Sarah Levy and the view from her home in the Pacific Palisades.Photo:Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic; Sarah Levy/Instagram
Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic; Sarah Levy/Instagram
Sarah Levyis sharing devastating news about her Los Angeles home.
TheSchitt’s Creekactress, 38, revealed on Tuesday, Jan. 14, that her house burned down in the Pacific Palisades fire.
In a heartbreakingInstagram postfeaturing an old photo of the view from her home at sunset, Levy reflected on the things she’d miss most about living in the house with herhusband Graham Outerbridgeand theirson James.
“Our whole future ahead, planned in our little kitchen,” the post concluded. “Luckily we are all safe and if this has taught me nothing else, it’s to appreciate every last detail of your life. I know we’ll be back and the Palisades will be more vibrant and lush and full of life than ever. We’ll wait until then. ❤️”
Levy is just one of many who have lost their homes amid the ongoing fires in Los Angeles. On Jan. 8, PEOPLE obtainedphotos of the remainsof her father,Eugene Levy’s, house in the same neighborhood.
“The smoke looked pretty black and intense over Temescal Canyon,” he described to theL.A. Timeson Jan. 7 after evacuating. “I couldn’t see any flames but the smoke was very dark.”
Los Angeles Fires.David Swanson / AFP/ Getty
David Swanson / AFP/ Getty
Among the more than 80,000 people displaced were many other celebrities. Some, includingLeighton MeesterandAdam Brody,Julia Louis-Dreyfus,Joshua Jackson,Anna Faris,Ricki Lake,Cary Elwes,Cameron Mathison,Spencer PrattandHeidi Montag, have lost their houses.
Others, such asBella HadidandSarah Staudinger, shared that they had lost their childhood homes in the blazes;Tatum O’Neal wrote that her late father Ryan O’Neal’s home was gone.
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As of Jan. 14, the Palisades Fire burned nearly 24,000 acres and is 17% contained. The Eaton Fire, which occurred in the Altadena neighborhood of L.A., is currently 35% contained and has burned over 14,000 acres.
According to the L.A. County Sheriffs, there have been 24 deaths, 23 people missing and 35 arrests as of Jan. 13.
Manyentertainment eventsandfilmings have been postponedas a result of the catastrophe, which is already being called the most destructive fire in the history of Los Angeles County, with more than 10,000 structures destroyed,according to ABC News.
Click hereto learn more about how to help the victims of the L.A. fires.
source: people.com