Allen, Woody

Allen, Woody
orig. Allen Stewart Konigsberg

born Dec. 1, 1935, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S.

U.S. film director, screenwriter, and actor.

After writing routines for comedians and performing as a nightclub comic, he wrote the Broadway play Don't Drink the Water (1966). His early films, such as Bananas (1971) and Sleeper (1973), combined highbrow comedy and slapstick. Later romantic comedies such as Annie Hall (1977), which won him two Academy Awards, and Manhattan (1979) offered a bittersweet view of New York life. He continued making films into the 21st century, most notably Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), Crimes and Misdemeanors (1989), and Bullets over Broadway (1994).

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▪ American actor and director
original name  Allen Stewart Konigsberg , legal name  Heywood Allen 
born Dec. 1, 1935, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S.

      American motion-picture director, screenwriter, actor, and author, best known for his bittersweet comic films containing elements of parody, slapstick, and the absurd. He was also known as a sympathetic director for women, writing strong and well-defined characters for them. Among his featured performers were Diane Keaton (Keaton, Diane) and Mia Farrow, with both of whom he was romantically involved.

      Much of Allen's comic material derives from his urban Jewish middle-class background. Intending to be a playwright, Allen began writing stand-up comedy monologues while still in high school. His introduction to show business came a few years later when he was hired to write material for such television comedians as Sid Caesar and Art Carney. In the early 1960s, after several false starts, he acquired a following on the nightclub circuit, where he performed his own stand-up comedy routines. His comic persona was that of an insecure and doubt-ridden person who playfully exaggerates his own failures and anxieties.

      Soon Allen began writing and directing plays and films, often also acting in the latter. He appeared in and wrote the screenplay for What's New, Pussycat? (1965), and his first play, Don't Drink the Water, appeared on Broadway in 1966. He starred in and directed the film Take the Money and Run (1969), a farcical comedy about an incompetent would-be criminal. The films that followed, Bananas (1971), Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex but Were Afraid to Ask (1972), and Sleeper (1973), employed a highly inventive, joke-oriented style and secured his reputation as a major comic filmmaker.

      In Love and Death (1975), a parody of 19th-century Russian novels, critics discerned an increased seriousness beneath the comic surface. This was borne out in the next film that Allen directed, Annie Hall (1977), in which the self-deprecating humour of the protagonist (played by Allen) serves as but one motif in a rich portrayal of a contemporary urban romantic relationship. Annie Hall won four Academy Awards, including the award for best picture and Oscars for Allen as best director and for best screenplay (cowritten with Marshall Brickman). Allen also starred in the film version (1972) of his successful Broadway play Play It Again, Sam (1969) and in the motion picture The Front (1976).

      Allen's subsequent films contain a paradoxical blend of comedy and philosophy and a juxtaposition of trivialities with major concerns. The commercial failure of Interiors (1978), a bleakly serious drama much influenced by Ingmar Bergman (Bergman, Ingmar), was followed by the highly acclaimed seriocomedy Manhattan (1979). In later films such as Stardust Memories (1980), Zelig (1983), The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985), Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), Crimes and Misdemeanors (1989), and Alice (1990), Allen attempted with varying success to blend his vein of absurd humour with more realistic narratives, a wider range of character portrayals, and light but basically serious themes.

      Through most of the 1990s, Allen worked largely outside of the Hollywood system, producing low-budget films that attracted loyal fans and that included Husbands and Wives (1992), Bullets over Broadway (1994), Mighty Aphrodite (1995), and Sweet and Lowdown (1999). In 1992 he found himself at the centre of a scandal when his longtime relationship with Farrow ended in a custody battle and the revelation that he was having an affair with Farrow's adopted daughter Soon-Yi Previn, whom Allen later married.

 Allen continued to write and direct movies into the 21st century. He found success with Match Point (2005), a dramatic thriller in which his usual quirky humour was absent. The film received an Oscar nomination for best screenplay, and it featured actress Scarlett Johansson, who also starred in Allen's comedy-drama Scoop (2006) and in the sultry Vicky Cristina Barcelona (2008), which was set in Spain and starred Penélope Cruz (Cruz, Penélope) and Javier Bardem. Cassandra's Dream (2007), like Match Point, centred on a dark murder plot.
 

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Universalium. 2010.

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