Michael Bolton’s career has taken him around the world, but his roots have always run through Connecticut. And for over three decades, his anchor has been a peaceful, Tuscan-style estate along Nash’s Pond in Westport — a quiet retreat far from the spotlight, yet never far from home.
What makes this home unique isn’t just the Mediterranean architecture or the resort-like grounds — it’s how closely the house mirrors the journey of the man who’s lived there since 1991.
Born Michael Bolotin in New Haven in 1953, Bolton grew up in a modest household — his father a local political organizer, his mother a homemaker. By seven, he was playing the saxophone. By twelve, he was writing songs. At fourteen, his band had a record deal. At sixteen, he dropped out of school to pursue music full-time.
That early promise didn’t translate immediately into success. Bolton spent years bouncing between genres — heavy metal, southern rock — fronting a band called Blackjack and opening for acts like Ozzy Osbourne. By the early ’80s, he was unemployed, living outside New Haven with a wife and three kids.
Then came the pivot. A solo contract with Columbia. A stage name change. A ballad he originally wrote for Laura Branigan — How Am I Supposed to Live Without You — finally became his own breakout hit in 1989. Soul Provider sold over 7 million copies. Time, Love and Tenderness followed in 1991 with even greater success, winning him a second Grammy and cementing his place as the voice of a generation of power ballads.
That same year, he purchased the Westport estate — a home that became both a personal refuge and a creative hub. The Mediterranean-style residence stretches over 9,600 square feet and includes a heated Gunite pool, a tennis court, a guest house, and sweeping terraces.
But this isn’t just a celebrity compound. It’s where Bolton raised his daughters. Where he wrote and recorded. Where late-night tennis broke up long recording sessions. Where music industry icons came to unwind. It’s where he bonded with friends, played marathon computer golf games, and found the kind of peace that’s hard to come by when you’re selling out stadiums in Tokyo.
Even as his fame soared, Bolton’s relationship with Westport stayed remarkably down to earth. Ask locals like Drew McKeon, a Staples High grad and longtime drummer for Bolton, and you’ll hear it again and again: around town, he’s just Mike. The guy who shows up to your gig. The neighbor you wave to in the produce aisle. Or simply the family man and grandfather.
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Doug Cress
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doug@cress.co
License #RES.0832278
Fairfield County, CT
Enterprise Realty Inc.
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