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Diane Keaton tribute (1946-2025) — She wore her pants, so I could too


A girl in trousers shouldn’t be usually a mainstream celeb fashion identification. From the time I made a decision in my early 20s that I’d put on quite a lot of pants — for causes starting from rebellious (Western clothes!) to pragmatic (much less waxing) — there have solely been a small pool of heroes to select from. Katharine Hepburn, Audrey Hepburn, and Diane Keaton turned my holy trinity. Whereas the Hepburns had their signature seems to be — Katharine championed wide-legged pants with button-down Oxford shirts and Audrey selected cigarette/capri pants with ballet flats — Diane Keaton wore her pants each which means. Cropped, wide-legged, boot minimize, skinny, straight, and dishevelled.

I found Keaton the final, someday in mid-2010s, when her Annie Corridor (1977) look turned the inspiration for a vogue season. Whereas I solely bear in mind snippets from the movie, her look — go well with vests, males’s footwear, dishevelled pleated pants, knotted ties, and floppy hats — stays recent. As has been endlessly chronicled since, it was a glance that was very a lot Keaton’s personal and it has been hailed as doing as a lot for pants in her time as Marlene Dietrich and Katharine Hepburn earlier than her. This even if it had been round a decade since Yves Saint Laurent had launched the tuxedo and pantsuit for ladies, and over half a century since Coco Chanel and Jean Patou had launched pants for ladies to free them from restrictive clothes.

Diane Keaton and Woody Allen within the movie ‘Annie Corridor’ (1977). (Getty Photos)

Diane Keaton on the 76th Annual Academy Awards in Los Angeles, the US. (Getty Photos)

Girls in tailor-made menswear have lengthy been a socially and politically loaded picture. Trousers symbolised male energy and girls who wore them have been accused of being unfeminine. The aura of film star glamour went a way in defending them however even that didn’t absolutely defend Katharine Hepburn, Greta Garbo, and Marlene Dietrich from the labels. Trousers have been additionally thought of lesbian coded, whereas carrying full fits an assault on male identification and concurrently a feminist problem of giving into male dominance. (This doesn’t apply to denims or monitor pants, that are thought of extra unisex.) Damned for those who do, damned for those who don’t. The simplest possibility, and one that’s nonetheless adopted, was to solely put on them a number of the time, to let your self be seen usually sufficient in ‘female’ apparel to offset the masculine.

However Keaton made her identification all in regards to the menswear, proper all the way down to the footwear. She usually took to the pink carpet clad in tuxedos, three-piece fits, and spats. Within the course of, she created an alternate glamour, a model of modest vogue, and used each trope of what was unattractive in ladies and flipped it on its head. Moreover her eclectically layered menswear, the outsized jackets, dangly neckties, layers of sweaters and vests, and cowboy boots, she additionally wore glasses and bowler hats.

Actor Katharine Hepburn. (Getty Photos)

Actor Audrey Hepburn in 1953. (Getty Photos)

The look she created was very a lot her personal, one that would vary from androgynous to asexualised to female. After all, the truth that there was a historical past of pores and skin most cancers in her household makes her decisions not solely sartorial but additionally sensible. She was herself recognized twice: with basal cell carcinoma at age 21 and squamous cell most cancers a long time later.

Whereas Annie Corridor’s androgynous fashion might need catapulted Keaton to vogue fame, it was not one which she caught to all her life. You solely want to have a look at her outfit to the Oscars of 1978, when she gained Finest Actress for Annie Corridor, to see how quickly she modified it up. She wore a swingy, voluminous mid-calf skirt over straight pants topped with a double breasted Armani blazer — a sort of layering that has by no means reached the mainstream and would go away present red-carpet watchers aghast.

Diane Keaton throughout fiftieth Annual Academy Awards in 1978 in Los Angeles, the US. (Getty Photos)

In a video on her Instagram, she was seen speaking about how very she was in vogue. What’s left unsaid was her willingness to take dangers and take a look at one thing new. Over time, Keaton’s confirmed off her gray hair, eschewed beauty surgical procedure, and by no means had a stylist. She performed with quantity usually, particularly when carrying skirts or clothes, and he or she did put on them, with as a lot pizzazz as she did trousers. She loved a superb anti-fit and infrequently layered it with lengthy coats. She blended plaids and pearls, boots and blazers, cravats and large belts.

The introduction of pants was a technique for Chanel to champion consolation and freedom; Katharine Hepburn famously skateboarded in hers, and Diane Keaton, maybe, used that freedom to pursue something that her. Moreover being a Hollywood star, she wrote three memoirs, Then Once more (2011), Let’s Simply Say it Wasn’t Fairly (2014), and Brother & Sister: A Memoir (2020), and printed quite a few pictures books, hers, others, and of discovered images. She pursued pictures, shot a collection of resort interiors for Rolling Stone journal, which then turned the guide Reservations, printed by Knopf in 1980. The geometry of the black and white images inside finds an echo in her usually monochrome clothes, checks and stripes.

Diane Keaton additionally did up homes, was accountable for preserving two Frank Lloyd Wright buildings, and printed books about interiors, The Home that Pinterest Constructed (2017) and California Romantica (2007). She adopted two kids in her 50s, launched a music single, and have become an Instagram star.

Actor Diane Keaton in 1996. She wears a purple & black striped go well with, bowler hat, and, round her neck, wears a big black crucifix. (Getty Photos)

Over time, I solely noticed Keaton on Pinterest and typically on pink carpets, and was all the time struck by her real curiosity in vogue and placing garments collectively. You possibly can see when somebody is having enjoyable; not caring about all the time getting it proper. That was Keaton’s greatest present to me and her many followers, to benefit from the technique of dressing up, to experiment, and never care if it all the time lands.

In her guide, Trend First (2024), she says, ‘I wished my garments to scream, Hey! Look! Look over right here!’ however, maybe, this was the one factor she was unsuccessful at — sure, folks checked out her and admired her garments and elegance, however solely as a result of they have been a part of her, not as a result of they have been garments that screamed for consideration. She wore them, they didn’t put on her.

The author is a vogue commentator and creator.

Revealed – October 18, 2025 07:18 pm IST