There are people who wear clothes, and then there are people who live in them. Diane Keaton did both spectacularly. Her suits were autobiographical; her hats, punctuation marks in a story told in corduroy, tweed, and a wink. She was Annie Hall before Annie Hall existed, a woman who wore the male wardrobe like a dare and made it look tender. Before genderless clothes became a hashtag, the late and great Keaton was already striding down Fifth Avenue, reflecting that style, like art or humor, was meant to be personal.
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The Woman Who Wore Herself Well
It’s almost impossible to talk about her without smiling. The wide-brimmed hat, the crisp shirt half-tucked, that anarchic tie that didn’t care for symmetry. She was the woman who could wear gloves at brunch and somehow make you wish you had, too.
Borrow from the boys, she did not. Her menswear wasn’t imitation, but translation. “Even when I was young, I was way into fashion. My mom and I used to pick out patterns, and then I’d tell her what I wanted, and she’d do it for me,” she said in an Instagram post.

Her mother taught her the structure of clothes; Cary Grant inspired her love for a good suit. Somewhere in between, she found herself.
“I think masculine is feminine,” she once said in an interview, a sentiment that defined her. Her style, shaped by an adoration of Golden-Era Hollywood stars and framed against contemporaries who shimmered in long ballgowns, made her stand apart — and made us all fall a little in love with the idea of being ourselves, too.

While the women of her generation leaned into Hollywood glamour, Keaton leaned into herself. Among her peers and close friends like Bette Midler and Goldie Hawn—both dazzling in sequins and sunshine—Keaton was the delightful oddball in pinstripes, the one who showed up to the party with a bowler hat and an opinion.
The Warmth of Wit, the Wit of Warmth
She had the spirit of a Nancy Meyers heroine before the director even called “Action!”: the chic clutter of Something’s Gotta Give, the soft linens, the coastal grandmother fantasy that Pinterest is still trying to perfect. You could almost smell the sea salt and see her laughing in a cashmere turtleneck, holding a mug of something comforting while philosophizing about heartbreak and hummus.

Her wardrobe was a time capsule of contradictions—structured but loose, masculine but soft, ironic yet sincere. Power dressing, but with the power to disarm. Plaid, pinstripes, polka dots: each print a stanza in her lifelong poem of personal style.
She dressed like a woman who’d already read the ending and decided to wear something comfortable to meet it.
The Heart Beneath the Hat
Diane Keaton made trends look outdated. Her inimitable style was timeless because it was; memorable because it is; ahead of its time because she’ll always be remembered for it. To look back at her now feels like looking through a family photo album—one full of laughter, oversized blazers, and a grace that never took itself too seriously.

Here’s to the actress: the woman who made menswear feminine, made neurosis chic, and made us all want to buy a better hat. She taught us that growing older can look like a good joke told well, that a little quirk never killed anyone, and that the right suit can make you feel like yourself, whoever that may be.
To which we can only reply: La-dee-da, Diane Keaton. La-dee-da.
Photos: REUTERS and WWD (via website), DIANE KEATON (via IMDb), DIANE KEATON and THOM BROWNE (via Instagram)
