‘Annie Hall’ Star Was 79

Diane Keaton, whose long, versatile career as an actress, producer and director was indelibly highlighted by her Academy Award-winning performance as Woody Allenâs titular love interest in the actor-writer-directorâs 1977 romantic comedy âAnnie Hall,â has died in California, according to People. She was 79.
In addition to her âAnnie Hallâ win, Hall was Oscar-nominated for best actress for âReds,â âSomethingâs Gotta Giveâ and âMarvinâs Room.â
After establishing herself on Broadway in 1969 as Allenâs co-star in his comedy hit âPlay It Again, Samâ (during which the performers became romantically involved), Keaton made an impression in Hollywood as Kay Adams, the tormented girlfriend and then spouse of mobster Michael Corleone (Al Pacino), in Francis Ford Coppolaâs âThe Godfatherâ (1972) and âThe Godfather Part IIâ (1974).
But it was as Allenâs frequent co-star and onscreen comedic foil â even after their life as a couple was over â that Keaton made her deepest impression. After reprising her role in âPlay It Again, Samâ in Herbert Rossâ 1972 screen adaptation, she appeared with the diminutive comic in his sci-fi comedy âSleeperâ (1973) and his spoof of Russian literature âLove and Deathâ (1975).
However, it was the role of Annie Hall, the loopy, charming girlfriend of comic Alvy Singer (Allen) in the unconventionally structured feature, which truly launched her into the top echelon of screen actresses, scoring Oscars for best picture, best director and best original screenplay in the process. Keaton, who had served as the model for her character, also emerged as a style icon (for her off-kilter fashion sense) and an immediate influence on other young actresses.
In a New Yorker profile published at the height of Keatonâs first flush of fame, Penelope Gilliatt noted, âShe is not at all like the many actresses who have skimmed some mannerisms off her and done insultingly mild imitations by relying on âWellâs and dither. Miss KeatonâŠis not a whit like the flustered ingĂ©nue she was cast to play.
ââIâve noticed people saying âLa-di-daâ like Annie Hall, and I donât like it, you know?â she told me. âItâs not a good idea to be identifiable, though itâs reassuring. It feels safe in most ways, and thatâs bad, because it means that youâre accepted, and once that happens thatâs where you stay. You have to watch yourself. Iâd like a life like Katharine Hepburnâs in terms of work. She matured. She made the changes.ââ
While Keaton would sometimes draw on the dizzy attributes of the Hall character in her later work, she quickly moved into work in other, more somber projects. She succeeded her turn as a promiscuous schoolteacher in Richard Brooksâ adaptation of the shocking bestseller âLooking for Mr. Goodbarâ (1977) with appearances in Allenâs Bergmanesque drama âInteriorsâ (1978) and his dark comedy-drama âManhattanâ (1979).
Keaton captured a second Oscar nomination for her performance as the early 20th-century socialite-turned-radical Louise Bryant in âRedsâ (1981), a sprawling political-historical drama directed and co-authored by her then-paramour Warren Beatty, who also starred as left-wing journalist John Reed.
She received strong notices for her work in Gillian Armstrongâs âMrs. Soffelâ (1984) and Bruce Beresfordâs âCrimes of the Heartâ (1986), and returned to work with Allen in a small part in his period comedy âRadio Daysâ (1987). That same year, her role as a harried career woman saddled with her dead cousinâs infant daughter in âBaby Boomâ inaugurated a fruitful series of comedic collaborations with writer (and later director) Nancy Meyers.
In 1990, Keaton â who was intermittently involved with her âGodfatherâ co-star Pacino from 1971 â reprised her role as Kay Adams Corleone in Coppolaâs long-delayed âThe Godfather Part III.â She made a profitable return to comedy opposite Steve Martin in Meyersâ hit remake of âFather of the Brideâ (1991) and its 1995 sequel; took another turn opposite Allen in âManhattan Murder Mysteryâ (1993); and teamed with Bette Midler and Goldie Hawn in the smash hit âThe First Wives Clubâ (1996).
Keaton went on to garner two more Oscar nods as best actress, as a leukemia-stricken woman coping with family upheaval, opposite Meryl Streep and Leonardo DiCaprio, in Jerry Zaksâ drama âMarvinâs Roomâ (1996) and as a playwright who becomes involved with an aging rouĂ© (Jack Nicholson) in Meyersâ rom-com âSomethingâs Gotta Giveâ (2003).
She was active as a director from the â80s, when she notably helmed the video for Go-Goâs lead singer Belinda Carlisleâs 1987 solo hit âHeaven is a Place on Earthâ; she went on to direct episodes for the network series âChina Beachâ and âTwin Peaksâ and the features âUnstrung Heroesâ (1995) and âHanging Upâ (2000), in which she also co-starred with Meg Ryan and Lisa Kudrow. She produced the Fox series âPasadenaâ and Gus Van Santâs startling Columbine-inspired feature âElephantâ (2003).
She published the bestselling memoirs âThen Againâ (2011), âLetâs Just Say It Wasnât Prettyâ (2015) and âBrother and Sisterâ (2020). From the â70s on, she was an avid photographer whose work was collected in âReservations,â and she also edited several photo collections. She was also active in preserving historic houses.
Keaton received a 2017 Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Film Institute. Woody Allen, who served as presenter, twitted the fedora-wearing honoreeâs timeless style, quipping, âShe looks like the woman in âA Streetcar Named Desireâ who comes to take Blanche away.â
Accepting the award, the actress eschewed a speech in favor of a performance of âSeems Like Old Times,â which she memorably sang in âAnnie Hall.â
She was born Diane Hall in Los Angeles on Jan. 5, 1946; Allen would later take her nickname and family name for the handle of her most famous character. During high school in Santa Ana, Calif., she was active in both music and theater (and in fact played Blanche Dubois in Tennessee Williamsâ âA Streetcar Named Desireâ).
After dropping out of college, she moved to New York to pursue acting professional using her motherâs maiden name. In 1968, she landed a role in the Broadway production of âHair,â the âAmerican tribal love-rock musical,â and attracted attention by declining to strip for the playâs notorious ensemble nude scene. She made her big-screen bow in âLovers and Other Strangersâ in 1970.
An open audition scored her the role as the female lead in Allenâs âPlay It Again, Sam,â in which a sexually maladroit film critic receives counsel in romance from the shade of Humphrey Bogart. The co-stars became an item, but their work together on screen persisted long after they separated in the late â70s.
The impact of her captivating performance as the aspiring singer in âAnnie Hallâ (a role she failed to live out successfully in real life) extended well beyond her skillful acting and into the realm of national style. Her wardrobe in the film â wide-brimmed hats, menâs shirts, ties and vests, slacks â became much-emulated street wear for young women of the late â70s.
Save for a catastrophic appearance in the 1984 adaptation of John Le CarrĂ©âs thriller âThe Little Drummer Girl,â Keaton remained largely on a box office roll into the late â90s, by which time she began appearing more frequently in TV movies while transitioning gracefully into mature roles.
In 2018, after allegations that Woody Allen had molested his daughter Dylan in the early â90s were renewed (as his son Ronan Farrowâs reporting about sexual improprieties in Hollywood helped spark the #MeToo movement), Keaton came to the directorâs defense publicly, stating on Twitter, âWoody Allen is my friend and I continue to believe him.â
Keaton, who never married, is survived by her adopted daughter Dexter and son Duke.



