Warren Beatty through the years

Credit: Getty Images File

Director Warren Beatty speaks during a news conference for Paramount Pictures "Reds" during the New York Film Festival on Oct. 3, 2006, in Manhattan.

Credit: Getty Images File

Actress Annette Bening, nominated for best actress in a leading role for her performance in "Being Julia", arrives with her husband, Warren Beatty, at the 77th Annual Academy Awards at the Kodak Theater on Feb. 27, 2005, in Hollywood, Calif.

Credit: Getty Images File

Warren Beatty arrives on the red carpet for the gala screening of the film "Being Julia," which starred his wife, Annette Bening, during the 29th Annual Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 9, 2004, in Toronto.

Credit: Getty Images File

Actor Warren Beatty and his wife, Annette Bening, arrive at the Vanity Fair dinner and postparty celebrating the 74th Academy Awards, March 24, 2002, at Mortons in West Hollywood, Calif.

Credit: New Line Cinema

Diane Keaton appears with Warren Beatty in a scene from the comedy "Town and Country" in 2001.

Credit: 20th Century Fox

Scene from "Bulworth," starring Halle Berry and Warren Beatty (1998)

Credit: Warner Bros.

Warren Beatty and Annette Bening star as two people who have a chance encounter on a plane and fall deeply in love in the Warner Bros. remake of "An Affair to Remember" (1994).

Credit: AP File

American actress Annette Bening, left, looks on as Warren Beatty answers a question during their news conference at a Tokyo hotel on Feb. 14, 1992.

Credit: AP File

Actor Warren Beatty is seen in Jerusalem with Israeli model Sippi Levine at a party to mark the end of the 1984 Jerusalem festival. (June 17, 1984)

Credit: Paramount Pictures

"Reds" (1981) is a drama about love and revolution starring Diane Keaton as a writer and love interest of both Jack Nicholson, left, and Warren Beatty, right.

Credit: AP File

Actor Warren Beatty, left, and actress Diane Keaton, attend a gala party in Manhattan on Sept, 13, 1978, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art to celebrate the opening of a retrospective show of American photographer Richard Avedon's work.

Credit: Columbia Pictures

Warren Beatty studies Julie Christie with something more than teasing on his mind as a Casanova of the curling iron in his role as hyperactive hairdresser in "Shampoo" (1975).

Credit: AP File

Movie star Warren Beatty and his companion Michelle Phillips, left, formerly of the Mamas and Papas, sit in the audience of Harvard University's Hasty Pudding Theater, on Feb. 28, 1975, in Cambridge, Mass. Beatty had received the Hasty Pudding Man of the Year Award earlier.

Credit: AP File

British actress Julie Christie and her constant escort, actor Warren Beatty, hold hands as they arrive for the American premiere of Christie's latest movie, Cannes festival grand-prize winner "The Go-Between," at the Museum of Modern Art in 1971 in Manhattan.

Credit: Warner Bros.

Faye Dunaway as Bonnie Parker and Warren Beatty as Clyde Barrow in the 1967 Warner Bros. release "Bonnie and Clyde."

Credit: AP File

Film stars Leslie Caron and Warren Beatty seen at London Airport on April 16, 1965.

Credit: AP File

Warren Beatty and Natalie Wood have eyes only for each other at the Milton Berle opening in Los Angeles' Coconut Grove on March 7, 1962.

Credit: AP File

Arriving at the Fox Wilshire Theater in Beverly Hills, Calif., on Dec. 19, 1961, for the world premiere of "The Children's Hour," are Natalie Wood and Warren Beatty, brother of Shirley MacLaine.

Credit: Warner Bros.

Natalie Wood and Warren Beatty in "Splendor in the Grass" (1961).

Credit: AP File, 1961

Actor Warren Beatty is photographed in 1961.

Credit: AP File

British actress Joan Collins, right, and her fiance, American actor Warren Beatty leave London Airport for a holiday visit to Paris on Jan. 25, 1961. Beatty is in Europe to star in the movie "The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone."

Credit: AP File

British actress Joan Collins and actor Warren Beatty are seen in the foyer of Eugene O'Neil Theater in Manhattan on Dec. 9, 1959, in front of a poster of the play "A Loss of Roses," in which Beatty appears.

Credit: CBS

From left, Edward Andrews, Louise Platt, Bennye Gatteys and Warren Beatty in "The Son," which was episode four in a five-part series called "The Family," originally broadcast in 1957. The series examined interpersonal relationships within the American family.

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