hedda-hopper:

Leading Ladies at Home | Joan Crawford 
Bristol Avenue in Brentwood, which she owned for three decades. She had  been living on Roxbury Drive in Beverly Hills, but when stardom demanded  a grander lifestyle, Louis B. Mayer—in a transaction not uncommon for  studio chiefs eager to perpetuate the myth of stardom—loaned her $40,000  to buy the house. Her friend William Haines, a well-known Hollywood  decorator and former actor, persuaded her to completely transform her  Brentwood house and to abandon her collection of 2,000 dolls. [source]

hedda-hopper:

Leading Ladies at Home | Joan Crawford

Bristol Avenue in Brentwood, which she owned for three decades. She had been living on Roxbury Drive in Beverly Hills, but when stardom demanded a grander lifestyle, Louis B. Mayer—in a transaction not uncommon for studio chiefs eager to perpetuate the myth of stardom—loaned her $40,000 to buy the house. Her friend William Haines, a well-known Hollywood decorator and former actor, persuaded her to completely transform her Brentwood house and to abandon her collection of 2,000 dolls. [source]