Diane Keaton, who was Woody Allen's favorite leading lady before he took up with Mia Farrow, writes about the pitfalls of plastic surgery in the April issue of Mirabella magazine.

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The actress, whose "Annie Hall" look spawned a fashion craze in the '70s, confesses that as a girl she fretted about her looks. "Around 12, I knew something was wrong. I wasn't pretty . . . I didn't like my nose, so I slept with a bobby pin stuck on top, hoping the bulb would squeeze itself into a straight line."As she grows older, Keaton says the prospect of plastic surgery is more tempting, but she fears yielding would only create a "mask" of prettiness.

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