Why I'm Fonda Hanoi Jane: actress, activist, American. What's not to like?To many, maybe even most, Americans, Jane Fonda is the Wal-Mart of activist celebrities--a category killer when it comes to personifying the loathsome limousine liberal, that subspecies subspecies, also called race, a genetically distinct geographical subunit of a species. See also classification. of Hollywood Democrat which, in some tellings, is more responsible for the great Republican political ascendancy than the end of the Cold War, Bill Clinton's zipper problems, or George W. Bush's tax cut strategery. As her new autobiography, My Life So Far (Random House), makes clear, Fonda helped create the very template of the Movie Star As Social Conscience. In the late 1960s and early '70s, bra-less and still sporting her trendsetting shag shag see cormorant. cut from Klute, Fonda was ubiquitous, decrying mistreatment mis·treat tr.v. mis·treat·ed, mis·treat·ing, mis·treats To treat roughly or wrongly. See Synonyms at abuse. mis·treat of Indians here, standing shoulder to shoulder with migrant workers there, and marching for women's lib elsewhere. Most controversially, she spoke out against the Vietnam War and visited the North Vietnamese capital in 1972; there she made radio broadcasts critical of U.S. policy, posed sitting "laughing and clapping" (her words) on an antiaircraft gun, and took home the sobriquet Hanoi Jane. Despite her tow profile for the last 15 years (part of which she spent as Mrs. Ted Turner), hatred of Fonda was strong enough that the actress even became an issue during the 2004 presidential campaign, when a faked photo of her standing next to John Kerry was widely circulated. Merely to be seen next to her was as toxic as the nuclear meltdown at the center of one of her many memorable movies, The China Syndrome. How else to explain that "Hanoi Jane Urinal urinal /uri·nal/ (u?ri-n'l) a receptacle for urine. u·ri·nal n. A vessel into which urine is passed. Stickers" still sell briskly on the Web? Fonda herself has said she would never campaign for a politician because she carries too much baggage. Fonda haters will find much to enjoy in My Life, including embarrassing revelations from the iconic feminist. For instance, she not only brought in most of the money to the household she shared with her first husband, the shiftless shift·less adj. 1. a. Lacking ambition or purpose; lazy: a shiftless student. b. Characterized by a lack of ambition or energy: studied in a shiftless way. French director Roger Vadim, but she dutifully cooked the meals, mixed the drinks, and procured the women for the menages a trois he insisted upon. (In true Gallic fashion, Vadim repaid his debt by billing her the "American Brigitte Bardot," casting her in the title role in the 1968 intergalactic in·ter·ga·lac·tic adj. Being or occurring between galaxies: intergalactic space. in soft-porn stinker Barbarella, and calling her stupid and unfaithful in his sybaritic syb·a·rit·ic adj. 1. Devoted to or marked by pleasure and luxury. 2. Sybaritic Of or relating to Sybaris or its people. Syb tell-all, Bardot, Deneuve, and Fonda.) My Life is also chock full of unintentionally hilarious sentences that Fonda's anti-fans will love. "My personal vagina was nothing but a pain in the ass Noun 1. pain in the ass - something or someone that causes trouble; a source of unhappiness; "washing dishes was a nuisance before we got a dish washer"; "a bit of a bother"; "he's not a friend, he's an infliction" ," she recalls during a discussion of her adolescence. Watching Last Tango in Paris with the '60s radical Tom Hayden, who would become her second husband, she reminisces, "[We] had to walkout in the middle. With the bombing [of Hanoi] on our minds, anal copulation copulation /cop·u·la·tion/ (kop?u-la´shun) sexual union; the transfer of the sperm from male to female; usually applied to the mating process in nonhuman animals. cop·u·la·tion n. 1. with butter didn't sit well." But even Fonda's harshest critics would do well to read My Life carefully--and not simply because she apologizes for the photo with the antiaircraft gun. "It sent a message that was the opposite of what I was feeling and doing," she writes, even as she defends her anti-war activism. When she wasn't agitating ag·i·tate v. ag·i·tat·ed, ag·i·tat·ing, ag·i·tates v.tr. 1. To cause to move with violence or sudden force. 2. , Fonda was starring in a long run of zeitgeisty films besides Barbarello, Klute, and The China Syndrome. A partial list includes Cat Ballou; They Shoot Horses, Don't They?; Julia; Coming Home; 9 to 5; and On Golden Pond On Golden Pond is a play by Ernest Thompson. It focuses on aging couple Ethel and Norman Thayer, who spend each summer at their home on Golden Pond. This year they are visited by daughter Chelsea with her fiancé and his son in tow. . The combination of politics and show biz lore helps make her book compulsively readable. The 68-year-old Fonda comes off something like Forrest Gump--a naif who somehow managed to be at the heart of the last 40 years. That's not to suggest she's stupid, only that her life mirrors many cultural contradictions that are still being worked out in contemporary America. She's a feminist who nonetheless largely defined herself in relation to men (her screen legend father, Henry Fonda, first, and then her three ex-husbands); a diehard lefty who became an amazingly successful entrepreneur through her Jane Fonda Workout videos; an exercise guru who was consumed by bulimia and who got breast implants during a midlife crisis; a longtime secularist who converted to Christianity late in life; and so on. Fonda's willingness to confront and explain these contradictions makes My Life 50 Far a deeply confessional and often moving memoir. And, as readers of Benjamin Franklin's autobiography might tell you, a very American one. Franklin speaks of sharing the "errata er·ra·ta n. Plural of erratum. " of his life so that others don't make the same mistakes he did. Though much, much more than two centuries separate Franklin and Fonda, she channels old Ben on almost every page. Nick Gillespie (gillespie@reason.com) is editor-in-chief of reason. |
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