Anna Faris's Home Has Been Destroyed in L.A. Fires, But She and Her Family 'Are Safe and Very Grateful'

Anna Faris’ home burned down amid the deadly Los Angeles wildfires, but she and her family were unharmed, PEOPLE can confirm.

“Anna and her family are safe and very grateful,” the rep said Just friends the actress, 48, told PEOPLE on Wednesday, Jan. 8.

The star is just one of tens of thousands of L.A.-area residents affected by the fires, which have continued to spread since Wednesday night, and the Palisades fire has now been named the most destructive in Los Angeles County history, according to the Associated Press.

LA fires live: Death toll rises to 5 as wildfires continue to burn across region

SPOT-Stoianov-BUFR/BACKGRID

A number of other famous faces have shared on social media how it has affected them, including Spencer and Heidi Pratt, whose home was destroyed on Tuesday, and Cameron Mathison, whose family home was leveled in a video he posted on Instagram.

Mandy Moore shared a devastating video of driving through her “home” of Altadena surrounded by burnt buildings and clouds of smoke. “My children’s school gone. Our favorite restaurants, leveled to the ground. So many friends and loved ones lost everything too,” she wrote.

Faris bought the house she lost in 2019 after splitting from Chris Pratt two years earlier. The former couple previously shared a home in the Hollywood Hills, Architectural Digest reported. The stars share a son Jack.12.

Fire crews respond to destroyed homes as a helicopter drops water as the Palisades Fire spreads in Pacific Palisades, California on January 7, 2025.

DAVID SWANSON/AFP/Getty

Five fires broke out in Los Angeles on January 7, forcing thousands of people to evacuate. They erupted as the National Weather Service issued a Jan. 6 warning for a “life-threatening, destructive, widespread storm” beginning Tuesday afternoon.

See also  RHOBH: Mauricio Calls Out Kyle's 'Rebellion' Phase as She Grows 'Irritated' and 'Disconnected' from Marriage

How to help the victims of the fire in Los Angeles

Flames engulf the intersection of the Temescal Canyon and Pacific Coast Highway fires in the Palisades Fire in Pacific Palisades, California on January 7, 2025.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass declared a state of emergency late Tuesday night, and President Joe Biden offered federal help to fight the spreading fires.

“Not only is this event not over, it’s just getting started and it’s going to get a lot worse before it gets better,” Daniel Swain, a climatologist at UCLA, said at an afternoon briefing on Tuesday, Jan. 7. Los Angeles Times reported.

Click here to learn more about how to help victims of the Los Angeles wildfires.

Categories: Trends
Source: HIS Education

Rate this post

Leave a Comment