Faye Dunaway offers to give up New York apartment

04 August 2011 - 18:47 By Reuters
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Actress Faye Dunaway attends The WB 2005 Television Critics Winter Press Tour Party at The WB Studios on January 22, 2005 in Burbank, California. ©
Actress Faye Dunaway attends The WB 2005 Television Critics Winter Press Tour Party at The WB Studios on January 22, 2005 in Burbank, California. ©
Image: Frederick M. Brown

Faye Dunaway, the Oscar-winning actress, said that she intends to give up her rent-stabilised New York City apartment after her landlord filed papers in housing court on Tuesday to evict her for not actually living there.

Reached by phone at her production company, Port Bascom Productions Inc., in California, Dunaway said she left the apartment, at 314 East 78th Street, in May.

Dunaway alleged that the realty company that owns the building, 7 of 8 Realty Co., initiated the eviction proceeding because she insisted the landlord paint the apartment.

"I couldn't even live in it, and it was really quite gross there," she said. Dunaway said she spoke with the landlord, Henry Moses, twice on Wednesday morning. "I have the keys waiting for him," she said.

"It's over, as far as I'm concerned," Dunaway said, adding, "I don't make it a practice to speak about these things."

Reached by phone on Wednesday evening, Moses declined comment. His attorney, Craig Charie, said, "These are fabricated allegations to avert the real issue: that she fails to occupy the premises as her primary residence."

Dunaway, 70, who is best known for her roles in Network, Bonnie and Clyde and Chinatown, said she remained in the apartment because of the comparatively low rent and because it was "Bill's house," referring to her mentor, the playwright William Alfred.

On Tuesday, the New York Times reported, Charie filed a petition in New York City Civil Court asking a judge to evict Dunaway from the apartment because she did not use it as her primary residence, according to court papers. Dunaway was paying a monthly rent of $1,048.72 for the one-bedroom unit. The lease, which Dunaway first signed in 1994, expired in July, the lawsuit said.

Dunaway's son, Liam Dunaway O'Neill, was listed as a subtenant in the lawsuit, but in a statement, he denied ever being a resident of New York.

"I've never signed a lease or a sublease for a New York apartment. I am confident that my name will be cleared," the statement said.

In a notice included in the court filing, the landlord said Dunaway is a California resident. She is registered to vote there, owns a home in West Hollywood, and has a California driver's license.

Tenants who do not use a dwelling as their primary residence are not entitled to the protections of the Rent Stabilization Law, including a renewal lease or continued occupancy, the lawsuit said. 

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