Sarah Paulson Honors Diane Keaton With Tattoo on What Would’ve Been Her 80th Birthday
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Sarah Paulson Honors Diane Keaton With Tattoo on What Would’ve Been Her 80th Birthday

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3 days ago
Edited ByGlobal AI News Editorial Team
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Jan 5, 2026

Crediting Daniel for the lifetime reminder of her friend, she added, “Thank you @winterstone for my forever reminder, of one of my forever people.”

Diane died on October 11 at the age of 79, following a battle with a bacterial pneumonia infection. Two months later, Sarah shared rare insight into their relationship while accepting an honor at the Hollywood Reporter’s Women in Entertainment in the form of personal emails.

“Look, I want to know every single thing that's going on with you—your career, your love, your f--king house,” Diane wrote to Sarah in a message read during the ceremony Dec. 3. “When are you in? Love you, little special. Keep me abreast on developments. Diane, one of your friends.”

Sarah tearfully shared what would have been her response to The Family Stone actress, should she had been alive to receive another email.

“Dear dumb-dumb, I want to tell you I'm sorry that voicemail was always full,” she shared through tears. “I want to tell you I'm sorry I wasn't available every time you called me. I want to tell you how much crummier the world is without you in it. I want to tell you everything that happened in my life in the 54 days since you’ve been gone.”

Giving one final nod to the late actress, Sarah said, “But most of all, I just want to say thank you. Thank you for being my friend. Sarah Paulson, actress. Please call.”

For more on Sarah and more stars who paid tribute to Diane after her death, keep reading…

Diane's Book Club costars each shared individual tributes for the late actress.

The Elf actress emphasized that her late friend was "magic."

"There was no one, nor will there ever be, anyone like her," she wrote in a statement. "I loved her and felt blessed to be her friend. My love to her family. What a wonder she was!!!"

"It’s hard to believe...or accept…that Diane has passed," Jane wrote in her own Instagram post. "She was always a spark of life and light, constantly giggling at her own foibles, being limitlessly creative... in her acting, her wardrobe, her books, her friends, her homes, her library, her worldview. Unique is what she was. And, though she didn’t know it or wouldn’t admit it, man she was a fine actress!"

Meanwhile, Candice wrote in her post, "This is a huge loss, both personally and for all of us."

The Miss Congeniality actress continued, "Diane was a true artist – tremendously gifted and uniquely talented in so many disciplines, yet also modest and wonderfully eccentric. I will miss her terribly."

The Big Little Lies actress praised Diane as "really important" and reflected on starring in the 1992 TV movie Wildflower, which Diane directed.

"She was one of my first mentors in this business," Reese said during during an event in October. "I was 15 years old and I was from Nashville, Tennessee, and I didn't know anybody."

She added, "She really took the time to pull me aside and say, 'Stand up straight, OK? I want you to have good posture. If you're gonna be an actress you got to work on your posture.'"

Asking the audience to pay tribute to Diane, she concluded, "So for Diane, watch one of her movies. And wear like a really cool, interesting outfit, black and white. Take a cool picture and just live your dream. Just be your unique, interesting self. I think Diane would be really happy. So rest in peace, Diane.”

The Matrix star reminisced on working with the Annie Hall actress in the 2003 movie Something's Gotta Give.

“Total pro,” Keanu told E! News Oct. 13. “She was very nice to me. Generous, generous artist and a very special, unique person.”

And getting the chance to watch Diane work alongside costar Jack Nicholson in the film—written and directed by Nancy Meyers—was a memorable experience he'll always cherish.

"It was cool to be able to see her and Jack Nicholson together," Keanu continued. "Just with the history they shared and the way the fondness and love they had for each other. It's really cool."

Diane's Annie Hall costar penned an essay in her honor after news of her passing.

"Unlike anyone the planet has experienced or is unlikely to ever see again, her face and laugh illuminated any space she entered," Woody wrote in an essay for The Free Press. "She was so charming, so beautiful, so magical, that I questioned my sanity. I thought: 'Could I be in love so quickly?'"

Woody called the world a "drearier" place without Diane, adding, "Still, there are her movies. And her great laugh still echoes in my head.”

The Something's Gotta Give writer-director paid tribute to her longtime collaborator and friend.

“As a movie lover, I’m with you all—we have lost a giant,” Nancy wrote on Instagram. “A brilliant actress who time and again laid herself bare to tell our stories.”

“As a woman, I lost a friend of almost 40 years,” she continued. “At times over the years, she felt like a sister because we shared so many truly memorable experiences. As a filmmaker, I’ve lost a connection with an actress that one can only dream of. We all search for that someone who really gets us, right? Well, with Diane, I believe we mutually had that."

Noting that Diane was "born to be a movie star," Nancy concluded, “For me, knowing her and working with her changed my life. Thank you Di. I’ll miss you forever.”

The former daytime television host posted a compilation of every time Diane appeared on her show, admitting she was one of her "all-time favorite guests."

"Diane Keaton was an icon- a hero of mine growing up," Ellen wrote in an Instagram post. "To be able to connect with her on my show over the years was so much fun. Always a surprise. always fun. She was one of a kind."

"You’ve left us with a trail of fairy dust, filled with particles of light and memories beyond imagination," Goldie gushed of her Town & Country costar. "How do we say goodbye? What words can come to mind when your heart is broken? You never liked praise, so humble, but now you can’t tell me to 'shut up' honey. There was, and will be, no one like you."

"We agreed to grow old together, and one day, maybe live together with all our girlfriends," Goldie continued. "Well, we never got to live together, but we did grow older together. Who knows… maybe in the next life. Shine your fairy dust up there, girlfriend. I’m going to miss the hell out of you."

The Saturday Night Live star, who previously worked as an assistant to the Annie Hall actress, wrote in a tribute to Instagram, "Diane, you are the best and I will be seeing you in everything."

Mandy, who starred alongside Diane in Because I Said So, penned a heartfelt tribute to the actress on Instagram.

"They say don’t meet your heros but I got to work with one of mine and even call her 'mom' for a few months," Mandy wrote. "An honor of a lifetime. What an incandescent human Di is and was. I am so sad she’s gone for all the reasons but also because it felt like she’d be here forever, dazzling us with her talent and charm (and her style, c’mon)!!! One of the very best to ever do it. All my love to her children and loved ones."

"The magical Diane Keaton has passed," he wrote on social media. "Diane will be deeply missed. She will continue to be an American original. A truly unique and sublime artist. A unicorn of sorts. No one like her. Her light will continue to shine forever."

He continued, "In fact, it will shine even brighter as the years pass. A beacon of spontaneity and originality that we all strive for. I was blessed to be in her light. I will carry it with me forever.”

"RIP to my friend Diane Keaton. A heartbreaking loss of one of the greatest icons in our industry," he wrote on Instagram. "I have so many fond memories of working with Diane on our film And So It Goes nearly twelve years ago. Sending my deepest condolences to the Keaton family during this difficult time."

"When I was a kid, Diane Keaton was my absolute idol," the Sex and the City alum wrote. "I loved her acting. I loved her vibe. I loved her everything. Starting with when I was 12, I tried to dress like her. I wore my hair long. I sported men’s hats and vests and (even though my eyes were fine) I wore bookish glasses because I thought they made me look more like her."

She continued, "A little more than a decade ago I got to be in a movie called Five Flights Up with her and it was like a dream come true. I was very shy around her, but I think she liked me and that meant everything to me."

"Diane Keaton has been a point of inspiration for countless actresses," she wrote. "I include myself among those who loved and admired her. I was very privileged to witness her singular skill and talent on both First Wives Club and The Family Stone."

The actor remembered his time working with Diane early in his career, writing, "Diane Keaton was one of a kind. Brilliant, funny, and unapologetically herself. A legend, an icon, and a truly kind human being."

The comedian shared a screenshot of an article, in which Martin Short asked Diane, "Who's sexier, me or Steve Martin?" To which Diane replied, "I mean, you're both idiots."

Steve captioned his post, "Don’t know who first posted this, but it sums up our delightful relationship with Diane."

Under a scene from First Wives Club, Kate wrote on social media, "We love you so much Diane."

"Diane Keaton could do anything," she wrote on Instagram. "From dramatic roles like Kay Corleone in The Godfather trilogy, to her hilariously offbeat portrayal of Annie Hall, which won her an Oscar, her talent seemed limitless. I also remember her lovely cold call to my mom after the release of her documentary, A Piece of Work, just to share her admiration. She will be greatly missed."

"Today we lost a true original," she said. "@diane_keaton wasn’t just an actress: she was a force. a woman who showed us that being yourself is the most powerful thing you can be."

She continued, "From Annie Hall to Something’s Gotta Give, she made every role unforgettable. But beyond the screen, she brought joy, laughter, and style that was all her own. Thank you, Diane, for reminding us that authenticity never goes out of fashion."

The Gilmore Girls actress shared a personal letter from her Because I Said So costar that encouraged her to write her first book.

“A few lines from a letter Diane Keaton wrote me years ago, when writing a book was just a dream of mine,” she captioned her Instagram post, which included a picture of the typed letter signed by “Di.” “Her work as an actor was an inspiration to me. Her encouragement changed my life.”

"She was beloved in her industry," Elizabeth said on Instagram. "Every one of us idolizes her. Her influence on culture, fashion, art and women can’t be overstated. She was a delight. I am proud I have a career that allowed me to meet her and breathe her air."

"The brilliant, beautiful, extraordinary Diane Keaton has died," Bette wrote in her Instagram tribute. "I cannot tell you how unbearably sad this makes me. She was hilarious, a complete original, and completely without guile, or any of the competitiveness one would have expected from such a star. What you saw was who she was…oh, la, lala!

"Diane, working with you will always be one of the highlights of my life," the Father of the Bride star wrote on Instagram. "You are one of a kind, and it was thrilling to be in your orbit for a time. Thank you for your kindness, your generosity, your talent, and above all, your laughter."

No!! No!!! No!! God, not yet, NO!!! Man… you defined womanhood," she noted on Instagram. "The pathos, humor, levity, your ever-present youthfulness and vulnerability — you tattooed your SOUL into every role, making it impossible to imagine anyone else inhabiting them. You were undeniably, unapologetically YOU!!! Loved you. Man… rest well. God bless your family, and I know angels are flying you home.

"What a very sad day. Rest in peace #dianekeaton," he wrote on Instagram "Such a brilliant actor, a kind heart and full of graciousness with a shining independent spirit."

"What a monumental loss," he wrote on Instagram. "Diane Keaton in many ways defined my love of movies. From Annie Hall to the Godfather films, from First Wives Club to Baby Boom, from Father of the Bride to Something’s Gotta Give, here resume was nothing short of iconic and hall of fame worthy."

"I was very fortunate to work with her many years ago on an unproduced HBO pilot," Josh continued, "and what I found was one of the most humble, ruthlessly funny, and unbelievably talented human beings I’ve ever come across."

He added, "In many ways, this year will be defined by the loss of a Hollywood we will never again see. There simply are no replacements for a Gene Hackman or a Robert Redford or a Diane Keaton. They were the mavericks who helped redefine movies for a generation and losing them feels like also losing a chance inactive tissue to that golden age just out of reach. My heart goes out to Diane’s entire family during this impossible moment. RIP"

"Diane Keaton is gone," the designer wrote on Instagram, "and though I only knew her through the light she gave on screen, I’ll miss that light deeply."

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