Kevin Spacey Taps Martin Scorsese and Quentin Tarantino in a Bid for a Comeback
Kevin Spacey says he has been effectively homeless, shuttling between hotels and Airbnbs as costs soar — a stark fall for the once-lauded star sidelined by Hollywood amid sexual misconduct allegations.
Kevin Spacey is back in the headlines, and not for a comeback role. In a new interview, he says he has been effectively homeless, bouncing between hotels and Airbnb, and he hints that a nod from a legendary director could be what finally lets him back into the big leagues. It is a lot, and some of it is surprising even if you have been following his saga.
Where he says things stand now
- Spacey says he has no permanent home and is living out of hotels and Airbnb. He pins it on years of high costs and little work.
- He believes a respected figure — he name-drops Martin Scorsese and Quentin Tarantino — could effectively give Hollywood permission to hire him again. He told The Telegraph he is in touch with powerful people who want to put him back to work, but that it needs the right timing and the right endorsement.
- He has acted in smaller, low-budget projects like Peter Five Eight and The Contract, but those have not changed the larger industry freeze-out.
- He once had an estimated $70 million net worth (via Celebrity Net Worth), which tracked with his pre-#MeToo career. That fell apart after the wave of allegations and industry backlash.
- Anthony Rapp accused Spacey of molesting him when Rapp was 14, alleged to have happened in the early 1980s. Separately, Spacey was acquitted on nine other sexual-assault charges. Despite those outcomes, the town has largely stayed away.
- Last year, Spacey said his Baltimore home was headed for foreclosure amid millions in legal bills.
'I am going where the work is. I literally have no home, that is what I am trying to explain. The costs over these last seven years have been astronomical. I have had very little coming in and everything going out.'
The money spiral, in plain English
The math he lays out is straightforward: seven years of legal fights and little income will torch anyone's reserves, even a former A-lister. The foreclosure notice on his Baltimore place last year was the first public sign the financial dam had really broken; this latest update is him saying the safety net is gone and he is living gig to gig.
About that Scorsese/Tarantino idea
Spacey is not wrong that a role from a filmmaker with overwhelming clout could change the temperature. That is how the industry works: one heavyweight cosign, and doors start cracking open. But the odds with those two specifically feel slim. Tarantino has repeatedly framed his next film as his last as a director, and signing Spacey would drag a firestorm into a swan song. Scorsese, still very much working, tends to pick his battles carefully; inviting that level of controversy onto a major project is a big ask.
Could some other powerful producer or director take the risk? Maybe. Hollywood loves a redemption narrative — until the blowback starts. Spacey clearly thinks someone will eventually make the first move. Whether the audience follows is a separate question.
Bottom line
Spacey says he is homeless, the legal bills kept piling up, and the small gigs have not moved the needle. He is betting that one high-profile ally can flip the script. Until that happens, it sounds like he is living out of a suitcase and waiting for a very specific phone call.