Actor Val Kilmer grew up on Roy Rogers' ranch.
Val Kilmer's Childhood on Roy Rogers' Legendary Ranch
Long before Val Kilmer became Hollywood's Iceman in Top Gun, he was a kid living out a Western fantasy that most children could only dream about. In 1969, his father Eugene—a real estate developer—purchased Roy Rogers' former ranch property at the top of Trigger Street in California's San Fernando Valley. The sprawling estate became young Val's childhood home.
The property wasn't just impressive by Hollywood standards. It featured a 6,000-square-foot ranch house with six bedrooms and six bathrooms, plus a guest house, tennis court, pool, and spa spread across three and a half acres. An additional 100 acres of undeveloped land came with the purchase, giving the Kilmer family plenty of room to roam.
The King of the Cowboys Next Door
Here's where the story gets better: Roy Rogers didn't just used to live there. The legendary cowboy actor was Val's actual next-door neighbor. At age seven, Kilmer's brothers and cousins dared him to ring the doorbell and ask if Roy could "come out to play."
What happened next became a core memory. Dale Evans answered the door, and young Val got an unexpected tour. Inside the Rogers home, he discovered that Roy's famous horse Trigger and his dog Bullet had been taxidermied and put on display. For a kid who just wanted to play cowboys, seeing the stuffed Trigger was probably equal parts fascinating and unsettling.
From Ranch Life to Juilliard
The ranch became Kilmer's home during a pivotal time. His parents divorced when he was nine, and his mother moved with the boys to nearby San Fernando, though Val and his brothers continued visiting their father at the Trigger Street property.
Growing up surrounded by Western heritage clearly left an impression. Kilmer would later own his own ranch—a 6,000-acre spread near Santa Fe, New Mexico, where he lived for over two decades before selling it. The actor has spoken fondly about his Western roots and the unique childhood experience of living where Hollywood's most famous cowboy once called home.
So yes, Val Kilmer literally grew up where Roy Rogers hung his hat. Not many people can say their childhood address was a piece of entertainment history—or that their neighbor kept a taxidermied horse in the living room.