Tributes pour in for Diane Keaton: “The world is drearier”

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Goldie Hawn, Steve Martin and Ben Stiller have led tributes to Oscar-winning actress Diane Keaton, who has died at the age of 79.

Keaton, who was born in Los Angeles, shot to fame in the 1970s through her role as Kay Adams-Corleone in The Godfather films.

She was also known for starring roles in films including Father of the Bride, First Wives Club and Annie Hall, which won her the Academy Award for Best Actress in 1978.

Fellow First Wives Club co-star Goldie Hawn said Keaton left “a trail of fairy dust, filled with particles of light and memories beyond imagination”.

Silver Screen Collection via Getty Images Woody Allen talking to Diane Keaton as she gets into a tax on a New York City street in the film Annie Hall
Woody Allen directed and starred alongside Diane Keaton in Annie Hall, one of the most famous films Keaton appeared in

Writing on Instagram, Hawn said: “How do we say goodbye? What words can come to mind when your heart is broken? You never liked praise, so humble, but now you can’t tell me to ‘shut up’ honey. There was, and will be, no one like you.”

Keaton died in California on Saturday, a family spokesperson told People magazine, which first reported the news.

Producer and friend of Keaton, Dori Rath, confirmed the actress’s death to the BBC’s US partner, CBS News.

Paying tribute, her other First Wives Club co-star Bette Midler wrote on Instagram: “The brilliant, beautiful, extraordinary Diane Keaton has died. I cannot tell you how unbearably sad this makes me.”

“She was hilarious, a complete original, and completely without guile, or any of the competitiveness one would have expected from such a star. What you saw was who she was … oh, la, lala!”

Getty Images First Wives Club co-stars Goldie Hawn, Diane Keaton and Bette Midler rehearse at the Academy Awards in LA in 1997
First Wives Club co-stars Goldie Hawn, Diane Keaton and Bette Midler

Steve Martin, who starred with Keaton in Father of the Bride alongside Martin Short, reposted part of a magazine article where Short asks: “Who’s sexier, me or Steve Martin?”

Keaton replies: “I mean, you’re both idiots.”

Martin said: “Don’t know who first posted this, but it sums up our delightful relationship with Diane.”

Actor Ben Stiller paid tribute on X, writing: “Diane Keaton. One of the greatest film actors ever. An icon of style, humor and comedy. Brilliant. What a person.”

Director Paul Feig said on X he had been “honoured” to call Keaton a friend, adding: “She was an amazingly kind and creative person who also just happened to be a Hollywood legend”, adding that she had “been taken far too soon”.

And The Book Club co-star Jane Fonda said on Instagram that Keaton was a “spark of life and light”

Columbia/Tristar via Getty Images image of Meg Ryan and Diane Keaton holding a door and shrieking as Lisa Kudrow looks on, stone-faced
Lisa Kudrow, Meg Ryan and Diane Keaton in “Hanging Up”, a film about three sisters bonding over the imminent death of their grumpy father

Woody Allen has also penned a heartfelt remembrance of Diane Keaton following the actor’s death at 79, sharing intimate memories of their romance and legendary creative partnership in an essay published by The Free Press.

“Unlike anyone the planet has experienced or is unlikely to ever see again, her face and laugh illuminated any space she entered,” Allen wrote in the piece.

The director recalled their first meeting at an audition for his 1969 play “Play It Again, Sam” at the Morosco Theatre. The pair initially struggled to connect during the first week of rehearsals. “She was shy, I was shy, and with two shy people things can get pretty dull,” Allen wrote. But after sharing a quick meal during a break, everything changed. “She was so charming, so beautiful, so magical, that I questioned my sanity. I thought: Could I be in love so quickly?”

By the time the show opened in Washington, D.C., they had become romantically involved. Keaton proved to be Allen’s most trusted creative collaborator, offering feedback on his films that he valued above all else.

“As time went on I made movies for an audience of one, Diane Keaton,” Allen revealed. “I never read a single review of my work and cared only what Keaton had to say about it.”

Allen praised Keaton’s multifaceted talents beyond acting, noting her work as a writer, photographer, collage artist, home decorator, and director. He also admired her unwavering aesthetic judgment, recalling how she wouldn’t hesitate to critique even Shakespeare if she felt the Bard had “gone wrong.”

The essay included colorful anecdotes from their time together, including a memorable Thanksgiving at Keaton’s Orange County home where Allen played penny poker with her family and “cleared about 80 cents.”

“This beautiful yokel went on to become an award-winning actress and sophisticated fashion icon,” Allen wrote. “We had a few great personal years together and finally we both moved on, and why we parted only God and Freud might be able to figure out.”

Allen concluded with a poignant reflection on Keaton’s legacy: “A few days ago the world was a place that included Diane Keaton. Now it’s a world that does not. Hence, it’s a drearier world. Still, there are her movies. And her great laugh still echoes in my head.”


For Annie Hall, Keaton also won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Comedy or Musical Motion Picture and the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role.

Keaton was nominated for three further Oscars – all in the best actress category – for her work in Something’s Gotta Give, Marvin’s Room and Reds.

Throughout her more than five-decade career, Keaton starred in dozens of other films including The Family Stone, Because I Said So, And So It Goes, as well as a number of other Woody Allen films, like Play It Again, Sam, Sleeper, Love and Death and Manhattan.

Keaton made her film debut in the 1970 romantic comedy Lovers and Other Strangers. Her most recent film was the 2024 comedy Summer Camp where she starred alongside Eugene Levy and Kathy Bates.

Keaton also directed several films, the first of which was a 1987 documentary, Heaven, chronicling people’s beliefs about the afterlife. Her 1995 film Unstrung Heroes – a comedy-drama starring Andie MacDowell, John Turturro and Michael Richards – was selected for Cannes Film Festival’s Un Certain Regard, which showcases unique stories by emerging directors.

Most recently, Keaton directed Hanging Up in 2000, a comedy-drama starring herself, Meg Ryan and Lisa Kudrow.

Both in her film roles and in her personal life, Keaton was known for her unique style, which often featured menswear and a wide-brimmed hat.

Getty Images Diane Keaton sitting on a sofa in The Godfather Part II film, wearing a white long-sleeve shirt, holding a small girl against her chest.
Seen here in The Godfather Part II, Diane Keaton starred in the trilogy as Kay Corleone

She never married and had two adopted children – a daughter, Dexter, and a son, Duke.

In her 2011 autobiography, titled Then Again, Keaton wrote: “I have assessed my happiness ratio and this is the result. I am totally content whenever the ones I love are happy about something little, big, insignificant, whatever.

“I just don’t think anyone could possibly have the same wonderful, intense, compelling feelings that I have for this family of mine.”

Also read: Jane Goodall has died at 91, world mourns conservation icon

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Source: BBC / Variety

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