American comedian and actor Billy Crystal and his wife Janice Crystal have lost their home in the recent Los Angeles fire, as the couple discloses.
Billy Crystal has confirmed that the Pacific Palisades home he lived in with his wife, Janice, since 1979 has burned down: 'Words cannot describe the enormity of the devastation.'
Stars, including Paris Hilton, Billy Crystal, and Milo Ventimiglia were mourning the loss of their homes and possessions in LA's devastating fires.
Billy and Janice Crystal are mourning the loss of their nearly 50-year-old Palisades home that was reduced to ashes by the Los Angeles fire. The actor confirmed the news in a statement to PEOPLE on Wednesday as Palisades wildfires continue to wreak havoc in L.
Palisades Charter High School and the Getty Villa have been destroyed—and homes owned by Kamala Harris, Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg remain were in the evacuation area.
Barbara Corcoran, best known for being one of the investors of ABC’s Shark Tank, has lost her mobile home amid the L.A. wildfires that have displaced thousands of Southern California residents. The businesswoman shared a video on social media of the fires that destroyed a mobile home community in the Palisades fire, where she had …
(CNN) — As at least four wildfires rage around Los Angeles, numerous members of the Hollywood community have been impacted, including Billy Crystal ... in Los Angeles County, fueled by excessive ...
With wildfires sweeping across parts of Los Angeles County, Hollywood stars are among the many who have lost homes. Billy Crystal ... have been destroyed. California Gov. Gavin Newsom declared ...
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 finality of the wildfires’ destruction has taken 10 more cherished buildings — by Richard Neutra, Gregory Ain, Eric Owen Moss and others —that showed the city’s great diversity.
Authorities say they have traced seven homicides — two in a California prison, five on the streets of Los Angeles County — to three men suspected of being top members of the Aryan Brotherhood.
Fires burning homes and businesses in Los Angeles for a week have killed at least 24 people, displaced thousands of others and destroyed more than 12,000 buildings in what might be the most expensive set of conflagrations in the nation's history.