Jane Fonda Biography Flash a weekly Biography.
Jane Fonda, at 87, is proving once again she's not just a Hollywood icon but a relentless force for social change, making headlines both on and off stage. Just days ago, she stood center spotlight at Houston’s Jones Hall for a sold-out evening of conversation and storytelling, reflecting on her six-decade career, her activism, and what she’d do differently if she had a second chance, as the Houston Performing Arts site notes. The event, which drew fans eager for a rare personal glimpse, offered a mix of career highlights and candid reflections on Hollywood’s sexism, with Fonda admitting she’d approach her early years differently if given the chance, according to Good Morning America.
But Fonda isn’t just looking back—she’s reshaping the present. In early October, she made waves by reviving the Committee for the First Amendment, the anti-censorship group her father, Henry Fonda, helped launch during the McCarthy era. According to Variety, Rolling Stone, and The Hollywood Reporter, the rebooted committee boasts over 600 high-profile signatories—including Natalie Portman, Pedro Pascal, Billie Eilish, Spike Lee, and Jon Hamm—uniting Hollywood against what Fonda calls “the most frightening moment of my life,” a direct reference to growing government efforts to silence critics in media, academia, and the arts. The committee’s mission, as stated publicly, is to defend free expression from government repression and industry complicity, specifically targeting the Trump administration’s crackdowns on dissent. This move isn’t just symbolic; it’s a strategic, high-stakes pushback that could redefine Fonda’s legacy as much as her Vietnam-era activism once did—and it dovetails with the broader “Fall of Freedom” protests planned by artists nationwide in late November, as reported by the World Socialist Web Site.
Her activism extends to the global stage, too. She’s set to make her first public appearance as executive producer for the Argentine human rights documentary Norita at the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles on October 27, presenting the film about Nora Cortiñas, a Mothers of Plaza de Mayo founder. As reported by the Buenos Aires Times, this rare public endorsement marks Fonda’s deepening commitment to global human rights, a theme that’s threaded through her entire career.
On the event circuit, Fonda is also slated to present at Variety’s Power of Women: Los Angeles gala later in October, rubbing elbows with fellow A-listers like Eva Longoria and Octavia Spencer. While her social media presence remains characteristically selective, the Committee for the First Amendment’s Instagram has been active, responding to government criticism of artists and reiterating the group’s free-speech mandate.
There’s been no major business venture news outside these advocacy efforts, and her health, at least publicly, appears robust for her age. No scandals, no feuds—just Jane Fonda, still talking, still walking the walk, still making history.
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