

Actress’ auction is a no-go. Elsewhere, a former Ford desert property is for sale.
After shopping her Palm Springs compound for more than adecade, Suzanne Somers appeared on the cusp of selling her longtime desert retreat at auction last month. She must have had a change of heart.
The actress-entrepreneur and her husband, producer Alan Hamel, decided not to go through with the no-reserve bidding scheduled for Jan. 31. The 73-plus-acre property, which first hit the market in 2008 for $35 million, remains active on the Multiple Listing Service with a price of $14.5 million, records show.
The hillside retreat has been owned by Somers and Hamel since 1977, the year they married. The compound comprises multiple structures, including a main house that was designed by architect Albert Frey and evokes a French villa. Stone-lined paths connect various living quarters, which combine to offer eight bedrooms, nine full bathrooms and two half-baths.
There are outdoor dining areas, astone amphitheater and a carousel. A separate tasting room and wine vault hold 5,000 bottles. There are also a lap swimming pool and a waterfall-fed pond. A private funicular railway system provides means for navigating the property, which sits among boulders overlooking the Coachella Valley floor.
Somers, 71, is best known for “Three’s Company.” Hamel, 81, hosted 1960s game shows and later produced a number of Somers’ TV and video specials.
Scott Lyle of Douglas Elliman is the listing agent.
Presidential, movie history overlap
Adesert home with ties to both Hollywood and the White House has listed for sale in Rancho Mirage at $3.695 million.
Set
in the Thunderbird Country Club, the contemporary house was built in
2016 on what was once part of former President Ford and Betty Ford’s
estate. The previous house, once home to actress Ginger Rogers and next
door to the Fords’ longtime residence, was used during their ownership
as a command post for the Secret Service.
Entered
through a walled and palm-topped courtyard, the fivebedroom,
6.5-bathroom house features high ceilings, white walls and
floor-to-ceiling windows. A long entry hall lined with wood panels leads
to the common areas.
The
5,852 square feet of openplan space includes a living room with a
modern wall fireplace, a formal dining room, a family room and a
center-island kitchen. There are walk-in closets and a glass box-like
shower in the master suite.
Covered
terraces and sunning areas create additional living space outdoors. A
swimming pool and spa, a fire pit, lawn and cactuses complete the
setting.
John Nelson and Cat Moe of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage hold the listing.
An old haunt comes up for sale
The former Rancho Mirage home of “Interview With the Vampire” author Anne Rice has come to market at $3.9 million.
The
gated contemporary-style home is on a little more than an acre in the
Thunderbird Heights neighborhood. Rice bought the house in 2005 and
owned it for about seven years, records show.
The
single-story1995 home of about 9,200 square feet of living space has
custom floors and an updated kitchen with a broad island. A step-down
wet bar sits off the living room, which has one of three fireplaces.
The
master suite lies in a separate wing and comprises multiple rooms.
Including a two-bedroom casita, there are six bedrooms and 7.5
bathrooms.
Walls of
glass doors open to the back, which holds an outdoor kitchen, patio
space and a swimming pool with built-in seating. An outdoor dining
terrace overlooks a cascading pond feature, lawns and desert
landscaping.
Zwemmer Realty Group of Keller Williams Realty holds the listing.
Rice, 76, gained fame for her series of supernatural novels known as “The Vampire Chronicles.”
Her other works include “Servant of the Bones” and “The Feast of All Saints,” the latter of which was made into a miniseries.
Another attempt at a right-swipe
The
Edris House, a modernist design by architect E. Stewart Williams, has
returned to the market in Palm Springs at $3.2 million, down $1 million
from when it first listed earlier this year.
Built
in 1952 for movie theater and farm owner William Edris and his wife,
Marjorie, the knoll-top estate encompasses slightly more than two-thirds
of an acre with commanding mountain and city views.
Concealed
steel beams are used to support the home’s distinctive roofline, which
features a subtle pitch and overhanging eaves. Original built-in screens
serve as partitions for the 2,700 square feet of open-plan space.
In
the heart of the home is the living and dining area, which has walls of
windows and a rock-finished fireplace that runs from floor to ceiling.
Three bedrooms, three bathrooms and a kitchen filled with original
details complete the living spaces.
Patio space, desert landscaping and a swimming pool and spa make up the grounds.
The
property previously changed hands in 2001 for $1.2 million and in 1999
for $690,000, records show. Last year it was added to the National
Register of Historic Places as a Class 1 site.
TTK Represents/HK Lane, an affiliate of Christie’s International Real Estate, holds the listing.
He may not write the songs, but ...
Kevin Goetz, founder
and chief executive of film marketing and research firm Screen Engine,
has bought a modern post-and-beam home in Palm Springs for $3.6 million.
The
desert spread, built in 2004, sits at the end of a curved driveway on
the same three-quarter-acre lot where crooner Barry Manilow once had a
home.
Designed by Ana
Escalante, the flat-roofed house draws from midcentury-modern style,
with block walls, clerestories and steel and wood beams. Walls of
floor-toceiling windows take in mountain and city-light views.
The
roughly 5,075 square feet of open-plan space includes a vaulted-ceiling
great room, a family room, a formal dining room, awet bar and a
kitchen. There are five bedrooms and six bathrooms, including a master
suite that sits raised on a split level.
Outside,
desert landscaping surrounds a slightly curved swimming pool. There’s
also a twobedroom guest suite complete with a salon and wet bar.
Andy
Linsky, Sven Vennen and Kevin Bass of HK Lane Real Estate were the
listing agents. Dan Valentino of Valentino & Valentino Real Estate
represented the buyer.
Goetz
began his career at NRG, now known as Nielsen Content, and is a former
president of the motion picture group at OTX, a major player in the
movie market research industry. He founded Screen Engine in 2011.
neal.leitereg@latimes.com