Curry died last week at her home in Altadena as the Eaton Fire raged through the community.
Her granddaughter had dropped her off at her house about 11:30 p.m., after she spent the day in the hospital for tests after she felt dizzy. On the drive, they saw the fire far off in the distance and power was out as they exited the interstate in Altadena.
But power was on in her grandmother’s neighborhood, and there was no sign of immediate danger, so Kelley told her grandmother she’d check in later and left. She asked in a neighborhood text group for someone to call her if there were evacuations.
She woke about 5:30 a.m. the next morning to an urgent message in the group text, asking if Curry got out during the overnight evacuations.
Kelley rushed to Altadena but wasn’t allowed past a police barricade. An officer called her, saying her grandmother’s cottage burned to the ground. Then she frantically looked for her grandmother in shelters.
Four days later, the family received confirmation from the Los Angeles Coroner’s office that Curry had died, one of at least 25 victims of the devastating Los Angeles fires.
Curry said all the family mementos, including photos going back nine decades, and all were lost in the fire.
The only thing of her grandmother’s that escaped unscathed was a 1981 midnight blue Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham. It didn’t run, but Curry had been hoping to fix it up and rent it out to production companies making movies set in the 1980s.
Curry had other ties to the movie industry, starting after she struck up a friendship with Nellie Crawford, who went by the stage name of Madame Sul-Te-Wan, at a Los Angeles beauty salon in the early 1950s, Kelley says, telling her grandmother’s stories as best she can.