David Geffen and his ex-husband David Armstrong appear to have put their shockingly bitter divorce on hold.
The billionaire, 83, and the former go-go dancer, 33, were photographed together on Monday on Geffen’s yacht in Mallorca. The two also wore the same color scheme, with Geffen wearing a white bucket hat and a dark sweatshirt, while Armstrong wore a white baseball cap and a black zip-up jacket.
There was no PDA in the photo, but they seemed friendly and seemed to be talking to each other.
In one photo, Armstrong is smiling broadly as he talks to staff.
The reunion is surprising considering the pair reconciled in April and their high-profile divorce.
In court documents obtained by Page Six, Geffen marked the case as “no issue,” meaning the parties had reached a clear agreement on all important issues, including spousal support and property division.
Terms of the settlement were not disclosed.
Geffen filed for divorce from Armstrong in May 2025, after less than two years of marriage, citing irreconcilable differences. The former record company executive, who has a net worth of more than $9 billion, did not have premarital sex.
Shortly after Geffen’s divorce filing, Armstrong filed a response requesting an investigation into the former record company executive’s true assets. In court documents obtained by Page Six, Armstrong said, “The exact nature and extent of the separate assets and obligations are unknown at this time.”
But their divorce took a shocking turn in July 2025, when Armstrong filed a bombshell lawsuit against Geffen, accusing him of paying her thousands of dollars for sex and “grooming.” In court documents obtained by Page Six, Armstrong claimed that Geffen paid her $10,000 for sex the night they first met, after the two met on SeekingArrangements.com, a website that claimed rich people like Geffen were “shopping for the underdog.”
Geffen vehemently denies all of the allegations in the lawsuit, including that Armstrong claims that Geffen “began shipping her around the world as a paid sex worker” and traveled internationally, “much of which took place aboard Geffen’s personal superyacht.”
Mr. Armstrong also accused Mr. Geffen of forcing him to undergo painful cosmetic surgery, paying for drugs and expecting him to dine out with A-list friends.
But Armstrong moved to dismiss the lawsuit in October.
Later that month, he accused Geffen of hiding his finances to avoid paying. Armstrong claimed in court documents that the former man, “one of the richest, most powerful and influential men in the world,” had “made numerous false attempts to portray himself as an elderly ‘retirement'” despite remaining a “very important and powerful figure” among the wealthy.
