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O'Neal sues ex-Fawcett associate for defamation

Sat Jul 9, 2011 12:02 AM EDT
us-news, entertainment, us, dispute, andy-warhol, farrah-fawcett, warhol, fawcett, ryan-o'neal
Anthony Mccartney, AP Entertainment Writer
< PreviousNext >
showing 1 of 3 photos
<p>FILE- In this Aug. 29, 2004 file photo, actress Farrah Fawcett arrives for the  MTV Video Music Awards in Miami. The University of Texas system sued Fawcett's longtime partner, Ryan O'Neal, asking that a federal judge order him to turn over an Andy Warhol painting of the model and actress that they claim he is keeping without permission. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara, file)</p>

FILE- In this Aug. 29, 2004 file photo, actress Farrah Fawcett arrives for the MTV Video Music Awards in Miami. The University of Texas system sued Fawcett's longtime partner, Ryan O'Neal, asking that a federal judge order him to turn over an Andy Warhol painting of the model and actress that they claim he is keeping without permission. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara, file)

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LOS ANGELES — Ryan O'Neal sued a former associate of longtime partner Farrah Fawcett on Thursday, claiming the man is responsible for a Texas university's attempts to reclaim an Andy Warhol portrait of the actress.

O'Neal's defamation lawsuit against Craig Nevius Thursday seeks more than $1 million in damages and blames the actress' former collaborator for a lawsuit filed last week by the University of Texas system against O'Neal.

That lawsuit seeks return of a mixed-media portrait of Fawcett created by Warhol that Nevius and the university claim the actress bequeathed to the school's Austin, Texas campus.

O'Neal's lawsuit states that the school has known for more than a year that he has the portrait and that he is its rightful owner. He states Warhol gave it to him and that the two men had been friends long before the Fawcett artwork was created.

"O'Neal has no intention of ever parting with it during his lifetime, and upon his death he intends to bequeath it to his son and Ms. Fawcett's only child, Redmond O'Neal," the lawsuit states.

The lawsuit claims Nevius' interviews with "Good Morning America" and Star magazine that he had helped the university investigate the whereabouts of the Warhol portrait.

"Nevius' false, malicious and defamatory accusations that O'Neal stole the Warhol portrait are a desperate attempt to draw attention to himself by fabricating a controversy where none exists."

Nevius and O'Neal have sparred for years.

Nevius collaborated on a documentary of Fawcett's fight with cancer, but sued the actor claiming he interfered in the project and removed him from it shortly before Fawcett's 2009 death. The case was later dismissed.

In a statement, Nevius called the latest lawsuit an attempt to "further harass me into silence."

"I believe this is less about the portrait of Farrah Fawcett by Andy Warhol than it is about certain actions and events that occurred during the last few years of Farrah's life which I have knowledge of and that he (and others) would prefer me to never speak about," he wrote.

The University of Texas system's lawsuit filed July 8 claims O'Neal may be holding onto other pieces from Fawcett's art collection that she donated to the school and asked a judge to order the actor to ensure he properly stores and insures the Warhol piece.

"The Warhol portrait is an irreplaceable piece of art for which legal damages could not fully compensate," the university's lawsuit states.

___

Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/celebritydocket

© 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (4)
Josephelk

Even after your death Farrah men are fighting over you :)

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Sat Jul 9, 2011 3:40 AM EDT
Little Sure Shot

It does not matter if the university knew for ten years that he had the painting, if it is in her will that it is bequeathed to them, then O'Neil needs to turn it over. Perhaps they didn't push it for a year to give the man some time to resign himself to her death.

  • 1 vote
Reply#2 - Sat Jul 9, 2011 8:18 AM EDT
Josephelk

Your right LSS if that is what Farrah wanted then O'Neal should honor it. I also agree that the school didn't push it because of the grieving process we have when a loved one passes on, we tend to want to hang onto everything for awhile and cherish their belongings because it was their loved ones and we try and hang onto every little piece of life for as long as we can, but I think O'Neal is just being a jerk if he's going against Farrah's wishes.

  • 1 vote
#2.1 - Sat Jul 9, 2011 5:59 PM EDT
Reply
abroad-1111903

 On the one hand it is bequeathed to the University and should be honored. On the other hand would it kill the University to let him keep it until he dies and then it resorts back to the University? 

If he tries to sell it that is one thing- at this point it hangs on the wall in his room.

Neither one wins at this point. He looks argumentative and is being called a jerk. The University look like money grabbing administrators. How about concentrating on providing a quality education for the students and helping keep tuition costs down then spending the money on a law suit? Just a thought...........

    Reply#3 - Tue Jul 12, 2011 2:44 PM EDT
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