Jane Fonda: 'Here I am'

As Jane Fonda strides across the marble entranceway of the 1940s
hillside home she shares with her boyfriend, music producer Richard
Perry, she's already explaining her most recent break with convention:
their living situation.

"I have an apartment over there," she says pointing out the window to a
building in the distance, rising up from the neon blur of city lights
below. "But I've never slept there. I never thought this is where I'd be
at this point in my life — 73, shacked up with somebody in the music
business," she laughs. "But here I am."
FOR THE RECORD:
Jane Fonda: A photograph of actors Jane Fonda and Zach Grenier on the
cover of the Arts & Books section elsewhere in this edition is
incorrectly credited to Jay L. Clendenin of The Times. It was taken by
Lawrence K. Ho of The Times. The error was detected after the section
went to press. —

"Here" is a place, for Fonda, that's both enormously active and quietly
introspective at once — a self-described "third act" that's buzzing with
new people and new projects, but equally awash in self-reflection.
Settling onto a brown velvet couch in Perry's media room, her white
puffball of a dog, Tulea, nestled beside her, there's much talk of
synchronicity, bucket lists and parental forgiveness. She is thoughtful,
giving careful consideration to each question — until the silence is cut
by a crisp assuredness when she finally answers. There's the sense that
if Fonda felt her time was being wasted, she might snuff out the
conversation. She has too much going on to dawdle.

The Broadway play marked Fonda's return to the stage after 46 years — an
event that could have been daunting considering how different the
process of acting is for stage and screen. But Fonda says she took it in
stride. "I did not feel afraid. I felt challenged. And I like
challenges," she says. "It felt like closure. My father loved the
theater more than anything, he loved that immediate live response and
reaction from the audience. So [in returning to the stage] I wanted: a)
the chance to perform the things I was feeling in my body and my mind,
and b) to try and find out what my father experienced."

Written and directed by Kaufman, who has revised parts of the production
since its New York run, the play concerns Beethoven's 33 variations on a
single waltz that was written by his publisher Anton Diabelli. Fonda
plays aging musicologist Dr. Katherine Brandt, who is struggling with
ALS and becomes obsessed with unraveling the riddle of why the
by-then-deaf Beethoven descended into obsession over the relatively
mediocre waltz. In the process, she learns to let go and confront her
own mortality with grace.

"My character has physical infirmities, but right up until the end,
she's focused on her obsession" says Fonda, who has had hip and knee
replacements in the past and recovered from non-invasive breast cancer
in 2010. "And I have physical infirmities, but it doesn't define me. Her
illness doesn't define her — and I like that. I like that she's not
afraid of dying."

Why, then, did Fonda continue acting in plays? "I had to earn a living,"
she says. "I was with the Actor's Studio and you did plays, that's what
you did. A lot of it had to do with earning money."

Over the years, however, it's been that personal connection to the
material, not money, that's propelled Fonda and drawn her to projects,
from the Vietnam War era drama "Coming Home" (1978) to "On Golden Pond"
(1981), in which she starred with her late father, Henry Fonda. "33
Variations" is no exception. It's a story about curiosity, passion and
creative obsession, the strive for perfection in art, and familial
estrangement.

The Venezuelan-born Kaufman notes the parallels, saying he was struck by
the intensity of Fonda's work ethic, matched only by the characters in
the play. "Just the way Beethoven was obsessed with the waltz, Jane is
obsessed with the role," he says. "She's so hardworking, so focused,
always on a quest. She has that hunger — to delve deeper into the
character, to profoundly understand the work that's being done. She's a
real artist."

Partly spurred by Fonda's desire to continue honing her character,
Kaufman — who's also the artistic director of the Tectonic Theater
Project in New York — embarked on rewrites of the play after the
Broadway show wrapped. It's now a different play, he says, than what
garnered five Tony nominations in 2009, but was also met with mixed
reviews from critics. "After two years, one has grown and changed; and
one revisits the play from a different perspective," says Kaufman. "Our
understanding of the characters and their struggles has deepened."

Of her revised performance for the L.A. stage, Fonda says: "Things are
much more internal now. And a little bit drier. It feels right."

"I was frustrated that I really did not understand … blogging and
Facebook and Twitter and that whole world that was foreign to me," she
says. So in characteristic fashion, Fonda threw herself in with
unbridled determination to conquer her obstacles, blogging all through
the first run of the play, sometimes during intermission. "What I didn't
expect is that I learned [about my performance] from it, I learned from
the feedback I'd get from the people who sent me comments."

Fonda says she'd consider another play — or film — if the right script
came along. But what she really wants to do at this point in her life is
… cable. "The most interesting, edgy, exciting cultural statements are
made on cable TV now," she says. "'Nurse Jackie,' for example, I think
is amazing. 'Weeds,' 'The Big C,' really interesting stuff. I would like
to find a way to express, in a television series, what it's like to be a
woman of my age in the world today."

Clearly, Fonda is back — in L.A., on stage, on screen, on the page. But
where, exactly, she'll go from here is wide open. "I swear in the last
10 years I've given up trying to know what I'm supposed to do" she says,
not at all concerned about the uncertainty. After three marriages, she
says, she's finally found true emotional intimacy with Perry, whom she's
been with for 18 months now. And she feels more her "authentic self"
than ever. Though not "finished," by any stretch.

"I still feel like a work in progress, I'm happy to say. I think that's
the way life is supposed to be. Until the very end."

[email protected]

--
http://articles.latimes.com/2011/jan/30/entertainment/la-ca-jane-fonda-20110130
Via InstaFetch

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