WOODY
ALLEN
Heywood
"Woody" Allen (born Allan Stewart
Konigsberg, December 1, 1935)
is an American actor, filmmaker, comedian, musician, and playwright whose
career spans more than 50 years.
He worked 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, Allen began
performing as a stand-up comic, emphasizing monologues rather than traditional
jokes. As a comic, he developed the persona of an insecure, intellectual,
fretful nebbish, which he maintains is
quite different from his real-life personality. In 2004, Comedy
Central ranked Allen in fourth place on
a list of the 100 greatest stand-up comics, while a UK survey ranked Allen as
the third greatest comedian.
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. He is often
identified as part of the New
Hollywood wave of filmmakers of the mid-1960s to late
'70s. Allen often stars
in his films, typically in the persona he developed as a standup. Some
best-known of his over 40 films are Annie Hall (1977), Manhattan (1979), Hannah
and Her Sisters (1986), and Midnight in Paris (2011).
Critic Roger Ebert described
Allen as "a treasure of the cinema."[6]
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