Web Images Groups Books Scholar Blogs Gmail more »
Recently Visited Groups | Help | Sign in
Google Groups Home
Nicolas Cage, Compulsive Spender
There are currently too many topics in this group that display first. To make this topic appear first, remove this option from another topic.
There was an error processing your request. Please try again.
flag
  2 messages - Collapse all  -  Translate all to Translated (View all originals)
The group you are posting to is a Usenet group. Messages posted to this group will make your email address visible to anyone on the Internet.
Your reply message has not been sent.
Your post was successful
 
From:
To:
Cc:
Followup To:
Add Cc | Add Followup-to | Edit Subject
Subject:
Validation:
For verification purposes please type the characters you see in the picture below or the numbers you hear by clicking the accessibility icon. Listen and type the numbers you hear
 
Twitchell  
View profile  
 More options Nov 5, 2:51 am
Newsgroups: alt.gossip.celebrities
From: Twitchell <Twitchell_mem...@newsguy.com>
Date: 4 Nov 2009 07:21:16 -0800
Local: Thurs, Nov 5 2009 2:51 am
Subject: Nicolas Cage, Compulsive Spender
http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-11-03/nicolas-cag...

The star is blaming his ex-money manager for his money problems. But insiders
say it was Cage who spent his way into big troubles. Jacob Bernstein reports on
the star's head-spinning treasure trove: more than a dozen houses, two Bahamian
islands, dinosaur skulls, shrunken heads, the shah of Iran's Lamborghini (and
more). Fun while it lasted.

Even by Bel Air standards, the Christmas party in the tent at Nicolas Cage’s
mansion was a major to-do. The pool was covered up. Blocks of ice were brought
in and carved into a buffet table, from which an extravagant array of shellfish
was served. A production crew blew fake snow. There were enormous nutcracker
men, 8- to 10-feet-tall, out by the gate in front of the house. Lighting
specialists came by and illuminated Cage’s favorite cars, which sat on display
in the driveway. Guests at the December 2003 event included Hugh Hefner and Jay
Leno, who later called it the greatest Christmas party he’d ever been to.

The following morning, staffers arrived at Cage’s house and were surprised to
find a straggler roaming the backyard: a young pony that had been given to Cage
by a relative the night before. Later, he moved the pet out to his ranch in
Malibu.

But today, the property in Bel Air is in contract to be sold for less than half
of what Cage was originally seeking. The personal chef who orchestrated the
evening? Laid off. The decorator? Gone as well.

And now the actor is suing his former money manager, Samuel J. Levin, for $20
million in Los Angeles Superior Court, claiming he enriched himself while
“sending Cage down a path toward financial ruin.” (Levin declined comment for
this article.)

Whether the actor proves his former money manager is at fault remains to be
seen, but conversations with several sources close to Cage reveal a person whose
financial problems stemmed at least in part from his own profligate spending. As
they tell it, Cage’s appetite was extreme even for Hollywood, with a decade-plus
shopping spree that saw him snapping up houses, motorcycles, a jet, yachts,
vintage and new cars, expensive watches, meteorites, dinosaur skulls, an
enormous pet collection, massive amounts of jewelry for the women in his life,
group vacations for his entire entourage, and on and on and on. “He lived like a
sheik,” says one person who’s known him for several years. “Spent money like it
was water,” says another.

Reached for comment, Cage’s lawyer Martin Singer said, “Half the stuff you say
is false. I’m not going to get into detail.” A publicist for Cage had nothing
further to add. “As you’ve already spoken to Marty, I don’t have anything else
to contribute.”

Until fairly recently, Cage’s primary residence was the 1940 Bel Air mansion,
with eight bedrooms, a theater, wine cellar, and a library. The house’s previous
owners included Dean Martin and Tom Jones. “A Gothic mausoleum” is how one
sometime guest describes its décor in recent years. When Cage first put it on
the market a few years back, the asking price was more than $30 million. He
later dropped the price in half, and finally put it up this September in a
sealed bid sale, where only offers above $9.95 million were considered. A source
close to the sale says it went for less than $15 million. Some argue that the
economy may not be the only reason the house went for so much less than Cage had
desired. “It was not what I would call good taste,” says the visitor.

Down South, Cage’s two mansions in New Orleans have been foreclosed upon and
will be auctioned off later this month. The first, a 13,000-square-foot,
six-bedroom house in the Garden District, was originally put on the market for a
reported $3.45 million. The second, on Royal Street in the French Quarter, went
on sale for $3.5 million and has been described as one of the most beautiful
houses in the city, though there are rumors it’s inhabited by ghosts.
(Seriously.)

They are among more than a dozen other homes Cage has bought in the last decade
or so, in places like Newport Beach; Venice Beach; Malibu; San Francisco;
Middletown, Rhode Island; New York; and Las Vegas. There was a castle near Bath,
in England, an 11th-century estate in Etzelwang, Germany, and not one but two
Bahamian islands, which Cage bought in their entirety. (Movie stars, after all,
like privacy, so long as you’re paying attention to them onscreen.)

The bulk of those properties have been sold or are in the process of being sold.

Cage also had a serious car and motorcycle habit. In June 2004, he owned 18
motorcycles and 30 cars, a member of his entourage says. And that was on the low
end: At another point, two sources say, the car total was around 50.

In 1997, Cage spent nearly half a million dollars on a Lamborghini Miura SVJ
that had been owned by the shah of Iran and was confiscated from the Imperial
Garage during the 1979 revolution. Never mind that at the time he bought it, the
car was trading for an estimated $250,000 to $300,000. “He didn’t care,” says a
close source. “Nic at an auction is dangerous. There’s just no limit to what
he’d spend.” He kept the cars in a hangar at the Santa Monica Airport, where
neighbors with their own hangars included Jerry Seinfeld, Tom Cruise, and
Charlie Sheen.

The most bizarre display of Cage’s conspicuous car consumption? A 1955 Jaguar
D-Type that he decided to put on exhibit in his billiard room at the Bel Air
house, where it was lit from above, like something out of a car dealership.
(There was also at least one expensive motorcycle sitting in the foyer,
according to three people who visited the house. “It was an eclectic way of
decorating,” one shrugs.)

Nor did Cage limit himself to vintage cars, which are typically better
investments than new ones. “He had one of every thing that was new and
fantastic,” says one source. “Ferraris, Lamborghinis, Rolls Royces, Bentleys. If
Aston Martin was coming out with a new model, chances are, he would have it.” At
one point, the source says, Cage was snapping up cars at a rate of about “one
per month.” For a time, the actor also employed a full-time car mechanic, whose
job was solely to service his cars, two sources say.

Cage’s penchant for acquisition was aided by the fact that for years, many of
the things he spent money on appeared to be good investments. The vintage cars
he bought frequently doubled in value, so Cage made a lot of money buying and
selling them. (In his case, most sales were followed by more purchases). Real
estate was seen as an even safer bet. According to a source from his inner
circle, when the first few houses he bought began to accrue in value, Cage began
to borrow heavily against them to buy more properties. Unlike the cars, though,
he didn’t do nearly enough selling, which placed him in a particularly
precarious position when the market began to collapse over the last two and a
half years.

And then there were two yachts, at least, and the Gulfstream jet.

Until he sold them in 2002 for a reported $1.6 million, Cage was also a
voracious comic-book collector. The most prized of these included Action Comics
#1 (which contained the first appearance of Superman), and Detective Comics 38,
(which was the first strip in which Batman’s sidekick Robin appeared). For
safekeeping, Cage housed them at his Bel Air pad in museum-like glass cases.

Three people who visited his house also report seeing shrunken heads. None is
sure whether they were actual people’s heads (which are illegal to import) or
simply those of animals (which generally are not). Still, one thing was for
certain. “They were pretty weird,” says a source.

So was Cage’s pet collection, which in addition to a handful of purebred dogs,
included rare birds and a host of lizards, snakes, and other creepy crawlies.
“Basically, a zoo,” is how a person who’s known Cage for many years describes
it. He also had two albino King Cobras, this person says, as well as “an
antidote serum on the wall, so that if you got bit by a snake you could save
yourself.”

There also was a dinosaur skull that Cage purchased in 2007 for $276,000 in a
heated auction with Leonardo DiCaprio.

It was a fabulous life while it lasted, but it helps explain why so many people
in Hollywood aren’t entirely convinced his ex-money manager is solely to blame
for the actor’s financial troubles. Says one person who has known Cage for many
years: “I remember a bunch of us saying, ‘How many more magic tricks can Sam do
to keep Nic afloat?’ It was a house of cards… I think Nic thought he was
invincible.”

Certainly, Nic Cage was a man without an ordinary idea of living on a budget.
Born in Long Beach, California, in 1964, he is the nephew of director Francis
Ford Coppola. (Interestingly, Coppola also experienced serious money problems
over the years related to alleged overspending.) “I think Nic spent a lot of his
life with his face pressed against the glass, looking at his uncle Francis,”
says one person who’s worked with the star and knows him well. Cage’s father,
August Coppola, died last month at the age of 75.

From the early days of his career, Cage displayed a taste for the finer things
in life—which he shared with just about everyone around him. One crew member
from the celeb’s 1993 film It Could Happen to You tells The Daily Beast about an
episode in which this person was dispatched to caviar hotspot Petrossian in New
York to get takeout for the star and a few people on the set. “It was something
like $2,000 for a snack,” this person says. “He was really friendly and nice,
but almost dorky.”

His largesse was even more pronounced with the women he became involved with.
During his divorce proceedings from Lisa Marie Presley (Cage married her in
August 2002 and filed for divorce 108 days later), it emerged that in the ...

read more »


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
seastew  
View profile  
 More options Nov 5, 12:17 pm
Newsgroups: alt.gossip.celebrities
From: seastew <seattles...@hushmail.com>
Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 16:47:53 -0800 (PST)
Local: Thurs, Nov 5 2009 12:17 pm
Subject: Re: Nicolas Cage, Compulsive Spender
On Nov 4, 9:21 am, Twitchell <Twitchell_mem...@newsguy.com> wrote:

...

read more »


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
End of messages
« Back to Discussions « Newer topic     Older topic »

Create a group - Google Groups - Google Home - Terms of Service - Privacy Policy
©2009 Google