Hollywood woke to heartbreak this morning as Bette Midler — the beloved singer and actress — finally broke her silence on the death of her longtime friend and The First Wives Club co-star, Diane Keaton. In an emotional statement released early today, Bette shared a handwritten letter and a simple pencil sketch she had drawn for Diane, calling it her “last conversation” with the woman who, in her words, “made chaos beautiful.” The letter, written on cream stationery in Midler’s familiar looping script, was reportedly penned in the hours after she learned of Keaton’s passing. “We were partners in laughter, and in life,” she wrote. “You taught me that bravery isn’t loud — sometimes it’s the quiet choice to stay strange, stay kind, stay real. I’ll keep hearing your laugh in the wings forever.” Alongside the letter was a tender sketch — a rough drawing of the three women from The First Wives Club: Diane, Goldie Hawn, and Bette herself, all holding hands beneath a rising sun. In the corner, Bette had scribbled three words: “Still together, always.”.. WATCH VIDEO BELOW 👇👇

BREAKING THIS MORNING: Bette Midler Breaks Silence With a Heart-Wrenching Letter and Hand-Drawn Sketch for Diane Keaton — “We Were Partners in Laughter, and in Life”

The First Wives Club' turns 25: Where are they now? | Gallery |  Wonderwall.com

Hollywood woke up to a wave of emotion this morning as Bette Midler — the legendary actress, singer, and one of Diane Keaton’s closest friends — finally broke her silence following Diane’s passing. What she released wasn’t a formal statement or a press note, but something far more intimate: a four-page handwritten letter and a pencil sketch she had drawn herself, both dedicated to her late friend.

Bette Midler Pens Heartfelt Tribute to 'Extraordinary' Diane Keaton

The letter, written in Bette’s delicate, looping handwriting on her signature cream stationery, begins simply: “Dear Diane — or should I say, Dee, the name only your friends could use without you rolling your eyes.” From there, the words flow like a confession — tender, nostalgic, and filled with the kind of humor that only two lifelong friends could share.

“We were partners in laughter, and in life. I can still hear your voice echoing through the soundstage — that sharp wit, that brilliant chaos you carried everywhere. You made awkwardness look elegant. You made silence sound like music. And somehow, you made all of us better just by being around.”

In another passage, Midler reflects on their iconic film The First Wives Club, where she, Diane, and Goldie Hawn became symbols of resilience, friendship, and female empowerment.

Bette Midler Pens Heartfelt Tribute to 'Extraordinary' Diane Keaton

“You, me, and Goldie — three mad women in heels, shouting about revenge and singing about freedom. Who knew that behind the laughter, we were writing our own love letter to survival? You taught me that the bravest thing a woman can do is stay true to herself, even when the world calls her crazy.”

As the pages go on, the tone shifts. Bette’s pen trembles — the ink smudged where tears must have fallen.

“I wasn’t ready to say goodbye. None of us were. You always said you wanted to ‘exit quietly, no fuss, no headlines.’ But oh, darling… the world doesn’t know how to be quiet without you in it. The laughter stopped when you left.”

The final paragraph is the one that fans say “broke them completely”:

“Save me a seat, Dee. Somewhere between the noise and the music. Somewhere we can start again — you in your hat, me running late, both of us laughing too loud. Until then, I’ll keep you alive in every note, every joke, every unfiltered truth we shared.”

Attached to the letter was a small hand-drawn sketch — three women holding hands under a rising sun, unmistakably meant to be Diane, Goldie, and Bette. In the corner, Midler wrote just three words: “Still together, always.”

The post appeared online early this morning, shared by Bette herself with a simple caption: “For my sister in hats and heartbreaks — I miss you already.”

Within hours, the image spread across social media, drawing millions of reactions and tributes. Fans called it “the most human goodbye Hollywood has ever seen.” Goldie Hawn reportedly responded privately, telling friends that Bette’s words “felt like Diane’s laughter coming back one last time.”

As the world mourns the loss of Diane Keaton, Bette Midler’s handwritten farewell reminds us why their bond transcended fame — two women, flawed, fearless, and funny, who found in each other the kind of friendship that doesn’t fade with time… or even death.

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