Kevin Spacey is revealing his finances are "not great" as he tries to put the assault allegations against him in the "rear-view mirror."

The "House of Cards" actor, 66, is performing at a nightclub in Cyprus, he shared in a new interview in The Telegraph. The news comes as Spacey, once a celebrated Hollywood figure, has struggled to get a second act off the ground following widespread allegations of sexual misconduct.

Beginning in 2017, Spacey was accused by a slew of alleged victims of sexual assault and harassment. While several of the claims went to court, the actor was never convicted by a jury.

Spacey said his belongings are in storage and he's hopping from hotel to Airbnb as he goes where the work is, the outlet reports.

"I've had very little coming in and everything going out," Spacey, who described his financial situation as "not great," said. "I'm living in hotels, I'm living in Airbnbs, I'm going where the work is. I literally have no home, that's what I'm attempting to explain."

Spacey was accused by some 15 alleged victims of sexual assault or harassment. The first, actor Anthony Rapp, told BuzzFeed in an October 2017 interview that Spacey made sexual advances in 1986, when he was 14, in Spacey's New York apartment. Spacey has denied all allegations against him.

After taking time to "reflect," Spacey is now selling tickets to a variety-style show in Europe.

"There's going to be people who will speculate whether this is some design plan, but that isn't the way my career happened, and it's not the way this next chapter is going to happen," Spacey told the outlet. "The last seven years have offered me a lot of opportunity to reflect and be reminded of what I'm grateful for, and the people in my life."

While he told Telegraph that he feels the scandal brought on by the sexual assault allegations is "in my rear-view mirror," he lamented the friendships he lost with some in Hollywood.

"There may be individuals that made decisions that I don’t think were fair, based on what they thought they knew at the time. … The fact that a whole bunch of people in Hollywood that I had relations with were an inch thick, OK," he said. "But my friends, my colleagues, my family – I have not felt isolated at all."

He's been eager to look at the narrative he feels was spun about him.

"Why was I such a good villain, why did I fit so well into a narrative that was out there?" Spacey said. "And some of those were important questions for me to ask, to take accountability for where I made mistakes."

He continued: "I was secretive. … People didn’t really know me, so it was very easy for people to stick a lot of labels on me that just were not true," he added. "Do I think the media was interested in not the truth but in creating a villain? Yes. I suppose when I look back, I wish I had spoken out sooner and allowed my voice to be heard more."

Spacey said he's been "enormously grateful" for the people who didn't doubt him. "I have always felt the public was on my side, and understood what had happened, and were not buying into things that they were reading," Spacey said.

As for a return to Hollywood, Spacey told the Telegraph that he feels the opportunities are slowly bubbling back up.

"We are in touch with some extremely powerful people who want to put me back to work," he said. “And that will happen in its right time. But I will also say what I think the industry seems to be waiting for is to be given permission – by someone who is in some position of enormous respect and authority."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Kevin Spacey admits finances are 'not great,' has 'no home'

Reporting by Anna Kaufman, USA TODAY / USA TODAY

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