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Citizen Jane

Christopher Andersen
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Plot Summary

Citizen Jane

Nonfiction | Biography | Adult | Published in 2017

Plot Summary

American journalist Christopher Andersen’s biography Citizen Jane: The Turbulent Life of Jane Fonda (1990) chronicles the life of Hollywood actor and political activist Jane Fonda. In researching the book, Andersen interviewed several individuals connected to his subject's life, including her younger brother Peter—also a film actor—and Fonda herself.

On December 21, 1937, Jane Fonda was born in New York City. Her father, Henry Fonda, was three years into his career as a Hollywood actor. After a series of well-regarded roles in the late 1930s, Henry became a massive star thanks to his Academy Award-winning performance in the 1940 classic The Grapes of Wrath. Andersen suggests that Jane's relationship with her father was never as close as she would have liked. Moreover, his cycle of marrying, divorcing, and remarrying is suggested to have had an impact on how Jane viewed male intimacy. Jane was particularly disturbed by her mother Frances's suicide in 1950, along with Henry's marriage to a socialite 23 years his junior later that very year.

Before becoming an actor, Jane attends Vassar College and works as a model, appearing on the cover of the fashion magazine Vogue twice. Jane drops out of Vassar and spends six months in Paris studying art. In 1958, back in the United States, Jane meets Lee Strasburg, the world-renowned acting coach at the Actors' Studio in New York. Jane characterizes meeting Strasburg as a life-changing event, as Strasburg is the first person aside from her father to tell her she has a real talent for anything. From that day forward, Jane commits herself to acting.



Through the 1960s, Jane averages nearly two films a year. After acting in movies of varying quality for five years, Jane proves herself as a bankable Hollywood star in the 1965 comedy-western, Cat Ballou. The film goes on to receive five Academy Award nominations, becoming one of the year's highest-grossing films. That same year, Jane marries the French filmmaker Roger Vadim.

Though long considered beautiful, 1968 cements Jane's status as an international sex symbol with the release of the science fiction comedy Barbarella, directed by her husband, Roger. Not Roger's first choice for the leading role, Jane only earns the part after attempts to cast Brigitte Bardot and Sophia Loren fail. During that decade, Jane also becomes a prominent political activist. A return visit to France exposes her to anti-Vietnam War attitudes that are far more prominent in Europe.

Despite many offers to play lead roles in the wake of Barbarella's success, Jane becomes incredibly selective about her roles, a quality that leads to her turning down parts in universally beloved future classics such as Bonnie and Clyde and Rosemary's Baby. Instead, Jane chooses to star in the grim 1969 drama, They Shoot Horses, Don't They? The role attracts widespread praise from critics and leads to her first Academy Award nomination. Two years later, Jane wins an Academy Award for playing a prostitute in the 1971 mystery film Klute.



After a half-decade of political activism, Jane becomes more heavily involved in the anti-war movement in 1970. Along with Klute costar Donald Sutherland and political organizer Fred Gardner, Fonda launches the Free the Army or FTA Tour, a counterpoint to the USO shows hosted by Bob Hope for the military. That same year, Jane is arrested at an airport in Cleveland on suspicion of drug trafficking after officers find bags of pills in her luggage. She is released without being charged, insisting then and today that the pills were merely vitamins.

In 1972, in support of journalists and activists who travel to Vietnam to bring more honest reporting than what is frequently found in mainstream news outlets, Jane takes a trip to Hanoi, the capital of North Vietnam. Jane's visit is highly controversial among many in the United States, as she reports that the US methodically bombs dams in North Vietnam to deprive civilians of drinking water, a contentious though not unreasonable claim. She also draws controversy for a photograph in which she is depicted sitting in a North Vietnam anti-aircraft gun. Many Americans back home are outraged, referring to the actor henceforth as "Hanoi Jane." While she admits that allowing herself to be photographed in the gun-seat is something about which she feels great remorse, Jane adds that she has no other regrets regarding her visit to North Vietnam. The following year, Jane divorces Roger and marries the activist Tom Hayden who is famous for drafting the Students for a Democratic Society's Port Huron Statement.

Between 1971 and 1977, none of Jane's films become significant box office successes. It is an open question whether this is because Americans reject her actions surrounding the anti-war movement or whether she is merely distracted by her activism and less focused on her career. Whatever the case, Jane returns to glory playing the blacklisted playwright Lillian Hellman in the 1977 film Julia, a role for which she receives another Academy Award nomination. Committed now to only taking roles that have social relevance, Jane stars in 1978's Vietnam drama Coming Home, earning herself yet another Academy Award nomination. The Academy Award nomination streak continues with 1979's nuclear disaster drama, The China Syndrome. While Jane's film career would decline slightly during the 1980s, Jane finds a whole new audience as a host of highly popular aerobics videos.



Citizen Jane is a compelling look at a great actor and one of the most recognizable symbols of American anti-war sentiments in the 1970s.
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