“Scarface” Movie Mansion Finally Sells
The opulent mansion that was the fictional home of Al Pacino’s character, Tony Montana, in the 1983 film “Scarface” has sold after 17 months on the market and a price drop of almost $23 million. Although the movie portrayed it as a Miami mansion, it is actually a 109-year-old home in Montecito, California. Its best known scenes were Tony’s wedding to the cocaine-addicted beauty queen Elvira (Michelle Pfeiffer’s break-out role) and where Tony made his bloody last stand with his M-16 “little friend” killing 42 assassins. Other than the movie, the mansion is most famous as the wedding site for 54-year-old Charlie Chaplain and 18-year-old Oona O’Neill, daughter of playwright Eugene O’Neill, in 1943.
During the real estate crash, international investors were flocking to the U.S. to take advantage of rock bottom prices on everything from Kentucky horse farms to Florida condos. Russian-born financier Sergey Grishin (Facebook, Groupon and Farmville) bought the Montecito estate for a reported $20 million in 2008. In that same year, Russian fertilizer king Dmitry Rybolovlev set a new U.S. sales record when he purchased Donald Trump’s Palm Beach mansion for $100 million. Grishin waited until 2014 to put the Montecito home on the market at $35 million, but nothing happened. Months later, he dropped the price to $17.9 million. It finally sold for $12.26 million, creating a loss for Grishin over $7.7 million.
Known locally as El Fureidis (Tropical Paradise), the estate with its exotic Mediterranean-style villa and Persian gardens was a favorite Southern California postcard souvenir in the early 1900s, and home to several species of rare palm trees. It was designed by Bertram Goodhue. He and the owner, James Waldron Gillespie, a wealthy New Yorker, traveled to the Middle East and Europe for a year looking for inspiration. They added Persian touches of gardens, fountains and accents including a Byzantine-style sitting room with an 18-foot domed ceiling decorated with a floral hand-painted, gold and blue design in 24k gold-leaf modeled after the church of St. John Lateran in Rome. The barreled dining room ceiling is also finished in gold leaf and depicts a scene of Alexander the Great conquering Persepolis. The mansion has four bedrooms, nine bathrooms, a library, sitting room and a lounge. A large rooftop terrace provides 360-degree views of the Pacific Ocean, mountains and Channel Islands and makes an excellent venue for large scale entertaining. Due to the mild climate, the multiple terraces of the estate can be used year-round.
“Scarface,” written by Oliver Stone and directed by Brian De Palma, was released in December, 1983 to poor reviews and criticism for the film’s violence. Despite the bad start, the film grossed $44 million and has become a cult favorite – one of the most popular movies of the last 40 years. “In this country, you gotta make the money first” was one of Al Pacino’s famous “Scarface” lines. Sometimes in real estate, it just takes a bit longer. The listing agency was Riskin Partners, an affiliate of Christie’s International Real Estate.
“Hollywood’s Ultimate Celebrity Home”
When the Golden Age of Hollywood was in its prime from the late 1920s to the early 1960s, Paul Williams was the stars’ favorite architect. Paul was the best at designing luxury homes that fit their glamorous images, expected by theater goers. One of Paul’s Bel Air home designs was especially attractive to the the stars including Frank Sinatra during his Mia Farrow marriage, Audrey Hepburn and the dashing David Niven. It always seemed to have an important celebrity in residence.
In 1970, the home was purchased by Eva Gabor, one of three famous Hungarian sister beauties that turned Hollywood on its social ear. Eva, Zsa Zsa and Magda were the first of the Kardashian-type fame families – famous mostly for just being themselves. Eva lived in the home for almost 20 years until her death in 1995 at age 76.
With 6,400 square feet of living space on over an acre of mature lawns, trees, rose gardens, pool and tennis court, the estate has a lot to offer. The main house includes formal living and dining rooms, a library/screening room, bar, office, six bedrooms and five baths. There is also a detached caretaker’s cottage, a greenhouse and a detached office. Now for sale at $16.95 million. The listing agent is Josh Flagg of Rodeo Realty in Beverly Hills.
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