Communicating with Jane Fonda

http://womensmediacenter.com/ex/032709.html

Not content merely to speak to her Broadway audience eight times a 
week through a critically acclaimed performance, Jane Fonda is 
blogging daily and twittering nightly. She finds herself hooked on 
the instant feedback.

by Marianne Schnall
March 27, 2008

In her memoir, My Life So Far (Random House, 2005), Jane Fonda 
reveals how it wasn't until age 60, after many life lessons in what 
she calls her "third act," that she felt she discovered her voice. 
Now that she has it, she is determined to find meaningful ways to use 
it, through the many channels that she finds opening up to her.

Ironically, Fonda was in the process of writing her next book on 
aging for Random House, when playwright Moisés Kaufman sent her the 
script for a play called 33 Variations. Fonda had just been writing 
about how many renowned artists like Matisse and Beethoven did some 
of their best work later in life, and the part Kaufman was offering 
to her was an American musicologist who becomes obsessed with why 
Beethoven, in his later years, was driven to write 33 variations on a 
waltz by Anton Diabelli. Fonda, who loved the script, took it as a 
sign, and returned to Broadway after 46 years to star in the play, 
currently performing to rave reviews and standing ovations.

In addition to acting in plays and films that inspire her and working 
on her next book, Fonda has also been drawn to some of the newer 
media outlets emerging­no surprise since media has long been one of 
her interests; she is a co-founder (with Gloria Steinem and Robin 
Morgan) of the Women's Media Center.  Fonda, who had been slow to 
join the Internet and had only googled for the very first time last 
year, decided to launch a blog and her own web site, in large part to 
"show you can teach an old dog new tricks." Explains Fonda, "I had 
just turned 71. It was the start of a new year, and I was going to 
Broadway after 46 years. I thought it would be interesting to keep a 
daily journal to take folks through the process­the good and the bad, 
the ups and the downs." She adds, "It has been fun."

It has been fun for her visitors as well, who get exclusive access to 
personal photos and backstage details of interactions with famous 
friends like Gloria Steinem, Robert Redford and Lily Tomlin, as well 
as personal musings about whether or not to read her reviews, having 
to perform while sick, the ritual of her daily nap, the times she 
felt unsure of herself and the moments when it all clicked in. Her 
blog has been flooded by supportive comments from friends and fans, 
including those who have just seen the show. Asked what she likes 
best about entering the blogosphere, she answers, "Keeping a record 
and getting feedback."

Fonda has even taken to the latest craze of twittering lately, 
delivering live tweets during intermission about who is at the show, 
or when her dog ran out on stage during a curtain call. She already 
has close to 9,000 "followers" on twitter. Asked whether she is 
feeling hip and with it these days, she answers, "You betcha."

Her blog, which is candid and revealing, can at times feel like her 
autobiography, but as Fonda points out, the process is very 
different. "My memoir was far deeper and more detailed. I do the blog 
very quickly…five minutes a day maybe."

Fonda sees both benefits and parallels through being able to 
communicate different aspects of herself on all these 
levels­artistically through the play, and literally through writing 
her blog. Says Fonda, "It's immediate audience feedback and immediate 
blogosphere feedback. Oddly, I think it helps me be present in the moment."

In addition to chronicling her experience doing the play, Fonda also 
has been using her site to promote organizations such as V-Day, the 
Women's Media Center, the Georgia Campaign for Adolescent Pregnancy 
Prevention, The Jane Fonda Center at Emory University, and the 
Sisterhood is Global Institute­all causes dear to her heart. The site 
includes an Activist section and a section titled "Matters that Move 
Me."  Visitors are also treated to a slide show of photos from her 
past and present, as well as videos, and sections like "Family and 
Friends" and "Ask Jane."  I ask her what her goals are for the site. 
"It's too soon to say anything definitive about my website 'goals,'" 
she responds. "There are many interesting aspects to my life and I 
thought I might as well expose them­my non-profit involvements, 
activism, as well as my professional matters, my books and videos."

She is thinking of how the site might develop in the future. "I may 
do another video to go with my book on aging­'maybe' being the 
operative word. But if I do, a website is a good way to sell them, 
and books." People have already begun pitching her on other 
innovative uses for the site. "Someone suggested that I sell canvas 
bags with my 1971 mug shot on them as a way to raise money for my 
non-profits. Maybe from this post I will hear from folks if they 
think this is a good idea or not. I'm kind of learning as I go and 
the feedback I get will help inform my decision about whether or not 
to continue blogging after the play." As it goes, time itself may 
tell. "I am planning two films this year and there are interesting 
adventures in the future so there may be reasons to continue writing 
about what's happening. If I feel I don't have anything worthwhile to 
write about then I will stop."

Asked whether she is enjoying herself with all her many activities 
and media outlets, she answers, "Frankly, I have never been happier. 
I won't go into the details of this happiness because I'm writing a 
book about it, but it is something. It's like all the strands of my 
life are coming together."
--

Visit Jane Fonda's web site at http://www.janefonda.com. For 
information on 33 Variations, visit http://www.33Variations.com.

.


--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Sixties-L" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to