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Bergen Lost Palisades Home and All Childhood Photos in California Wildfire

Conan O'Brien Needs A Friend · Candice Bergen (Full Episode) | Where Everybody Knows Your Name · July 8, 2026
Bergen Lost Palisades Home and All Childhood Photos in California Wildfire
Conan O'Brien Needs A Friend
Conan O'Brien Needs A Friend
Candice Bergen (Full Episode) | Where Everybody Knows Your Name
"I had left the morning of the fire to go back to New York. Nobody knew the fire was coming. And by the time I got to New York, my house was gone."
Candice Bergen revealed she lost her Pacific Palisades home containing the majority of photographs from her childhood and daughter Chloe's life in the recent California wildfires. She had left for New York the morning of the fire with no warning, and by the time she arrived on the East Coast, the house was destroyed. She described the fire as very mismanaged.

About this episode

Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen sit down with actress and cultural icon Candice Bergen for an intimate conversation covering her extraordinary Hollywood life and recent tragedy. The 80-year-old Emmy winner reveals she lost her Pacific Palisades home and irreplaceable family photographs in the recent California wildfires, leaving for New York the morning of the blaze with no warning. Bergen shares harrowing details about her narrow escape from the Manson murders, explaining how she and boyfriend Terry Melcher moved out of their house immediately after Charles Manson visited seeking a recording contract—the same house later rented to Sharon Tate. The conversation spans Bergen's unconventional upbringing as daughter of ventriloquist Edgar Bergen, who famously included dummy Charlie McCarthy in his will but not her, to wild stories from her youth including accidentally burning down a Swiss restaurant at 14. She discusses her modeling career, marriage to filmmaker Louis Malle, and working with legends like Steve McQueen on The Sand Pebbles in grueling conditions in Taiwan. Bergen reveals she turned down a correspondent position at 60 Minutes after Murphy Brown because they wouldn't let her continue making films, and candidly discusses asking to be removed from Emmy consideration after five wins because she felt the room turning against her. Throughout, Bergen displays the sharp wit, self-deprecating humor, and emotional restraint that have defined her six-decade career, with Steenburgen praising the 'naughty child' inside her friend that makes her such compelling company. The episode offers rare insight into Hollywood royalty navigating tragedy, triumph, and the absurdities of fame with characteristic grace.

Key takeaways

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