Woody Allen (born
Allen Stewart
Konigsberg; December 1, 1935) is an
American screenwriter,
film
director,
actor,
comedian,
writer,
musician, and
playwright.
Allen's distinctive films, which run the gamut from dramas to
screwball sex comedies, have
made him one of the most respected living American directors. He is
also distinguished by his rapid rate of production and his very
large body of work. Allen writes and directs his movies and has
also acted in the majority of them. For inspiration, Allen draws
heavily on
literature,
sexuality,
philosophy,
psychology,
Jewish identity, and the history of
cinema, among a wealth of other fields of
interest.
Allen is also a
jazz
clarinetist.
What began as a teenage avocation has led to regular public performances
at various small venues in his hometown of Manhattan
, with occasional appearances at various jazz festivals. Allen joined
the
Preservation Hall Jazz
Band and the
New Orleans Funeral
Ragtime Orchestra in performances that provided the
film score for his 1973 comedy
Sleeper, and a rare European tour in
1996 featuring Allen was the subject of the documentary
Wild Man Blues.
Biography
Early years
Allen was
born and raised in New York
City
, the son of Nettie (née Cherrie; November 8, 1906 -
January 27, 2002), a bookkeeper at her
family's delicatessen, and Martin
Konigsberg (December 25, 1900 - January 13, 2001), a jewelry
engraver and waiter. His family was
Jewish and his grandparents were
Yiddish- and
German-speaking immigrants.
Allen has a sister,
Letty (born 1943), and was raised in
Midwood, Brooklyn
.
His
parents were both born and raised on the Lower East Side
of Manhattan
. His childhood wasn't particularly happy.
His parents didn't get along, and he had a rocky relationship with
his stern, temperamental mother.
Allen spoke Yiddish during his early years
and, after attending Hebrew school for
eight years, went to Public School 99 and to Midwood High
School
. During that time, he lived in an apartment
at 1402 Avenue K, between East 14th and 15th Streets. He impressed
students with his extraordinary talent at card and
magic tricks.
To raise money he began writing
gags for the
agent
David O. Alber, who sold them to newspaper
columnists. According to Allen, his first
published joke read: "Woody Allen says he ate at a restaurant that
had O.P.S. prices—over people's salaries."
He began to call himself Woody Allen. He was a highly gifted young
comedian and would later joke that when he was young he was sent to
inter-faith
summer camp, where he was
"sadistically beaten by boys of all races and creeds." At the age
of 17, he legally changed his name to Heywood Allen.
After high
school, he went to New York University
(NYU), where he studied communication and
film. He was never committed as a student, so he failed a
film course, and was eventually expelled.
He later briefly
attended City College
of New York
, and eventually taught at The New School.
Comedy writer and playwright
After his false starts at NYU and City College, he became a
full-time writer for
Herb Shriner,
earning $75 a week at first. At age 19, he started writing scripts
for
The Ed Sullivan
Show,
The Tonight
Show,
Caesar's Hour
and other television shows. By the time he was working for
Sid Caesar, he was making $1500 a week; with
Caesar he worked alongside
Danny Simon,
whom Allen credits for helping him to structure his writing
style.
In 1961,
he started a new career as a stand-up
comedian, debuting in a Greenwich Village
club called the Duplex. Examples of Allen's
standup act can be heard on the albums
Standup Comic and
Nightclub Years 1964-1968 (including his classic routine
entitled "The Moose").
He began writing for the popular
Candid Camera television show, even
appearing in some episodes. Together with his managers, Allen
turned his weaknesses into his strengths, developing his neurotic,
nervous, and intellectual persona. He quickly became a successful
comedian, and appeared frequently in nightclubs and on television.
Allen was popular enough to appear on the cover of
Life in 1969.
Allen started writing short stories and cartoon captions for
magazines such as
The New
Yorker.
He also became a successful Broadway
playwright and wrote Don't Drink the Water in
1966. It starred
Lou Jacobi,
Kay Medford,
Anita Gillette and Allen's future movie
co-star
Anthony Roberts. A film
adaptation of the play, directed by Howard Morris, was released in
1969 starring
Jackie Gleason. In 1994
Allen directed and starred in a
third version for television
with
Michael J. Fox and
Mayim
Bialik.
The next Broadway hit that he wrote was
Play It Again, Sam; he also starred
in it. It opened on February 12, 1969, and ran for 453
performances. It also featured
Diane
Keaton and Anthony Roberts. Allen, Keaton and Roberts would
reprise their roles in the film version of the play, directed by
Herbert Ross.
Allen is also an accomplished author having published four
collections of his short pieces and plays. These are
Getting Even, Without Feathers,
Side Effects and
Mere Anarchy. His early comic fiction was
heavily influenced by the zany, pun-ridden humour of
S.J. Perelman.
Early films
His first movie production was
What's New, Pussycat? in 1965,
for which he wrote the initial screenplay. He was hired by
Warren Beatty to re-write a script, and to
appear in a small part in the movie. Over the course of the
re-write, Beatty's part grew smaller and Allen's grew larger.
Beatty was upset and quit the production.
Peter O'Toole was hired for the Beatty role,
and
Peter Sellers was brought in as
well; Sellers was a big enough star to demand many of Woody Allen's
best lines/scenes, prompting hasty re-writes.
Allen's first directorial effort was
What's Up, Tiger Lily?
(1966
co-written with Mickey Rose), in which an existing Japanese
spy movie (Kokusai himitsu keisatsu: Kagi no
kagi [1965] — "International Secret Police: Key of Keys") was
redubbed in English by Allen and
his friends with completely new, comic dialogue.
He acted in the James Bond spoof,
Casino Royale.
1960s and 1970s
Allen directed
Take the Money
and Run (1969), and then
Bananas,
Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex* ,
Sleeper, and
Love and Death.
Take the Money and
Run and
Bananas were both co-written by his childhood
friend,
Mickey Rose.
In 1972, he starred in the film version of
Play It Again, Sam,
which was directed by
Herbert Ross. All
of Allen's early films were pure comedies that relied heavily on
slapstick, inventive
sight gags, and non-stop
one-liner. Among the many notable influences
on these films are
Bob Hope,
Groucho Marx (as well as, to some extent,
Harpo Marx) and
Humphrey Bogart .
In 1976, he starred
in The Front directed by Martin Ritt), a humorous and poignant account of
Hollywood
blacklisting during the
1950s.
Annie Hall won four Academy
Awards in 1977, including Best Picture and Best Actress in a
Leading Role for Diane Keaton.
Annie Hall set the standard
for modern romantic comedy, and also started a minor fashion trend
with the unique clothes worn by
Diane
Keaton in the film (the offbeat, masculine clothing, such as
ties with cardigans, was actually Keaton's own). While in
production, its working title was "
Anhedonia," a term that means the inability to
feel pleasure, and its plot revolved around a murder mystery.
Apparently, as filmed, the murder mystery plot did not work (and
was later used in his 1993
Manhattan Murder Mystery), so
Allen re-cut the movie after production ended to focus on the
romantic comedy between Allen's character, Alvy Singer, and
Keaton's character, Annie Hall. The new version, retitled
Annie Hall (named after Keaton,
Hall being her given last name and Annie a nickname), still deals
with the theme of the inability to feel pleasure. Ranked at No. 35
on the
American Film
Institute' s "100 Best Movies" and at No. 4 on the AFI
list of "100 Best Comedies,"
Annie
Hall is considered to be among Allen's best.
Manhattan, released in
1979, is a black-and-white film that can be viewed as an homage to
New York City, which has been described as the true "main
character" of the movie. As in many other Allen films, the main
characters are upper-class academics. Even though it makes fun of
pretentious intellectuals, the story is packed with obscure
references which makes it less accessible to a general audience.
The love-hate opinion of cerebral persons found in
Manhattan is characteristic of many of Allen's movies
including
Crimes and
Misdemeanors and
Annie
Hall. Manhattan focuses on the complicated
relationship between a middle-aged Isaac Davis (Allen) and a
17-year-old Tracy (
Mariel
Hemingway).
Between
Annie Hall and
Manhattan, Allen wrote and
directed the gloomy drama
Interiors (1978), in the style of the late
Swedish director
Ingmar Bergman, one of Allen's major
influences.
Interiors represented
a significant departure from Allen's "earlier, funnier comedies" (a
line from 1980s
Stardust
Memories).
1980s
Allen's 1980s films, even the comedies, have somber and
philosophical undertones. Some, like
September and
Stardust Memories, are heavily
influenced by the works of European directors, most notably
Ingmar Bergman and
Federico Fellini.
Stardust Memories
features as a main character Sandy Bates, a successful filmmaker
played by Allen, who expresses resentment and scorn for his fans.
Overcome by the recent death of a friend from illness, the
character states, "I don't want to make funny movies any more," and
a running gag throughout the film has various people (including a
group of visiting space aliens) telling Bates that they appreciate
his films, "especially the early, funny ones." To this day, Allen
believes this to be one of his very best films.
However, by the mid-1980s, Allen had begun to combine tragic and
comic elements with the release of such films as
Hannah and Her Sisters and
Crimes and
Misdemeanors, in which he tells two different stories that
connect at the end. He also produced a vividly idiosyncratic
tragi-comical parody of documentary, titled
Zelig.
He also made three films about show business. The first is
Broadway Danny Rose, in
which he plays a New York show business agent; the second is
The Purple Rose of
Cairo, a movie that shows the importance of the cinema
during the Depression through the character of the naive Cecilia.
Lastly, Allen made
Radio Days,
which is a film about his childhood in Brooklyn, and the importance
of the radio.
Purple Rose was named by
Time Magazine as one of the 100 best
films of all time, and Allen has described it as one of his three
best films, along with
Stardust
Memories and
Match
Point."Woody Speaks!",
Premiere Magazine interview by Jason
Matloff.
[5904] (Allen defines them as "best" not in
terms of quality, but because they came out the closest to his
original vision.)
Before the end of the '80s, he made other movies that were strongly
inspired by
Ingmar Bergman's films.
September resembles
Autumn Sonata, and Allen uses
many elements from
Wild
Strawberries in
Another
Woman. Similarly, the
Federico
Fellini classic
Amarcord
strongly inspired
Radio
Days.
1990s
His 1992 film
Shadows and
Fog is a black-and-white homage to
German expressionists and features the
music of
Kurt Weill. Allen then made his
critically acclaimed drama
Husbands and Wives (1992), which
received two Oscar nominations: Best Supporting Actress for
Judy Davis and Best Original Screenplay
for Allen. His film
Manhattan Murder Mystery
(1993) combined suspense with dark comedy, and marked the return of
Diane Keaton,
Alan
Alda and
Anjelica Huston.
Next, he returned to lighter movies, such as
Bullets Over Broadway (1994),
which earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Director,
followed by a musical,
Everyone Says I Love You
(1996). The singing and dancing scenes in
Everyone Says I Love
You are similar to many musicals starring
Fred Astaire and
Ginger Rogers. The comedy
Mighty Aphrodite (1995), in which the
Greek drama plays a large role, won an
Academy Award for
Mira Sorvino. Allen's 1999 jazz-based
comedy-drama
Sweet and
Lowdown was also nominated for two Academy Awards for
Sean Penn (Best Actor) and
Samantha Morton (Best Supporting Actress).
In contrast to these lighter movies, Allen veered into darker
satire towards the end of the decade with
Deconstructing Harry (1997) and
Celebrity (1998).Allen
made his only
sitcom "appearance" to date
(2009) via telephone on the show
Just
Shoot Me!, in a 1997 episode, "My Dinner with Woody,"
which paid tribute to several of his films. Allen also provided the
lead voice in the 1998 animated film
Antz, which featured many actors he had previously
worked with and had Allen play a character that was very similar to
his earlier neurotic roles, only as an insect.
2000s
Small Time
Crooks (2000) was his first film with DreamWorks
SKG
studio and represented a change in direction: Allen
began giving more interviews and made an apparent attempt to return
to his slapstick comedy roots. Small Time Crooks
was a relative success, grossing over $17 million domestically, but
Allen's next four films foundered at the box office, including
Allen's most expensive film to date,
The Curse of the Jade
Scorpion (with a budget of $33 million).
Hollywood Ending,
Anything Else, and
Melinda and Melinda were given
"rotten" ratings from film-review website
Rotten Tomatoes and each earned less than $5
million domestically. Some critics claimed that Allen's films since
1999's
Sweet and Lowdown were subpar and expressed concern
that Allen's best years were now behind him. Woody gave his godson,
Quincy Rose, a small part in
Melinda and Melinda.
Match Point (2005) was one of
Allen's most successful films in the past 10 years and generally
received very positive reviews.
Set in London
, it starred
Jonathan Rhys-Meyers and
Scarlett Johansson. It is
also markedly darker than Allen's first four films under the
DreamWorks SKG banner. In
Match Point, Allen shifts his
focus from the intellectual upper class of New York to the moneyed
upper class of London. While different from Allen's many critical
satires,
Match Point still has undertones of social
critique. This is clearest in the theme of luck which works on
several levels in the film .
Match Point earned more than
$23 million domestically (more than any of his films in nearly 20
years) and earned over $62 million in international box office
sales.
Match Point earned Allen his first Academy Award
nomination since 1998 for Best Writing - Original Screenplay and
also earned directing and writing nominations at the Golden Globes,
his first Globe nominations since 1987. In an interview with
Premiere Magazine, Allen
stated this was the best film he has ever made.
Allen returned to London to film
Scoop, which also starred Johansson,
as well as
Hugh Jackman,
Ian McShane and
Kevin
McNally. The film was released on July 28, 2006, and received
mixed reviews. He has also filmed
Cassandra's Dream in London.
Cassandra's Dream stars
Colin
Farrell,
Ewan McGregor, and
Tom Wilkinson and was released
in November 2007.
After
finishing his third London film, Allen headed to Spain
.
He
reached an agreement to film Vicky Cristina Barcelona in
Avilés
, Barcelona
and Oviedo
, where
shooting started on July 9, 2007. The movie stars
international actors and actresses, including
Scarlett Johansson,
Javier Bardem,
Rebecca
Hall, and
Penélope Cruz.
Speaking of his experience there, Allen said: "I'm delighted at
being able to work with Mediapro and make a film in Spain, a
country which has become so special to me."
Vicky Cristina
Barcelona was well received, winning "Best Musical or Comedy"
at the Golden Globe awards. Penélope Cruz received the Academy
Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in the film.
Allen has said that he "survives" on the European market.
Audiences
there have tended to be more receptive to Allen's films,
particularly in Spain and France
, both
countries where he has a large fan base (something joked about in
Hollywood Ending). "In the United States things
have changed a lot, and it's hard to make good small films now,"
Allen said in a 2004 interview. "The avaricious studios couldn't
care less about good films – if they get a good film they're twice
as happy, but money-making films are their goal. They only want
these $100 million pictures that make $500million."
In April 2008, he began filming for a movie focused more towards
older audiences starring
Larry David,
Patricia Clarkson and
Evan Rachel Wood. He revealed in July 2008
the title of this film, to be released in 2009:
Whatever Works,described as a dark
comedy, follows the story of a botched suicide attempt turned messy
love triangle.
Whatever Works was written by Allen in the
1970s and the character now played by Larry David was originally
written for Zero Mostel, who died the year Annie Hall came
out.
Allen's current project,
You Will Meet A Tall Dark
Stranger, filmed in London, stars Antonio Banderas, Josh
Brolin, Sir Anthony Hopkins, Anupam Kher, Freida Pinto and Naomi
Watts. Filming started in July 2009.
Reports also suggest that Woody Allen's next two projects will be
filmed in Europe, in the summers of 2010 and 2011,
respectively.
Distinction in the film world
Over the course of his career, Allen has received a considerable
number of
awards and
distinctions in
film festivals
and yearly national film awards ceremonies, saluting his work as a
director, screenwriter, and actor. When premiering his films at
festivals, Allen does not screen his motion pictures in
competition, thus deliberately taking them out of consideration for
potential awards.
- Allen's film Annie Hall won
four Academy Awards in 1977,
including best picture.
- Allen won the 1978 O. Henry Award for his short story "The Kugelmass Episode," published
in The New Yorker on May 2,
1977.
- Allen twice won the César Award for Best
Foreign Film, the first in 1980 for Manhattan and the
second in 1986 for The Purple Rose of Cairo. Seven other
of his movies were nominated for the prize.
- In 1986, Allen won the Golden Globe
for Best Screenplay for The
Purple Rose of Cairo, and in 2009 he won the same award
for Best Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical for Vicky Christina Barcelona. He
was also nominated four times as Best Director, four times for Best
Screenplay and twice for Best Actor (Comedy/musical).
- At the 1995 Venice Film
Festival, Allen received a Career Golden
Lion for lifetime achievement.
- In
1996, Allen received a lifetime achievement award from the Directors
Guild of America
.
- In 2002, Allen won the Prince of Asturias Award.
Subsequently, the city of Oviedo,
Spain, erected a life-size statue of Allen.
- In
2002, Allen received the Palme des Palmes, a special
lifetime achievement award granted by the Cannes
Festival
and whose
sole other recipient is Ingmar
Bergman.
- In a 2005 poll The
Comedian's Comedian, Allen was voted the third greatest
comedy act ever by fellow comedians and comedy insiders.
- In June 2007, Allen received a Ph.D. degree Honoris Causa from
Pompeu Fabra University (Barcelona, Spain).
Academy Awards
Woody Allen has won three Academy Awards and been nominated a total
of 21 times: 14 as a screenwriter, six as a director, and one as an
actor. He has more screenwriting
Academy
Award nominations than any other writer; all are in the "Best
Original Screenplay" category. He is tied for fifth all-time with
six Best Director nominations. His actors have regularly received
both nominations and Academy Awards for their work in Allen films,
particularly in the Best Supporting categories.
Annie Hall won four Academy Awards (Best Picture, Best
Screenplay, Best Director and Best Actress). The film received a
fifth nomination, for Allen as Best Actor.
Hannah and Her
Sisters won three, for Best Screenplay and both Best
Supporting Actor categories; it was nominated in four other
categories, including Best Picture and Best Director.
Despite friendly recognition from the Academy, Allen has
consistently refused to attend the ceremony or acknowledge his
Oscar wins. He broke this pattern only once.
At the Academy Awards ceremony in 2002, Allen
made an unannounced appearance, making a plea for producers to
continue filming their movies in New York City
after the 9-11 attacks. He was given a
standing ovation before introducing a montage of movie clips
featuring New
York
.
Best Original Screenplay
Best Actor
Best Director
- Five actors have won six Academy Awards for
their work in Allen films: Diane Keaton
(Best Actress, Annie Hall), Michael Caine (Best Supporting Actor,
Hannah and Her Sisters), Dianne
Wiest (Best Supporting Actress, Hannah and Her Sisters
and Bullets Over Broadway), Mira
Sorvino (Best Supporting Actress, Mighty Aphrodite),
and Penélope Cruz (Best
Supporting Actress, Vicky Cristina Barcelona).
- Eleven actors have received Academy Award
nominations for their work in Allen films: Allen
himself (Best Actor, Annie Hall), Geraldine Page (Best Actress,
Interiors), Martin Landau
(Best Supporting Actor, Crimes and Misdemeanors), Chazz Palminteri (Best Supporting Actor,
Bullets Over Broadway), Maureen Stapleton (Best Supporting
Actress, Interiors), Mariel
Hemingway (Best Supporting Actress, Manhattan),
Judy Davis (Best Supporting Actress,
Husbands and Wives), Jennifer
Tilly (Best Supporting Actress, Bullets Over
Broadway), Sean Penn (Best Actor,
Sweet and Lowdown), and Samantha Morton (Best Supporting Actress,
Sweet and Lowdown).
BAFTA
Allen has won a number of
British Academy of
Film and Television Arts awards and nominations for best
picture, best director, best actor, and best screenplay. In 1997,
he received the honorary BAFTA Fellowship for his work.
Title sequences
Virtually all of Allen's films since
Annie Hall begin with the same style of
title sequence, incorporating a series of black-and-white title
cards in a vintage typeface (most often
Windsor) reminiscent mostly of legendary
Japanese director
YasujirĹŤ Ozu,
set to a selection of jazz music that occasionally figures
prominently later in the film's story (e.g.,
Radio Days). Additionally, the cast is
placed on one such title card and listed in alphabetical order, and
not in the order of the relative "star power" of the actors at the
time in which the film was made. This is reminiscent of silent-era
films. There is one minor variation in
Deconstructing Harry, where the
titles are weaved in with a looped shot. Another exception to this
is
Manhattan, which opens
with a series of black-and-white still shots of the city set to
Gershwin's "Rhapsody In Blue"; the film's title comes after the
opening narration is over.
Theater
Although best known for his films, Allen has also enjoyed a very
successful career in theater, starting as early as 1960 when Allen
was writing sketches for the
revue
From A to Z. His first great
success was
Don't Drink
the Water, which opened in 1968 and ran for 598
performances for almost two years on Broadway. His success
continued with
Play it Again,
Sam, which opened in 1969, starring Allen and
Diane Keaton. The show played for 453
performances and was nominated for three
Tony Awards, although none of the nominations
was for Allen's writing or acting.
In the '70s, Allen wrote a number of
one-act plays, most notably
God and
Death, which were published in his 1975
collection
Without
Feathers.
In 1981, Allen's play
The
Floating Light Bulb opened on Broadway. The play was a
critical success but a commercial flop. Despite two
Tony Award nominations, a Tony win for the acting
of
Brian Backer (who also won the 1981
Theatre World Award and a
Drama Desk Award for his work), the
play only ran for 62 performances.
As of January 2008, it is the last Allen
work that ran on Broadway
.
After a long hiatus from the stage, Allen returned to the theater
in 1995 with the one-act
Central Park West, an installment
in an evening of theater known as
Death Defying Acts that
was also made up of new work by
David
Mamet and
Elaine May.
For the next couple of years, Allen had no direct involvement with
the stage, yet notable productions of his work were being staged.
A
production of God was staged at the The Bank of Brazil Cultural
Center in Rio de
Janeiro
, and theatrical adaptations of Allen's films
Bullets over Broadway and September were produced
in Italy and France, respectively, without Allen's
involvement. In 1997, rumors of Allen returning to the
theater to write a starring role for his wife
Soon-Yi Previn turned out to be false.
In 2003, Allen finally returned to the stage with
Writer's
Block, an evening of two one-acts--
Old Saybrook and
Riverside Drive--that played
off-Broadway. The production marked the
stage-directing debut for Allen. The production sold out its entire
run.
Also that year, reports of Allen writing the book for a musical
based on
Bullets over Broadway surfaced, but no show ever
formulated. In 2004, Allen's first full-length play since 1981,
A Second Hand Memory, was directed by Allen and enjoyed an
extended run off-Broadway.
In June 2007, it was announced that Allen would make two more
creative debuts in the theater, directing a work that he didn't
write and directing an opera – a re-interpretation of
Puccini's
Gianni Schicchi for the
Los Angeles Opera - which debuted at the
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion on September 6, 2008.
Commenting on his
direction of the opera, Allen said, “I have no idea what I’m
doing.” His production of the opera opened the Festival of Two Worlds in Spoleto,
Italy
, in June 2009.
Marriages and relationships
Harlene Rosen
At age 19, Allen married 16-year-old Harlene Rosen. The marriage
lasted five "nettling, unsettling years," from
1954 to
1959.
Rosen, whom Allen referred to in his standup act as "the Dread Mrs.
Allen," later
sued Allen for
defamation due to comments at a TV appearance
shortly after their divorce. Allen tells a different story on his
mid-1960s standup album
Standup Comic. In his act, Allen
said that Rosen sued him because of a joke he made in an interview.
Rosen had been
sexually assaulted outside her
apartment, and, according to Allen, the newspapers reported that
she "had been violated." In the interview, Allen said, "Knowing my
ex-wife, it probably wasn't a
moving
violation." In a later interview on
The Dick Cavett Show, Allen
brought the incident up again where he repeated his comments and
stated that the amount that he was being sued for was "$1
million."
Louise Lasser
Allen married
Louise Lasser in 1966.
Allen and Lasser divorced in 1969, and Allen did not marry again
until 1997. Lasser starred in four Allen films after the
divorce--
Take the Money and Run,
Bananas,
Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex (But Were Afraid
to Ask) and
Sleeper--and made a brief appearance in
Stardust Memories. Allen is alleged to have loosely based
aspects of the "Harriet Harman" character in
Husbands and Wives (the "kamikaze
woman") on his relationship with Lasser.
Diane Keaton
In 1970, Allen cast
Diane Keaton in his
Broadway play
Play It Again,
Sam, which had a successful run. During this time, she
became romantically involved with Allen and appeared in a number of
his films, including
Annie Hall.
Keaton starred in
Play It Again, Sam as
Tony Roberts' wife. Although Allen and
Keaton broke up after a year, she starred in a number of his films
after their relationship had ended, including
Sleeper as a futuristic poet and
Love and Death as a
composite character based on the novels of
Tolstoy and
Dostoevsky.
Annie Hall was very
important in Allen and Keaton's careers. Furthermore, it is said
that the role was written especially for her, and even the title
speaks to this as Diane Keaton's given name is Diane Hall. She then
starred in
Interiors as a poet
again, followed by
Manhattan. In 1987, she had a cameo as
a night-club singer in
Radio
Days and was chosen to replace
Mia
Farrow in the co-starring role for
Manhattan Murder Mystery after
Allen and Farrow began having troubles with their personal and
working relationship while making this film. Keaton has not worked
with Allen since
Manhattan Murder Mystery.
Stacey Nelkin
The film
Manhattan is said
to have been based on his romantic relationship with the actress
Stacey Nelkin.
Her bit part in
Annie Hall ended up on the
cutting room floor, and their
relationship, though never publicly acknowledged by Allen,
reportedly began when she was 17 years old and a student at New
York's Stuyvesant
High School
.
Mia Farrow
Starting around 1980, Allen began a 12-year relationship with
actress
Mia Farrow, who had leading roles
in several of his movies from 1982 to 1992. Farrow and Allen never
married, but they
adopted two children
together: Dylan Farrow (who changed her name to Eliza and is now
known as Malone) and Moshe Farrow (now known as Moses); they also
had one biological child, Satchel Farrow (now known as
Ronan Seamus Farrow). Allen did not
adopt any of Farrow's other biological and adopted children,
including Soon-Yi Farrow Previn (the adopted daughter of Farrow and
André Previn, now known as
Soon-Yi Previn). Allen and Farrow
separated in 1992 after Farrow discovered nude photographs that
Allen had taken of Soon-Yi. In her autobiography,
What Falls
Away (New York: Doubleday, 1997), Farrow says that Allen
admitted to a relationship with Soon-Yi.
After Allen and Farrow separated, a long public legal battle for
the custody of their three children began. During the proceedings,
Farrow alleged that Allen had sexually molested their adopted
daughter Dylan, who was then seven years old. The judge eventually
concluded that the sex abuse charges were inconclusive, but called
Allen's conduct with Soon-Yi "grossly inappropriate." She called
the report of the team that investigated the issue "sanitized and,
therefore, less credible," and added that she had "reservations
about the reliability of the report." Farrow ultimately won the
custody battle over their children. Allen was denied visitation
rights with Malone and could see Ronan only under supervision.
Moses, who was then 14, chose not to see Allen.
In a 2005
Vanity
Fair interview, Allen estimated that, despite the
scandal's damage to his reputation, Farrow's discovery of Allen's
attraction to Soon-Yi Previn, by accidentally finding nude
photographs of her, was "just one of the fortuitous events, one of
the great pieces of luck in my life. [...] It was a turning point
for the better." Of his relationship with Farrow, he said, "I'm
sure there are things that I might have done differently. [...]
Probably in retrospect I should have bowed out of that relationship
much earlier than I did."
Soon-Yi Previn
After breaking his relationship from Farrow in 1992, Allen
continued his relationship with
Soon-Yi
Previn. Even though Allen never married or lived with Farrow,
and was never Previn's legal
stepfather,
the relationship between Allen and Previn has often been referred
to as a father dating his "stepdaughter," since he had been
perceived as being in the child's life in a father-like capacity.
For example, in 1991,
The New York Times described Allen's
family life by reporting, "Few married couples seem more married.
They are constantly in touch with each other, and not many fathers
spend as much time with their children as Allen does." Despite
assertions from Previn that Allen was never a father-figure to her,
the relationship became a
cause
célèbre. At the time, Allen was 56 and Previn was 22. Asked
whether their age difference was conducive to "a healthy, equal
relationship," Allen discounted the matter of equality and added
this protestation: "The heart wants what it wants."
Allen and Previn married on December 24, 1997, in the Palazzo
Cavalli in Venice, Italy. The couple has adopted two daughters,
naming them Bechet and Manzie after jazz musicians
Sidney Bechet and
Manzie Johnson.
Allen and Farrow's only biological son,
Ronan Seamus Farrow, said of Allen:
"He's my father married to my sister. That makes me his son and his
brother-in-law. That is such a moral transgression. I cannot see
him. I cannot have a relationship with my father and be morally
consistent.... I lived with all these adopted children, so they are
my family. To say Soon-Yi was not my sister is an insult to all
adopted children."
Clarinetist
Allen is a passionate fan of jazz, which is often featured
prominently in the soundtracks to his films. He began playing as a
child and took his stage name from clarinetist
Woody Herman. He has performed publicly at
least since the late 1960s, notably with the
Preservation Hall Jazz Band on
the soundtrack of
Sleeper. One of his earliest televised
performances was on
The Dick
Cavett Show on October 20, 1971.
Woody
Allen and his New Orleans Jazz Band play every Monday evening at
Manhattan's Carlyle
Hotel
, specializing in classic New Orleans jazz from the early twentieth
century. The
documentary
film Wild Man Blues
(directed by
Barbara Kopple)
documents a 1996 European tour by Allen and his band, as well as
his relationship with Previn. The band has released two
CDs:
The Bunk Project (1993) and the soundtrack
of
Wild Man Blues (1997).
Allen and his band played the Montreal Jazz Festival on two
consecutive nights in June 2008.
Work about or inspired by Woody Allen
Apart from
Wild Man Blues
directed by
Barbara Kopple, there are
a number of other documentaries featuring Woody Allen, including
the 2002 cable-television documentary
Woody Allen: a Life in
Film, directed by
Time
Magazine film critic
Richard
Schickel, which interlaces interviews of Allen with clips of
his films, and
Meetin' WA, a
short interview of Allen by French director
Jean-Luc Godard.
Waiting for Woody Allen is a 2004 short film, starring
Modi Rosenfeld, parodying
Samuel Beckett's
Waiting for Godot. From 1976 to 1984,
Stuart Hample wrote and drew
Inside Woody Allen, a comic strip
based on Allen's film persona.
Central Park West Stories
(Baldini Castoldi Dalai publisher, 2005) by
Glauco Della Sciucca (Italian
contributor to
Columbia
Journalism Review,
The New
Yorker, and
The Jewish
Week, since September 2003) are inspired by Allen. "Death
of an Interior Decorator" is a song on
Death Cab for Cutie's album
Transatlanticism that was inspired by
Woody Allen's
Interiors.
In
Love Creeps, a novel by
Amanda Filipacchi, a group of
birders in Central
Park
spot Woody Allen and Soon-Yi stepping out onto
their balcony and get very excited, which torments a nearby group
of recovering stalkers from Stalkaholics Anonymous, causing one
of them to suddenly lose his sobriety by grabbing the binoculars
from around the neck of a birder to stare at Woody Allen and
Soon-Yi.
The character
George Costanza, from
the sitcom
Seinfeld, was
originally performed as a caricature of Woody Allen, according to
Jason Alexander, before the actor
soon realized that Costanza was based on the show's co-creator,
Larry David.
In 1998, the Spanish novel
Yo-Yo Boing! by
Giannina Braschi features a party scene in
which Woody Allen fidgets and stammers while explaining literary
classics and the films of Federico Fellini.
In 2003, Keith Black wrote, directed and starred in the
award-winning film
Get the Script to Woody Allen. The
feature was about a neurotic young man who is obsessed with getting
his script to Woody.
While not making a case for direct influence or affinity while
reviewing
American
Splendor inspired by/about graphic artist
Harvey Pekar, columnist
Jaime Wolf drew attention to formal parallels
between the film and subject, on one hand, and Allen,
Annie
Hall, and other Allen films, on the other.
Psychoanalysis
Allen spent at least 30 years undergoing
psychoanalysis, sometimes going three days a
week. Many of his films contain references to psychoanalysis. Even
the film
Antz, an animated feature in
which Allen contributes the voice of lead character
Z,
opens with a classic piece of Allen analysis
shtick.
Moment Magazine says, "It drove his self-absorbed work."
John Baxter, author of
Woody Allen - A Biography, wrote,
"Allen obviously found analysis stimulating, even exciting."
Allen says he ended his psychotherapy visits around the time he
began his relationship with Previn. He says he still is
claustrophobic and
agoraphobic.
Filmography
Theater works
In
addition to directing, writing, and acting in films, Allen has
written and performed in a number of Broadway
theater productions.
Bibliography
Published plays
- Don't Drink the Water: A comedy in two acts (1967),
ASIN B0006BSWBW
- Play It Again, Sam
(1969), ISBN 0-394-40663-X
- God: A comedy in one act
(1975), ISBN 0-573-62201-9
- The Floating Light Bulb (1981)
- Three One-Act Plays: Riverside Drive / Old Saybrook /
Central Park West (2003), ISBN 0-8129-7244-9
- Writer's Block: Two One-Act Plays (2005), ISBN
0-573-62630-8 (includes Riverside Drive and Old
Saybrook)
- A Second Hand Memory: A drama in two acts (2005)
- The one-act plays God and Death are both
included in Allen's 1975 collection Without Feathers (see
below).
Short stories
- Getting Even (1971), ISBN 0-394-47348-5
- Without Feathers
(1975), ISBN 0-394-49743-0
- Side Effects (1980), ISBN
0-394-51104-2
- Mere Anarchy (2007), ISBN 978-1-4000-6641-4
Anthologies
- Complete Prose of Woody Allen (1992), ISBN
0-517-07229-7. (Collection of Allen's short stories first published
in Getting Even, Without Feathers and Side
Effects.)
- The Insanity Defense: The Complete Prose. New York:
Random House Trade Paperbacks, 2007, ISBN 978-0812978117.
Chapbook
- Lunatic's Tale (1986), ISBN 1-55628-001-7 (Short story
previously included in Side Effects.)
Further reading
- Stardust Memories: Visiting Woody Michael
Žantovský recalls a memorable meeting between two giants, Woody
Allen and Václav Havel
- Essay by Victoria Loy on Woody Allen's
career
- The Essential Woody Allen; Lauren Hill
- Fun With Woody, The Complete Woody Allen Quiz Book (Henry
Holt), Graham Flashner
- The Importance of Being Famous: Behind the Scenes of the
Celebrity Industrial Complex by Maureen Orth p233 ISBN 0-8050-7545-3
- "Why I Love London" by Simon Garfield,
Guardian Unlimited, August 8, 2004
- Woody Allen - A Biography; John Baxter (1999) ISBN
0-7867-0666-X
- Woody Allen: Interviews (Conversations With Filmmakers
Series), ed. R. E. Kapsis and K. Coblentz, (2006) ISBN
1-57806-793-6
- Woody Allen; Stephan
Reimertz, (rororo-Monographie), Reinbek (2005) ISBN
3-499-50410-3 (in German)
- Woody Allen: Eine Biographie; Stephan Reimertz, Reinbek (2000) ISBN
3-499-61145-7 (in German)
- Woody Allen On Location, by Thierry de Navacelle
(Morrow, 1987); a day-to-day account of the making of Radio Days (1987)
- Woody Allen on Woody Allen: In Conversation With Stig
Bjorkman (1995), ISBN 0-8021-1556-X
- Woody Allen: Profane and Sacred; Richard A. Blake
(1995) ISBN 978-0-810-82993-0
- "Woody plots film return to London" by A
Correspondent, Times Online, November 30, 2005
References
- Woody Allen Biography (1935-)
- "I think he's slacked off the last few movies, said Norman
Brown, 70, a retired draftsman from Mr. Allen's old neighborhood,
Midwood, Brooklyn, who said he had seen nearly all of Mr. Allen's
33 films."
- The Unruly Life of Woody Allen
- The principal of P.S. 99 was Mrs. Eudora Fletcher; Allen has
used her name for characters in several of his films.
- Woody Allen at Encyclopedia
Britannica
- Famous college drop-outs who became successful
businessmen - Non-Traditional College Students - Helium - by Glenda
K. Fralin
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmnLRVWgnXU
-
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/18/books/review/Kamp-t.html?ex=1352955600&en=a6afbde4f7e9bcfa&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink
-
http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19881118/REVIEWS/811180301/1023
Roger Ebert’s review of Another Woman
-
http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19870130/REVIEWS/701300302/1023
- /
- Woody Allen Reveals Latest Movie Title: 'Whatever
Works' - Cinematical
- Good Small Films
- Neatorama
- Mitchell, Elvis. " Arts", The New York Times, May 18,
2002.
- Internet Broadway Database: Don't Drink the Water
Production Credits
- Internet Broadway Database: Play It Again, Sam Production
Credits
- Internet Broadway Database: The Floating Light Bulb
Production Credits
- Death Defying Acts and No One Shall Be Immune —
David Mamet Society
- http://www.playbill.com/news/article/36475.html
- Playbill News: Woody Allen Adaptation Debuts at
Italian Theatre Festival, Aug. 1
- Playbill News: Stage Version of Woody Allen's
September to Bow in France, Sept. 16
- http://www.playbill.com/news/article/36263.html
- Playbill News: Woody Allen's Writer's Block, with
Neuwirth and Reiser, Opens Off-Broadway May 15
- Playbill News: Two Weeks Added to Woody Allen's New
Play, Second Hand Memory, at Off-Bway's Atlantic
- Playbill News: Work Continues of Musical Version of
Bullets Over Broadway
- Playbill News: Woody Allen Directs His Second Hand
Memory, Opening Nov. 22 Off-Broadway
-
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/08/arts/music/08arts-WOODYALLENSP_BRF.html
- Fox, Julian. Woody: Movies from Manhattan. New York: Overlook
Press, 1996. 111-112
- Baxter, John. Woody Allen: A Biography. New York: Caroll &
Graf., 1998. 226, 248, 249, 250, 253, 273-4, 385, 416
- Bailey, Peter J. The Reluctant Film Art of Woody Allen.
Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2001. 61
- Brozan, Nadine. " Chronicle", The New York Times, May
13, 1994.
- Biskind, Peter. "Reconstructing Woody," Vanity
Fair, December 2005
- Lax, Eric. " Magazine", The New York Times, Feb 24,
1991.
- Hornblow, Deborah. " Entertainment", LA Times, Aug 30,
2001.
- Isaacson, Walter. " U.S.", Time, Aug 31, 1992.
- The New York Observer
- Get The Script To Woody Allen
- Slate "Harvey, Meet Woody: American Splendor vs.
Annie Hall"; by Jaime Wolf 9-24-03. Retrieved 12-28-08.
External links