• A firefighter battles a hotspot caused by the Woosley Fire in Malibu. EPA
    A firefighter battles a hotspot caused by the Woosley Fire in Malibu. EPA
  • Molten aluminum has flowed from a car that burned in front of one of at least 20 homes destroyed in the Point Dume area of Malibu. AP Photo
    Molten aluminum has flowed from a car that burned in front of one of at least 20 homes destroyed in the Point Dume area of Malibu. AP Photo
  • Leveled residences line a mobile home park on Edgewood Lane after the Camp Fire burned through Paradise. AP Photo
    Leveled residences line a mobile home park on Edgewood Lane after the Camp Fire burned through Paradise. AP Photo
  • Abandoned cars, scorched by the wildfire, line Pearson Road in Paradise. AP Photo
    Abandoned cars, scorched by the wildfire, line Pearson Road in Paradise. AP Photo
  • A helicopter drops water as the Woolsey Fire continues to burn in Malibu. Reuters
    A helicopter drops water as the Woolsey Fire continues to burn in Malibu. Reuters
  • Firefighters Jason Toole, right, and Brent McGill walk among the ashes of a wildfire-ravaged home in Malibu. AP Photo
    Firefighters Jason Toole, right, and Brent McGill walk among the ashes of a wildfire-ravaged home in Malibu. AP Photo
  • Captain Adrian Murrieta looks for hot spots on a wildfire-ravaged home in Malibu. AP Photo
    Captain Adrian Murrieta looks for hot spots on a wildfire-ravaged home in Malibu. AP Photo
  • Retired CalFire firefighter Scott Wit surveys burnt out vehicles on the side of the road in Paradise. AFP
    Retired CalFire firefighter Scott Wit surveys burnt out vehicles on the side of the road in Paradise. AFP
  • Melted metal from an abandoned car destroyed by the Camp Fire is seen in Paradise. Reuters
    Melted metal from an abandoned car destroyed by the Camp Fire is seen in Paradise. Reuters
  • A deer looks on from a burned residence after the Camp fire tore through the area in Paradise. AFP
    A deer looks on from a burned residence after the Camp fire tore through the area in Paradise. AFP

Gerard Butler shares dramatic photo of his destroyed house - asks for support for firefighters


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Celebrities whose coastal homes have been damaged or destroyed in a Southern California wildfire or were forced to flee from the flames expressed sympathy and solidarity with less-famous people hurt worse by the state's deadly blazes, and gave their gratitude to firefighters who kept them safe.

"Returned to my house in Malibu after evacuating," Gerard Butler wrote in an Instagram post next to a photo that showed a burned-out structure and a badly scorched vehicle. "Heartbreaking time across California. Inspired as ever by the courage, spirit and sacrifice of firefighters."

Via the Instagram he asked people to go to SupportLAFD.org to help the firefighting effort.

"Half-gone" the 300 actor grumbled in his Scottish accent in a video that shows embers, ashes and what's left of his home.

Camille Grammer Meyer of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills lost her Malibu home entirely on Saturday night, her publicist, Howard Bragman, said in an email to The Associated Press.

Read more: The other celebrity homes that have been evacuated

"Sadly my house couldn't be saved," Meyer, the ex-wife of actor Kelsey Grammer, wrote in an Instagram post that showed a huge house engulfed in flames. "The courageous firefighters were able to save my cars and personal items recovered from my home."

Many others, including Orlando Bloom, Alyssa Milano, Lady Gaga, Rainn Wilson and fashion designer Donna Karan were among evacuees. Some knew their homes were safe (for now) and waited for a chance to return. Others were in the dark, posting pictures of plumes of smoke and saying their houses were somewhere in there.

"Stay safe, California — and keep those prayers coming America," Wilson said on his Twitter account, where over the weekend he was sharing photos of some of the more than 100 people missing in the huge wildfire in Northern California that has killed at least 23.

Milano said her house is "still in jeopardy" as strong winds kicked up again Sunday.

Southern California's wildfire has killed two and destroyed at least 177 homes. The blaze started Thursday night and pushed toward Malibu and the Pacific Ocean, prompting evacuations in Malibu, Calabasas, Agoura Hills and other nearby areas.

Paramount Ranch's "Western Town," a landmark film location dating back to 1927 that included a jail, hotel and saloon, burned to the ground . The TV series Westworld is among the many productions that have filmed at the ranch in the mountains west of Los Angeles.

"LA is a pretty great place but if fires are all we have to deal with, you know, we're lucky," Rules of Engagement actor Oliver Hudson told the AP at a charity event in Culver City. "There's a lot of people in the world who are dealing with a lot more."

Actress Julie Bowen of Modern Family said everyone affected by the flames is deserving of sympathy.

"I think there are lots and lots of people who think of Malibu as just being a celebrity second-home culture," Bowen said at the Culver City event, "but there are people who is this is their first, last and only homes are there and going all up and down those canyons and they're not necessarily, 'who cares they're rich and glamorous they can afford to lose a home'. This is life and death and it's really tragic."