Apropos of Nothing
Apropos of Nothing is a 2020 memoir by American filmmaker, comedian, writer, and actor Woody Allen, chronicling his personal and professional life from childhood in mid-20th-century New York to his extensive career in entertainment.[1][2] The 400-page autobiography, published by Arcade (an imprint of Skyhorse Publishing) on March 23, 2020, provides Allen's candid reflections on his creative influences, comedic development, relationships—including his marriage to Soon-Yi Previn—and directorial output, such as Annie Hall and Manhattan, for which he received four Academy Awards.[1][3] Originally set for release by Hachette Book Group's Grand Central Publishing, the project faced cancellation after internal employee protests invoking 1992 allegations of child molestation by Allen's adopted daughter Dylan Farrow—claims Allen has denied throughout, with no criminal charges resulting from police and child welfare probes.[4][5] Allen subsequently arranged expedited publication through Arcade, framing the book as his unvarnished counter-narrative to what he describes as distorted public perceptions amplified by media and cultural dynamics.[6][4] The memoir's content notably rebuts the Farrow allegations, attributing them to familial acrimony amid his separation from Mia Farrow, while emphasizing empirical inconsistencies in accounts that investigations, including a Yale-New Haven Hospital review, deemed unreliable.[6]Background and Genesis
Woody Allen's Career Leading to the Memoir
Woody Allen began his professional career in the 1950s as a comedy writer in New York City, contributing gags to television shows including Sid Caesar's Your Show of Shows and related programs.[7] By the early 1960s, he transitioned to stand-up comedy, performing in Greenwich Village venues such as the Bitter End, where he developed a distinctive neurotic persona that drew audiences alongside contemporaries like Lenny Bruce.[8] These early efforts established Allen's foundation in humor rooted in self-deprecation and intellectual satire, leading to nightclub bookings and initial recording deals for comedy albums by 1964.[9] Allen's entry into filmmaking accelerated in the 1970s, with Sleeper (1973) and Bananas (1971) marking his shift from directing comedies infused with slapstick to more introspective works. The pivotal breakthrough came with Annie Hall (1977), which earned Academy Awards for Best Director and Best Original Screenplay, alongside Best Picture, grossing over $39 million domestically and critically redefining romantic comedy through innovative narrative techniques like on-screen subtitles for inner thoughts.[10] This success was followed by Manhattan (1979), a black-and-white homage to New York City that received two Oscar nominations and solidified Allen's reputation for blending urban sophistication with philosophical undertones, achieving $39 million in worldwide earnings.[11] Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Allen maintained an annual output of films, directing over 20 features including Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), which won three Oscars, and Crimes and Misdemeanors (1989), amassing a body of work totaling more than 40 films by 2020 characterized by consistent critical acclaim and box-office returns averaging tens of millions per release. In the 2000s, facing creative fatigue with New York settings, he relocated production to Europe starting with Match Point (2005), yielding commercial hits like Vicky Cristina Barcelona (2008), which grossed $96 million globally. This phase peaked with Midnight in Paris (2011), a fantasy comedy that earned the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay and exceeded $150 million in worldwide box office, demonstrating sustained international viability.[12][13] By the late 2010s, Allen's films encountered reduced U.S. theatrical distribution amid broader cultural reevaluations of legacy artists, with releases like A Rainy Day in New York (2019) limited primarily to international markets and platforms, prompting a pivot toward personal reflection in writing.[14] This professional trajectory—from gag writing to prolific auteurship—provided the empirical foundation for Allen to chronicle his experiences in a memoir, capturing decades of artistic evolution amid shifting industry dynamics.[15]Motivations for Writing the Autobiography
Allen had long resisted writing a memoir, but at age 84, he chose to document his life in Apropos of Nothing, reflecting that "at my age, I'm playing with house money" and expressing a desire to "get some things off my chest" absent belief in an afterlife.[16][17] This timing underscores a personal imperative tied to mortality rather than external pressure, prioritizing candid reflection over prior self-perceived self-indulgence in autobiography.[18] A primary impetus was Allen's frustration with journalistic distortions of his biography, including embellished accounts of his career trajectory and the 1992 familial allegations stemming from his relationship with Mia Farrow.[19][20] He aimed to assert narrative control, presenting events through his lens without defensiveness, as evidenced by the memoir's emphasis on factual recounting over polemic.[18] The work draws from Allen's established essayistic voice in The New Yorker, favoring humor and unvarnished candor—described by the publisher as "candid and often hilarious"—over rote chronology or apology.[2][21] Financial incentives played no highlighted role, given his substantial earnings from directing and writing over 50 films since 1966, rendering the endeavor introspective rather than mercenary.Contents
Early Life, Comedy, and Stand-Up
Allen was born Allan Stewart Konigsberg on December 1, 1935, in New York's Bronx but raised primarily in Brooklyn's Flatbush and Midwood sections amid a boisterous Jewish family environment.[22] [23] His parents, Nettie (née Cherrie) and Martin Konigsberg, both children of Russian Jewish immigrants, maintained a volatile household rife with shouting matches that Allen later drew upon for comedic insights into familial discord.[23] In the memoir, he portrays this Brooklyn upbringing in the 1940s as a source of both insecurity and raw material, emphasizing street games, local theaters, and a cultural immersion that fostered his early affinity for humor as escapism.[17] [24] Influenced by vaudeville and film comedy, Allen cites the Marx Brothers' anarchic style as a formative draw, likening his mother's appearance to Groucho in retrospect, while his budding interest in jazz—manifesting in clarinet lessons and fandom—shaped his performative sensibilities.[25] [26] As a teenager, he adopted the pseudonym Woody Allen at age 17 to submit one-liners to newspaper columnists, dispatching up to 40 jokes weekly despite frequent rejections, a discipline that refined his concise, self-lacerating wit.[27] [28] This evolved into gag-writing for television, including contributions to shows like Your Show of Shows, where he collaborated with contemporaries such as Mel Brooks, marking his professional entry into entertainment.[29] By the early 1960s, Allen transitioned to stand-up, performing in Greenwich Village venues like the Bitter End with routines centered on urban neuroses, hypochondria, and absurd existential dread, delivered through rapid-fire one-liners and confessional monologues.[30] [31] His debut album, Woody Allen (1964), recorded live, showcased this persona— a bespectacled, anxious intellectual fumbling through life's absurdities—earning Grammy nominations and cementing his reputation among comedy enthusiasts.[31] Follow-up releases, including Woody Allen Volume 2 (1965) and The Third Woody Allen (1968), expanded on these themes with bits on masturbation, death, and failed relationships, amassing a cult following and paving the way for his written humor collections before film pursuits.[32]Hollywood and Filmmaking Achievements
Allen's transition to filmmaking commenced with What's New Pussycat? (1965), a box-office hit grossing over $18 million on a modest budget but plagued by studio interference and script rewrites that frustrated his vision. By contrast, Bananas (1971) represented his first project with near-complete creative control, enabling slapstick experimentation and satirical edge that critics praised for elevating him beyond gag-driven comedy. This autonomy fueled further stylistic risks, as seen in Interiors (1978), a stark dramatic turn emulating Ingmar Bergman's introspective aesthetic, which Allen cited as a deliberate pivot to probe psychological depths over farce.[33][34] Such independence underpinned collaborations yielding landmark successes, including repeated pairings with Diane Keaton in films like Sleeper (1973), Annie Hall (1977), and Manhattan (1979), where her naturalistic portrayals amplified Allen's neurotic protagonists. Similarly, Mia Farrow featured in 13 of his pictures from A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy (1982) onward, contributing to ensemble dynamics in works like Hannah and Her Sisters (1986). Annie Hall secured Oscars for Best Director and Best Original Screenplay on April 3, 1978, while Hannah and Her Sisters garnered nominations in those categories on March 30, 1987, affirming his mastery of character-driven narratives.[35][36][37] Allen's output peaked with near-annual releases—averaging one feature per year from the 1970s through the 1990s—yielding a corpus of over 50 directed films by 2020 that collectively grossed more than $575 million worldwide, driven by hits like Midnight in Paris (2011) at $151 million. Creative sovereignty, often self-financed or backed by loyal producers, minimized commercial compromises, prioritizing artistic iteration over formula. Post-2000, European funding and audiences—especially in France, where honors like the Legion of Honour in 2002 underscored appreciation for his intellectualism—bolstered longevity amid domestic distribution hurdles, with films like Match Point (2005) earning $85 million internationally.[38][39]Personal Relationships and Marriages
Allen's first marriage was to Harlene Rozner, a childhood acquaintance from Brooklyn, in March 1956; the union ended in divorce in 1962 after six years marked by his emerging career demands and personal incompatibilities, as he later reflected in his memoir.[40] His second marriage, to actress Louise Lasser, occurred on February 2, 1966, and lasted until their divorce in 1970; Lasser appeared in several of his early films, including What's Up, Tiger Lily? (1966), but the relationship strained under the pressures of his professional ambitions and her independent pursuits.[41] In 1980, Allen entered a long-term partnership with actress Mia Farrow, which lasted until 1992 and produced a blended family without formal marriage; during this period, they welcomed biological son Ronan Farrow, born on December 19, 1987 (initially named Satchel), and co-parented several adopted children, including Dylan Farrow (adopted by Farrow in 1985 and co-adopted by Allen in 1991) and Moses Farrow (adopted by Farrow in 1980 and co-adopted by Allen in 1991).[42][43] Allen described the arrangement in Apropos of Nothing as a logistical expansion driven by Farrow's enthusiasm for adoption and their shared commitment to raising the children amid separate residences in New York and Connecticut.[44] Allen's relationship with Soon-Yi Previn, adopted by Farrow and her then-husband André Previn in 1977, began consensually in 1991 when Previn was 21; the couple married on December 23, 1997, in a private ceremony and have since adopted two daughters, Bechet Dumaine Allen (1999) and Manzie Tio Allen (2001).[45][46] In the memoir, Allen portrays the partnership as a stable, adult choice that defied public misconceptions, emphasizing Previn's independence and their mutual compatibility over familial ties, as he never adopted her or functioned as a stepfather.[44]Address of Legal and Familial Disputes
In Apropos of Nothing, Woody Allen recounts the 1992 dissolution of his long-term relationship with Mia Farrow, triggered by her discovery of nude photographs of her adopted daughter Soon-Yi Previn, then aged 21, leading to revelations of an affair between Allen, aged 56, and Previn.[44] [47] This disclosure precipitated an acrimonious custody dispute over their three children: biological son Satchel (later Ronan), adopted daughter Dylan, and adopted son Moses.[44] Allen acknowledges his limited involvement in daily child-rearing prior to the conflict, describing weekend visitations rather than primary parenting responsibilities, which he attributes to the non-traditional family dynamic with Farrow.[44] Allen portrays Farrow's response as driven by vengeance, alleging she threatened to "ruin" him after learning of the affair and subsequently manipulated circumstances to influence the children against him.[44] He claims Farrow coached and brainwashed Dylan during therapy sessions, fabricating elements of the ensuing allegations amid the custody proceedings, and depicts her as exhibiting bitterness, including statements like "You took my daughter, now I’ll take yours."[47] [44] Regarding familial tensions, Allen notes support from Moses, who later defended him publicly, while highlighting estrangement from Ronan, whom he speculates may not be his biological son based on Farrow's past affair with Frank Sinatra.[47] On his relationship with Soon-Yi Previn, Allen describes it as arising organically during the filming of Husbands and Wives in 1991, emphasizing mutual passion from the outset: "we couldn’t keep our hands off each other."[48] [44] He rejects portrayals of coercion or exploitation, characterizing Previn as "sharp, classy, fabulous" and their bond as evolving into a stable, loving marriage of over two decades, which he states he would pursue "in a heartbeat" despite the fallout.[48] [47] Allen contrasts media depictions with his view of Previn as an independent adult partner, not a familial dependent.[44]Publication History
Initial Contract with Hachette
Grand Central Publishing, an imprint of Hachette Book Group, acquired the rights to Woody Allen's memoir Apropos of Nothing in March 2019, following rejections from multiple other publishers.[49][50] The deal was initiated after Hachette senior vice president Ben Sevier reviewed a proposal submitted by Allen, marking a departure from industry reluctance shaped by the #MeToo movement and uncharged allegations of sexual abuse leveled against Allen in the early 1990s, which he has repeatedly denied under oath and in public statements.[49][50] Prior pitches had encountered disinterest, with reports indicating that pre-#MeToo, the project might have sparked a competitive auction yielding a six- or seven-figure advance, but post-2017 sensitivities led to widespread caution among houses fearing reputational risks.[50] On March 2, 2020, Hachette publicly announced the acquisition and scheduled the book's release for April 7, 2020, positioning it as a comprehensive personal account spanning Allen's life, career, and relationships.[51][52] The contract's financial terms, including any advance, were not disclosed, consistent with practices for many high-profile deals where specifics remain private unless litigation or leaks arise.[53] Hachette's decision to proceed reflected an assessment of the manuscript's intrinsic value over external pressures, with the publisher maintaining editorial independence in its acquisition process across imprints, a policy that allowed imprints like Grand Central to operate autonomously from others under the Hachette umbrella, such as Little, Brown and Company.[54] This approach underscored a commitment to evaluating content on merit amid an industry environment where unproven allegations had rendered Allen's projects commercially toxic for years, yet did not preclude selective engagement when internal reviews deemed viable.[55][56]Internal Protests and Contract Termination
On March 5, 2020, dozens of Hachette Book Group employees in New York staged a walkout from their offices to protest the company's decision to publish Woody Allen's memoir Apropos of Nothing, expressing moral objections tied to the director's alleged sexual abuse of his adopted daughter Dylan Farrow in 1992.[57] [54] The action followed Hachette's early March announcement of the acquisition and planned April 7 release through its Grand Central Publishing imprint, amid renewed scrutiny of the unproven allegations during the #MeToo movement.[58] The employee protests gained momentum after Ronan Farrow, Dylan Farrow's brother and a Hachette author whose book Catch and Kill detailed his investigations into sexual misconduct allegations, publicly condemned the deal and terminated his relationship with the publisher on March 4.[58] [59] Staff cited the publication as incompatible with Hachette's stated values against sexual assault, demanding the contract's cancellation without reference to the memoir's specific contents.[60] In response, Hachette Book Group terminated the contract on March 6, 2020, returning all rights to Allen and stating the decision was "difficult" but aligned with its zero-tolerance policy on sexual assault and support for abuse victims who speak out.[61] [62] The publisher explicitly apologized to Dylan Farrow and her family for proceeding without sufficiently weighing the ongoing public sensitivities surrounding the case, a move that unfolded less than a week after the deal's disclosure and before any formal galleys had been distributed for review.[58] This rapid reversal underscored the primacy of internal activist pressure and reputational concerns over traditional editorial evaluation in the decision-making process.[63]Industry and Public Backlash to Cancellation
Following Hachette Book Group's announcement on March 6, 2020, that it would terminate its contract for Woody Allen's memoir Apropos of Nothing amid employee protests and public outcry, several prominent figures in literature and media condemned the decision as an act of censorship driven by unproven allegations rather than legal findings. Salman Rushdie, whose own works have faced fatwas and bans, expressed unease with the cancellation, stating, "The Hachette decision to drop the Woody Allen book makes me very uneasy. It's not him; I don't give a damn about Mr. Allen," emphasizing broader concerns over publishers yielding to pressure without regard for due process or the absence of criminal convictions against Allen.[64] Literary advocates highlighted risks to publisher autonomy and free expression precedents. In an op-ed, James Patterson, a bestselling author and Hachette client, criticized the move, asserting that Allen "has the right to tell his own story" despite personal reservations about the director's work, arguing that blocking publication based on contested claims sets a dangerous standard for authors without formal guilt.[65] Media commentators echoed this, with a Guardian piece contending that Hachette erred by capitulating to staff activism over editorial independence, noting Allen's lack of charges after multiple investigations into the 1992 allegations and framing the reversal as prioritizing ideological conformity over the principle that "free speech isn't a reward for good behavior."[66][67] Public discourse included petitions and essays defending Allen's opportunity for self-narration, given the decade-plus of scrutiny without prosecutorial action. An NBC News opinion argued the memoir's right to exist aligns with First Amendment protections, cautioning that preemptive suppression based on public sentiment undermines the marketplace of ideas, especially absent court-validated wrongdoing.[67] These responses positioned the cancellation not as accountability but as a chilling effect on publishing, potentially discouraging works from figures facing similar unadjudicated disputes.[68]Shift to Arcade and Release in 2020
Arcade Publishing, an imprint of Skyhorse Publishing, acquired the rights to Apropos of Nothing and released the 400-page hardcover memoir on March 23, 2020—the same day the acquisition was announced.[69] [70] This expedited process followed Hachette Book Group's termination of its contract earlier in the month, with Arcade completing final edits on the manuscript within days to facilitate the immediate U.S. launch amid the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, which disrupted traditional distribution channels.[5] [71] The book launched with an initial print run of 75,000 copies.[69] Despite persistent calls for boycotts from industry figures and employee protests at prior publishers, Apropos of Nothing achieved commercial success, debuting on the New York Times bestseller list.[29] [72] In the book's preface, Woody Allen thanked Arcade for defending free speech principles and proceeding with publication after larger houses demurred.[1]International Distribution
Translations and Releases by Language
The memoir underwent translations into several European languages in 2020 and 2021, with publishers navigating occasional retailer reluctance amid surrounding controversies, though no government-imposed bans occurred. Editions generally retained Allen's original wry, conversational style with minimal adaptations beyond linguistic adjustments to idiomatic expressions. By October 2025, no significant new translations or revisions had emerged in major markets.| Language | Title | Publisher | Release Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Italian | A proposito di niente | La Nave di Teseo | March 23, 2020[73] |
| French | Apropos de rien | Éditions Stock | April 2020[74] |
| German | Apropos nichts | Carl Hanser Verlag | 2020 |
| Czech | Apropos of Nothing (original title retained in translation) | Argo | 2021[75] |