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Chrissy Teigen and John Legend were able to return home just in time for their daughter Esti’s second birthday.
“Grateful to be back home,” Teigen, 39, wrote via Instagram Story on Monday, Jan. 13, alongside a photo of a homemade cake. “That’s all I could muster for Esta’s birthday.
The cake was decorated with chocolate frosting and colorful sprinkles and featured two action figures of Estia’s favorite wrestler. John Cena. Besides Esti, Teigen and Legend46, share Luna, 8, Miles, 6, and Wren, 18 months.
Ahead of Esta’s special day, the family was forced to evacuate their home amid wildfires in Los Angeles.
“This is unreal, I’m very scared now. Packing,” Teigen wrote on Wednesday, Jan. 8, as she prepared to head to a hotel with Legend and their kids.
Wildfires broke out in the Pacific Palisades January 7 and quickly spread to other parts of Los Angeles. Many celebrities who live in the area have offered updates on the loss of their homes and personal belongings. Others continue to evacuate the city amid a rapidly changing natural disaster.
Actor Milo Ventimiglia revealed on Thursday, January 9 that his home with wife Jarah Mariano, who is nine months pregnant, was completely destroyed.
“You start thinking about all the memories in different parts of the house and stuff, and then you see your neighbor’s houses and everything around and your heart breaks,” he told CBS News. “It’s kind of a shock where you go ‘This is real, this is happening’ and at some point you just shut it off. What’s the point of continuing to watch? We kind of accepted the loss.”
Ventimiglia, 47, acknowledged the parallel between his and his loss This is us the character of Jack Pearson who died of smoke inhalation after a slow cooker caused his family’s house to burn to the ground.
“You know, it’s not lost on me, life imitating art,” he added as he pondered his personal next steps. “We have good friends and good people to work with and get by. Wife, child and dog, the most important.”
John Mayermeanwhile, he shared an emotional post about preparing for the loss of important items due to ongoing forest fires.
“This is the most valuable thing I own. It’s a folder of photos of my dad that covers his life as a baby, educator, husband and father. It’s the only evidence of his life that will exist over time,” he wrote on Instagram Thursday alongside a photo of the folder. “These are the ‘documentaries’ you read about people being taken from their homes. When you hear someone say they lost everything in a fire, that’s a lot of everything, if not everything.”
He continued: “Those who say they will be fine still have their files and albums. Those who are inconsolable have lost them. Right behind the immeasurable loss of life is the loss of proof of life.”
Mayer, 47, offered a message of support others are displaced.
“I don’t practice a prayer, but tonight I will say one for everyone who no longer has these things. It’s not about art and collectibles. It’s photos, letters, class rings, glasses and things we keep to remind us that the ones we loved were there,” he added. “May those who have lost so much find some semblance of hope and support in their family and friends. Stay safe, take care of yourself and each other, and believe that humanity and all that it brings is alive and well, even if it’s hard to see sometimes. This is really devastating.”
Check LAFD website for local fire warnings and click here resources to help the disabled.