Celebrities flee Los Angeles fires as Hollywood events scrapped

Iklan
Firefighters arrive at the scene as Eliot Arts Magnet Middle School burns during the Eaton fire in the Altadena area of Los Angeles county, California, on January 8, 2025. At least five people are now known to have died in wildfires raging around Los Angeles, with more deaths feared, law enforcement said January 8, as terrifying blazes leveled whole streets, torching cars and houses in minutes. More than 1,000 buildings have burned in multiple wildfires that have erupted around America's second biggest city, forcing tens of thousands of people from their homes. (Photo by JOSH EDELSON / AFP)

The entertainment industry screeched to a halt amid the chaos.

LOS ANGELES - A-list actors, musicians and other celebrities were among the tens of thousands of people affected by terrifying wildfires in Los Angeles Wednesday, as the entertainment industry screeched to a halt amid the chaos.

The showbiz capital has been besieged by multiple out-of-control blazes, with Hollywood events including a glitzy awards show and a Pamela Anderson film premiere among those cancelled as firefighters battle flames in hurricane-force winds.

Iklan
Iklan

Hundreds of homes were destroyed in the swanky Pacific Palisades area, a favorite spot for celebrities where multimillion-dollar houses nestle on beautiful hillsides, while other infernos sprang up across the north of the city.

Mandy Moore, the singer and "This Is Us" actress, told followers on Instagram she had fled with her children and pets from the path of a blaze that had left her Altadena neighborhood "leveled."

Iklan

"My sweet home. I am devastated and gutted for those of us who've lost so much. I'm absolutely numb," she wrote, in a caption to footage of the destruction.

Emmy-winning actor James Woods posted a video on X showing flames engulfing trees and bushes near his Pacific Palisades home as he got ready to evacuate, and shortly afterwards said all the fire alarms were going off.

Iklan

"I couldn't believe our lovely little home in the hills held on this long. It feels like losing a loved one," Woods said.

"Star Wars" star Mark Hamill told followers on Instagram that he had fled his Malibu home with his wife and pet dog, escaping down a road flanked by active fires.

This satellite image taken and released by Maxar Technologies on January 8, 2025 shows a view of a neighborhood during the Eaton Fire in Altadena, California. At least five people have been killed in rampaging wildfires around Los Angeles, officials said on January 8, with firefighters overwhelmed by the speed and ferocity of multiple blazes. (Photo by Satellite image ゥ2025 Maxar Technologies / AFP)

Iklan

Oscar winner Jamie Lee Curtis was also forced to evacuate, later writing on Instagram: "Our beloved neighborhood is gone. Our home is safe. So many others have lost everything."

Meanwhile, next week's unveiling of the Oscar nominations was pushed back until January 19, to give Academy members affected by fires more time to cast their ballots this week.

PREMIERES CANCELED

Several other major Hollywood events have already been called off or postponed due to the disaster.

The annual Critics Choice Awards gala, which honors the year's best in film and television and is attended by dozens of A-list stars, was delayed from this Sunday to January 26.

Anderson's premiere for "The Last Showgirl" was scrapped due to the unfolding disaster.

Paramount cancelled a glitzy red-carpet screening of the Robbie Williams musical film "Better Man," and Netflix pulled the plug on a press conference for its Golden Globe winner "Emilia Perez."

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 8: Firefighters battle flames from the Palisades Fire on January 8, 2025 in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. Multiple wildfires fueled by intense Santa Ana Winds are burning across Los Angeles County. Five people have been killed, over 25,000 acres have burned, and 30,000 people have been evacuated. Eric Thayer/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by Eric Thayer / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

Filming of Los Angeles-based shows such as "Grey's Anatomy," "Hacks" and "Jimmy Kimmel Live" was paused.

And the Universal Studios theme park was closed for the day due to the extreme winds and fire conditions.

Steve Guttenberg -- star of 1984 comedy "Police Academy" -- was among those helping get people out of Pacific Palisades as the fire began spreading on Tuesday.

The "Cocoon" actor expressed frustration at how some of those fleeing the blaze had abandoned their cars on one of the only roads in and out of the ritzy neighborhood.

"If you leave your car... leave the key in there so a guy like me can move your car so that these fire trucks can get up there," he told a live television broadcast.

Reality TV personalities Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt from "The Hills," an MTV show that ran until 2010, said they had lost their house after evacuating.

"I'm watching our house burn down on the security cameras," Pratt wrote on Snapchat. - AFP