About to check into a midtown Manhattan hotel, Woody Allen, in the title role, and Mia Farrow, as Tina Vitale, argue in a scene from "Broadway Danny Rose," released in 1984. and his work and been good for him. He sees nothing inconsistent in having cast Farrow as a sqeaky-voiced bimbo in Radio Days, either: "I don't think there's any- thing antifeminist in that." Woody Allen has such a high heterosex- ual profile that homosexuality seems something unfathomable to him, like a religion from another galaxy, despite his classic gag about bisexuality doubling one's chances for a date on Saturday night. "I have a high feminine component," he says, "and • I probably have that high heterosexual profile because of jokes I've made over the years. Mia's always kidding me in our relationship because I grew up interested in fashions. I grew up cutting out paper dolls and dressing Deanna Dur- bin cutouts, and Mia, now in her life, is the one who, up at her farm, drives the tractor and knows how to repair the television set when it breaks. She can do all that stuff. I'm the one who's always turning to the fashion page in the newspaper and saying, `Look at this. Look at what Oscar de la Renta has come up with: "You know, my friends are all women, most of them are women. I mean, I'm not one of those guys who's at the fights with the guys and playing poker with the guys. They're females, my friends. And Mia kids me about that all the time. She thinks there's nothing I'd rather do than go out to lunch and dish with the gals." Farrow has eight children, five adopted ("Vietnamese, Korean, American, handi- capped — the full gamut"), and while Allen says he enjoys them, he is not, unlike Mickey in, Hannah, eager to father one himself. "I don't care about heirs. Some people do very vehemently, but it doesn't mean anything to me. I like Mia's kids. They're sweet kids. She's very gifted at raising kids. And I think she's going to get more. It's just something that she wants to do." He balks at the Eighties mania for pro- creating. "That I don't like, because I don't think we should bring more people into the world at this point. Mia's heart was broken when she went to adopt these kids and saw there are just wards of them that need parents. And there's just this kind of aimless reproduction. I don't think it's a gift to bring somebody into this world. I don't think that's a particularly nice thing to do. Especially since there are millions of kids that need families and don't have them. And so I think that everybody should stop reproducing for a while and should adopt all the kids that are loose." [Reports in recent months say that Mia and Woody are expecting — her fourth, his first.] Mia's full gamut of children do not refer to Allen as Uncle, he says, nor as Daddy. "No, they call me Woody, or Max if we're out on the street, because that's always my disguise name, from the first time I was shooting 7hke the Money and Run and someone would say, 'Oh, that's Woody Allen!' I've always had people call me Max on the street because it just never attracts any attention," even though that's just what his friend Ibny Roberts calls him on- screen in Annie Hall. "I still get away with it," Woody says. Shying away, abandoning a party to watch a Knicks game in the bedroom, and hoping to slink through the city without being recognized are all part of the Woody Allen image. If you walk close to the buildings, there is less chance of being hit by a grand piano falling from the sky. But at times it has appeared as if Allen has been calling more attention to himself by his elaborate schemes of anonymity, as if the Invisible Man had taken to wearing red silk smoking jackets and then grumped about being noticed. Most notoriously, of course, has been the whole Rolls-Royce business, with Woody being chauffered about Manhattan in a big yellow, or was it white, Rolls, while claiming to crave privacy. Woody says it was not big, it was not yellow, and it was not white. "It was ivory-colored," he says, as if this makes an enormous difference. "It was a small one. I mean, it was not a big one. Quite small, actually. I don't think you'd notice it was a Rolls. But much was made of it because people always associated me with Greenwich Village and sweaters with holes in them and things like that. And I've never been that kind of person. Never. I never lived in the Village. I always lived on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. I always ate at good restaurants. When I went to buy a car I said, 'What's the best car?' Just automatically. But people always found that at odds with my image. They thought, 'This is the guy who's a regular guy and who wears jeans to formal dinners and who must live in the Village someplace.' " Woody Allen is wearing a sweater today, a forest-green one, and it does not have a hole in it. He says he never drove — not even test-drove — the Rolls himself and, in fact, hasn't driven a car since the driving scene in the health food restaurant park- ing lot in Annie Hall. He expresses his aversion to cars, or "automobiles," as he still sometimes calls them, in an ingenuous way. He says, "I don't find them pretty." There was that item that had Woody ordering his driver to let him off a block away from a destination because he was ashamed to be seen arriving in the Rolls. "This is a true item," he says. "That's why I got rid of the car. I noticed when I would go someplace and I would pull up, because it was a Rolls people would look. And that bothered me. So I would say, 'Pull up a block away.' And finally I just got rid of the car because people would look at me. I either rent a car or take taxis. But not a Rolls." So you won't see Woody's Rolls double- parked in front of that chic dive Elaine's anymore, though you still might see Woody parked at a table inside. One near the back. Where he won't be noticed, ex- cept that everybody knows that's where he sits. His standoffishness has turned, in the public mind, into a kind of advertised reclusiveness, and this irks him. "I don't think I'm excessively isolated. Hive in New York City, and I'm politically aware to a THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 27