It was a style all her own – broad-brimmed hat; eyeglasses; vest; turtleneck, or blouse worn with a tie or scarf; wide, pleated pants, and a jacket, sometimes matching and sometimes tweed.
It was labeled “Annie Hall style,” but it really should have been called “ Diane Keaton style,” for it is what made her an icon from the moment she appeared on the screen in that Woody Allen film, which won her an Oscar. Designers throughout the intervening almost five decades would often copy it, but there was only one original: Keaton, who died Saturday at age 79 and who remained true to her look throughout her life , even on the red carpet. There she sometimes would don mannish suits, or else full skirted dresses worn with a wide belt.
She sometimes appeared at fashion shows, including Ralph L