Natalie Wood at Home: The Silver Screen Siren’s Domestic Life in 20 Photos
The Rebel Without a Cause star, who ran a freelance interior decorating business in the ’70s, took design notes from her movie sets
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“Gone too soon” is the lament echoed by admirers of Natalie Wood, one of the last true leading ladies of Hollywood’s golden era. Renowned for her beauty, charisma, and emotional depth on screen, Wood tragically drowned off the coast of California’s Santa Catalina Island in 1981 at the age of 43. Her death remains shrouded in mystery to this day.
Born Natalia Nikolaevna Zacharenko in San Francisco to Russian immigrant parents, Wood began acting at just four years old and landed her breakout role at eight, charming audiences as Susie Walker in the Christmas classic Miracle on 34th Street. Her ascent to fame was steady and swift; as a teenager she starred in Rebel Without a Cause and as a young adult in West Side Story. By 25, she had already earned three Academy Award nominations. At the height of her career, one director remarked, “Natalie Wood has a stranglehold on every young leading-lady part in town. If a role calls for a woman between 15 and 30, you automatically think of her.”
At a time when few women held sway in Tinseltown, Wood insisted on choosing her own roles, demanding equal pay to her male costars, and negotiating ownership stakes in her films. She embraced stardom and was known for both her talent onscreen as well as her high-profile romances with James Dean, Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, and Warren Beatty. She married three times (twice to actor Robert Wagner), and prized her loved ones and home life above all. “The most important thing to me is family—my husband and my kids,” Wood once said. “There aren’t a lot of other things to relate to.” Read on for a look inside the golden age star’s days off set.
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images1/20
Sister, sister
In this summer 1955 image, a 16-year-old Wood stands in a playfully protective pose over her younger sister Lana in the doorway of the family’s California home, located at 15036 Valley Road in Sherman Oaks. Despite their eight-year age difference, the sisters shared a profound connection. “I shed many, many tears over passages about me—how close we were, as sisters and friends and companions, and how much she loved me,” Lana later revealed when reflecting on a draft of Natalie’s memoir.
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images2/20
Budding decorator
Wood chats on the phone in her bedroom at the family’s Sherman Oaks residence in this 1955 shot. The home’s maximalist decor was the creative doing of the young starlet, an early expression of the sensibility that would later flourish into her own interior decorating practice in the 1970s. “My mother loved to make statements with bold patterns and colors,” Wood’s eldest daughter Natasha Gregson Wagner wrote in her 2020 book More Than Love: An Intimate Portrait of My Mother, Natalie Wood. “I learned how to decorate my home from the sets on my movies,” was a statement oft repeated by the actor, according to Natasha.
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images3/20
Favored femme aesthetic
“She was going through her pink phase,” Wood’s childhood friend Jackie Eastes said of the bedroom in the star’s Sherman Oaks home. “Everything was pink.” The frilly canopy seen here and the roses on the wallpaper were both pink, matching her rosy hued 1955 Thunderbird convertible. The teenager even swathed the silver blue Mercedes 300 SL roadster, which she bought in 1957, in the frothy color.
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images4/20
Animal house
Wood had a lifelong love of animals. She owned numerous pets over the years, including turtles, guinea pigs, mice, birds, lizards, ducks, rabbits, and the dog in this 1955 snap. “She had a special way of communing with animals,” Natasha wrote in her book, adding that Wood “often favored the ugly ones.”
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images5/20
Stuffed animal companions
As if having a handful of pets around the property wasn’t enough, Wood also owned countless stuffed animals. A giant stuffed tiger’s head, gifted to her by her mother, was mounted on her bedroom wall. Actor Dennis Hopper thought her immense collection of stuffed animals was “cute and eccentric” and said that they were “everywhere” in the star’s bedroom. This 1955 photo shows Wood posing with her pet parakeet (named Gregory Peckwood) and two stuffed monkeys.
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images6/20
Natalie the fashionista
Wood strikes a fashionable pose at home in this 1955 image. Lana wrote in her book Natalie: A Memoir by Her Sister that Wood’s style was soft and feminine, leaning toward the romantic—much like the floral wallpaper seen here in her home’s entryway. Wood adored clothes, and it was her sister’s influence that nurtured Lana's own affinity for dressing up. And although Wood loved to shop, most of her clothes came from her movie sets—a deal her mother/momager successfully negotiated for the star.
- Photo: Graphic House/Archive Photos/Getty Images7/20
Her trademark jewelry
Wood was just 10 years old when she suffered a near-death accident while filming The Green Promise. A footbridge scheduled to collapse gave way too soon, leaving the young actress dangling above a raging river. She managed to crawl to safety but suffered a dislocated wrist bone that protruded for the rest of her life. As a result, she always wore “a bracelet, a leather band, a long sleeve, or (when wearing a swimsuit) a flesh-colored Band-Aid,” biographer Gavin Lambert writes. This 1956 image shows a smiling Wood with one of the many bracelets she used adorn her left wrist.
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images8/20
The Laurel Canyon house
Wood and her family moved into a newly-built home on Laurel Canyon’s Woodrow Wilson Drive over Christmas of 1955. Sitting on 6,000 square feet of property, the SoCal dwelling contained six bedrooms and seven bathrooms. The star had a self-contained wing in the house with a bedroom, en suite bathroom, walk-in closet, and a large living area that she decorated herself. In this 1957 photo, the actor sits in the main living room, propped against a wall fashioned from volcanic stone.
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images9/20
Ever-evolving aesthetic
Desiring a sense of independence after moving to Laurel Canyon, Wood transformed her bedroom into her personal haven, though her approach to its aesthetic marked a departure from her previous quarters. The star’s former bright pink bed canopy and floral patterned walls were replaced by modern, all-black furniture, white walls, and white carpeting.
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images10/20
Hangout spot
At Laurel Canyon, Wood’s bedroom suite opened directly to the home’s kidney-shaped swimming pool, which was added after the family moved in. It was thought that the actor’s mother added the amenity so that the space might serve as a communal gathering spot, where she could easily keep an eye on the young starlet and her Rebel Without a Cause costars-turned-companions—Hopper, Nick Adams, and James Dean—during their visits. It featured a tiled mermaid at the bottom. When Wood and Wagner tied the knot in late 1957, her parents and sister moved out of the ranch-style abode, leaving the six-bedroom, seven-bathroom home to the newlyweds.
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images11/20
Forever a ballerina
As a former ballet dancer herself, Wood’s mother put the actor in ballet classes from a very early age, according to biographer Lambert. Although the writer never specifies how many years Wood was enrolled, it is clear the classes had a lasting effect, as evidenced by this 1957 photo of a gracefully airborne Wood on the home’s patio.
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images12/20
Keeping up appearances
“From her teens until the last time I saw her, Natalie was perfectly groomed and always made up. Always,” Lana wrote in her book. Even on days when her calendar was empty, the Splendor in the Grass star insisted on doing her makeup. Her younger sibling didn’t see this as vanity, but rather as Wood’s belief that she was expected to be “Natalie Wood the movie star” at all times. The actor became so skilled with cosmetics that she once joked that “in a pinch, I could always get work in pictures as a makeup artist.”
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images13/20
An enviable closet
Wood reveled in being a starlet. Her wardrobe formed large part of her identity and public image. “Natalie was always very careful to present herself as a movie star,” her sister told The New York Times. The outlet also reported that the Wood sisters could be spotted “arm in arm all around town, in high spirits and beautiful clothes” from the 1950s up until Wood’s 1981 death. In her will, the actor left Lana all of her clothing—rooms and rooms full of her high-end pieces. This image featuring some of her garments was taken in the dressing room of her Laurel Canyon home.
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images14/20
A lonely social butterly
In her private life, away from the sets and the streets of Tinseltown, the star sometimes felt blue. “Actors are basically lonely people,” Wood once told a writer. Though she was known as the life of the party, her obsession with stuffed animals, according to Wood herself, was actually driven by a looming loneliness. The California native is seen here in the bedroom of her Laurel Canyon home, lounging beneath the classic comedy and tragedy masks fixed to her wall.
- Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images15/20
The anti-domestic goddess
“I’m not domestic,” Wood once said. “If I don’t learn to cook, maybe I won’t have to.” Indeed, the screen legend never really picked up that particular skill; according to her firstborn, the actor’s “idea of food preparation was snacking on shredded wheat or All Bran cereal, making BLT sandwiches, or heating up her favorite canned soup.” Wood did have one exception: She perfected huevos rancheros, but only made the dish when she was out on her yacht with family and friends.
- Photo: Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images16/20
Bel Air retreat
In 1966, Wood put a mental-health pause on her acting career. Despite a streak of hit movies, the toll of the actor’s 1962 divorce from Wagner and a subsequent string of failed romantic relationships left her feeling depleted. She was reportedly in therapy “every single day,” according to Suzanne Finstad, author of Natalie Wood: The Complete Biography. “I broke out in hives and suffered anguish that was very real pain every day we shot,” Wood said of her mental and physical state while filming the 1966 film Penelope. This spring 1968 image shows an outwardly happier Wood about to leave her Bel Air home during the sabbatical, which ended a year later.
- Photo: Ellen Graham/Getty Images17/20
Palm Springs compound
An enamored Wood and Wagner are shown in this 1973 image outside their Palm Springs residence, a year after they married each other for the second time. The 1.6-acre estate (which belonged to Wagner before the marriage) featured a six-bedroom, six-bathroom main residence; a three-bedroom, two bathroom guesthouse; a tennis court; a swimming pool; and the lush gardens pictured here in the background. The 1934-build’s stone façade, original terra-cotta tiles, and wood-beamed interiors were intact in 2018 when the property hit the market for the first time in 40 years.
- Photo: Screen Archives/Getty Images18/20
Sentimental decor
The Wagner-Wood family spent the majority of the 1970s in Beverly Hills, where they resided in a Gerard Colcord-designed Cape Cod-style home with dark blue shutters. Wood is shown here with Wagner in the living room of their North Canon Drive dwelling just after the birth of her second daughter, Courtney, who was the couple’s first and only child together. (Natasha, who is the daughter of Wood and producer Richard Gregson, was raised alongside Courtney by Wagner after Wood’s death.) The image offers a glimpse into Wood’s decor style, which Natasha describes in her book: “Heavy dark wood pieces sat alongside wicker furniture and big, upholstered chairs and sofas. Photos of family and friends in silver frames dotted shelves and long tables; on the walls hung framed Chinese needlepoint and works of art. Everything had a connection to someone famous or admired, or to a relative or friend.”
- Photo: © Ted Streshinsky/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images19/20
Picture-perfect household
Giant sycamore trees dotted the North Canon Drive property’s front yard. Out in the backyard was a garden paradise featuring an oval-shaped pool, bougainvillea, potted pansies, geraniums, lemon trees, and hibiscus flowers. “Everything was heaven,” said actor Mia Farrow of the home. “The house was so beautiful and also welcoming. The focus was the children, not the grown-ups.”
- Photo: Stephen Lovejoy/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images20/20
Party house
In addition to being a celebrated actor, a freelance interior decorator, and a devoted mother and wife, Wood was also well-known around town for being the consummate hostess at her legendary house parties. “Natalie would give incredible parties,” one of her former assistants once recalled. The most anticipated of Wood’s gatherings were her New Year’s Eve parties; Hollywood’s brightest luminaries such as George Segal, Gregory Peck, Jimmy Stewart, Fred Astaire, and Cary Grant would rub shoulders at these fêtes. “Those parties were the best,” said actor and filmmaker Richard Benjamin. “The house was just so full of love and happiness. It made you feel good to be there.”




















