Sarah Paulson Honors Diane Keaton | Text Messages Filled with Unapologetic Laughter and Insulting Love
Sarah Paulson has always been a force of nature on screen, but this week she reminded us that her power extends far beyond acting. At The Hollywood Reporterโs Women in Entertainment gala, Paulson took the stage to honor her late friend Diane Keaton, who passed away in October. What she shared wasnโt a polished speech or a reel of career highlights. Instead, she opened her phone and let us glimpse the unfiltered, hilarious, and deeply human messages Keaton sent her over the years.
It was the kind of tribute Sarah Paulson delivered like the master of entertainment craft that she is. And it was the kind of legacy Keaton leaves behind for those who loved her: a trail of text messages that read like comedy sketches filled with love.
The Friendship Behind the Messages
Paulson first crossed paths with Keaton on the set of “The Other Sister” in 1999, and from that day forward the two built one of those rare Hollywood friendships that actually lasted. What started as coโstars quickly grew into a bond that was genuine, enduring, and full of laughter. Keaton, forever etched in film history with roles in “Annie Hall,” “The Godfather,” and “The First Wives Club,” was just as unforgettable offโscreen. Among her friends she was famous not only for her brilliance, but for her razorโsharp wit and her absolute refusal to sugarcoat a single thing.
Paulson described revisiting the texts as โbeing with her again.โ And in sharing them publicly, she gave the audience a gift: the chance to laugh with Keaton one more time.
Diane Keaton, Unfiltered
The messages Paulson read were pure Keatonโfunny, blunt, and impossible to forget.
โSarah, I hate your phone. It is always full, and I can never leave a message. Moron, what is your address? Hurry home, sucker idiot.โ
โAs usual, your voicemail is full. What makes you so f***ing popular?โ
โYou are a numbskull.โ
โDonโt ask why. Donโt ask what I did. Iโm a loser from way back.โ
Each line landed with the audience like a punchline, but beneath the humor was the unmistakable warmth of a friend who knew Paulson well enough to tease her relentlessly.
Sarah Paulson’s Tribute Resonated
Goldie Hawn joined Paulson on stage, calling Keaton โlightning in a bottle.โ Together, they painted a portrait of a woman who was more than her filmographyโshe was a friend, a confidante, and a comedian in her own right.
Paulsonโs decision to honor Keaton through their text exchanges felt exactly right. Those messages revealed Keaton as she truly wasโirreverent, razorโsharp, and unapologetically herself. And in choosing to share them, Paulson reminded us why sheโs so adored: she doesnโt flatten her friends into polished legends, she lifts them up by spotlighting the quirks and the humor that made them unforgettable.
Why Tributes Like This Matter
Tributes like this remind us that legacies arenโt just built on awards or box office numbers. Theyโre built on the small, everyday exchanges that reveal who someone really was.
By sharing these personal texts, Paulson gave us a glimpse of the Diane she knew on the daily: funny and fearless. And in doing so, she reminded us that grief can always be softened by laughter. That love lives on in the most unexpected places โlike a voicemail full of insults and name calling. With love, that is.
It’s Diane, One of Your Friends โฅ
Sarah Paulson didnโt just honor Diane Keaton; she let us all sit in on their friendship. She let us laugh at Keatonโs words, feel the sting of her loss, and remember the joy of having someone in your life who never lets you off the hook.
It was a fanโgirl moment, yes, but also a masterclass in how to honor someone you love: by letting them speak for themselves, even if what theyโre saying is โYou are a numbskull.โ
