Michael & Dodie – From Rages To Riches
Michael and Dodie spent the first two months of married life in Dodie’s apartment until the lease expired.
By their first wedding anniversary Michael and Dodie had made a down payment on their first house. They renovated it, sold it, bought another and then did the same thing again.
At night, we have the lights of a large portion of Los Angeles like a magic carpet below us, or we can look up at the serene moon. Lions roared after dusk our first evening here.
That petrified Dodie – until she recalled that the city zoo was just across a few canyons.” Michael Landon, 1960. aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
The house included an Hawaiian lava pool and waterfall and a badminton court.
After his marriage to Lynn broke up Michael bought a house on Malibu beach, living there with Cindy and having his children come to stay on the weekends.
Wedding February 13 at 1973
Michael had not lived in the beach house long when Malibu was hit with fierce storms. Five beach homes were swept into the ocean, many others, including Michael’s, were badly damaged. A few days after the storm, on Valentine’s Day 1983, Michael and Cindy wed in a ceremony at the house.
Summers on the beach were really looky-loo time. I’m about as easygoing as you can get with fans, but when they start using your Jacuzzi and walking in the door…” (Then it’s time to go.)
The Landon family moved into the newly built house in late 1989. The following pieces are from an article in 1990 about Michael’s last house. It’s a shame he got to spend so little time there, it hadn't long been completed when he died.
"Michael provided me with what he considered to be the most important details. The Landons wanted the place to look like it was a hundred years old, but they didn't want it to have the imposing appearance of a formal residence. They wanted it to have a feeling of warmth and informality - they wanted it to look like a ranch." (Architect Robert L. Earl)
Before preparing a formal plan, Earl (architect Robert L. Earl) spent several weekends observing the Landons’ active life at the ranch and at the beach. The architect then translated his firsthand research directly to the drawing board, and says that Michael Landon often modified or revised certain details. "I tried to provide facilities for all I had observed," he says. "I noticed, for instance, that family members enjoyed riding three-wheel vehicles on the ranch, and that they'd need a lot of terrain for that. Toward the end of the day, Michael would always prepare to cook for a large group, and I realized they'd need large indoor and outdoor cooking facilities similar to those in commercial restaurants.” "I also noticed that the pet birds, which were in cages inside the beach house, would need an enclosed aviary at the ranch." At Earl's suggestion, the Landons hired Los Angeles designer Ron Wilson to do the interiors. The couple did not provide Wilson with a similarly detailed outline for the interiors. Instead, Michael Landon candidly explained to the designer that although he had no specific style in mind, he wanted a setting that was luxuriously comfortable. But, says Wilson, "they were willing to be exposed to different ideas." Mindful of the couples recently inspired interest in European architecture, Wilson encouraged their growing appreciation of French and Italian antiques so that they could create an elegantly informal interior to complement the informal elegance of the exterior. (Architect Robert L. Earl)
Flanking one length of the pool is a gallery-roofed outdoor cooking area with a fireplace and a larger-than-life barbeque grill that can hold up to seventy steaks at a time. On the opposite side of the pool, three cabanas, each with its own entrance, separate bedroom, bath and dressing area, stand ready for visiting grown children and other relatives, allowing them to come and go without disturbing the rest of the family.
The three bedroom main house, which lies at the far end of the pool, sports a tile roof that was specially treated on the job site to give it a patina of age. 'The roof forms a gigantic part of the house," says Ron Wilson. "I told the workers to lay on the tile in an erratic way, as if they were drunk, so that this brand-new house would not look brand-new." A set of glass-panelled French doors guarded by a pair of antique stone lions at the main entrance leads into an airy, high-ceilinged gallery with exposed oak beams and the tile floors.
"There is no formal foyer with winding staircase," the architect explains, "because we wanted to remain faithful to the ranch look. Instead, we placed the staircase on the side and designed one central great room, as you might have in a ranch house." The first floor also includes two of Michael Landon's favourite haunts: his office, filled with photographs and awards from his television shows; and a lounge area, which features a sunken fire pit and a stone-topped game table.
The second floor of the residence elaborates on the design themes established downstairs.
The master bedroom has a sloping roof supported by exposed pine beams, a fireplace, a carved low poster bed that is flanked by Spanish stone-topped night tables, a writing desk and an over scale sofa and chaise lounges.
Behind the main house are acres of open space for the children and their menagerie of seven dogs, two rabbits and two horses. The landscaping consists of luxuriant stands of eucalyptus, magnolias, fruit and pepper trees, some of which were transplanted fully grown. "If I were twenty-eight years old,” says Landon, who is in his mid fifties, "I would have planted baby trees.
But at my age, I can't wait for trees to grow." Beyond the trees atop a steep hill are the stables, reached by a long driveway, which,
Landon says, had to be built to accommodate the turning radius and weight of a fifty-thousand-pound fire truck, according to local ordinances. The stables feature a horse pen, covered stalls, a first-floor tack room and a second-floor private lounge with pine-panelled walls and French-tiled floors. It is only from the stables second-floor vantage point that the Landons can glimpse the ocean, which is less than a mile to the west of their secluded canyon.
But, more important, they have a breathtaking and intimate view of their ranch house and the wilderness park nearby.
Michael Landon died at home on
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