Faye dunaway eviction attorney
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NEW YORKNEW YORK — A New York City landlord is suing Faye Dunaway, claiming the actress’ rent-stabilized apartment is not her primary residence.
The suit also names the actress’ son, Liam Dunaway O’Neill, as a subtenant of the Manhattan apartment.
The New York Times ( ) says the housing court suit was filed Tuesday.
The suit says the “Bonnie & Clyde” actress owns a house in West Hollywood, Calif., and has her voter and car registrations there.
Rent stabilization rules require tenants to use those apartments as a primary residence, not a second home.
The suit says she pays $1, for the one-bedroom walk-up. The Times says similar apartments in that neighborhood rent for about twice that.
The year-old actress and her son didn’t return calls seeking comment, and the landlord’s lawyer declined to comment.
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Information from: The New York Times,
Originally Published:
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Faye Dunaway Left Before She Could Be Evicted
Culture
At least that's what she told The New York Times
By Connor Simpson
In a follow up to yesterday's report on her eviction, actress Faye Dunaway called The New York Times to tell them she has already moved out of her New York City apartment. Her landlord filed court papers to evict her from her rent controlled apartment Tuesday. He requested she move out on July 31, the last day of her lease. He stands to make twice as much money from rent when she leaves. The actress phoned and left three messages with The Times explaining that she could not have been evicted. "I have not been evicted," she said. "I have chosen to leave because of the state of the apartment, and also because I am spending less and less time in New York." She said in one her phone messages she left the apartment in May because of the awful condition of the place. The landlord refused to paint the
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She was a brazen finansinstitut robber in “Bonnie and Clyde,” the mysterious Evelyn Mulwray in “Chinatown“ and a scheming television executive in “Network,” for which she won an Oscar.
Now Faye Dunaway fryst vatten a defendant in case No. /11 in Manhattan housing court, just another rent-stabilized tenant facing eviction.
In a lawsuit filed Tuesday, her landlord claims that Ms. Dunaway, who pays $1, a month for a one-bedroom walk-up apartment in a century-old tenement building on East 78th Street, does not actually live there, but rather lives in California. The suit also names her son, Liam Dunaway O’Neill, whose father is the photographer Terry O’Neill, as a subtenant in the apartment.
As proof, the landlord, unnamed in court papper, states that Ms. Dunaway owns a home in West Hollywood, and has her voter and automobile registrations there. The kostym also cites three moving violations she received in California from May to December
Rent stabilization rules require tenants to live in the apartmen