THE WORLD SAID GOODBYE TO DIANE KEATON — BUT BARRY GIBB JUST GAVE HER IMMORTALITY. In the quiet of last night, Barry Gibb did something no one expected. Without press, without fanfare, he appeared at a small, private chapel in Los Angeles — guitar in hand, eyes heavy with memory — and began to sing a song no one had ever heard before. The piece, titled “When the Lights Fade to Gold,” was written for Diane Keaton, a woman Barry once called “the soul that made silence beautiful.” The melody was soft, haunting — part elegy, part confession. One verse lingered in the air: “She smiled in shadows, she spoke in light / and left her grace in the breath of night.” Those who were there said it didn’t sound like mourning. It sounded like love remembering itself. A single photo from the service — Barry’s trembling hands resting on a guitar beside Diane’s framed portrait — spread across the internet within hours. Fans are calling it his most intimate moment in decades. Others are asking quietly: what unspoken bond tied the Bee Gee and the silver-screen legend — and why did this farewell feel like a promise kept?
THE WORLD SAID GOODBYE TO DIANE KEATON — BUT BARRY GIBB JUST GAVE HER IMMORTALITY...