
Miley Cyrus is revisiting the moment her life — and home — went up in flames. Years on, and stronger, she has a glass-half-full perspective on the tragedy.
During a recent Q&A at her “Something Beautiful” event in New York, the pop singer described the destruction of her Malibu compound in the 2018 Woolsey Fire as a turning point.
The $2.52 million property, which included a four-bedroom residence and her personal recording studio, Rainbowland, was reduced to ash just weeks before she married Aussie actor Liam Hemsworth.
“When my house burned down, that was the biggest blessing I’ve ever had in my life, actually,” Cyrus said, according to People.
“Losing everything and being able to rebuild, and to be able to be purposeful and choose every piece that I’m gonna collect — or also just about the people in my life.”
The 2-acre estate wasn’t just a home. It was the birthplace of her recording career, where Cyrus, then a teen, laid down tracks for her first album in 2005.
But the fire brought more than physical loss.
“A lot of my relationships also burned down,” she said. “That again just led me to such magic and to have so much gratitude.”
Cyrus and Hemsworth had spent nearly a decade in an on-and-off relationship before marrying in December 2018. By August 2019, they…