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Diane Keaton Honored at Vogue World 2025 with Moving Annie Hall Tribute Two Weeks After Her Death

- - Diane Keaton Honored at Vogue World 2025 with Moving Annie Hall Tribute Two Weeks After Her Death

Brittany TalaricoOctober 27, 2025 at 4:54 AM

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Diane Keaton as Annie Hall in the 1977 film/Model Betsy Gaghan honors Diane Keaton at Vogue World 2025. -

At Vogue World 2025, Diane Keaton’s signature sartorial voice was spotlighted in a moving tribute two weeks after her death at age 79

Model Betsy Gaghan walked the runway wearing a Ralph Lauren recreation of Keaton's iconic costume from the 1977 film Annie Hall, a performance which earned her the Best Actress Oscar

The Vogue World tribute now joins the swell of remembrances from Hollywood and beyond, all celebrating Keaton's authenticity and how she made fashion her own

Diane Keaton's style legacy was celebrated on the runway at Vogue World: Hollywood just two weeks after her death at 79.

The show, held on Oct. 26 at the famed Paramount Pictures Studios in L.A., featured a heartfelt tribute to Keaton's unmistakable style, honoring the icon whose Annie Hall–inspired suits, ties and wide-brimmed hats rewrote Hollywood fashion.

Model Betsy Gaghan walked the runway channeling Keaton's Annie Hall character in a Ralph Lauren recreation of her iconic costume originally designed by Ruth Morley.

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In Keaton’s 2024 book Fashion First, designer Ralph Lauren clarified that while Keaton wore some of his pieces in Annie Hall, the styling was all her own: “I’m often credited with dressing Diane in her Oscar‑winning role in Annie Hall. That’s not true. Annie’s style was Diane’s style.”

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Diane Keaton and Woody Allen in 1977's Annie Hall.

Keaton's androgynous wardrobe choices in Annie Hall, the 1977 Wood Allen-directed film which she won the Oscar for Best Actress, held huge sartorial relevance and inspired a generation of women. Her clothes sent a message that femininity didn’t have to look one specific way to be powerful and she shifted what mainstream fashion looked like in the 1970s. Her own style, rooted in self-expression rather than trends, became a template for countless fashion fans as she showed that authenticity was the ultimate accessory.

In a PEOPLE interview published one year before her death, the star said it was her mom who led her down an avenue of self-expression through their shopping trips to Goodwill. She recalled at the time, "She was my biggest supporter and manifester of my creativity. Later in life, my inspiration came from countless hours of cutting and pasting my way through magazines like Vogue magazine."

Following her death, countless peers and Hollywood friends shared memories and touching tributes, including Ralph Lauren who wrote: “Diane always marched to the beat of her own drum — in the way she lived, the way she saw the world, and the way she made all of us feel. She was authentic, unique and full of heart. She was always herself—one of a kind.”

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On Oct. 11, PEOPLE first reported that Keaton died in California at the age of 79.

In an exclusive statement to PEOPLE, the Oscar-winning actress’s family confirmed she died of pneumonia and expressed their gratitude for the outpouring of support.

"The Keaton family are very grateful for the extraordinary messages of love and support they have received these past few days on behalf of their beloved Diane, who passed away from pneumonia on October 11," reads the statement.

The actress' family went on to share the causes she was passionate about: "She loved her animals and she was steadfast in her support of the unhoused community, so any donations in her memory to a local food bank or an animal shelter would be a wonderful and much appreciated tribute to her."

At the time of Keaton's death, a source told PEOPLE that she was surrounded by her "closest family."

on People

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