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  1. written by. Woody Allen. Marshall Brickman. (Sound and Woody Allen monologue begin) FADE IN: White credits dissolve in and out on black screen. No sound. FADE OUT: credits. FADE IN: Abrupt medium close-up of Alvy Singer doing a comedy monologue. He. wearing a crumbled sports jacket and tieless shirt; the background is stark. ALVY .

  2. www.scriptslug.com › script › annie-hall-1977Annie Hall - Script Slug

    Annie Hall. 1977 · Film. In the city of New York, comedian Alvy Singer falls in love with the ditsy Annie Hall. Written by. Woody Allen. Film. Comedy. Romance. United Artists.

  3. Annie Hall (Guión) - Woody Allen PDF | PDF. Scribd es red social de lectura y publicación más importante del mundo.

  4. "ANNIE HALL" written by. Woody Allen & Marshall Brickman. Shooting Script, 1977 Sound and Woody Allen monologue begin. FADE IN: White credits dissolve in and out on black screen. No sound. FADE OUT: CREDITS. FADE IN: Abrupt medium close-up of Alvy Singer doing a comedy monologue.

  5. pvproductions.org › wp-content › uploadsAnnie Hall Movie Script

    The sounds of city traffic, car horns honking, can be heard while he looks around waiting for, Annie. A man in a black leather jacket, walking past the theater, stops in front of, Alvy. He looks at him, then moves away. He stops a few steps farther and turns around to look at Alvy again. Alvy looks away, then back at the man.

  6. scripts-onscreen.com › movie › annie-hall-script-linksAnnie Hall – Scripts on Screen

    Director: Woody Allen. Written by: Woody Allen (Screenplay), Marshall Brickman (Screenplay) Script Synopsis: New York comedian Alvy Singer falls in love with the ditsy Annie Hall. Annie Hall Script Resources: Annie Hall Script PDF at Script Slug. Annie Hall Script PDF at archive.org.

  7. ANNIE HALL is the 6th film written and directed by Woody Allen, first released in 1977. Woody Allen stars as Alvy Singer. He has broken up with Annie, played by DIANE KEATON, and he’s looking back on his whole life to see if he can figure out how he got here. What do you say about ANNIE HALL? It’s been over analysed to death. Every