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Diane Keaton

Diane Keaton (born Diane Hall, January 5, 1946) is an American actress. She has received various accolades throughout her career spanning over five decades, including an Academy Award, a British Academy Film Award, and two Golden Globe Awards, in addition to nominations for a Tony Award and two Emmy Awards. She was honored with the Film Society of Lincoln Center Gala Tribute in 2007 and an AFI Life Achievement Award in 2017.

Diane Keaton
Keaton in 2012
Born
Diane Hall

(1946-01-05) January 5, 1946 (age 77)
OccupationActress
Years active1966–present
Children2
AwardsFull list

Keaton's career began on stage when she appeared in the original 1968 Broadway production of the musical Hair. The next year she was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Play for her performance in Woody Allen's comic play Play it Again, Sam. She then made her screen debut in a small role in Lovers and Other Strangers (1970), before rising to prominence with her first major film role as Kay Adams-Corleone in Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather (1972), a role she reprised in its sequels Part II (1974) and Part III (1990). She frequently collaborated with Woody Allen, beginning with the film adaptation of Play It Again, Sam (1972). Her next two films with him, Sleeper (1973) and Love and Death (1975), established her as a comic actor, while her fourth, Annie Hall (1977), won her the Academy Award for Best Actress.

To avoid being typecast as her Annie Hall persona, Keaton appeared in several dramatic films, starring in Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977) and Interiors (1978). She received three more Academy Award nominations for her roles as activist Louise Bryant in Reds (1981), a leukemia patient in Marvin's Room (1996), and a dramatist in Something's Gotta Give (2003). Keaton is also known for her starring roles in Manhattan (1979), Baby Boom (1987), Father of the Bride (1991), Father of the Bride Part II (1995), The First Wives Club (1996), The Family Stone (2005), Finding Dory (2016) and Book Club (2018).

Early life and education Edit

Keaton was born Diane Hall in Los Angeles, California on January 5, 1946.[1][2] Her mother, Dorothy Deanne (née Keaton),[3] was a homemaker and amateur photographer; her father, John Newton Ignatius "Jack" Hall, was a real estate broker and civil engineer.[4][5][6] Keaton was raised a Free Methodist by her mother.[7][8][9] Her mother won the "Mrs. Los Angeles" pageant for homemakers; Keaton has said that the theatricality of the event inspired her first impulse to be an actress, and led to her desire to work on stage.[10] She has also credited Katharine Hepburn, whom she admires for playing strong and independent women, as one of her inspirations.[11]

Keaton is a 1964 graduate of Santa Ana High School in Santa Ana, California.[12] During her time there, she participated in singing and acting clubs at school, and starred as Blanche DuBois in a school production of A Streetcar Named Desire. After graduation, she attended Santa Ana College, and later Orange Coast College as an acting student, but dropped out after a year to pursue an entertainment career in Manhattan.[13] Upon joining the Actors' Equity Association, she changed her surname to Keaton, which was her mother's maiden name, as there was already an actress registered under the name of Diane Hall.[14] For a brief time she also moonlighted at nightclubs with a singing act.[15] She revisited her nightclub act in Annie Hall (1977), And So It Goes (2014), and a cameo in Radio Days (1987).

Keaton began studying acting at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York City. She initially studied acting under the Meisner technique, an ensemble acting technique first evolved in the 1930s by Sanford Meisner, a New York stage actor/acting coach/director who had been a member of The Group Theater (1931–1940). She describes her acting technique as, "[being] only as good as the person you're acting with ... As opposed to going it on my own and forging my path to create a wonderful performance without the help of anyone. I always need the help of everyone!"[15] According to fellow actor Jack Nicholson, "She approaches a script sort of like a play in that she has the entire script memorized before you start doing the movie, which I don't know any other actors doing that."[16]

Career Edit

1970s Edit

In 1968, Keaton became an understudy for part of Sheila in the original Broadway production of Hair.[17] She gained some notoriety for her refusal to disrobe at the end of Act I when the cast performs nude, even though nudity in the production was optional for actors (those who performed nude received a $50 bonus).[10][18] After acting in Hair for nine months, she auditioned for a part in Woody Allen's production of Play It Again, Sam. After nearly being passed over for being too tall (at 5 ft 8 in (173 cm), she is 2 inches (5 cm) taller than Allen), she won the part.[4] She went on to receive a Tony Award nomination for a Best Featured Actress in a Play for her performance in Play It Again, Sam.

 
Keaton with Woody Allen and Jerry Lacy in the play Play It Again, Sam (1969/1970)

The next year, Keaton made her film debut in Lovers and Other Strangers. She followed with guest roles on the television series Love, American Style, Night Gallery, and Mannix. Between films, Keaton appeared in a series of deodorant commercials.

Keaton's breakthrough role came two years later when she was cast as Kay Adams, the girlfriend and eventual wife of Michael Corleone (played by Al Pacino) in Francis Ford Coppola's 1972 film The Godfather. Coppola noted that he first noticed Keaton in Lovers and Other Strangers, and cast her because of her reputation for eccentricity that he wanted her to bring to the role[19] (Keaton claims that at the time she was commonly referred to as "the kooky actress" of the film industry).[10] Her performance in the film was loosely based on her real-life experience of making the film, both of which she has described as being "the woman in a world of men."[10] The Godfather was an unparalleled critical and financial success, becoming the highest-grossing film of the year and winning the 1972 Academy Award for Best Picture.

Two years later, she reprised her role as Kay Adams in The Godfather Part II. She was initially reluctant, saying, "At first, I was skeptical about playing Kay again in the Godfather sequel. But when I read the script, the character seemed much more substantial than in the first film."[13] In Part II, her character changed dramatically, becoming more embittered about her husband's criminal empire. Even though Keaton received widespread exposure from the films, some critics felt that her character's importance was minimal. Time wrote that she was "invisible in The Godfather and pallid in The Godfather Part II, but according to Empire magazine, Keaton "proves the quiet lynchpin which is no mean feat in [the] necessarily male dominated films."[20][21]

Keaton's other notable films of the 1970s included many collaborations with Woody Allen. She played many eccentric characters in several of his comic and dramatic films, including Sleeper, Love and Death, Interiors, Manhattan, Manhattan Murder Mystery and the film version of Play It Again, Sam, directed by Herbert Ross. Allen has credited Keaton as his muse during his early film career.[22]

In 1977, Keaton won the Academy Award for Best Actress in Allen's romantic comedy Annie Hall, one of her most famous roles. Annie Hall, written by Allen and Marshall Brickman and directed by Allen, was believed by many to be an autobiographical exploration of his relationship with Keaton. Allen based the character of Annie Hall loosely on Keaton ("Annie" is a nickname of hers, and "Hall" is her original surname). Many of Keaton's mannerisms and her self-deprecating sense of humor were added into the role by Allen. (Director Nancy Meyers has claimed: "Diane's the most self-deprecating person alive."[23]) Keaton has also said that Allen wrote the character as an "idealized version" of herself.[24] The two starred as a frequently on-again, off-again couple living in New York City. Her acting was later summed up by CNN as "awkward, self-deprecating, speaking in endearing little whirlwinds of semi-logic",[25] and by Allen as a "nervous breakdown in slow motion."[26] The film was a major critical and commercial success and won the Academy Award for Best Picture. Of Keaton's performance, feminist film critic Molly Haskell wrote, "Keaton took me by surprise in Annie Hall. Here she blossomed into something more than just another kooky dame—she put the finishing touches on a type, the anti-goddess, the golden shiksa from the provinces who looks cool and together, who looks as if she must have a date on Saturday night, but has only to open her mouth or gulp or dart spastically sideways to reveal herself as the insecure bungler she is, as complete a social disaster in her own way as Allen's horny West Side intellectual is in his."[27] In 2006, Premiere magazine ranked Keaton in Annie Hall 60th on its list of the "100 Greatest Performances of All Time", and noted:

It's hard to play ditzy. ... The genius of Annie is that despite her loopy backhand, awful driving, and nervous tics, she's also a complicated, intelligent woman. Keaton brilliantly displays this dichotomy of her character, especially when she yammers away on a first date with Alvy (Woody Allen), while the subtitle reads, 'He probably thinks I'm a yoyo.' Yo-yo? Hardly.[28]

Keaton's eccentric wardrobe in Annie Hall, which consisted mainly of vintage men's clothing, including neckties, vests, baggy pants, and fedora hats, made her an unlikely fashion icon of the late 1970s. A small amount of the clothing seen in the film came from Keaton herself, who was already known for her tomboyish clothing style years before Annie Hall, and Ruth Morley designed the film's costumes.[29] Soon after the film's release, men's clothing and pantsuits became popular attire for women.[30] She is known to favor men's vintage clothing, and usually appears in public wearing gloves and conservative attire. (A 2005 profile in the San Francisco Chronicle described her as "easy to find. Look for the only woman in sight dressed in a turtleneck. On a 90-degree afternoon in Pasadena.")[31]

Her photo by Douglas Kirkland appeared on the cover of the September 26, 1977, issue of Time magazine, with the story dubbing her "the funniest woman now working in films."[20] Later that year she departed from her usual lighthearted comic roles when she won the highly coveted lead role in the drama Looking for Mr. Goodbar, based on the novel by Judith Rossner. In the film, she played a Catholic schoolteacher for deaf children who lives a double life, spending nights frequenting singles bars and engaging in promiscuous sex. Keaton became interested in the role after seeing it as a "psychological case history."[32] The same issue of Time commended her role choice and criticized the restricted roles available for female actors in American films:

A male actor can fly a plane, fight a war, shoot a badman, pull off a sting, impersonate a big cheese in business or politics. Men are presumed to be interesting. A female can play a wife, play a whore, get pregnant, lose her baby, and, um, let's see ... Women are presumed to be dull. ... Now a determined trend spotter can point to a handful of new films whose makers think that women can bear the dramatic weight of a production alone, or virtually so. Then there is Diane Keaton in Looking for Mr. Goodbar. As Theresa Dunn, Keaton dominates this raunchy, risky, violent dramatization of Judith Rossner's 1975 novel about a schoolteacher who cruises singles bars.[20]

In addition to acting, Keaton has said she "had a lifelong ambition to be a singer."[33] She had a brief, unrealized career as a recording artist in the 1970s. Her first record was an original cast recording of Hair, in 1971. In 1977 she began recording tracks for a solo album, but the finished record never materialized.[4]

Keaton met with more success in the medium of still photography. Like her character in Annie Hall, Keaton had long relished photography as a favorite hobby, an interest she picked up as a teenager from her mother. While traveling in the late 1970s, she began exploring her avocation more seriously." Rolling Stone had asked me to take photographs for them, and I thought, 'Wait a minute, what I'm really interested in is these lobbies, and these strange ballrooms in these old hotels.' So I began shooting them", she recalled in 2003. "These places were deserted, and I could just sneak in anytime and nobody cared. It was so easy and I could do it myself. It was an adventure for me." Reservations, her collection of photos of hotel interiors, was published in book form in 1980.[34]

1980s Edit

With Manhattan (1979), Keaton and Woody Allen ended their long working relationship; it was their last major collaboration until 1993. In 1978, she became romantically involved with Warren Beatty, and two years later he cast her opposite him in the epic historical drama Reds. In the film, she played Louise Bryant, a journalist and feminist, who flees her husband to work with radical journalist John Reed (Beatty) and later enters Russia to find him as he chronicles the Russian Civil War. Beatty cast Keaton after seeing her in Annie Hall, as he wanted to bring her natural nervousness and insecure attitude to the role. The production of Reds was delayed several times following its conception in 1977, and Keaton almost left the project when she believed it would never be produced. Filming finally began two years later.

 
Keaton (right) at the White House with First Lady Nancy Reagan and Warren Beatty (December 1981)

In a 2006 Vanity Fair story, Keaton described her role as "the everyman of that piece, as someone who wanted to be extraordinary but was probably more ordinary ... I knew what it felt like to be extremely insecure." Assistant director Simon Relph later stated that Louise Bryant was one of Keaton's most difficult roles, and that "[she] almost got broken."[35] Reds opened to widespread critical acclaim, and Keaton's performance was highly praised in particular. The New York Times wrote that Keaton was "nothing less than splendid as Louise Bryant – beautiful, selfish, funny and driven. It's the best work she has done to date."[36] Roger Ebert called Keaton "a particular surprise. I had somehow gotten into the habit of expecting her to be a touchy New Yorker, sweet, scared, and intellectual. Here, she is just what she needs to be: plucky, healthy, exasperated, loyal, and funny."[37] Keaton received her second Academy Award for Best Actress nomination for her performance.

The following year, Keaton starred in the domestic drama Shoot the Moon opposite Albert Finney. The film follows George (Finney) and Faith Dunlap (Keaton), whose deteriorating marriage, separation, and love affairs devastate their four children. Shoot the Moon received mostly positive reviews from critics and Keaton's performance was again praised. In The New Yorker, Pauline Kael wrote that the film was "perhaps the most revealing American movie of the era", and that Keaton "may be a star without vanity: she's so completely challenged by the role of Faith that all she cares about is getting the character right. Very few young American movie actresses have the strength and the instinct for the toughest dramatic roles—intelligent, sophisticated heroines. Jane Fonda did, around the time that she appeared in Klute and They Shoot Horses, Don't They?, but that was more than ten years ago. There hasn't been anybody else until now. Diane Keaton acts on a different plane from that of her previous film roles; she brings the character a full measure of dread and awareness and does it in a special, intuitive way that's right for screen acting."[38] David Denby of New York magazine called Keaton "perfectly relaxed and self-assured", adding, "Keaton has always found it easy enough to bring out the anger that lies beneath the soft hesitancy of her surface manner, but she's never dug down and found this much pain before.[39] Keaton's performance garnered her a second Golden Globe nomination in a row for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama, following Reds.

1984 brought The Little Drummer Girl, Keaton's first excursion into the thriller and action genre. The Little Drummer Girl was both a financial and critical failure, with critics claiming that Keaton was miscast for the genre, such as one review from The New Republic claiming that "the title role, the pivotal role, is played by Diane Keaton, and around her the picture collapses in tatters. She is so feeble, so inappropriate."[40] But the same year, she received positive reviews for her performance in Mrs. Soffel, a film based on the true story of a repressed prison warden's wife who falls in love with a convicted murderer and arranges for his escape. Two years later, she starred with Jessica Lange and Sissy Spacek in Crimes of the Heart, adapted from Beth Henley's Pulitzer Prize-winning play into a moderately successful screen comedy. Keaton's performance was well received by critics, and Rita Kempley of The Washington Post wrote, "As the frumpy Lenny, Keaton eases smoothly from New York neurotic to southern eccentric, a reluctant wallflower stymied by, of all things, her shriveled ovary."[41]

In 1987, Keaton starred in Baby Boom, her first of four collaborations with writer-producer Nancy Meyers. She played a Manhattan career woman who is suddenly forced to care for a toddler. A modest box-office success, Keaton's performance was singled out by Kael, who described it as "a glorious comedy performance that rides over many of the inanities in this picture. Keaton is smashing: the Tiger Lady's having all this drive is played for farce and Keaton keeps you alert to every shade of pride and panic the character feels. She's an ultra-feminine executive, a wide-eyed charmer, with a breathless ditziness that may remind you of Jean Arthur in The More The Merrier."[42] That same year, Keaton made a cameo in Allen's film Radio Days as a nightclub singer. 1988's The Good Mother was a financial disappointment (according to Keaton, the film was "a Big Failure. Like, BIG failure"),[43] and some critics panned her performance; according to The Washington Post, "her acting degenerates into hype—as if she's trying to sell an idea she can't fully believe in."[44]

In 1987, Keaton directed and edited her first feature film, Heaven, a documentary about the possibility of an afterlife. It met with mixed critical reaction, with The New York Times likening it to "a conceit imposed on its subjects."[45] Over the next four years, Keaton directed music videos for artists such as Belinda Carlisle, including the video for Carlisle's chart-topping hit "Heaven Is a Place on Earth," two television films starring Patricia Arquette, and episodes of the series China Beach and Twin Peaks.

1990s Edit

By the 1990s, Keaton had established herself as one of the most popular and versatile actors in Hollywood. She shifted to more mature roles, frequently playing matriarchs of middle-class families. Of her role choices and avoidance of becoming typecast, she said: "Most often a particular role does you some good and Bang! You have loads of offers, all of them for similar roles ... I have tried to break away from the usual roles and have tried my hand at several things."[46]

Keaton began the decade with The Lemon Sisters, a poorly-received comedy-drama that she starred in and produced, which was shelved for a year after its completion. In 1991 she starred with Steve Martin in the family comedy Father of the Bride. She was almost not cast in the film, as The Good Mother's commercial failure had strained her relationship with Walt Disney Pictures, the studio of both films.[43] Father of the Bride was Keaton's first major hit after four years of commercial disappointments. She reprised her role four years later in the sequel, as a woman who becomes pregnant in middle age at the same time as her daughter. A San Francisco Examiner review of the film was one of many in which Keaton was once again compared to Katharine Hepburn: "No longer relying on that stuttering uncertainty that seeped into all her characterizations of the 1970s, she has somehow become Katharine Hepburn with a deep maternal instinct, that is, she is a fine and intelligent actress who doesn't need to be tough and edgy in order to prove her feminism."[47]

Keaton reprised her role of Kay Adams in 1990's The Godfather Part III, set 20 years after the end of The Godfather, Part II. In 1993 Keaton starred in black comedy mystery Manhattan Murder Mystery, her first major film role in a Woody Allen film since 1979. Her part was originally intended for Mia Farrow, but Farrow dropped out of the project after breaking up with Allen.[48] Todd McCarthy of Variety commended her performance, writing that she "nicely handles her sometimes buffoonish central comedic role".[49] David Ansen of Newsweek wrote, "On screen, Keaton and Allen have always been made for each other: they still strike wonderfully ditsy sparks".[50] For her performance, Keaton was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Comedy or Musical.

In 1995, Keaton directed Unstrung Heroes, her first theatrically released narrative film. The film, adapted from Franz Lidz's memoir, starred Nathan Watt as a boy in the 1960s whose mother (Andie MacDowell) is diagnosed with cancer. As her sickness advances and his inventor father (John Turturro) grows increasingly distant, the boy is sent to live with his two eccentric uncles (Maury Chaykin and Michael Richards). Keaton switched the story's setting from the New York of Lidz's book to the Southern California of her own childhood, and the four mad uncles were reduced to a whimsical odd couple.[51] In an essay for The New York Times, Lidz said that the cinematic Selma had died not of cancer, but of "Old Movie Disease". "Someday somebody may find a cure for cancer, but the terminal sappiness of cancer movies is probably beyond remedy."[52] Unstrung Heroes played in a relatively limited release and made little impression at the box office, but the film and its direction were generally well-received critically.[53]

Keaton's most successful film of the decade was the 1996 comedy The First Wives Club. She starred with Goldie Hawn and Bette Midler as a trio of "first wives": middle-aged women who had been divorced by their husbands in favor of younger women. Keaton claimed that making the film "saved [her] life."[54] The film was a major success, grossing US$105 million at the North American box office,[55] and it developed a cult following among middle-aged women.[56] Its reviews were generally positive for Keaton and her co-stars, and The San Francisco Chronicle called her "probably [one of] the best comic film actresses alive."[57] In 1997 Keaton, Hawn and Midler received the Women in Film Crystal Award, which honors "outstanding women who, through their endurance and the excellence of their work, have helped to expand the role of women within the entertainment industry."[58]

Also in 1996, Keaton starred as Bessie, a woman with leukemia, in Marvin's Room, an adaptation of the play by Scott McPherson. Meryl Streep played her estranged sister, Lee, and had also initially been considered for the role of Bessie. The film also starred Leonardo DiCaprio as Lee's rebellious son. Roger Ebert wrote, "Streep and Keaton, in their different styles, find ways to make Lee and Bessie into much more than the expression of their problems."[59] Keaton earned a third Academy Award nomination for the film, which was critically acclaimed. She said the role's biggest challenge was understanding the mentality of a person with a terminal illness.[10] Keaton next starred in The Only Thrill (1997) opposite her Baby Boom co-star Sam Shephard, and had a supporting role in The Other Sister (1999).

In 1999, Keaton narrated the one-hour public radio documentary "If I Get Out Alive", the first to focus on the conditions and brutality young people face in the adult correctional system. The program, produced by Lichtenstein Creative Media, aired on public radio stations across the country and was honored with a First Place National Headliner Award and a Casey Medal for Meritorious Journalism.[60]

2000s Edit

Keaton's first film of 2000 was Hanging Up, with Meg Ryan and Lisa Kudrow. She directed the film, despite claiming in a 1996 interview that she would never direct herself in a film, saying "as a director, you automatically have different goals. I can't think about directing when I'm acting."[43] A drama about three sisters coping with the senility and eventual death of their elderly father (Walter Matthau), Hanging Up rated poorly with critics and grossed a modest US$36 million at the North American box office.[61]

In 2001, Keaton co-starred with Beatty in Town & Country, a critical and financial fiasco. Budgeted at an estimated US$90 million, the film opened to little notice and grossed only US$7 million in its North American theatrical run.[62] Peter Travers of Rolling Stone wrote that Town & Country was "less deserving of a review than it is an obituary....The corpse took with it the reputations of its starry cast, including Beatty and Keaton."[63] In 2001 and 2002, Keaton starred in four low-budget television films. She played a fanatical nun in the religious drama Sister Mary Explains It All, an impoverished mother in the drama On Thin Ice, and a bookkeeper in the mob comedy Plan B. In Crossed Over, she played Beverly Lowry, a woman who forms an unusual friendship with the only woman executed while on death row in Texas, Karla Faye Tucker.

 
Keaton in 2009

Keaton's first major hit since 1996 came in 2003's romantic comedy Something's Gotta Give, directed by Nancy Meyers and co-starring Jack Nicholson. Nicholson and Keaton, aged 65 and 56 respectively, were seen as bold casting choices for leads in a romantic comedy. Twentieth Century Fox, the film's original studio, reportedly declined to produce the film, fearing that the lead characters were too old to be bankable. Keaton told Ladies' Home Journal, "Let's face it, people my age and Jack's age are much deeper, much more soulful, because they've seen a lot of life. They have a great deal of passion and hope—why shouldn't they fall in love? Why shouldn't movies show that?"[64] Keaton played a middle-aged playwright who falls in love with her daughter's much older boyfriend. The film was a major success at the box office, grossing US$125 million in North America.[65] Roger Ebert wrote, "Keaton and Nicholson bring so much experience, knowledge and humor to their characters that the film works in ways the screenplay might not have even hoped for."[66] Keaton received her fourth Academy Award nomination for her performance.

Keaton's only film between 2004 and 2006 was the comedy The Family Stone (2005), starring an ensemble cast. In the film, scripted and directed by Thomas Bezucha, Keaton played a breast cancer survivor and matriarch of a big New England family that reunites at the parents' home for its annual Christmas holidays.[67] The film released to moderate critical and commercial success,[68] and earned US$92.2 million worldwide.[69] Keaton received her second Satellite Award nomination for her performance,[70] of which Peter Travers of Rolling Stone wrote, "Keaton, a sorceress at blending humor and heartbreak, honors the film with a grace that makes it stick in the memory."[71]

In 2007, Keaton starred in both Because I Said So and Mama's Boy. In the romantic comedy Because I Said So, directed by Michael Lehmann, Keaton played a long-divorced mother of three daughters, determined to pair off her only single daughter, Milly (Mandy Moore).[72] Also starring Stephen Collins and Gabriel Macht, the project opened to overwhelmingly negative reviews, with Wesley Morris of The Boston Globe calling it "a sloppily made bowl of reheated chick-flick cliches", and was ranked among the worst-reviewed films of the year.[73][74][75] The following year Keaton received her first and only Golden Raspberry Award nomination to date for the film.[70][unreliable source?] In Mama's Boy, director Tim Hamilton's feature film debut, Keaton starred as the mother of a self-absorbed 29-year-old (Jon Heder) whose world turns upside down when she starts dating and considers kicking him out of the house. Distributed for a limited release to certain parts of the United States only, the independent comedy garnered largely negative reviews.[76]

In 2008, Keaton starred alongside Dax Shepard and Liv Tyler in Vince Di Meglio's dramedy Smother, playing the overbearing mother of an unemployed therapist, who decides to move in with him and his girlfriend after breaking up with her husband (Ken Howard). As with Mama's Boy, the film received a limited release only, resulting in a gross of US$1.8 million worldwide.[77] Critical reaction to the film was generally unfavorable.[78] Also in 2008, Keaton appeared alongside Katie Holmes and Queen Latifah in the crime-comedy film Mad Money, directed by Callie Khouri. Based on the British television drama Hot Money (2001), the film revolves around three female employees of the Federal Reserve who scheme to steal money that is about to be destroyed.[79]

2010s Edit

In 2010, Keaton starred alongside Rachel McAdams and Harrison Ford in Roger Michell's comedy Morning Glory, playing the veteran TV host of a fictional morning talk show that desperately needs to boost its lagging ratings. Portraying a narcissistic character who will do anything to please the audience, Keaton described her role as "the kind of woman you love to hate."[80] Inspired by Neil Simon's 1972 Broadway play The Sunshine Boys,[81] the film was a moderate success at the box office, taking a worldwide total of almost US$59 million.[82] Keaton was generally praised for her performance, with James Berardinelli of ReelViews writing, "Keaton is so good at her part that one can see her sliding effortlessly into an anchor's chair on a real morning show."[83]

 
Keaton at the 2012 Santa Barbara International Film Festival

In fall 2010, Keaton joined the production of the comedy-drama Darling Companion by Lawrence Kasdan, which was released in 2012. Co-starring Kevin Kline and Dianne Wiest and set in Telluride, Colorado,[84] the film follows a woman, played by Keaton, whose husband loses her much-beloved dog at a wedding held at their vacation home in the Rocky Mountains, resulting in a search party to find the pet.[85] Kasdan's first film in nine years, the film bombed at the US box office, where it scored about US$790,000 throughout its entire theatrical run.[86] Critics dismissed the film as "an overwritten, underplotted vanity project" but applauded Keaton's performance.[87][88] Ty Burr of The Boston Globe wrote that the film "would be instantly forgettable if not for Keaton, who imbues [her role] with a sorrow, warmth, wisdom, and rage that feel earned [...] Her performance here is an extension of worn, resilient grace."[88]

Also in 2011, Keaton began production on Justin Zackham's 2013 ensemble family comedy The Big Wedding, a remake of the 2006 French film Mon frère se marie in which she, along with Robert De Niro, played a long-divorced couple who, for the sake of their adopted son's wedding and his very religious biological mother, pretend they are still married.[89] The film received largely negative reviews.[90]

In 2014, Keaton starred in And So It Goes and 5 Flights Up. In Rob Reiner's romantic dramedy And So It Goes, Keaton portrayed a widowed lounge singer who finds autumnal love with a bad boy (Michael Douglas).[91] The film received largely negative reviews. One critic wrote that "And So It Goes aims for comedy, but with two talented actors stuck in a half-hearted effort from a once-mighty filmmaker, it ends in unintentional tragedy."[92] Keaton co-starred with Morgan Freeman in Richard Loncraine's comedy-drama 5 Flights Up, based on Jill Ciment's novel Heroic Measures. They play a long-married couple who have an eventful weekend after they are forced to contemplate selling their beloved Brooklyn apartment.[93][94] Shot in New York, the film premiered, under its former name Ruth & Alex, at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival.[95] The same year Keaton became the first woman to receive the Golden Lion Award at the Zurich Film Festival.[96][97]

Keaton's only film of 2015 was Love the Coopers, an ensemble comedy about a troubled family getting together for Christmas, for which she reunited with Because I Said So writer Jessie Nelson.[98] Also starring John Goodman, Ed Helms, and Marisa Tomei, Keaton was attached for several years before the film went into production.[98] Her casting was instrumental in financing and recruiting most other actors, which led her to an executive producer credit in the film.[98] Love the Coopers received largely negative reviews from critics, who called it a "bittersweet blend of holiday cheer",[99] and became a moderate commercial success at a worldwide total of US$41.1 million against a budget of US$17 million.[100] Also in 2015 Netflix announced the comedy Divanation, for which Keaton was expected to reunite with her First Wives Club co-stars Midler and Hawn to portray a former singing group, but the project failed to materialize.[101]

Keaton voiced amnesiac fish Dory's mother in Disney and Pixar's Finding Dory (2016), the sequel to the 2003 Pixar computer-animated film Finding Nemo. The film was a critical and commercial success, grossing over US$1 billion worldwide, the second Pixar film to cross this mark after Toy Story 3 (2010). It also set numerous records, including the biggest animated opening of all time in North America, emerging as the biggest animated film of all time in the US.[102][103] Keaton's other project of 2016 was the HBO eight-part series The Young Pope, in which she plays a nun who raised the newly elected Pope (Jude Law) and helped him reach the papacy.[104] The miniseries received two nominations for the 69th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards, becoming the first Italian TV series to be nominated for Primetime Emmy Awards.[105]

In 2017, Keaton appeared opposite Brendan Gleeson in the British dramedy film Hampstead.[106] Based on the life of Harry Hallowes, it depicts an American widow (Keaton) who helps a local man defending his ramshackle hut and the life he has been leading on Hampstead Heath for 17 years.[107] The specialty release had a mixed reception from critics, who were unimpressed by the film's "deeply mediocre story",[108] but became a minor commercial success.[109] Keaton's only project of 2018 was Book Club, in which she, Jane Fonda, Candice Bergen, and Mary Steenburgen play four friends who read Fifty Shades of Grey as part of their monthly book club and subsequently begin to change how they view their personal relationships. The romantic comedy received mixed reviews from critics, who felt that Book Club only "intermittently rises to the level of its impressive veteran cast,"[110][111] but with a worldwide gross of over $91 million, became Keaton's biggest commercial success in a non-voice role since 2003's Something's Gotta Give.[112] In 2019, Keaton starred in the comedy Poms as a woman dying of cancer who starts a cheerleading squad with other female residents of a retirement home. The film was a box office disappointment and was negatively received by critics.[113]

Personal life Edit

Relationships and family Edit

Keaton has had romantic associations with several entertainment industry personalities, starting with director Woody Allen during her role in the 1969 Broadway production of Play It Again, Sam. Their relationship turned romantic following a dinner after a late-night rehearsal. It was her sense of humor that attracted Allen.[114] They briefly lived together during the production, but by the time of the film release of the same name in 1972, their living arrangement became informal.[115] They worked together on eight films between 1971 and 1993, and Keaton has said that Allen remains one of her closest friends.[24]

Keaton also had a relationship with her Godfather Trilogy costar Al Pacino. Their on-again, off-again relationship ended after the filming of The Godfather Part III. Keaton said of Pacino, "Al was simply the most entertaining man... To me, that's, that is the most beautiful face. I think Warren [Beatty] was gorgeous, very pretty, but Al's face is like whoa. Killer, killer face."[116]

Keaton was already dating Warren Beatty in 1979 when they co-starred in the film Reds (1981).[117] Beatty was a regular subject in tabloid magazines and media coverage, and Keaton became included, much to her bewilderment. In 1985, Vanity Fair called her "the most reclusive star since Garbo."[14] This relationship ended shortly after Reds wrapped. Troubles with the production are thought to have strained the relationship, including numerous financial and scheduling problems.[35] Keaton remains friends with Beatty.[24]

In July 2001, Keaton said of being older and unmarried, "I don't think that because I'm not married it's made my life any less. That old maid myth is garbage."[118] Keaton has two adopted children, daughter Dexter (adopted 1996) and son Duke (2001). Her father's death made mortality more apparent to her, and she decided to become a mother at age 50.[54] She later said of having children, "Motherhood has completely changed me. It's just about like the most completely humbling experience that I've ever had."[119]

Religious beliefs Edit

Keaton said she produced her 1987 documentary Heaven because "I was always pretty religious as a kid ... I was primarily interested in religion because I wanted to go to heaven." When she grew up, she became agnostic.[120]

Other activities Edit

Keaton has been a vegetarian since around 1995.[121][122] She has continued to pursue photography. In 1987, she told Vanity Fair, "I have amassed a huge library of images—kissing scenes from movies, pictures I like. Visual things are really key for me."[120] She has published several collections of her photographs and served as an editor of collections of vintage photography. Works she has edited include a book of photographs by paparazzo Ron Galella, an anthology of reproductions of clown paintings, and a collection of photos of California's Spanish-Colonial-style houses.

Keaton has served as a producer on films and television series. She produced the Fox series Pasadena, which was canceled after airing only four episodes in 2001 but completed its run on cable in 2005. In 2003, she produced the Gus Van Sant drama Elephant, about a school shooting. Of why she produced the film, she said, "It really makes me think about my responsibilities as an adult to try and understand what's going on with young people."[123]

Since 2005, Keaton has been a contributing blogger at The Huffington Post. Since 2006, she has been the face of L'Oréal.[124] In 2007, Keaton received the Film Society of Lincoln Center's Gala Tribute. She opposes plastic surgery. She told More magazine in 2004, "I'm stuck in this idea that I need to be authentic ... My face needs to look the way I feel."[11]

Keaton is active in campaigns with the Los Angeles Conservancy to save and restore historic buildings, particularly in the Los Angeles area.[15] Among the buildings she has been active in restoring is the Ennis House in the Hollywood Hills, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.[31] Keaton was also active in the failed campaign to save the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles (a hotel featured in Reservations), where Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated. She is an enthusiast of Spanish Colonial Revival architecture.[125]

Keaton has also established herself as a real estate developer. She has resold several mansions in Southern California after renovating and redesigning them. One of her clients was Madonna, who purchased a $6.5 million Beverly Hills mansion from Keaton in 2003.[126]

Keaton wrote her first memoir, Then Again, for Random House in November 2011.[127] Much of it relies on her mother's private journals, which include the line "Diane...is a mystery...At times, she's so basic, at others so wise, it frightens me."[128] In 2012, Keaton's audiobook recording of Joan Didion's Slouching Towards Bethlehem was released on Audible.com.[129] Her performance was nominated for a 2013 Audie Award in the Short Stories/Collections category.

Acting style and legacy Edit

Keaton has been called "one of the great American actresses from the heyday of the 1970s", a style icon and a "treasure" with a personal and professional style that is "difficult to explicate and impossible to duplicate."[130][131][132] Many critics have pointed to her versatility in starring in both light comedies and acclaimed dramas. The New York Times described Keaton as "remarkably skilled" at portraying Woody Allen's "darling flustered muse" in his comedies, as well as "shy, self-conscious women overcome by the power of their own awakened eroticism" in dramatic films like Looking for Mr. Goodbar, Reds, Shoot the Moon and Mrs. Soffel.[133] It also noted Keaton's ability to consistently reinvent and challenge herself on screen, having transitioned from "Allen's ditzy foil" to a "gifted and erotically nuanced character actress" and later "an appealing maternal figure... a woman's woman with a sexy edge."[133][134]

Literary critic Daphne Merkin argued that Keaton remained more popular with audiences than her contemporaries because of her "friendly accessibility" and "charmingly self-effacing" persona, calling Keaton's most "steadfastly glamorous" asset her "megawatt personality, bursting out of her like an uncontrollable force of nature, a geyser of quirkily entertaining traits that fall on the air and lend everything around her a momentary sparkle."[133] In New York magazine, Peter Rainer wrote, "In her Annie Hall days, [Keaton] was famed for her thrown-together fashion sense, and her approach to acting is, in the best way, thrown-together, too. Audiences love her because they identify with the women she plays, who are never all of a piece. Nobody can be grave and goofy all at once like Diane Keaton. In these fractious times, it's the perfect combo for a modern heroine."[135] Famously self-deprecating, Keaton has been noted for her "wry sense of humor" and "eccentric gender-bending style."[136]

Analyzing her on-screen persona, Deborah C. Mitchell wrote that Keaton often played "a complex, modern American woman, a paradox of self-doubt and assurance", which became her trademark. Mitchell suggests that Keaton made Annie Hall a "critical juncture for women in American culture. In this ism-infected age, Keaton became not just a star but an icon. Annie Hall, and with her Diane Keaton, presented all of the uncertainty and ambivalence of the new breed of women."[137] Likewise, Bruce Weber felt Keaton's eccentricity—"an amalgam of caginess and insecurity" and a "note of comic desperation... her round-cheeked Annie Hall dewiness"—was her gift as a screen comedian.[132] Keaton's Annie Hall is often cited among the greatest Oscar-winning performances in history: Entertainment Weekly ranked it 7th on its "25 greatest Best Actress Winners" list, praising her "loopy mannerisms, jazz-club serenades, and endlessly imitated fashion sense."[138] After seeing her performance in Looking for Mr. Goodbar, Andrew Sarris remarked, "Keaton is clearly the most dynamic woman star in pictures. And any actress who can bring wit and humor to sex in an American movie has to be blessed with the most winning magic."[139]

When asked what made Keaton funny, Allen said: "My opinion is that with the exception of Judy Holliday, she's the finest screen comedienne we've ever seen. It's in her intonation; you can't quantify it easily. When Groucho Marx or W.C. Fields or Holliday would say something, it's in the ring of their voices, and she has that. It's never line comedy with her. It's all character comedy."[132] Charles Shyer, who directed her in Baby Boom, said Keaton was "in the mold of the iconic comedic actresses Carole Lombard, Irene Dunne and Rosalind Russell."[140] In 2017 Keaton was chosen by the board of directors of the American Film Institute to receive the AFI Life Achievement Award, which Woody Allen presented.[141]

Filmography Edit

Film Edit

Year Title Role Notes
1970 Lovers and Other Strangers Joan Vecchio
1971 Men of Crisis: The Harvey Wallinger Story Renata Wallinger Short film
1972 The Godfather Kay Adams
Play It Again, Sam Linda Christie
1973 Sleeper Luna Schlosser
1974 The Godfather Part II Kay Adams-Corleone
1975 Love and Death Sonja
1976 I Will, I Will... for Now Katie Bingham
Harry and Walter Go to New York Lissa Chestnut
1977 Annie Hall Annie Hall
Looking for Mr. Goodbar Theresa Dunn
1978 Interiors Renata Wallinger
1979 Manhattan Mary Wilkie
1981 The Wizard of Malta Narrator
Reds Louise Bryant
1982 Shoot the Moon Faith Dunlap
1984 The Little Drummer Girl Charlie
Mrs. Soffel Kate Soffel
1986 Crimes of the Heart Lenny Magrath
1987 Radio Days New Years Singer
Baby Boom J.C. Wiatt
1988 The Good Mother Anna Dunlop
1989 The Lemon Sisters Eloise Hamer
1990 The Godfather Part III Kay Adams-Michelson
1991 Father of the Bride Nina Banks
1993 Manhattan Murder Mystery Carol Lipton
Look Who's Talking Now Daphne Voice
1995 Father of the Bride Part II Nina Banks
1996 The First Wives Club Annie Paradis
Marvin's Room Bessie Wakefield
1997 The Only Thrill Carol Fitzsimmons
1999 The Other Sister Elizabeth Tate
2000 Hanging Up Georgia Mozell
2001 Town & Country Ellie Stoddard
Plan B Fran Varecchio
2003 Something's Gotta Give Erica Barry
2005 Terminal Impact Narrator
The Family Stone Sybil Stone
2007 Because I Said So Daphne Wilder
Mama's Boy Jan Mannus
2008 Mad Money Bridget Cardigan
Smother Marilyn Cooper
2010 Morning Glory Colleen Peck
2012 Darling Companion Beth Winter
2013 The Big Wedding Ellie Griffin
2014 And So it Goes Leah
5 Flights Up Ruth Carver
2015 Love the Coopers Charlotte Cooper
2016 Finding Dory Jenny Voice
2017 Hampstead Emily Walters
2018 Book Club Diane
2019 Poms Martha
2020 Father of the Bride, Part 3(ish) Nina Banks Short film
Love, Weddings & Other Disasters Sara
2022 Mack & Rita Rita
2023 Maybe I Do Grace
Book Club: The Next Chapter Diane
TBA Summer Camp Nora Post-production

Television Edit

Year Title Role Notes
1970 Love, American Style Louise Segment: "Love and Pen Pals"
Rod Serling's Night Gallery Nurse Frances Nevins Segment: "Room with a View"
1971 The F.B.I. Diane Britt Episode: "Death Watch"
Mannix Cindy Conrad Episode: "The Color of Murder"
1977 The Godfather Saga Kay Adams Corleone 4 episodes
1992 Running Mates Aggie Snow Television film
1994 Amelia Earhart: The Final Flight Amelia Earhart
1997 Northern Lights Roberta Blumstein
2001 Sister Mary Explains It All Sister Mary Ignatius
2002 Crossed Over Beverly Lowry
2003 On Thin Ice Patsy McCartle
2006 Surrender, Dorothy Natalie Swerdlow
2011 Tilda Tilda Watski Pilot
2016 The Young Pope Sister Mary Ignatius 10 episodes
2019–2022 Green Eggs and Ham Michellee Weebie-Am-I Voice; 20 episodes

Music videos Edit

Year Title Role Artist
2021 "Ghost" Self Justin Bieber

Awards and honors Edit

Keaton has received various awards, including an Academy Award, and a Golden Globe Award for her performance in Woody Allen's Annie Hall (1977). She also received three more Academy Award nominations, for Reds (1981), Marvin's Room (1996), and Something's Gotta Give (2003). Keaton received a Primetime Emmy Award nomination for Amelia Earhart: The Final Flight (1994) and a Daytime Emmy Award nomination for CBS Schoolbreak Special in 1990. Keaton has received 12 Golden Globe Award nominations, winning for Annie Hall (1977) and Something's Gotta Give (2003). She has received four Screen Actors Guild Award nominations for her work in film and television.

Over the years Keaton has been received various honors for her work as an actress and fashion icon. In 1991, she received the Hasty Pudding Woman of the Year award from Harvard's Hasty Pudding Theatricals, which is given to performers who give a lasting and impressive contribution to the world of entertainment.[142] In 1995, she was honored by the New York Women in Film & Television association along with Angela Bassett, Cokie Roberts, Gena Rowlands and Thelma Schoonmaker.[143] In 1996 she won the Golden Apple Award as the Female Star of the Year, sharing it with her First Wives Club co-stars Goldie Hawn and Bette Midler.[144] She also received the 1997 Crystal Award at the Women in Film Crystal + Lucy Awards in 1997, and the Elle Women in Hollywood Awards the Icon Award in 1998 along with Sigourney Weaver, Lucy Fisher and Gillian Armstrong.[145]

Keaton won the 2004 AFI Star Award during the US Comedy Arts Festival.[146] In 2005, she received a Lifetime Achievement award from the Hollywood Film Awards.[147] She was honored with the Film Society of Lincoln Center Gala Tribute in 2007.[148] In 2014 she received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Manaki Brothers Film Festival.[149] That year she also received the Golden Icon Award at the Zurich Film Festival.[150] In 2017 she was honored by the American Film Institute and was given a Lifetime Achievement Award, which was presented to her by her close friend and frequent collaborator Woody Allen. Other who paid tribute to her included Steve Martin, Martin Short, Meryl Streep, Reese Witherspoon, Emma Stone, Rachel McAdams, Morgan Freeman, and Al Pacino.[151] In 2018 she received a Special David at the David di Donatello Awards.[152]

Bibliography Edit

As writer Edit

  • Then Again, New York: Random House, 2011, ISBN 9781400068784
  • Let's Just Say It Wasn't Pretty, New York: Random House, 2014, ISBN 9780812994261
  • Brother & Sister, New York: Random House, 2020 ISBN 9780451494504

As photographer Edit

As editor Edit

References Edit

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Works cited Edit

  • Lax, Eric. Woody Allen: A Biography (Paperback). ISBN 0-306-80985-0. Da Capo Press; Updated edition (December 2000).
  • Denby, David (January 25, 1982). "Going for broke". New York Magazine. Vol. 15, no. 4. New York: New York Media, LLC. p. 66. ISSN 0028-7369.

External links Edit

diane, keaton, born, diane, hall, january, 1946, american, actress, received, various, accolades, throughout, career, spanning, over, five, decades, including, academy, award, british, academy, film, award, golden, globe, awards, addition, nominations, tony, a. Diane Keaton born Diane Hall January 5 1946 is an American actress She has received various accolades throughout her career spanning over five decades including an Academy Award a British Academy Film Award and two Golden Globe Awards in addition to nominations for a Tony Award and two Emmy Awards She was honored with the Film Society of Lincoln Center Gala Tribute in 2007 and an AFI Life Achievement Award in 2017 Diane KeatonKeaton in 2012BornDiane Hall 1946 01 05 January 5 1946 age 77 Los Angeles California U S OccupationActressYears active1966 presentChildren2AwardsFull listKeaton s career began on stage when she appeared in the original 1968 Broadway production of the musical Hair The next year she was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Play for her performance in Woody Allen s comic play Play it Again Sam She then made her screen debut in a small role in Lovers and Other Strangers 1970 before rising to prominence with her first major film role as Kay Adams Corleone in Francis Ford Coppola s The Godfather 1972 a role she reprised in its sequels Part II 1974 and Part III 1990 She frequently collaborated with Woody Allen beginning with the film adaptation of Play It Again Sam 1972 Her next two films with him Sleeper 1973 and Love and Death 1975 established her as a comic actor while her fourth Annie Hall 1977 won her the Academy Award for Best Actress To avoid being typecast as her Annie Hall persona Keaton appeared in several dramatic films starring in Looking for Mr Goodbar 1977 and Interiors 1978 She received three more Academy Award nominations for her roles as activist Louise Bryant in Reds 1981 a leukemia patient in Marvin s Room 1996 and a dramatist in Something s Gotta Give 2003 Keaton is also known for her starring roles in Manhattan 1979 Baby Boom 1987 Father of the Bride 1991 Father of the Bride Part II 1995 The First Wives Club 1996 The Family Stone 2005 Finding Dory 2016 and Book Club 2018 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 1970s 2 2 1980s 2 3 1990s 2 4 2000s 2 5 2010s 3 Personal life 3 1 Relationships and family 3 2 Religious beliefs 3 3 Other activities 4 Acting style and legacy 5 Filmography 5 1 Film 5 2 Television 5 3 Music videos 6 Awards and honors 7 Bibliography 7 1 As writer 7 2 As photographer 7 3 As editor 8 References 8 1 Works cited 9 External linksEarly life and education EditKeaton was born Diane Hall in Los Angeles California on January 5 1946 1 2 Her mother Dorothy Deanne nee Keaton 3 was a homemaker and amateur photographer her father John Newton Ignatius Jack Hall was a real estate broker and civil engineer 4 5 6 Keaton was raised a Free Methodist by her mother 7 8 9 Her mother won the Mrs Los Angeles pageant for homemakers Keaton has said that the theatricality of the event inspired her first impulse to be an actress and led to her desire to work on stage 10 She has also credited Katharine Hepburn whom she admires for playing strong and independent women as one of her inspirations 11 Keaton is a 1964 graduate of Santa Ana High School in Santa Ana California 12 During her time there she participated in singing and acting clubs at school and starred as Blanche DuBois in a school production of A Streetcar Named Desire After graduation she attended Santa Ana College and later Orange Coast College as an acting student but dropped out after a year to pursue an entertainment career in Manhattan 13 Upon joining the Actors Equity Association she changed her surname to Keaton which was her mother s maiden name as there was already an actress registered under the name of Diane Hall 14 For a brief time she also moonlighted at nightclubs with a singing act 15 She revisited her nightclub act in Annie Hall 1977 And So It Goes 2014 and a cameo in Radio Days 1987 Keaton began studying acting at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York City She initially studied acting under the Meisner technique an ensemble acting technique first evolved in the 1930s by Sanford Meisner a New York stage actor acting coach director who had been a member of The Group Theater 1931 1940 She describes her acting technique as being only as good as the person you re acting with As opposed to going it on my own and forging my path to create a wonderful performance without the help of anyone I always need the help of everyone 15 According to fellow actor Jack Nicholson She approaches a script sort of like a play in that she has the entire script memorized before you start doing the movie which I don t know any other actors doing that 16 Career Edit1970s Edit In 1968 Keaton became an understudy for part of Sheila in the original Broadway production of Hair 17 She gained some notoriety for her refusal to disrobe at the end of Act I when the cast performs nude even though nudity in the production was optional for actors those who performed nude received a 50 bonus 10 18 After acting in Hair for nine months she auditioned for a part in Woody Allen s production of Play It Again Sam After nearly being passed over for being too tall at 5 ft 8 in 173 cm she is 2 inches 5 cm taller than Allen she won the part 4 She went on to receive a Tony Award nomination for a Best Featured Actress in a Play for her performance in Play It Again Sam nbsp Keaton with Woody Allen and Jerry Lacy in the play Play It Again Sam 1969 1970 The next year Keaton made her film debut in Lovers and Other Strangers She followed with guest roles on the television series Love American Style Night Gallery and Mannix Between films Keaton appeared in a series of deodorant commercials Keaton s breakthrough role came two years later when she was cast as Kay Adams the girlfriend and eventual wife of Michael Corleone played by Al Pacino in Francis Ford Coppola s 1972 film The Godfather Coppola noted that he first noticed Keaton in Lovers and Other Strangers and cast her because of her reputation for eccentricity that he wanted her to bring to the role 19 Keaton claims that at the time she was commonly referred to as the kooky actress of the film industry 10 Her performance in the film was loosely based on her real life experience of making the film both of which she has described as being the woman in a world of men 10 The Godfather was an unparalleled critical and financial success becoming the highest grossing film of the year and winning the 1972 Academy Award for Best Picture Two years later she reprised her role as Kay Adams in The Godfather Part II She was initially reluctant saying At first I was skeptical about playing Kay again in the Godfather sequel But when I read the script the character seemed much more substantial than in the first film 13 In Part II her character changed dramatically becoming more embittered about her husband s criminal empire Even though Keaton received widespread exposure from the films some critics felt that her character s importance was minimal Time wrote that she was invisible in The Godfather and pallid in The Godfather Part II but according to Empire magazine Keaton proves the quiet lynchpin which is no mean feat in the necessarily male dominated films 20 21 Keaton s other notable films of the 1970s included many collaborations with Woody Allen She played many eccentric characters in several of his comic and dramatic films including Sleeper Love and Death Interiors Manhattan Manhattan Murder Mystery and the film version of Play It Again Sam directed by Herbert Ross Allen has credited Keaton as his muse during his early film career 22 In 1977 Keaton won the Academy Award for Best Actress in Allen s romantic comedy Annie Hall one of her most famous roles Annie Hall written by Allen and Marshall Brickman and directed by Allen was believed by many to be an autobiographical exploration of his relationship with Keaton Allen based the character of Annie Hall loosely on Keaton Annie is a nickname of hers and Hall is her original surname Many of Keaton s mannerisms and her self deprecating sense of humor were added into the role by Allen Director Nancy Meyers has claimed Diane s the most self deprecating person alive 23 Keaton has also said that Allen wrote the character as an idealized version of herself 24 The two starred as a frequently on again off again couple living in New York City Her acting was later summed up by CNN as awkward self deprecating speaking in endearing little whirlwinds of semi logic 25 and by Allen as a nervous breakdown in slow motion 26 The film was a major critical and commercial success and won the Academy Award for Best Picture Of Keaton s performance feminist film critic Molly Haskell wrote Keaton took me by surprise in Annie Hall Here she blossomed into something more than just another kooky dame she put the finishing touches on a type the anti goddess the golden shiksa from the provinces who looks cool and together who looks as if she must have a date on Saturday night but has only to open her mouth or gulp or dart spastically sideways to reveal herself as the insecure bungler she is as complete a social disaster in her own way as Allen s horny West Side intellectual is in his 27 In 2006 Premiere magazine ranked Keaton in Annie Hall 60th on its list of the 100 Greatest Performances of All Time and noted It s hard to play ditzy The genius of Annie is that despite her loopy backhand awful driving and nervous tics she s also a complicated intelligent woman Keaton brilliantly displays this dichotomy of her character especially when she yammers away on a first date with Alvy Woody Allen while the subtitle reads He probably thinks I m a yoyo Yo yo Hardly 28 Keaton s eccentric wardrobe in Annie Hall which consisted mainly of vintage men s clothing including neckties vests baggy pants and fedora hats made her an unlikely fashion icon of the late 1970s A small amount of the clothing seen in the film came from Keaton herself who was already known for her tomboyish clothing style years before Annie Hall and Ruth Morley designed the film s costumes 29 Soon after the film s release men s clothing and pantsuits became popular attire for women 30 She is known to favor men s vintage clothing and usually appears in public wearing gloves and conservative attire A 2005 profile in the San Francisco Chronicle described her as easy to find Look for the only woman in sight dressed in a turtleneck On a 90 degree afternoon in Pasadena 31 Her photo by Douglas Kirkland appeared on the cover of the September 26 1977 issue of Time magazine with the story dubbing her the funniest woman now working in films 20 Later that year she departed from her usual lighthearted comic roles when she won the highly coveted lead role in the drama Looking for Mr Goodbar based on the novel by Judith Rossner In the film she played a Catholic schoolteacher for deaf children who lives a double life spending nights frequenting singles bars and engaging in promiscuous sex Keaton became interested in the role after seeing it as a psychological case history 32 The same issue of Time commended her role choice and criticized the restricted roles available for female actors in American films A male actor can fly a plane fight a war shoot a badman pull off a sting impersonate a big cheese in business or politics Men are presumed to be interesting A female can play a wife play a whore get pregnant lose her baby and um let s see Women are presumed to be dull Now a determined trend spotter can point to a handful of new films whose makers think that women can bear the dramatic weight of a production alone or virtually so Then there is Diane Keaton in Looking for Mr Goodbar As Theresa Dunn Keaton dominates this raunchy risky violent dramatization of Judith Rossner s 1975 novel about a schoolteacher who cruises singles bars 20 In addition to acting Keaton has said she had a lifelong ambition to be a singer 33 She had a brief unrealized career as a recording artist in the 1970s Her first record was an original cast recording of Hair in 1971 In 1977 she began recording tracks for a solo album but the finished record never materialized 4 Keaton met with more success in the medium of still photography Like her character in Annie Hall Keaton had long relished photography as a favorite hobby an interest she picked up as a teenager from her mother While traveling in the late 1970s she began exploring her avocation more seriously Rolling Stone had asked me to take photographs for them and I thought Wait a minute what I m really interested in is these lobbies and these strange ballrooms in these old hotels So I began shooting them she recalled in 2003 These places were deserted and I could just sneak in anytime and nobody cared It was so easy and I could do it myself It was an adventure for me Reservations her collection of photos of hotel interiors was published in book form in 1980 34 1980s Edit With Manhattan 1979 Keaton and Woody Allen ended their long working relationship it was their last major collaboration until 1993 In 1978 she became romantically involved with Warren Beatty and two years later he cast her opposite him in the epic historical drama Reds In the film she played Louise Bryant a journalist and feminist who flees her husband to work with radical journalist John Reed Beatty and later enters Russia to find him as he chronicles the Russian Civil War Beatty cast Keaton after seeing her in Annie Hall as he wanted to bring her natural nervousness and insecure attitude to the role The production of Reds was delayed several times following its conception in 1977 and Keaton almost left the project when she believed it would never be produced Filming finally began two years later nbsp Keaton right at the White House with First Lady Nancy Reagan and Warren Beatty December 1981 In a 2006 Vanity Fair story Keaton described her role as the everyman of that piece as someone who wanted to be extraordinary but was probably more ordinary I knew what it felt like to be extremely insecure Assistant director Simon Relph later stated that Louise Bryant was one of Keaton s most difficult roles and that she almost got broken 35 Reds opened to widespread critical acclaim and Keaton s performance was highly praised in particular The New York Times wrote that Keaton was nothing less than splendid as Louise Bryant beautiful selfish funny and driven It s the best work she has done to date 36 Roger Ebert called Keaton a particular surprise I had somehow gotten into the habit of expecting her to be a touchy New Yorker sweet scared and intellectual Here she is just what she needs to be plucky healthy exasperated loyal and funny 37 Keaton received her second Academy Award for Best Actress nomination for her performance The following year Keaton starred in the domestic drama Shoot the Moon opposite Albert Finney The film follows George Finney and Faith Dunlap Keaton whose deteriorating marriage separation and love affairs devastate their four children Shoot the Moon received mostly positive reviews from critics and Keaton s performance was again praised In The New Yorker Pauline Kael wrote that the film was perhaps the most revealing American movie of the era and that Keaton may be a star without vanity she s so completely challenged by the role of Faith that all she cares about is getting the character right Very few young American movie actresses have the strength and the instinct for the toughest dramatic roles intelligent sophisticated heroines Jane Fonda did around the time that she appeared in Klute and They Shoot Horses Don t They but that was more than ten years ago There hasn t been anybody else until now Diane Keaton acts on a different plane from that of her previous film roles she brings the character a full measure of dread and awareness and does it in a special intuitive way that s right for screen acting 38 David Denby of New York magazine called Keaton perfectly relaxed and self assured adding Keaton has always found it easy enough to bring out the anger that lies beneath the soft hesitancy of her surface manner but she s never dug down and found this much pain before 39 Keaton s performance garnered her a second Golden Globe nomination in a row for Best Actress in a Motion Picture Drama following Reds 1984 brought The Little Drummer Girl Keaton s first excursion into the thriller and action genre The Little Drummer Girl was both a financial and critical failure with critics claiming that Keaton was miscast for the genre such as one review from The New Republic claiming that the title role the pivotal role is played by Diane Keaton and around her the picture collapses in tatters She is so feeble so inappropriate 40 But the same year she received positive reviews for her performance in Mrs Soffel a film based on the true story of a repressed prison warden s wife who falls in love with a convicted murderer and arranges for his escape Two years later she starred with Jessica Lange and Sissy Spacek in Crimes of the Heart adapted from Beth Henley s Pulitzer Prize winning play into a moderately successful screen comedy Keaton s performance was well received by critics and Rita Kempley of The Washington Post wrote As the frumpy Lenny Keaton eases smoothly from New York neurotic to southern eccentric a reluctant wallflower stymied by of all things her shriveled ovary 41 In 1987 Keaton starred in Baby Boom her first of four collaborations with writer producer Nancy Meyers She played a Manhattan career woman who is suddenly forced to care for a toddler A modest box office success Keaton s performance was singled out by Kael who described it as a glorious comedy performance that rides over many of the inanities in this picture Keaton is smashing the Tiger Lady s having all this drive is played for farce and Keaton keeps you alert to every shade of pride and panic the character feels She s an ultra feminine executive a wide eyed charmer with a breathless ditziness that may remind you of Jean Arthur in The More The Merrier 42 That same year Keaton made a cameo in Allen s film Radio Days as a nightclub singer 1988 s The Good Mother was a financial disappointment according to Keaton the film was a Big Failure Like BIG failure 43 and some critics panned her performance according to The Washington Post her acting degenerates into hype as if she s trying to sell an idea she can t fully believe in 44 In 1987 Keaton directed and edited her first feature film Heaven a documentary about the possibility of an afterlife It met with mixed critical reaction with The New York Times likening it to a conceit imposed on its subjects 45 Over the next four years Keaton directed music videos for artists such as Belinda Carlisle including the video for Carlisle s chart topping hit Heaven Is a Place on Earth two television films starring Patricia Arquette and episodes of the series China Beach and Twin Peaks 1990s Edit By the 1990s Keaton had established herself as one of the most popular and versatile actors in Hollywood She shifted to more mature roles frequently playing matriarchs of middle class families Of her role choices and avoidance of becoming typecast she said Most often a particular role does you some good and Bang You have loads of offers all of them for similar roles I have tried to break away from the usual roles and have tried my hand at several things 46 Keaton began the decade with The Lemon Sisters a poorly received comedy drama that she starred in and produced which was shelved for a year after its completion In 1991 she starred with Steve Martin in the family comedy Father of the Bride She was almost not cast in the film as The Good Mother s commercial failure had strained her relationship with Walt Disney Pictures the studio of both films 43 Father of the Bride was Keaton s first major hit after four years of commercial disappointments She reprised her role four years later in the sequel as a woman who becomes pregnant in middle age at the same time as her daughter A San Francisco Examiner review of the film was one of many in which Keaton was once again compared to Katharine Hepburn No longer relying on that stuttering uncertainty that seeped into all her characterizations of the 1970s she has somehow become Katharine Hepburn with a deep maternal instinct that is she is a fine and intelligent actress who doesn t need to be tough and edgy in order to prove her feminism 47 Keaton reprised her role of Kay Adams in 1990 s The Godfather Part III set 20 years after the end of The Godfather Part II In 1993 Keaton starred in black comedy mystery Manhattan Murder Mystery her first major film role in a Woody Allen film since 1979 Her part was originally intended for Mia Farrow but Farrow dropped out of the project after breaking up with Allen 48 Todd McCarthy of Variety commended her performance writing that she nicely handles her sometimes buffoonish central comedic role 49 David Ansen of Newsweek wrote On screen Keaton and Allen have always been made for each other they still strike wonderfully ditsy sparks 50 For her performance Keaton was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress Motion Picture Comedy or Musical In 1995 Keaton directed Unstrung Heroes her first theatrically released narrative film The film adapted from Franz Lidz s memoir starred Nathan Watt as a boy in the 1960s whose mother Andie MacDowell is diagnosed with cancer As her sickness advances and his inventor father John Turturro grows increasingly distant the boy is sent to live with his two eccentric uncles Maury Chaykin and Michael Richards Keaton switched the story s setting from the New York of Lidz s book to the Southern California of her own childhood and the four mad uncles were reduced to a whimsical odd couple 51 In an essay for The New York Times Lidz said that the cinematic Selma had died not of cancer but of Old Movie Disease Someday somebody may find a cure for cancer but the terminal sappiness of cancer movies is probably beyond remedy 52 Unstrung Heroes played in a relatively limited release and made little impression at the box office but the film and its direction were generally well received critically 53 Keaton s most successful film of the decade was the 1996 comedy The First Wives Club She starred with Goldie Hawn and Bette Midler as a trio of first wives middle aged women who had been divorced by their husbands in favor of younger women Keaton claimed that making the film saved her life 54 The film was a major success grossing US 105 million at the North American box office 55 and it developed a cult following among middle aged women 56 Its reviews were generally positive for Keaton and her co stars and The San Francisco Chronicle called her probably one of the best comic film actresses alive 57 In 1997 Keaton Hawn and Midler received the Women in Film Crystal Award which honors outstanding women who through their endurance and the excellence of their work have helped to expand the role of women within the entertainment industry 58 Also in 1996 Keaton starred as Bessie a woman with leukemia in Marvin s Room an adaptation of the play by Scott McPherson Meryl Streep played her estranged sister Lee and had also initially been considered for the role of Bessie The film also starred Leonardo DiCaprio as Lee s rebellious son Roger Ebert wrote Streep and Keaton in their different styles find ways to make Lee and Bessie into much more than the expression of their problems 59 Keaton earned a third Academy Award nomination for the film which was critically acclaimed She said the role s biggest challenge was understanding the mentality of a person with a terminal illness 10 Keaton next starred in The Only Thrill 1997 opposite her Baby Boom co star Sam Shephard and had a supporting role in The Other Sister 1999 In 1999 Keaton narrated the one hour public radio documentary If I Get Out Alive the first to focus on the conditions and brutality young people face in the adult correctional system The program produced by Lichtenstein Creative Media aired on public radio stations across the country and was honored with a First Place National Headliner Award and a Casey Medal for Meritorious Journalism 60 2000s Edit Keaton s first film of 2000 was Hanging Up with Meg Ryan and Lisa Kudrow She directed the film despite claiming in a 1996 interview that she would never direct herself in a film saying as a director you automatically have different goals I can t think about directing when I m acting 43 A drama about three sisters coping with the senility and eventual death of their elderly father Walter Matthau Hanging Up rated poorly with critics and grossed a modest US 36 million at the North American box office 61 In 2001 Keaton co starred with Beatty in Town amp Country a critical and financial fiasco Budgeted at an estimated US 90 million the film opened to little notice and grossed only US 7 million in its North American theatrical run 62 Peter Travers of Rolling Stone wrote that Town amp Country was less deserving of a review than it is an obituary The corpse took with it the reputations of its starry cast including Beatty and Keaton 63 In 2001 and 2002 Keaton starred in four low budget television films She played a fanatical nun in the religious drama Sister Mary Explains It All an impoverished mother in the drama On Thin Ice and a bookkeeper in the mob comedy Plan B In Crossed Over she played Beverly Lowry a woman who forms an unusual friendship with the only woman executed while on death row in Texas Karla Faye Tucker nbsp Keaton in 2009Keaton s first major hit since 1996 came in 2003 s romantic comedy Something s Gotta Give directed by Nancy Meyers and co starring Jack Nicholson Nicholson and Keaton aged 65 and 56 respectively were seen as bold casting choices for leads in a romantic comedy Twentieth Century Fox the film s original studio reportedly declined to produce the film fearing that the lead characters were too old to be bankable Keaton told Ladies Home Journal Let s face it people my age and Jack s age are much deeper much more soulful because they ve seen a lot of life They have a great deal of passion and hope why shouldn t they fall in love Why shouldn t movies show that 64 Keaton played a middle aged playwright who falls in love with her daughter s much older boyfriend The film was a major success at the box office grossing US 125 million in North America 65 Roger Ebert wrote Keaton and Nicholson bring so much experience knowledge and humor to their characters that the film works in ways the screenplay might not have even hoped for 66 Keaton received her fourth Academy Award nomination for her performance Keaton s only film between 2004 and 2006 was the comedy The Family Stone 2005 starring an ensemble cast In the film scripted and directed by Thomas Bezucha Keaton played a breast cancer survivor and matriarch of a big New England family that reunites at the parents home for its annual Christmas holidays 67 The film released to moderate critical and commercial success 68 and earned US 92 2 million worldwide 69 Keaton received her second Satellite Award nomination for her performance 70 of which Peter Travers of Rolling Stone wrote Keaton a sorceress at blending humor and heartbreak honors the film with a grace that makes it stick in the memory 71 In 2007 Keaton starred in both Because I Said So and Mama s Boy In the romantic comedy Because I Said So directed by Michael Lehmann Keaton played a long divorced mother of three daughters determined to pair off her only single daughter Milly Mandy Moore 72 Also starring Stephen Collins and Gabriel Macht the project opened to overwhelmingly negative reviews with Wesley Morris of The Boston Globe calling it a sloppily made bowl of reheated chick flick cliches and was ranked among the worst reviewed films of the year 73 74 75 The following year Keaton received her first and only Golden Raspberry Award nomination to date for the film 70 unreliable source In Mama s Boy director Tim Hamilton s feature film debut Keaton starred as the mother of a self absorbed 29 year old Jon Heder whose world turns upside down when she starts dating and considers kicking him out of the house Distributed for a limited release to certain parts of the United States only the independent comedy garnered largely negative reviews 76 In 2008 Keaton starred alongside Dax Shepard and Liv Tyler in Vince Di Meglio s dramedy Smother playing the overbearing mother of an unemployed therapist who decides to move in with him and his girlfriend after breaking up with her husband Ken Howard As with Mama s Boy the film received a limited release only resulting in a gross of US 1 8 million worldwide 77 Critical reaction to the film was generally unfavorable 78 Also in 2008 Keaton appeared alongside Katie Holmes and Queen Latifah in the crime comedy film Mad Money directed by Callie Khouri Based on the British television drama Hot Money 2001 the film revolves around three female employees of the Federal Reserve who scheme to steal money that is about to be destroyed 79 2010s Edit In 2010 Keaton starred alongside Rachel McAdams and Harrison Ford in Roger Michell s comedy Morning Glory playing the veteran TV host of a fictional morning talk show that desperately needs to boost its lagging ratings Portraying a narcissistic character who will do anything to please the audience Keaton described her role as the kind of woman you love to hate 80 Inspired by Neil Simon s 1972 Broadway play The Sunshine Boys 81 the film was a moderate success at the box office taking a worldwide total of almost US 59 million 82 Keaton was generally praised for her performance with James Berardinelli of ReelViews writing Keaton is so good at her part that one can see her sliding effortlessly into an anchor s chair on a real morning show 83 nbsp Keaton at the 2012 Santa Barbara International Film FestivalIn fall 2010 Keaton joined the production of the comedy drama Darling Companion by Lawrence Kasdan which was released in 2012 Co starring Kevin Kline and Dianne Wiest and set in Telluride Colorado 84 the film follows a woman played by Keaton whose husband loses her much beloved dog at a wedding held at their vacation home in the Rocky Mountains resulting in a search party to find the pet 85 Kasdan s first film in nine years the film bombed at the US box office where it scored about US 790 000 throughout its entire theatrical run 86 Critics dismissed the film as an overwritten underplotted vanity project but applauded Keaton s performance 87 88 Ty Burr of The Boston Globe wrote that the film would be instantly forgettable if not for Keaton who imbues her role with a sorrow warmth wisdom and rage that feel earned Her performance here is an extension of worn resilient grace 88 Also in 2011 Keaton began production on Justin Zackham s 2013 ensemble family comedy The Big Wedding a remake of the 2006 French film Mon frere se marie in which she along with Robert De Niro played a long divorced couple who for the sake of their adopted son s wedding and his very religious biological mother pretend they are still married 89 The film received largely negative reviews 90 In 2014 Keaton starred in And So It Goes and 5 Flights Up In Rob Reiner s romantic dramedy And So It Goes Keaton portrayed a widowed lounge singer who finds autumnal love with a bad boy Michael Douglas 91 The film received largely negative reviews One critic wrote that And So It Goes aims for comedy but with two talented actors stuck in a half hearted effort from a once mighty filmmaker it ends in unintentional tragedy 92 Keaton co starred with Morgan Freeman in Richard Loncraine s comedy drama 5 Flights Up based on Jill Ciment s novel Heroic Measures They play a long married couple who have an eventful weekend after they are forced to contemplate selling their beloved Brooklyn apartment 93 94 Shot in New York the film premiered under its former name Ruth amp Alex at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival 95 The same year Keaton became the first woman to receive the Golden Lion Award at the Zurich Film Festival 96 97 Keaton s only film of 2015 was Love the Coopers an ensemble comedy about a troubled family getting together for Christmas for which she reunited with Because I Said So writer Jessie Nelson 98 Also starring John Goodman Ed Helms and Marisa Tomei Keaton was attached for several years before the film went into production 98 Her casting was instrumental in financing and recruiting most other actors which led her to an executive producer credit in the film 98 Love the Coopers received largely negative reviews from critics who called it a bittersweet blend of holiday cheer 99 and became a moderate commercial success at a worldwide total of US 41 1 million against a budget of US 17 million 100 Also in 2015 Netflix announced the comedy Divanation for which Keaton was expected to reunite with her First Wives Club co stars Midler and Hawn to portray a former singing group but the project failed to materialize 101 Keaton voiced amnesiac fish Dory s mother in Disney and Pixar s Finding Dory 2016 the sequel to the 2003 Pixar computer animated film Finding Nemo The film was a critical and commercial success grossing over US 1 billion worldwide the second Pixar film to cross this mark after Toy Story 3 2010 It also set numerous records including the biggest animated opening of all time in North America emerging as the biggest animated film of all time in the US 102 103 Keaton s other project of 2016 was the HBO eight part series The Young Pope in which she plays a nun who raised the newly elected Pope Jude Law and helped him reach the papacy 104 The miniseries received two nominations for the 69th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards becoming the first Italian TV series to be nominated for Primetime Emmy Awards 105 In 2017 Keaton appeared opposite Brendan Gleeson in the British dramedy film Hampstead 106 Based on the life of Harry Hallowes it depicts an American widow Keaton who helps a local man defending his ramshackle hut and the life he has been leading on Hampstead Heath for 17 years 107 The specialty release had a mixed reception from critics who were unimpressed by the film s deeply mediocre story 108 but became a minor commercial success 109 Keaton s only project of 2018 was Book Club in which she Jane Fonda Candice Bergen and Mary Steenburgen play four friends who read Fifty Shades of Grey as part of their monthly book club and subsequently begin to change how they view their personal relationships The romantic comedy received mixed reviews from critics who felt that Book Club only intermittently rises to the level of its impressive veteran cast 110 111 but with a worldwide gross of over 91 million became Keaton s biggest commercial success in a non voice role since 2003 s Something s Gotta Give 112 In 2019 Keaton starred in the comedy Poms as a woman dying of cancer who starts a cheerleading squad with other female residents of a retirement home The film was a box office disappointment and was negatively received by critics 113 Personal life EditRelationships and family Edit Keaton has had romantic associations with several entertainment industry personalities starting with director Woody Allen during her role in the 1969 Broadway production of Play It Again Sam Their relationship turned romantic following a dinner after a late night rehearsal It was her sense of humor that attracted Allen 114 They briefly lived together during the production but by the time of the film release of the same name in 1972 their living arrangement became informal 115 They worked together on eight films between 1971 and 1993 and Keaton has said that Allen remains one of her closest friends 24 Keaton also had a relationship with her Godfather Trilogy costar Al Pacino Their on again off again relationship ended after the filming of The Godfather Part III Keaton said of Pacino Al was simply the most entertaining man To me that s that is the most beautiful face I think Warren Beatty was gorgeous very pretty but Al s face is like whoa Killer killer face 116 Keaton was already dating Warren Beatty in 1979 when they co starred in the film Reds 1981 117 Beatty was a regular subject in tabloid magazines and media coverage and Keaton became included much to her bewilderment In 1985 Vanity Fair called her the most reclusive star since Garbo 14 This relationship ended shortly after Reds wrapped Troubles with the production are thought to have strained the relationship including numerous financial and scheduling problems 35 Keaton remains friends with Beatty 24 In July 2001 Keaton said of being older and unmarried I don t think that because I m not married it s made my life any less That old maid myth is garbage 118 Keaton has two adopted children daughter Dexter adopted 1996 and son Duke 2001 Her father s death made mortality more apparent to her and she decided to become a mother at age 50 54 She later said of having children Motherhood has completely changed me It s just about like the most completely humbling experience that I ve ever had 119 Religious beliefs Edit Keaton said she produced her 1987 documentary Heaven because I was always pretty religious as a kid I was primarily interested in religion because I wanted to go to heaven When she grew up she became agnostic 120 Other activities Edit Keaton has been a vegetarian since around 1995 121 122 She has continued to pursue photography In 1987 she told Vanity Fair I have amassed a huge library of images kissing scenes from movies pictures I like Visual things are really key for me 120 She has published several collections of her photographs and served as an editor of collections of vintage photography Works she has edited include a book of photographs by paparazzo Ron Galella an anthology of reproductions of clown paintings and a collection of photos of California s Spanish Colonial style houses Keaton has served as a producer on films and television series She produced the Fox series Pasadena which was canceled after airing only four episodes in 2001 but completed its run on cable in 2005 In 2003 she produced the Gus Van Sant drama Elephant about a school shooting Of why she produced the film she said It really makes me think about my responsibilities as an adult to try and understand what s going on with young people 123 Since 2005 Keaton has been a contributing blogger at The Huffington Post Since 2006 she has been the face of L Oreal 124 In 2007 Keaton received the Film Society of Lincoln Center s Gala Tribute She opposes plastic surgery She told More magazine in 2004 I m stuck in this idea that I need to be authentic My face needs to look the way I feel 11 Keaton is active in campaigns with the Los Angeles Conservancy to save and restore historic buildings particularly in the Los Angeles area 15 Among the buildings she has been active in restoring is the Ennis House in the Hollywood Hills designed by Frank Lloyd Wright 31 Keaton was also active in the failed campaign to save the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles a hotel featured in Reservations where Robert F Kennedy was assassinated She is an enthusiast of Spanish Colonial Revival architecture 125 Keaton has also established herself as a real estate developer She has resold several mansions in Southern California after renovating and redesigning them One of her clients was Madonna who purchased a 6 5 million Beverly Hills mansion from Keaton in 2003 126 Keaton wrote her first memoir Then Again for Random House in November 2011 127 Much of it relies on her mother s private journals which include the line Diane is a mystery At times she s so basic at others so wise it frightens me 128 In 2012 Keaton s audiobook recording of Joan Didion s Slouching Towards Bethlehem was released on Audible com 129 Her performance was nominated for a 2013 Audie Award in the Short Stories Collections category Acting style and legacy EditKeaton has been called one of the great American actresses from the heyday of the 1970s a style icon and a treasure with a personal and professional style that is difficult to explicate and impossible to duplicate 130 131 132 Many critics have pointed to her versatility in starring in both light comedies and acclaimed dramas The New York Times described Keaton as remarkably skilled at portraying Woody Allen s darling flustered muse in his comedies as well as shy self conscious women overcome by the power of their own awakened eroticism in dramatic films like Looking for Mr Goodbar Reds Shoot the Moon and Mrs Soffel 133 It also noted Keaton s ability to consistently reinvent and challenge herself on screen having transitioned from Allen s ditzy foil to a gifted and erotically nuanced character actress and later an appealing maternal figure a woman s woman with a sexy edge 133 134 Literary critic Daphne Merkin argued that Keaton remained more popular with audiences than her contemporaries because of her friendly accessibility and charmingly self effacing persona calling Keaton s most steadfastly glamorous asset her megawatt personality bursting out of her like an uncontrollable force of nature a geyser of quirkily entertaining traits that fall on the air and lend everything around her a momentary sparkle 133 In New York magazine Peter Rainer wrote In her Annie Hall days Keaton was famed for her thrown together fashion sense and her approach to acting is in the best way thrown together too Audiences love her because they identify with the women she plays who are never all of a piece Nobody can be grave and goofy all at once like Diane Keaton In these fractious times it s the perfect combo for a modern heroine 135 Famously self deprecating Keaton has been noted for her wry sense of humor and eccentric gender bending style 136 Analyzing her on screen persona Deborah C Mitchell wrote that Keaton often played a complex modern American woman a paradox of self doubt and assurance which became her trademark Mitchell suggests that Keaton made Annie Hall a critical juncture for women in American culture In this ism infected age Keaton became not just a star but an icon Annie Hall and with her Diane Keaton presented all of the uncertainty and ambivalence of the new breed of women 137 Likewise Bruce Weber felt Keaton s eccentricity an amalgam of caginess and insecurity and a note of comic desperation her round cheeked Annie Hall dewiness was her gift as a screen comedian 132 Keaton s Annie Hall is often cited among the greatest Oscar winning performances in history Entertainment Weekly ranked it 7th on its 25 greatest Best Actress Winners list praising her loopy mannerisms jazz club serenades and endlessly imitated fashion sense 138 After seeing her performance in Looking for Mr Goodbar Andrew Sarris remarked Keaton is clearly the most dynamic woman star in pictures And any actress who can bring wit and humor to sex in an American movie has to be blessed with the most winning magic 139 When asked what made Keaton funny Allen said My opinion is that with the exception of Judy Holliday she s the finest screen comedienne we ve ever seen It s in her intonation you can t quantify it easily When Groucho Marx or W C Fields or Holliday would say something it s in the ring of their voices and she has that It s never line comedy with her It s all character comedy 132 Charles Shyer who directed her in Baby Boom said Keaton was in the mold of the iconic comedic actresses Carole Lombard Irene Dunne and Rosalind Russell 140 In 2017 Keaton was chosen by the board of directors of the American Film Institute to receive the AFI Life Achievement Award which Woody Allen presented 141 Filmography EditFilm Edit Year Title Role Notes1970 Lovers and Other Strangers Joan Vecchio1971 Men of Crisis The Harvey Wallinger Story Renata Wallinger Short film1972 The Godfather Kay AdamsPlay It Again Sam Linda Christie1973 Sleeper Luna Schlosser1974 The Godfather Part II Kay Adams Corleone1975 Love and Death Sonja1976 I Will I Will for Now Katie BinghamHarry and Walter Go to New York Lissa Chestnut1977 Annie Hall Annie HallLooking for Mr Goodbar Theresa Dunn1978 Interiors Renata Wallinger1979 Manhattan Mary Wilkie1981 The Wizard of Malta NarratorReds Louise Bryant1982 Shoot the Moon Faith Dunlap1984 The Little Drummer Girl CharlieMrs Soffel Kate Soffel1986 Crimes of the Heart Lenny Magrath1987 Radio Days New Years SingerBaby Boom J C Wiatt1988 The Good Mother Anna Dunlop1989 The Lemon Sisters Eloise Hamer1990 The Godfather Part III Kay Adams Michelson1991 Father of the Bride Nina Banks1993 Manhattan Murder Mystery Carol LiptonLook Who s Talking Now Daphne Voice1995 Father of the Bride Part II Nina Banks1996 The First Wives Club Annie ParadisMarvin s Room Bessie Wakefield1997 The Only Thrill Carol Fitzsimmons1999 The Other Sister Elizabeth Tate2000 Hanging Up Georgia Mozell2001 Town amp Country Ellie StoddardPlan B Fran Varecchio2003 Something s Gotta Give Erica Barry2005 Terminal Impact NarratorThe Family Stone Sybil Stone2007 Because I Said So Daphne WilderMama s Boy Jan Mannus2008 Mad Money Bridget CardiganSmother Marilyn Cooper2010 Morning Glory Colleen Peck2012 Darling Companion Beth Winter2013 The Big Wedding Ellie Griffin2014 And So it Goes Leah5 Flights Up Ruth Carver2015 Love the Coopers Charlotte Cooper2016 Finding Dory Jenny Voice2017 Hampstead Emily Walters2018 Book Club Diane2019 Poms Martha2020 Father of the Bride Part 3 ish Nina Banks Short filmLove Weddings amp Other Disasters Sara2022 Mack amp Rita Rita2023 Maybe I Do GraceBook Club The Next Chapter DianeTBA Summer Camp Nora Post productionTelevision Edit Year Title Role Notes1970 Love American Style Louise Segment Love and Pen Pals Rod Serling s Night Gallery Nurse Frances Nevins Segment Room with a View 1971 The F B I Diane Britt Episode Death Watch Mannix Cindy Conrad Episode The Color of Murder 1977 The Godfather Saga Kay Adams Corleone 4 episodes1992 Running Mates Aggie Snow Television film1994 Amelia Earhart The Final Flight Amelia Earhart1997 Northern Lights Roberta Blumstein2001 Sister Mary Explains It All Sister Mary Ignatius2002 Crossed Over Beverly Lowry2003 On Thin Ice Patsy McCartle2006 Surrender Dorothy Natalie Swerdlow2011 Tilda Tilda Watski Pilot2016 The Young Pope Sister Mary Ignatius 10 episodes2019 2022 Green Eggs and Ham Michellee Weebie Am I Voice 20 episodesMusic videos Edit Year Title Role Artist2021 Ghost Self Justin BieberAwards and honors EditMain article List of awards and nominations received by Diane Keaton Keaton has received various awards including an Academy Award and a Golden Globe Award for her performance in Woody Allen s Annie Hall 1977 She also received three more Academy Award nominations for Reds 1981 Marvin s Room 1996 and Something s Gotta Give 2003 Keaton received a Primetime Emmy Award nomination for Amelia Earhart The Final Flight 1994 and a Daytime Emmy Award nomination for CBS Schoolbreak Special in 1990 Keaton has received 12 Golden Globe Award nominations winning for Annie Hall 1977 and Something s Gotta Give 2003 She has received four Screen Actors Guild Award nominations for her work in film and television Over the years Keaton has been received various honors for her work as an actress and fashion icon In 1991 she received the Hasty Pudding Woman of the Year award from Harvard s Hasty Pudding Theatricals which is given to performers who give a lasting and impressive contribution to the world of entertainment 142 In 1995 she was honored by the New York Women in Film amp Television association along with Angela Bassett Cokie Roberts Gena Rowlands and Thelma Schoonmaker 143 In 1996 she won the Golden Apple Award as the Female Star of the Year sharing it with her First Wives Club co stars Goldie Hawn and Bette Midler 144 She also received the 1997 Crystal Award at the Women in Film Crystal Lucy Awards in 1997 and the Elle Women in Hollywood Awards the Icon Award in 1998 along with Sigourney Weaver Lucy Fisher and Gillian Armstrong 145 Keaton won the 2004 AFI Star Award during the US Comedy Arts Festival 146 In 2005 she received a Lifetime Achievement award from the Hollywood Film Awards 147 She was honored with the Film Society of Lincoln Center Gala Tribute in 2007 148 In 2014 she received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Manaki Brothers Film Festival 149 That year she also received the Golden Icon Award at the Zurich Film Festival 150 In 2017 she was honored by the American Film Institute and was given a Lifetime Achievement Award which was presented to her by her close friend and frequent collaborator Woody Allen Other who paid tribute to her included Steve Martin Martin Short Meryl Streep Reese Witherspoon Emma Stone Rachel McAdams Morgan Freeman and Al Pacino 151 In 2018 she received a Special David at the David di Donatello Awards 152 Bibliography EditAs writer Edit Then Again New York Random House 2011 ISBN 9781400068784 Let s Just Say It Wasn t Pretty New York Random House 2014 ISBN 9780812994261 Brother amp Sister New York Random House 2020 ISBN 9780451494504As photographer Edit Reservations New York Knopf 1980 ISBN 0394508424 Saved New York Rizzoli 2022 ISBN 0847871282As editor Edit Still Life with Marvin Heiferman New York Callaway 1983 ISBN 0935112162 Mr Salesman Santa Fe Twin Palms Publishers 1993 ISBN 0944092268 Local News with Marvin Heiferman New York D A P Distributed Art Publishers Inc 1999 ISBN 1891024132 Clown Paintings New York powerHouse Books 2002 ISBN 1576871487 California Romantica New York Rizzoli 2007 ISBN 0847829758 House New York Rizzoli 2012 ISBN 9780847835638References Edit French Philip November 20 2011 Then Again A Memoir by Diane Keaton review The Guardian Retrieved October 7 2015 UPI Almanac for Saturday Jan 5 2019 United Press International January 5 2019 Archived from the original on January 5 2019 Retrieved September 6 2019 actor Diane Keaton in 1946 age 73 Dorothy Hall Dies OC Register 2008 a b c Fong Torres Ben June 30 1977 Diane Keaton The Next Hepburn Rolling Stone No 242 Brockes Emma May 3 2014 Diane Keaton I love Woody And I believe my friend The Guardian Retrieved October 7 2015 Kaufman Joanne May 15 2015 Diane Keaton and Morgan Freeman s Real Estate Adventure The New York Times Retrieved July 23 2016 Stated in Then Again by Diane Keaton 2011 Then Again Actress Diane Keaton looks back today gt books TODAY com Archived from the original on October 17 2015 Retrieved October 7 2015 Then Again with Diane Keaton Fisher Center for Alzheimer s Research Foundation September 14 2012 Archived from the original on September 22 2018 a b c d e Diane Keaton interview Fresh Air WHYY Philadelphia January 1 1997 Retrieved February 27 2006 a b Nancy Griffin American Original More Magazine March 2004 Santa Ana High School Yearbook The Ariel 1964 a b Diane Keaton A Nervous Wreck on the Verge of a Breakthrough Movie Crazed 1974 Archived from the original on July 29 2020 Retrieved February 22 2006 a b Dunne Dominic February 1985 Hide and Seek with Diane Keaton Vanity Fair Retrieved August 23 2022 a b c Keefe Terry January 2004 Falling in love again with Diane Keaton Venice Magazine Archived from the original on November 2 2004 Retrieved November 4 2004 Jack Nicholson Falls Hard for the Romantic Comedy Something s Gotta Give About com December 2003 Archived from the original on June 7 2011 Retrieved March 24 2006 Diane Keaton Internet Broadway Databas Retrieved May 30 2008 Diane Keaton The Comeback Kid CBS News May 3 2004 Retrieved February 22 2006 Behind the Scenes A Look Inside Featurette from The Godfather DVD bonus features a b c Love Death and La De Dah Time September 26 1977 Collins Andrew January 1 2010 The Godfather Part II Review Empire Lax 2000 p 204 Smith Sean December 2003 Sweet on Diane Newsweek a b c Q amp A Diane Keaton CBS News February 18 2004 Retrieved February 21 2006 Tatara Paul January 13 1997 Keaton walks away with Marvin s Room CNN Retrieved February 27 2006 Antonia Quirke Something s Gotta Give review Archived October 11 2006 at the Wayback Machine Camden New Journal Retrieved March 20 2006 Reprinted in New York magazine October 31 1977 Molly Haskell 100 Greatest Performances of All Time Premiere magazine April 2006 Annie Hall 1977 Classic Hollywood Style November 2 2013 Retrieved October 7 2015 Signature Threads AMCTV Archived from the original on August 19 2005 Retrieved February 20 2006 a b Hart Hugh December 11 2005 Let s talk Diane Keaton San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved February 23 2006 Joan Juliet Buck Inside Diane Keaton Vanity Fair March 1987 The ever changing star Archived December 6 2008 at the Wayback Machine Sunday Post magazine Retrieved from the Google cache December 16 2005 Long Robert June 26 2003 Diane Keaton A Photographer s Role The East Hampton Star Archived from the original on July 25 2008 Retrieved August 25 2008 a b The Making of Reds Vanity Fair March 2006 Canby Vincent December 4 1981 Beatty s Reds with Diane Keaton The New York Times Retrieved February 24 2006 Ebert Roger January 1 1981 Reds Movie Review The Chicago Sun Times Retrieved December 11 2018 Kael Pauline January 18 1982 The Current Cinema The New Yorker Denby 1982 p 66 Stanley Kauffmann The Little Drummer Girl The New Republic 191 November 5 1984 Kempley Rita December 12 1986 Crimes of the Heart The Washington Post Retrieved January 15 2019 Kael Pauline November 16 1987 Baby Boom The New Yorker Retrieved March 7 2016 a b c Behar Henri December 22 1996 Diane Keaton on The First Wives Club Film Scouts Archived from the original on March 22 2006 Retrieved March 26 2006 Hinson Hal November 4 1988 The Good Mother The Washington Post Retrieved March 1 2006 Canby Vincent April 17 1987 Film A Documentary Diane Keaton s Heaven The New York Times Retrieved March 24 2006 Interview with film actress Diane Keaton Indian Television October 10 2003 Retrieved March 25 2006 Shulgasser Barbara December 8 1995 Great Bride II cast carries retread plot San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved March 3 2006 Smith Dinitia May 8 1994 Picking Up The Legos And The Pieces The New York Times Retrieved November 6 2010 McCarthy Todd August 9 1993 Manhattan Murder Mystery Ansen David August 30 1993 Play It Again Woody Newsweek New York City Newsweek Media Group Undone Heroes 09 18 95 New York magazine Lidz Franz January 10 1999 In a Higher State of Being That Is Dying The New York Times Unstrung Heroes at Rotten Tomatoes a b Brad Stone Defining Diane More magazine July August 2001 The First Wives Club at Box Office Mojo Elizabeth Gleick Hell Hath No Fury Time magazine October 7 1996 Wives Get Even and Even More San Francisco Chronicle September 20 1996 Retrieved February 24 2006 Past Recipients wif org Archived from the original on July 24 2011 Retrieved May 9 2011 Ebert Roger January 10 1997 Review Marvin s Room Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on January 10 2006 Retrieved March 25 2006 via rogerebert com National Headliner Awards Archived August 20 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved May 9 2010 Hanging Up at Box Office Mojo Town amp Country at Box Office Mojo Travers Peter May 9 2001 Town amp Country Rolling Stone Retrieved March 3 2006 Ginsberg Merle January 2004 Adopting Was the Smartest Thing I ve Ever Done Ladies Home Journal Something s Gotta Give at Box Office Mojo Ebert Roger December 12 2003 Something s Gotta Give Chicago Sun Times Retrieved February 20 2006 Kopp Carol December 12 2005 Keaton Grows Into Matriarch Role CBS News Retrieved February 9 2011 The Family Stone at Rotten Tomatoes The Family Stone at Box Office Mojo a b Awards for Diane Keaton IMDb Retrieved February 9 2011 Travers Peter December 1 2005 The Family Stone Review Rolling Stone Retrieved February 9 2011 Murray Rebecca Diane Keaton Talks About Playing a Meddlesome Mother in Because I Said So About com Archived from the original on January 22 2011 Retrieved February 9 2011 Morris Wesley February 2 2007 Looking for the perfect man has never been more painful Boston Globe This is a sloppily made bowl of reheated chick flick cliches Because I Said So at Rotten Tomatoes Booth William December 29 2007 Rated PU Unfit for Any Audience The Washington Post Retrieved February 14 2008 Mama s Boy at Rotten Tomatoes Smother at Box Office Mojo Smother at Rotten Tomatoes Honeycutt Kirk January 15 2008 Mad Money A Bankrupt Comedy Reuters Retrieved February 10 2010 Nasson Tim November 6 2010 Morning Glory BEHIND THE SCENES WildAboutMovies com Archived from the original on October 11 2011 Retrieved July 15 2011 Morning Glory Official Movie Site Production Notes Archived from the original on July 14 2011 Retrieved January 23 2011 Morning Glory at Box Office Mojo Morning Glory Reelviews Movie Reviews Reelviews net November 10 2010 Retrieved November 24 2010 Schwartz Terri September 23 2010 Kevin Kline And Diane Keaton Cast In Lawrence Kasdan s Latest Film Darling Companion MTV Retrieved July 18 2011 Renninger Bryce J Loria Daniel October 14 2010 In the Works Darling Companion from Big Chill Director Social Anxiety Monsters amp New Docs IndieWire com Retrieved July 18 2011 Darling Companion at Box Office Mojo Darling Companion at Rotten Tomatoes a b Burr Ty May 18 2012 Darling Companion unleashes late life frustrations Boston Globe Retrieved October 9 2012 Sneider Jeff June 24 2011 Robin Williams Invited To Big Wedding Variety Retrieved July 18 2011 The Big Wedding Rotten Tomatoes April 26 2013 Retrieved October 7 2015 And So It Goes For Michael Douglas amp Diane Keaton Indiewire October 18 2012 Archived from the original on January 20 2013 Retrieved October 29 2012 And So It Goes at Rotten Tomatoes Smarp September 25 2013 Morgan Freeman in Myrtle Ave Brooklyn NY USA Archived from the original on September 26 2013 Retrieved September 25 2013 Smarp September 25 2013 Diane Keaton in Myrtle Ave Brooklyn NY USA Archived from the original on September 26 2013 Retrieved September 25 2013 Ruth amp Alex Toronto International Film Festival Archived from the original on August 19 2014 Retrieved August 17 2014 Keaton first woman to win Golden Icon Award The Washington Post October 3 2014 Retrieved October 7 2015 Matt Mueller October 3 2014 Golden Icon Winner Diane Keaton Gets Real at Zurich Film Thompson on Hollywood Thompson on Hollywood Archived from the original on October 17 2015 Retrieved October 7 2015 a b c Grady Pam November 7 2015 Diane Keaton s Love the Coopers ties a bow around the holidays San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved February 29 2016 Love the Coopers 2015 Rotten Tomatoes November 13 2015 Retrieved February 9 2016 Love The Coopers 2015 Box Office Mojo Retrieved January 20 2016 Galuppo Mia December 15 2015 Goldie Hawn Bette Midler Diane Keaton Reteam for Netflix s Divanation The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved February 28 2016 Jonathan Papish June 17 2016 On Screen China Despite Upstream Struggle Pixar s Dory Could Haul It In China Film Insider Retrieved June 17 2016 Finding Dory 2016 International Box Office Results China Box Office Mojo Retrieved October 13 2016 Stanhope Kate July 28 2015 Diane Keaton to Star Opposite Jude Law in HBO and Sky Series The Young Pope The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved February 28 2016 Emmy Awards The Young Pope il record di Saturday Night Live e le candidature di Nicole Kidman Anthony Hopkins e gli altri Corriere della Sera July 14 2017 Ritman Alex October 20 2015 AFM Diane Keaton Brendan Gleeson to Find Love in Hampstead The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved February 28 2016 Doward Jamie June 10 2017 Mystery of Hampstead Heath squatter whose home inspired Hollywood romcom Guardian Retrieved July 15 2018 Hampstead Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved July 15 2018 Hampstead Box Office Mojo Retrieved July 15 2018 Book Club 2018 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango May 18 2018 Retrieved July 15 2018 Book Club 2018 review Roger Ebert Book Club 2018 The Numbers Retrieved July 15 2018 Clark Travis May 13 2019 Poms is the worst box office flop of the year so far Business Insider Retrieved December 19 2020 Lax 2000 p 243 Lax 2000 p 308 The Barbara Walters Special February 29 2004 Diane Keaton biography The New York Times Retrieved February 21 2006 Diane Keaton s Given Up On Men Archived February 26 2011 at the Wayback Machine WENN July 2 2001 Retrieved March 21 2006 Paul Fischer Diane Keaton Happily Single and Independent Film Monthly December 2 2003 Retrieved March 26 2006 a b Joan Juliet Buck Inside Diane Keaton Vanity Fair March 1987 21 Celebrities Who Stopped Eating Meat Share Why They Went Vegetarian or Vegan brightside me Retrieved 22 January 2023 You pay for privilege Why Diane Keaton s enviable life has come at some cost smh com au Retrieved 22 January 2023 Helen Bushby School shootings film hits Cannes BBC News May 18 2003 Retrieved February 25 2010 People and Accounts of Note June 5 2006 The New York Times Retrieved November 6 2010 Look Inside Diane Keaton s Spanish Colonial Revival House in Bel Air August 30 2016 Diane Keaton s good homework pays off Contact Music May 16 2003 Retrieved March 21 2006 Then Again PenguinRandomhouse com Retrieved October 7 2015 Weller Sheila December 2 2011 Diane Keaton Soulful Unselfish Maturity The New York Times Retrieved December 18 2011 Diane Keaton on Joan Didion Working with Robert De Niro in The Big Wedding and Her Love of Frank Ocean VF Daily August 31 2012 Retrieved April 26 2013 Reid Joe O Keefe Kevin July 22 2014 Diane Keaton Is Not Having A Moment The Atlantic Archived from the original on September 23 2019 Retrieved July 19 2021 Mac Donnell Chloe March 14 2019 Why Diane Keaton is your new ageless style inspiration The Telegraph Archived from the original on January 10 2022 Retrieved July 19 2021 a b c Weber Bruce March 17 2004 A Lifetime of Comedy Well La dee da Diane Keaton Reflects On Keeping Em Laughing The New York Times Archived from the original on March 28 2009 Retrieved July 19 2021 a b c Merkin Daphne October 23 2005 Another Woman The New York Times Magazine Archived from the original on May 29 2015 Retrieved July 19 2021 Barrachlough Leo August 18 2014 Diane Keaton to Receive Zurich Film Festival s Golden Icon Award Variety Archived from the original on September 23 2019 Retrieved July 17 2019 Rainer Peter December 3 2003 Acting Her Age New York Magazine Archived from the original on February 11 2008 Retrieved July 19 2021 Osterhout Jacob E June 12 2014 Diane Keaton Shows Style And Substance In Her New Memoir Newsweek Archived from the original on June 21 2014 Retrieved July 19 2021 Diane Keaton Artist and Icon The Price of Fame Deborah C Mitchell 41 The 25 greatest Best Actress winners in Oscar history Entertainment Weekly April 9 2021 Archived from the original on July 30 2020 Retrieved July 19 2021 Reprinted in The Village Voice Andrew Sarris October 1977 Kulhawik Joyce March 31 2017 A Beautiful Fantasy on the 30th Anniversary of Baby Boom Rogerebert com Archived from the original on March 31 2017 Retrieved July 19 2021 Donnelly Matt October 6 2016 Diane Keaton to Receive AFI Life Achievement Award The Wrap Archived from the original on October 15 2016 Retrieved July 19 2021 HARVARD THESPIANS HONOR KEATON WITH PUDDING POT DeseretNews com February 14 1991 Retrieved September 26 2018 Past Muse Award Honorees New York Women in Film amp Television www nywift org February 13 2018 Retrieved September 26 2018 Golden Apple Awards 1996 IMDb Retrieved September 26 2018 Elle Women in Hollywood Awards 1998 IMDb Retrieved September 26 2018 US Comedy Arts Festival 2004 IMDb Retrieved September 26 2018 Honorees Database Hollywood Film Awards Hollywood Film Awards Archived from the original on March 3 2021 Retrieved September 26 2018 Lincoln Center to honor Keaton The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 26 2018 Golden Camera Germany 2014 IMDb Retrieved September 26 2018 Zurich Film Festival 2014 IMDb Retrieved September 26 2018 American Film Institute 2017 Diane Keaton Tribute www afi com Retrieved September 26 2018 David di Donatello Awards 2018 IMDb Retrieved September 26 2018 Works cited Edit Lax Eric Woody Allen A Biography Paperback ISBN 0 306 80985 0 Da Capo Press Updated edition December 2000 Denby David January 25 1982 Going for broke New York Magazine Vol 15 no 4 New York New York Media LLC p 66 ISSN 0028 7369 External links EditDiane Keaton at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity Diane Keaton at AllMovie Diane Keaton at IMDb Diane Keaton at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp Diane Keaton at the Internet Off Broadway Database Diane Keaton at Rotten Tomatoes Diane Keaton at the TCM Movie Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Diane Keaton amp oldid 1176600235, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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