Heywood Allen (born
Allan Stewart Konigsberg; December 1, 1935), better known as
Woody Allen,
is an American director, writer, actor, and comedian whose career spans
more than six decades. He began his career as a comedy writer in the
1950s, writing jokes and scripts for television and publishing several
books of short humor pieces. In the early 1960s, he performed as a
stand-up comedian, emphasizing
monologues rather than traditional jokes, where he developed the persona of an insecure, intellectual, fretful
nebbish, which he maintains is quite different from his real-life personality.
[1] In 2004
Comedy Central ranked Allen fourth on a list of the 100 greatest stand-up comedians,
[2][3] while a UK survey ranked Allen the third-greatest comedian.
[4]
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By the mid-1960s Allen was writing and directing films, first specializing in
slapstick comedies before moving into dramatic material influenced by
European art cinema during the 1970s, and alternating between comedies and dramas to the present. He is often identified as part of the
New Hollywood wave of filmmakers of the mid-1960s to late 1970s.
[5]
Allen often stars in his films, typically in the persona he developed
as a standup. Some of the best-known of his over 50 films are
Annie Hall (1977),
Manhattan (1979),
Hannah and Her Sisters (1986),
Crimes and Misdemeanors (1989), and
Midnight in Paris (2011). In 2007 he said
Stardust Memories (1980),
The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985), and
Match Point (2005) were his best films.
[6] Critic
Roger Ebert described Allen as "a treasure of the cinema".
[7]
Allen has received many
accolades and honors. He has won four
Academy Awards: three for
Best Original Screenplay and one for
Best Director. He also garnered nine
British Academy Film Awards. His screenplay for
Annie Hall was named the funniest screenplay by the
Writers Guild of America in its list of the "101 Funniest Screenplays".
[8] In 2011
PBS televised the film biography
Woody Allen: A Documentary on its series
American Masters.
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