landed in a place where she could feel at home. Many of the lemon trees and herb gardens Marilyn planted are said to still be thriving on the property. It is said Marilyn used one bedroom for herself, installed her housekeeper-companion in a second bedroom, and the third bedroom was used as a “telephone room,” a must-have, surely, for all girls in the 1960s.

She walked from room to room, lovingly pointing out where she planned to place each couch, table and lamp that had not yet arrived. “Anybody who likes my house, I am sure I will get along with,” she said. Monroe’s home was still filled with unpacked moving boxes at the time of her death, just six months after she purchased the only home she ever owned.

Beams of wood lined the ceiling and a blue-tiled fireplace anchored the room.

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