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Diane Keaton’s Bulimia Was ‘Just This Trick You Could Do’

Diane Keaton's Bulimia Was 'Just This Trick You Could Do'In Diane Keaton's memoir, Then Again, she writes that when she was 19, a Broadway director offered her a part in the Broadway musical Hair — on the condition she lose 10lbs. She developed an eating disorder. "I don't think it was called bulimia then," she tells People. "It was just this trick you could do. It's a horrible problem. Ugly and awful."

This was in the late sixties, but you have to wonder: How many other women were told the same thing? By that director or another? How many Hollywood actresses are still> told to lose weight, today? Keaton went to therapy — the "talking cure," she calls it — but were there others who didn't pull through?

In case you were wondering: She got the part. The photograph below, taken in June of 1968, shows Keaton — on the lower level, in the middle, between two costars — on stage performing "White Boys" in Hair. (Legend has it she refused to take off her clothes at the end of Act I when the cast gets naked, even though actors who performed nude received a $50 bonus.)

Diane Keaton's Bulimia Was 'Just This Trick You Could Do'

[Daily Mail via People]

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