20th century.
Biography
Following
the example
of
Charlie
Chaplin,
he usually
writes,
directs, and
acts in most
of his
films. Also
like
Chaplin,
Allen's best
movies
combine
humor with
tenderness
and pathos.
But Allen's
film persona
is a modern
and very
verbal one,
self-absorbed,
full of
neuroses,
psychobabble,
and
insecurity.
Almost all
of his own
films have
been set in
Manhattan,
providing a
sophisticated
and somewhat
romanticized
image of the
city as
background
to his story
line.
Woody
Allen was
born Allen
Stewart
Konigsberg
in
Brooklyn,
New York.
His parents
Martin and
Nettie lived
in Flatbush,
where he
attended a
Hebrew
school for
eight years.
After that,
he went to
Public
School 99
and then to
Midwood
High, where
"Red" (as he
was called
because of
his hair)
impressed
students
with his
extraordinary
talent at
cards. To
raise money,
he began
writing gags
for the
agency David
O. Alber,
who sold
them to
newspaper
columnists.
At sixteen,
he started
writing for
show stars
like
Sid Caesar
and started
calling
himself
Woody Allen.
After
school, he
went to
New York
University,
where he
took a
Communication
Arts course,
but soon
dropped out.
At nineteen,
he married
Harlene
Rosen and
started
writing
scripts for
The Ed
Sullivan
Show,
The Tonight
Show
and others.
In
1957, he
won his
first
Emmy Award;
about the
same time,
he divorced
Harlene.
Woody
Allen started
writing
prose and
plays, and
in
1960,
started a
new career
as a
stand-up
comedian
and also
began
writing for
the popular
Candid
Camera
television
show, even
appearing in
some
episodes.
Together
with his
managers he
turned his
weaknesses
into his
strengths
and
developed
the
neurotic,
nervous and
shy figure
famous from
his later
movies.
His first
movie
production
was
What's New,
Pussycat?
in
1965.
His first
directoral
effort was
What's
Up, Tiger
Lily? (1966),
in which an
existing
Japanese
movie was
redubbed in
English
with
completely
new, comic
dialogue. In
1967, he
appeared in
the offbeat
James Bond
film,
Casino
Royale.
His first
conventional
directing
effort was
Take The
Money and
Run
(1969);
some of his
early films
include
Bananas,
Everything
You Always
Wanted To
Know About
S--,
Sleeper,
and Love
and Death.
These films
relied on
slapstick,
sight gags,
and
one-liners.
In
1976,
Woody Allen starred in,
but did not
direct,
The Front,
a serious
look at
Hollywood
blacklisting
during the
1950s.
He returned
to directing
in
1977's
Annie Hall,
a film that
marked a
major turn
away to more
sophisticated
humor
(the movie
won four
Academy
Awards).
He also
directed
some serious
dramas, like
Interiors.
His most
successful
movies were
produced in
the ten year
period
starting
with
Annie Hall;
other
critical and
financial
successes
were
Manhattan
and
Hannah and
Her Sisters.
Woody
Allen's
1980s
films are
frequently
compared to
Russian
and
Polish
films; most
of them have
sad endings,
like The
Purple Rose
of Cairo.
His dramas,
like
September,
are often
said to
imitate
those of
European
directors,
most of all
Ingmar
Bergman.
In the
1990s he
returned to
lighter
movies and
to happy
endings:
Bullets Over
Broadway,
Everyone
Says I Love
You,
and others.
In
1992,
his personal
life became
very public,
when he left
his
long-term
partner
Mia Farrow
after she
discovered
his secret
affair with
her adopted
daughter,
Soon-Yi
Previn.
Farrow
accused him
of being a
pedophile
(she is 35
years his
junior) and
of abusing
their
seven-year-old
daughter
Dylan. These
events
eerily
echoed the
plotline of
the film
released at
the time,
Husbands
and Wives.
In that
film, Woody
and Mia play
a couple
whose
decade-long
relationship
is falling
apart, with
Woody's
character
becoming
attracted to
one of his
20-year-old
students.
Mia
discusses
the events
in What
Falls Away:
A Memoir,
ISBN
0385471874.
Woody and
Soon Yi
married in
1997,
and later
adopted two
daughters,
naming both
(Bechet
Allen and
Manzie Tio
Allen) after
jazz
musicians (Sidney
Bechet
and Manzie
Johnson).
Woody
Allen
continues to
write and
direct on
average one
film a year,
with box
office
grosses over
$10,000,000
considered a
relative
success. His
only recent
film to
reach that
milestone
was
Small Time
Crooks
(2000), his
first film
with
DreamWorks
SKG
studio. In
spite of the
lack of box
office
success, his
21st century
films
continue to
attract
diverse and
talented
actors.
Examples
include
Stockard
Channing,
Helen Hunt,
T? Leoni,
Christina
Ricci,
Chlo?Sevigny,
Wallace
Shawn,
and
David Ogden
Stiers.
He continues
to write
roles for
the neurotic
persona he
created in
the
60s and
70s, But
as he gets
older, the
roles have
been assumed
by other
actors such
as
Kenneth
Branagh
and more
recently,
Jason Biggs.
In
2002
Woody Allen
made a
surprise
appearance
at the
Academy
Awards
ceremony. It
was part of
a tribute to
New York
after the
9/11
terrorist
attacks.
Woody is
also a
talented
clarinettist
who has been
performing
publicly at
least since
the late
1960s.
He makes
regular New
York
appearances
with a band
specializing
in early
twentieth
century and
New Orleans
jazz. The
documentary
film
Wild Man
Blues
(directed by
Barbara
Kopple)
documents a
European
tour by
Allen and
band, as
well as his
relationship
with Soon
Yi.

Filmography
for Woody
Allen
as director
includes
-
Anything
Else
(2003)
-
Hollywood
Ending
(2002)
-
The
Curse of
the Jade
Scorpion
(2001)
-
Small
Time
Crooks
(2000)
Sweet
and
Lowdown
(1999)
Celebrity
(1998)
Deconstructing
Harry
(1997)
Everyone
Says I
Love You
(1996)
Mighty
Aphrodite
(1995)
Bullets
Over
Broadway
(1994)
Manhattan
Murder
Mystery
(1993)
Husbands
and
Wives
(1992)
Shadows
and Fog
(1992)
Alice
(1990)
Crimes
and
Misdemeanors
(1989)
New York
Stories
(1989)
(segment
"Oedipus
Wrecks")
Another
Woman
(1988)
September
(1987)
Radio
Days
(1987)
Hannah
and Her
Sisters
(1986)
The
Purple
Rose of
Cairo
(1985)
Broadway
Danny
Rose
(1984)
Zelig
(1983)
A
Midsummer
Night's s-- Comedy
(1982)
Stardust
Memories
(1980)
Manhattan
(1979)
Interiors
(1978)
Annie
Hall
(1977)
Love and
Death
(1975)
Sleeper
(1973)
Everything
You
Always
Wanted
to Know
About
S--
(1972)
Bananas
(1971)
Take the
Money
and Run
(1969)
What's
Up,
Tiger
Lily
(1966)
Books by
Woody Allen
-
Woody
Allen on
Woody
Allen
(1995),
ISBN
080211556X
-
Without
Feathers
(1975),
ISBN
0394497430
-
Side
Effects
(1980),
ISBN
0394511042
-
Getting
Even
(1971),
ISBN
0394473485