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      • Upon her return to Hollywood, Dunaway did make a bit of a splash opposite Mickey Rourke in "Barfly," a drama about struggling alcoholics. The film, released in 1987, earned her some of the best reviews she has ever received, including from established critics like Pauline Kael and Roger Ebert, as well as her eighth Golden Globe nomination.
      www.grunge.com/1413212/what-happened-hollywood-icon-faye-dunaway/
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  2. Oct 6, 2023 · After her role in 2010's "A Family Thanksgiving," Faye Dunaway began making very few public appearances and wouldn't act in a film again until 2017. However, with the actress entering her twilight years and no Hollywood comeback in sight, several organizations chose to honor her and her many contributions to cinema.

    • Larry Fried
  3. May 15, 2024 · Faye Dunaway in 'Faye' Warner Bros Discovery. Late in the highly entertaining and enlightening new HBO Documentary Films movie on the life and career of Faye Dunaway we learn how much this...

  4. Aug 14, 2024 · In 2019, she was fired from the one-woman Broadway show Tea at Five. As we reported at the time, her assistant on the show sued her, saying she terrorized him and repeatedly referred to him as a...

  5. Jul 13, 2024 · CNN — “Faye,” a documentary memoir of Faye Dunaway, begins with the “Chinatown” star barking orders at her interviewer, saying, “We need to shoot. I’m here now, come on.”

  6. Jul 16, 2024 · In “Faye,” director Laurent Bouzereau creates a compassionate yet unflinching portrait of a woman whom Columbia University film professor Annette Insdorf aptly sums up as “complicated.”

    • Ian Malone
  7. May 31, 2024 · Dunaway was once again in all of her widescreen glory: The film opens with the classic shot of the star beside the Beverly Hills Hotel swimming pool the morning after her 1977 Oscar victory—“the...

  8. Jul 17, 2024 · In Faye, director Laurent Bouzereau (Natalie Wood: What Remains Behind) considers all of this, creating a compassionate yet unflinching portrait of a woman whom Columbia University film professor Annette Insdorf in the film aptly sums up as “complicated”.