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Inside an Unapologetically Fun Midcentury Home in L.A.

Interior designer Jamie Bush and architect William Hefner reimagine a dwelling for a client with a dazzlingly eccentric point of view
living room
A Waterford crystal chandelier, original to the house, crowns the living room. Sofas by Coup Studio; cocktail table by Armand Jonckers; Charles De Lisle lamps atop Facture Studio pink resin tables; French 1950s armchairs and Gio Ponti stools in DimoreStudio fabrics. Artworks by Cindy Sherman (left) and John Baldessari.

Boxy Chandigarh chairs and raw linen. Dinesen oak floors and rustic farm tables. Fifty shades of beige. “I didn’t want any of that,” Mary Kitchen avows, rejecting the current vogue among Tinseltown’s elite for soft, hushed minimalism and all things Perriand. “I wasn’t looking for a cool midcentury house in the Hollywood Hills, with exquisitely tasteful interiors,” she says, adding emphatically, “I didn’t want a house that looks like everyone else’s.”

Mission accomplished. Ably abetted by her team of, well, let’s call them her enablers—interior designer Jamie Bush, architect William Hefner, and landscape maestro Raymond Jungles—Kitchen has conjured a blockbuster vision of Los Angeles swank, at once nostalgic and contemporary, sexy and funny, high-brow and low. With its circular skylights, color-blocked rooms, and pink-tinged indoor-outdoor terrazzo floors, the house represents a fearless pasticcio of Hollywood Regency, Art Deco, Palm Springs camp, tropical modern, granny chic, and a dash of Morris Lapidus–style Miami Beach cha-cha. It’s a heady brew, made all the more intriguing by Kitchen’s unapologetic refusal to abide by the shibboleths of modern taste—like the idea that selecting a painting because it matches the color of a sofa is somehow inherently vulgar.

The lanai is outfitted with Gio Ponti and Franco Albini rattan chairs for Bonacina 1889 covered in Dedar fabric, an India Mahdavi cocktail table for Ralph Pucci, custom sofas in Perennials fabric, and Marc Phillips abaca rugs.

Mary Kitchen’s three daughters, wearing Minnow swimsuits, Celine sunglasses, and vintage swim caps, by the pool of their L.A. home.

“The house is a glamorous throwback fantasy, but it’s also weirdly unfashionable. Mary pushed it in the most courageous way. Most people simply wouldn’t have the chutzpah,” Bush says of his audacious client, a television presenter, model, and philanthropist dedicated to cancer research, children’s arts education, and a host of other causes.

Kitchen’s fictional backstory for the project involved a widowed L.A. socialite—a grande dame of the old school—who built the house in the late 1940s or early ’50s and maintained it, in all its recherché glory, until Kitchen and her husband acquired the property upon her passing. In reality, the Hollywood Regency–style abode, nestled in tony Holmby Hills, was designed by architect Caspar Ehmcke and built in 1966. The residence is located just blocks from the landmark Brody House, a collaboration between architect A. Quincy Jones and decorator William Haines, which served as one of several stylish midcentury touchstones for the current renovation. Kitchen and her husband purchased the home from rock star Adam Levine and his wife, model Behati Prinsloo Levine, who had taken the interior down to the studs before abandoning the project in search of greener pastures elsewhere in the city.

Mary Kitchen, in an Oscar de la Renta gown and Lorraine Schwartz jewelry, sits in front of a Walter Dorwin Teague piano for Steinway & Sons and a Frank Stella painting.

Fashion styling by Dena Giannini. Hair by Renato Campora; makeup by Fiona Stiles; manicure by Masako Leone at MCNail Atelier. 
© 2022 Frank Stella / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

“Honestly, the house wasn’t that great, but it had generous rooms with 14-foot ceilings and a few details that were worth preserving. Mary didn’t want to lose the original character entirely, so we tried to imagine what the house might have been if it had really exceptional period architecture,” Hefner recalls. Working within the original footprint, the architect completely recast the character of the structure by flattening its pitched roof, adding spruce modern eaves and corner windows, and cladding the formerly stucco exterior in white-painted reclaimed brick, the same material he used for outdoor screens, planters, and brise-soleils, as well as a few strategic walls of the interior. “It’s not a slavish re-creation of one particular style, but it has the right spirit and it feels familiar,” the architect says.

Lozenge-shaped skylights mirror twin kitchen islands topped in emerald quartzite. Stools by Studio Van den Akker, custom brass hardware by Pashupatina, and sink fittings by Waterworks. Floors here and throughout by Hermosa Terrazzo.

Photo: Stephen Kent Johnson

Kitchen’s daughters (from left), Baye, Eden, and Maine, gather in the bunk room. Quadrille fabric, RH carpet, Silvio Piattelli pendant light, and vintage skirted chair in Dedar velvet.

Inside the house, the purity of the crisp white exterior gives way to a delirious medley of color. The monumental living room, which measures 30 by 36 feet, is bathed in shades of pink and peach, the kitchen in celadon and forest green, the dining room in lavender, the primary bedroom in ice blue, and the extensively renovated poolhouse in bright yellow. The bedrooms of Kitchen’s three young daughters, as well as the bunk room they share for in-house sleepovers, are enveloped in different colorways of the same sprightly tulip-patterned fabric and wallpaper.

“Zoning the house by color allowed us to control the incredible variety of pieces and themes that Mary was drawn to, all these great things from far-flung periods and places. Once we established the rules, we were free to play within those boundaries,” Bush explains. As an example, he cites the merry mélange of furnishings and artworks collected in the extravagant living room: pedigreed Italian designs by Gio Ponti and Osvaldo Borsani; a restored seven-foot-wide Waterford crystal chandelier original to the house; William Haines barstools upholstered in Pepto-Bismol pink leather; a Walter Dorwin Teague piano for Steinway & Sons; fuddy-duddy vintage Louis XV–style bergères from Phyllis Morris; a 1970s brass banana-leaf sculpture; signature artworks by John Baldessari, Cindy Sherman, and Yayoi Kusama; and a massive Frank Stella Protractor painting articulated in, you guessed it, shades of pink and peach.

Bush peppered his various ensembles with bits of old-fashioned finery—Sherle Wagner marble toilets and gilt-finished fixtures, accent walls of smoky beveled mirror, Dorothy Draper cut velvets, bullion-fringed pool umbrellas—as well as humble midcentury materials such as Formica, linoleum, cork, and vinyl. “Call it anti-establishment taste. These are things that most people wouldn’t want or would tear out of an old house,” Kitchen says of the more outré decorative effects sure to set the teeth of persnickety aesthetes on edge. “I just love that it feels fun to me,” she concludes. “At the end of the day, if you don’t have a sense of humor, what’s the point?”