Kay and Annie: The Woman Who Framed Two Cinematic Eras
The Politics of Awkwardness
Reinvention Without Apology
A Legacy Written in Human Scale
There are actors who become stars, and then there are actors who become grammar. Diane Keaton belonged to the latter category — a living punctuation mark in the sentence of cinema. She didn’t merely perform; she recalibrated the emotional temperature of every film she touched. And now, with her passing at 79, the movies feel slightly less alive, slightly less odd, slightly less possible.It’s difficult to describe Keaton without reaching for contradictions. She was chaotic and precise, aloof and intimate, whimsical and devastating.
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