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Home / The Museum of Mid Century Material Culture

Adee do, indeed: The 1969 interiors in Palm Springs’ “Stephan’s Folly” are a true historic treasure — 23 photos

Kate - March 7, 2016, Updated: February 2, 2019

“The house has amazing color theory and is a stunning example of early 70s design. It feels like an immersive piece of art.” — Matthew Reader

1970s retro decorTour-a-Time-CapsuleWhat words? Plush, lavish, regal, colorful … epic! This 1965 Palm Springs time capsule home — which was redecorated in glamorous 1969 style by the home’s second owner Jack Stephan, “Plumber to the Stars” — is currently listed for sale by Matthew Reader of Paul Kaplan Group. Almost all of the home’s 1969 decor and furnishings remain intact. Back in 1969, the interior redesign cost $150,000 – that’s a whopping $968,321 today! You will be amazed, we promise — thanks to the 23 photos, courtesy Lance Gerber of Lance Gerber Studio.

Palm Springs retro house

“Stephan’s Folly”

Jack Stephan founded his first business, Jack Stephan Plumbing & Heating, in 1946, and Adee Plumbing & Heating in 1949. The company is still in business, run by two of his sons. By the time he bought the house and redecorated it in 1969, his business must have been booming, because the decorators working on this house seem to have been given a blank check. Even so, Jack Stephan seems to have been bemused by his own extravagance and dubbed his estate “Stephan’s Folly.”

  • Jack Stephan died in 2014. He was such a memorable fixture, the Los Angeles Times wrote a lengthy obituary here.
  • Kinda sorta reminds us of our 2014 story about the 1962 time capsule house of Mel Brown — Furniture King of Los Angeles.

And the “Adee Do!” in our headline? That’s from Stephan’s local TV commercials. What a hoot! NOTE: That’s actor Wally Sherwin in the commercial, not Mr. Stephan.

This house — it’s fantastique! From the listing:

  • Price: $879,000
  • Year built: 1965
  • Square footage: 3,250
  • Bedrooms: 3
  • Bathrooms: 5

This grand 3,250 square foot estate style home is a showcase of design and Palm Springs style. This exceptional mid-century property was designed by architect Robert Lewis and constructed in 1965, and it is located in Deepwell Estates, one of the most desirable neighborhoods in South Palm Springs. This impressive home was made for entertaining, and it is rich in local history. Deepwell had many celebrity residents, and Loretta Young, Julie London, Jack Webb, Eva Gabor, Liberace, and Elizabeth Taylor all lived on Manzanita at one time.

The current incredible interior was designed and installed in 1971 [note, Matthew says further research indicates: 1969], and every surface has been meticulously maintained and preserved. The home was the 2015 recipient of the PS ModCom’s prestigious Residential Preservation Award.

This special home is centered around a kidney-shaped pool, and it features a sunken living room, curved wet bar, three bedrooms, den (or 4th bedroom), five bathrooms, pool cabana room, and an oversized garage for classic cars.

1970s retro decor 1970s retro decor

“There are 16 different types of wallpaper and fabric cohabitating in perfect harmony from red to orange, and pink to fuchsia.”

Stephan’s Folly has been so extraordinarily preserved that the Palm Springs Modern Committee just awarded its current owner of the home — Ross A. Klein — with a Residential Preservation Award. Realtor Matthew Reader, who sold the house to Klein, made the presentation and shared his introductory speech. It includes more background information (edited a bit by us for use here):

Adee do! Those words were drilled into pop-culture posterity thanks to Jack Stephan, a flamboyant entrepreneur with a flair for marketing who founded two of the region’s most heavily advertised plumbing companies in Southern California: Adee and Stephan’s Heating and Plumbing.

1970s retro decor

This fabulous residence, constructed in 1965, was designed by Robert Lewis & Associates. Originally built for Dr. & Mrs. Sanford Ehrens, it was later purchased by “Plumber to the Stars” Jack Stephan in 1969, who gave it the name Stephan’s Folly. Mr. Stephan founded Jack Stephan Plumbing & Heating in 1946, and Adee Plumbing & Heating in 1949. He passed away in 2014 at the age of 96 and left the home to his third wife of forty-five years, Barbara.

Ross purchased the home sight unseen after he was encouraged by yours truly of The Paul Kaplan Group. I was literally face-timing Ross from the house. He said it was love at first sight.

1970s retro decor

Ross says he was inspired to buy the house because of the history of the previous owners and the exquisitely maintained period interior decor and custom furnishings. The house has amazing color theory and is a stunning example of early 70s design. It feels like an immersive piece of art. There are 16 different types of wallpaper and fabric cohabitating in perfect harmony from red to orange, and pink to fuchsia. Every lampshade and light bulb is spec’d to match the light fixture.

1970s retro decor

The Stephans were incredibly social and many great card games and parties of Palm Springs luminaries were hosted at the house.  Mrs. Stephan was very generous in leaving many period accessories in the home from books and games, and cards and shufflers, to the Jean Naté and chafing trays for guests!  In keeping with his attention-grabbing advertising style, Stephan drove Rolls-Royces and maintained a flashy wardrobe, including mega-carat diamonds and suits in his favorite color, red.

1970s retro decor

The interior is almost entirely original. In fact, the only items not original to the design are some of the appliances that were replaced over time. The house was the epitome of chic luxury and Palm Springs style.

1970s retro decorvintage hairdryer

Every piece of furniture was custom designed, with many pieces featuring hand-applied gold leaf. There are matching fixtures in 23 karat gold, and up-to-date modern luxuries like electric drapes, a movie screen, 12 carousel 8-Track Player, and NuTone Sound System. There is even a professional salon hair dryer.

Palm Springs retro house

In contrast, the exterior is much more restrained than the interior. While the house was always “please, no smoking,” guests were given gold leafed wooden matchboxes inscribed with “Stephan’s Folly.”

On the phone with Matthew Reader, Pam discussed how to categorize the home’s interior design. How about: Arabian Nights meets Moroccan meets Hollywood Regency Taken As Far As it Can Go meets…. Steak House?! Indeed, Matthew says that everytime he goes into the house he immediately starts craving a steak, a baked potato and a Manhattan. “Even at eight o’clock in the morning,” he laughed. He underscores that inside, smoking was never allowed — the house does not feel musty or old. Pam declares that this home may not really be a “time capsule” — it’s a “time machine.”

Reader also told us that it’s believed that the interior redesign in 1969 cost $150,000. We went over to the online CPI Inflation calculator and that translated to nearly a million dollars ($968,321) today. That said, we don’t think you could even replicate these interiors today — some of these materials would be very difficult, and expensive, to find!

1970s retro decorAlso of interest — do you recognize anything familiar in the home’s kitchen?

1970s retro decorWhy yes, it looks like those are some woven wood blinds, possibly originals from back in the day from our friends at Beauti-Vue!

Suffice to say: We love it. Fingers crossed the new buyers do, too, and don’t change a thing.

Link love:

  • Mega thanks to realtor Matthew Reader from Paul Kaplan Group for allowing us to feature this property and supplying us with even more information about the history and decor of the residence.
  • Thanks also to photographer Lance Gerber of Lance Gerber Studio for supplying us with these fantastic photos of the property.
  • Again: Wonderful story about Jack Stephan’s life via the Los Angeles Times.
  • Adee Pluming — still serving Southern California, since 1949! Adee do!

Tips to view slide show: Click on first image… it will enlarge on screen… click anywhere to move forward and look for previous and next buttons within photo to move back or forth… you can start or stop at any image:


palm-springs-midcentury-home-exterior
midcentury-palm-springs-house
palm-springs-house-at-night-1965
retro-1960s-living-room-orange
retro-palm-springs-1965-house
1965-built-in-bar
retro-built-in-bar
vintage-orange-sectional-couch
retro-gold-foil-wallpaper
1965-kitchen-retro-harvest-gold
retro-wood-blinds
1960s-retro-bedroom-wallpaper
retro-furniture-orange-velour
retro-orange-tufted-bed-60s
1960s-bathroom-orange
retro-60s-wallpaper
retro-1965-bedroom
1960s-foil-wallpaper
retro-1965-bathroom-wallpaper
retro-gold-and-orange-foil-wallpaper
retro-orange-and-pink-sofa
palm-springs-pool
palm-springs-pool1965

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68 comments

Comments

  1. la573 says

    March 16, 2016 at 3:51 pm

    Other things I recognized in the kitchen – the GE cooktop with control knobs in the exhaust hood, the hudee ring porcelain white sink, I think a non-original but still Hobart-era Kitchenaid dishwasher.

    I’ve come to love those plastic-covered wall-to-wall fluorescent overhead panel lights. Despite giving off bright, even light, these have been routinely ripped out of ceilings during renovations for the last few decades because nobody liked the unflattering artificial light from fluorescent tubes. But now you can replace them with more-effecient, dimmable LED retrofit tubes that give off great light – your choice of incandescent-miming warm or looks-like-daylight cool, or anything in between or both. And you keep the retro continuous covers.

  2. mike evans says

    March 13, 2016 at 11:40 am

    wow we thought libareace was over the top i rem seeing the adds on tv ,c 1970 my auunt lived in highland park {south west pasadna }who knows what learks in your pluming addee do

  3. vintigchik says

    March 12, 2016 at 1:35 pm

    I grew up in socal watching those commercials. If I remember correctly, it was Jack Stephanovich. He must have dropped the last part of the name along the way. Another fixture of the area was Cal Worthington Ford. Those commercials probably ran back to back. What a cool house.

  4. Connie Dowcett says

    March 10, 2016 at 5:21 pm

    American Hustle comes to mind. The sunken tub made me nervous…one misstep.

    • pam kueber says

      March 10, 2016 at 5:28 pm

      We have a story on the interiors in American Hustle! https://retrorenovation.com/2014/01/09/american-hustle-interior-design-1970s/

  5. Joe Felice says

    March 10, 2016 at 1:29 pm

    Magenta and olive? Pink and burned orange? Purple and orange? How did we do it, and, more importantly, how did we get away with it? But then, we were driving around in Gremlins and Pintos, so. . .

    • mike evans says

      March 13, 2016 at 11:45 am

      and 75 -78 eldorado with tufted valour easy chair front seats one could sleep on the back seat

  6. Marie Gamalski says

    March 10, 2016 at 9:24 am

    I’m….. Just…. Gobsmacked….. The only really odd bit are the cabinets in the one bath. Are they sprayed different splotchy colors?!?

  7. JT says

    March 10, 2016 at 1:56 am

    Just imagine if those walls and sofa could talk….I am sure some stories could be told!

    That interior is splendid, nothing should ever be changed.

  8. Dawn says

    March 9, 2016 at 10:00 pm

    I love everything about this place, especially the kitchen. It’s over the top but I think it works because they went full speed ahead – they didn’t lose their nerve and only go part of the way.
    If I owned it, I wouldn’t change a thing and I would probably become a recluse because I’d never want to leave. But I would entertain –
    A LOT!

  9. Michele says

    March 9, 2016 at 8:57 pm

    it should be used as a movie set!

  10. Rick G says

    March 9, 2016 at 8:52 pm

    If I moved in, I wouldn’t change a thing – this is stunning, the colors really flow !!! Thanks Pam !

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