The Spanish-style residence, set above the Bel-Air Country Club, was once home to actor Charles Bronson and his second wife, actress Jill Ireland.
July 31, 2014
Real Estate
A Bel-Air residence formerly owned by actor Charles Bronson and his second wife, actress Jill Ireland, has been listed for sale at $19.75 million.
Obituaries
Charles Bronson, the taciturn actor who became an international action star in Europe in the late 1960s and achieved major box office success in America in the mid-’70s as the vengeance-seeking vigilante in “Death Wish,” has died.
Sept. 1, 2003
Archives
It’s a war out there during sweeps months. Who better to fight it than tough guys? Clint Eastwood.
Feb. 9, 1988
Movies
Television
Television may not have perfect pitch, but thanks to its unquenchable thirst for material, it has total recall.
Feb. 13, 1986
The character “arc” of every “Death Wish” film is the same: Charles Bronson, as Paul Kersey, starts each installment as a peace-loving architect with a good, doomed woman by his side, and ends up having added so many baddies to his cumulative body count you’d think he was competing against Ho Chi Minh’s all-time league record for kills-batted-in.
Jan. 17, 1994
An independent television producer has announced that he is close to signing a contract with a television network for a four-hour television movie about last summer’s massacre at a McDonald’s restaurant and that he plans to use the wife of the slain gunman, James Huberty, as a paid consultant.
March 1, 1985
Step aside, Charles Bronson.
Sept. 1, 1988
Movie makers have long been captivated by Jack London’s novel “The Sea Wolf,” and the version premiering with Charles Bronson and Christopher Reeve on TNT at 8 p.m.
April 17, 1993