Kevin Spacey says 'I literally have no home,' is working as nightclub singer in Cyprus

The Oscar winner is living out of hotels and Airbnb rentals in hope Hollywood gives him another chance.
Kevin Spacey
Kevin Spacey at the Venice International Film Festival on Aug. 31. Rocco Spaziani / Archivio Spaziani/Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images

Actor Kevin Spacey said he's living out of suitcases and biding time in hope of someday overcoming a sex scandal that has sidelined him from Hollywood's big stage for nearly a decade.

In a lengthy interview published Wednesday in The Telegraph, Spacey, 66, stopped just short of calling himself homeless, but he said of his financial situation: "Not great."

“I’m living in hotels, I’m living in Airbnbs, I’m going where the work is," said Spacey, a two-time Oscar winner, who lost his Baltimore home to foreclosure. "I literally have no home, that’s what I’m attempting to explain.”

Spacey spoke to the British broadsheet while singing standards at a nightclub in Cyprus, thousands of miles from bright Hollywood lights where he was once one of the industry's biggest names.

Spacey has been persona non grata in Tinseltown since actor Anthony Rapp told BuzzFeed in 2017 that he made a sexual advance on him in 1986. At the time, Spacey would have been 26 and Rapp 14.

A civil jury sided with Spacey over Rapp, but the allegations prompted others to accuse Spacey of improper behavior.

Spacey has admitted to "being too handsy" and “touching someone sexually in a way that I didn’t know at the time they didn’t want.”

In his interview with The Telegraph, Spacey compared himself to writers swept up in the red scare and the Hollywood blacklist.

It could take just one ally, such as Kirk Douglas' embrace of blacklisted writer Dalton Trumbo, to get him back onstage, Spacey said.

“When he [Douglas] said, ‘Dalton Trumbo’s name is going on 'Spartacus,' everyone around him said, ‘You’re crazy, you’re going to get cancelled,’” Spacey said.

“And Kirk Douglas said, ‘You know what, we get to play the hero in movies, but it’s not that simple in life.’ He was willing to stand up and say enough is enough. The moment he did that, the blacklist was over."

Spacey was on the critically acclaimed show “House of Cards” when Rapp made his allegations at the height of America's "Me Too" reckoning.

Image: Kevin Spacey
Kevin Spacey in "House of Cards."Nathaniel Bell / Netflix

After allegations of inappropriate behavior on the set of "House of Cards" were reported in the wake of Rapp's story, Spacey was fired from the hit Netflix series. He has struggled to find high-profile work ever since.

Just one VIP phone call could land Spacey back in the limelight, he said.

“So, my feeling is if Martin Scorsese or Quentin Tarantino call Evan [Lowenstein, Spacey’s manager] tomorrow, it will be over," Spacey said. "I will be incredibly honored and delighted when that level of talent picks up the phone.”

Spacey insists that day — and redemption — will come: “And I believe it’s going to happen.”

No criminal or civil court has ever found Spacey guilty or liable of any sexual crimes or misdeeds.

A criminal court in London on July 23, 2023, found Spacey not guilty of allegedly sexually assaulting four men.

A Massachusetts prosecutor, on July 17, 2019, declined to press a case against Spacey after the son of a former Boston news anchor accused him of sexual assault. The case came apart in light of allegations that messages on the accuser's iPhone might have been deleted.

The Telegraph reported that a fan at Spacey's show in Cyprus seemed unbothered by allegations against him: “He was acquitted! Isn’t that enough?”