About Steve :: Person :: Romance ::
Anne Stringfield

Steve apparently has been dating Anne Stringfield since December, 2002. As of December, 2003, they are apparently still together.

She is a fact-checker at the New Yorker,  and lives in New York City. She's 27 years younger than he is.

Beyond that, Steve keeps things quiet.

   
    http://pagesix.com/pagesix/31186.htm
Page Six
NYPost
26 Feb 2003
Steve's Squeze [sic]

THE alliance between Steve Martin and the New Yorker is getting nice and cozy. The actor-director-novelist is dating the magazine's deputy head of fact-checking, Anne Stringfield. The pair have been together since December, when Martin took the fetching journo with him to the Kennedy Center Honors in Washington, D.C., says a source. Stringfield, 31, a devotee of sport fishing, has been the object of many a crush at the Conde Nast building.
 

   
    http://www.imdb.com/PeopleNews/2003/20030227
Celebrity News: 27th February 2003
Steve Martin's New Romance Uncovered

American funnyman Steve Martin attempts at keeping his love life secret have failed - he's now romancing a journalist. The ex-lover of actress Anne Heche is currently dating New Yorker magazine's deputy head of fact-checking, Anne Stringfield. And just this morning, when the actor had been quizzed about his very private private life on American chat show The View, he avoided the question. Instead, L.A. Story star Steve joked about his fellow star guest, "Kathy Bates and I are married - that's why you never hear about our private lives." But according to American website Page Six, Martin and the journalist have been together since December, when the Housesitter star took Stringfield with him to the Kennedy Center Honors in Washington DC. Stringfield, 31, a devotee of sport fishing, has reportedly been the object of many a crush at the Conde Nast building since she began working there.
 
   
    http://www.blonnet.com/life/2003/05/19/stories/2003051900180400.htm
The Hindu Business Line
Life - People
Columns - Celebrity Corner
Steve Martin dying to get married

Steve Martin's a wild, crazy and lonely guy. He's desperately seeking the right woman to share his life, home and King Tut jokes. "If I could find the right lady, I would definitely get married again," says the comedian who divorced actress-wife Victoria Tennant in 1994.

"I love the idea of being married. The problem is finding the right person," he told Star Magazine. He wants to take his own walk down the aisle again, despite the painful ending to his eight-year marriage to Tennant.

"I've cried over ended relationships," confesses Martin, who also dated Anne Heche. "Breaking up with someone you love is as torturous for men as it is for women. We are all fragile. We all cry."

The zany Oscars host — most recently linked with Anne Stringfield, who works for The New Yorker magazine says his ideal woman is someone who likes to yuk it up. "As long as a woman can laugh with me, I don't care if she's a blonde, brunette or whatever."
 
   
    http://www.starswelove.com/scriptsphp/news.php?newsid=2161
Saturday, 1 Mar 2003
Steve Martin's New Romance Uncovered

American funnyman Steve Martin attempts at keeping his love life secret have failed - he's now romancing a journalist. The ex-lover of actress Anne Heche is currently dating New Yorker magazine's deputy head of fact-checking, Anne Stringfield. And just this morning, when the actor had been quizzed about his very private private life on American chat show The View, he avoided the question. Instead, L.A. Story star Steve joked about his fellow star guest, "Kathy Bates and I are married - that's why you never hear about our private lives." But according to American website Page Six, Martin and the journalist have been together since December, when the Housesitter star took Stringfield with him to the Kennedy Center Honors in Washington DC. Stringfield, 31, a devotee of sport fishing, has reportedly been the object of many a crush at the Conde Nast building since she began working there.
 

   
    Time
November 10, 1997
Living, p. 88
The Young and the Nested: The Shelter Industry Goes "On Trend: and Heads for a New Demographic as Gen Xers Become Gen Nesters
Tamala M. Edwards and Jacqueline Savaiano

****

Even those not on trend speak to how the culture and its expectations have flipped. Anne Stringfield, 24, works at a New York City publishing house, lives in the trendy East Village and moonlights on the side, typing for Nobel laureate Derek Walcott. But as she sits in a New York restaurant, dressed in black and adjusting her tortoiseshell glasses, she says she often feels unchic around her friends. She is single, while most of them are in serious relationships. Her apartment is in the expected dishabille, while their cupboards are filled with martini and highball glasses, their furniture is well selected, and their culinary skills are often on display. "They have all the accoutrements of domesticity," says Stringfield, who spent half an hour at a recent soiree talking about piecrusts, her one hook into what she sees as the prevailing culture. "We kind of joke about how middle-aged we've become."
   
           
   
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