How did Diane Keaton, Oscar-winning star of 'Annie Hall', pass away? What happened to her?
Diane Keaton, the Oscar -winning star of ‘Annie Hall’, ‘The Godfather’ films and ‘Father of the Bride’ died on October 11 on 79 in California. Her health has suddenly turned over the past few months for the worse. How did Diane Keaton died? A friend of the actress shared with people that she “suddenly rejected, who was heartbreaking to all who loved her”, named that the velocity of her decline was “unexpected”. “In her last months, she was only surrounded by her closest family, who chose to keep things very private. Even longtime friends were not quite aware of what was going on, ‘the source informed the outlet. The source added that Keaton was a well -known face in her Brentwood neighborhood, who regularly walked with her dog every day, until a few months ago when she suddenly stopped appearing. “She loved her neighborhood. Until just a few months ago, she walked with her dog every day. She was usually dressed the same, with a hat and her signature sunglasses, regardless of the weather. She was always very nice, funny and chatting. She spoke to her dog as if he were a person. She was eccentric and had this old school. Diane Keaton’s children she is survived by her two children, daughter Dexter and son Duke, whom she adopted in her 50s. Who was Diane Keaton? Diane Keaton was born in January 1946 in Los Angeles Diane Hall. However, her family had no ties to the film industry in which she would eventually thrive. Her mother was a homemaker and photographer, and her father worked in real estate and civil engineering, both of which helped to stimulate her lifelong passion for the arts, including fashion and architecture. While attending Santa Ana, California, Keaton developed an early interest in theater and singing. After just one year of the university, she decided to act full time and moved to Manhattan. Since actors’ equity already had a Diane Hall, she adopted Keaton, her mother’s maiden name, as her professional surname. In New York, she studied with the well -known acting teacher Sanford Meisner, who she credited to giving her the freedom to ‘map the complex field of human behavior within the safety of his guidance. It played with fire fun ‘. She made her film debut in the romantic comedy lovers and other strangers in 1970, but her big breakthrough came a few years later when she was cast in Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather, a film that won the best picture and became one of the reverence in film history. Despite its success, she initially hesitated to return to the successor, but after reading the screenplay, she finally chose to surprise her role. Keaton earned her first Oscar Award for Annie Hall and later received three additional nominations: for Reds, in which she depicted the journalist and the Suffragis Louise Bryant; Marvin’s room, as a caregiver who needs her unexpected care; And must give something. (With inputs of AP)