Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital
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The Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital is a motion picture and television industry complex complete with a retirement community, with individual cottages, and a fully licensed, acute-care hospital, located at 23388 Mulholland Drive in Woodland Hills, California.
In 1940, then president of the Motion Picture Relief Fund, Jean Hersholt, found 48 acres (194,000 m²) of walnut and orange groves in the southwest end of the San Fernando Valley that was selling for $850 an acre ($0.21/m²). The Board purchased the property for the Motion Picture Country House. To offset the costs for the first buildings, which were designed by architect William Pereira, seven acres (28,000 m²) were sold. Mary Pickford and Jean Hersholt broke the first ground. The dedication was on September 27, 1942.
The Motion Picture Hospital was dedicated on the grounds of the Country House in 1948. In attendance were Ronald Reagan, Shirley Temple, and Robert Young, among other stars.
Eventually, services were extended to those working in the television industry as well, and the name was altered to reflect the change.
Scores of movie notables spent their last years here; so have far less famous people from behind the scenes of the industry. Those with money paid their own way, while others, who had no money, paid nothing. Fees are based solely on the "ability to pay."
All kinds of workers in movies, TV, and other aspects of the industry, are accepted, from actors, artists, backlot men, cameramen, directors, extras, producers, security guards and stars. To qualify for a cottage, applicants (or their spouses) must have reached a minimum age of fifty-five for women and sixty for men, working steadily for at least twenty years in entertainment industry production. The waiting time is usually a few months, with no preference given to celebrities or those who can pay their own way, officials of the fund have said.
This full-service facility has an annual budget of $100 million.
[edit] Famous residents
- Mary Alden
- Gilbert M. Anderson
- Johnny Arthur
- Mary Astor
- Chester Conklin
- Wendell Corey (died in hospital)
- Maurice Costello
- Dorothy Davenport
- Yvonne DeCarlo (died in hospital)
- Billie Dove
- Max Fleischer
- Harrison Ford (silent film actor)
- Larry Fine
- Anita Garvin (died in hospital)
- James Gleason (died in hospital)
- Gareth Hughes
- DeForest Kelley (died in hospital)
- Marion Leonard
- Karen Morley (died in hospital)
- Hattie McDaniel (died in hospital)
- Mae Murray
- Jean Parker (died in hospital)
- Virginia Pearson
- Marin Sais
- Mack Sennett
- Norma Shearer
- Gale Sondergaard (died in hospital)
- Florence Turner
- Johnny Weissmuller (in hospital)
- Clara Kimball Young