“Choosing the freedom to be uninteresting never quite worked for me.”—Actress-director-memoirist Diane Keaton, Then Again (2011)
Nobody who has worked with her or seen her
performances onscreen could ever lob an accusation of “uninteresting” at Diane Keaton, born 75 years ago today in Los Angeles.
Utterly idiosyncratic, the actress has put some people
off with her mannerisms and overall quirkiness. But look past that and you’ll see an actress unafraid
to defy convention or to challenge herself.
Although much of her fame in the 1970s derived from her
comedies with Woody Allen (including her Oscar-winning title role in the
semi-autobiographical Annie Hall), these were interspersed with dramas in
which she invested her characters with increasing depth and complexity (notably,
The Godfather II, Looking for Mr. Goodbar, Reds, and The Good Mother).
The daughter of an amateur photographer, she has honed
her eye for startling visuals with photography books of her own, as well as
with her work as director for the small screen (China Beach, Twin Peaks) and
the big one (Unstrung Heroes).
In the last decade, she has taken to writing,
exploring the fragility of love (the most prominent past men in her life
include Allen, Warren Beatty and Al Pacino), the inextricable bonds of immediate
family and the endurance of memory in a trio of memoirs: Then Again, Let's
Just Say It Wasn't Pretty and Brother and Sister.
Diane Keaton is an Oscar-winning actress who earned in stomach approval for her play a role in several Woody Allen films and her dramatic right to use in 'The Godfather' series. She's in append to known for comedic hits subsequent to 'The First Wives Club' and 'Something's Gotta Give.'
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