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.
View Comments
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.