Jane Fonda's Human Design Chart

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          Jane Fonda's Biography

          American actress who at times has been a sexpot, a feminist, a political activist, a maker of exercise videos, businesswoman, philanthropist and wife to famous men. As she reinvents herself in a series of different incarnations, all in this lifetime, Fonda has been the object of admiration and outrage. An extremist who has frequently demonstrated poor judgment, Fonda is also known for her courage and mettle, standing up for that which she believes to be right. She stands among the world’s most admired women.
          Jane Fonda is the recipient of various accolades including two Academy Awards, two BAFTA Awards, seven Golden Globe Awards, a Primetime Emmy Award, the AFI Life Achievement Award, and the Honorary Golden Lion.
          She is the daughter of actor Henry Fonda and his second wife, socialite Frances Ford Brokaw (née Seymour). Her famous father was hot-tempered, inattentive and largely uncommunicative. Her mother, a Canadian-born East Coast socialite, became an agoraphobic penny-pincher who was hospitalized for mental illness and killed herself when Jane was 12. Jane’s brother, Peter Fonda (1940–2019), was also a noted actor.
          As a junior at boarding school, Jane started a pattern of bulimia that lasted 23 years during the height of her movie-making career. She made her acting debut at 18 in Country Girl, starring with her father, thus beginning her spectacular career.
          Fonda was married to French filmmaker Roger Vadim from 1965-1971; they had one daughter, Vanessa. He directed her as she played the title role in the film Barbarella, a chain-smoking, pill-popping bulimic sex-pot. After 1969, she changed her image to one of a serious, first-rate actress. Fonda won the New York Film Critics Award for They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? and an Oscar for Klute (1972). She has had seven Academy Award nominations, including that of Best Actress in Julia (1978). In 1979 she won a second Oscar for Coming Home.
          During the Vietnam War, she became a political activist and gained the reputation of being a simple-minded loudmouth whom some called traitor. She was nicknamed Hanoi Jane after she broadcast over Hanoi radio and posed on an anti-aircraft carrier with the North Vietnamese with whom the American military was locked in battle. Further enraging Americans, she publicly denounced U.S. soldiers as killers, declared that Black Panther Huey Newton was “close to sainthood” and visited American POWs in what was reportedly used as North Vietnamese propaganda.
          On 21 January 1973, during her political period, she married another anti-war activist Tom Hayden and became immersed in his 1976 Senatorial attempt, before they later divorced in 1990. (Their son Troy Hayden, known professionally as Troy Garity, was arrested on 15 January 1990 for spray-painting graffiti near a freeway and his half-sister, Vanessa, was ordered to do community service after being arrested for mouthing-off at the scene of a drug bust the previous November.) In 1982, Fonda and Hayden unofficially adopted an African-American teenager, Mary Luana Williams (known as Lulu), whose parents were Black Panthers.
          In the 1990s, keeping physically fit and active, Fonda turned herself into an aerobics guru with exercise videos, becoming the head of a US$670 million aerobics and fitness empire. She denounced cosmetic surgery at the same time that she herself had eye lifts and breast implants.
          On 21 December 1991 at 11:22 AM she married media tycoon Ted Turner at his 8,000 acre (3240 hectare) ranch near Capps, east of Tallahassee, Florida. They seemed an ideal couple, each having to compromise with the other’s strong beliefs and ego. Jane presented herself as an attractive modern woman and Ted demonstrated a tolerance for liberal causes and passion for the environment. In her customary pattern of being a chameleon to her mate, she gave up her acting career to become the ideal corporate wife. Fonda and Turner ultimately showed the stress of being an unlikely duo; on 4 January 2000 they announced their separation. One reason given: her latest “cause,” that of becoming a Christian, rubbed Ted the wrong way. Their divorce was final on 22 May 2001.
          At age 67, she was working on the Georgia Campaign for Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention, an organization which she founded. Her memoir, My Life So Far, was released on 5 April 2005 and the following month, the movie Monster-in-Law, co-starring Jane, was released. In her book, on tour and on the interview circuit, Fonda tried to explain herself and her actions leaving some of her audience to admire her and others to revile her. One Vietnam veteran spat in her face at a book signing; Fonda said she would not press charges.
          In 2009, Fonda began a relationship with the record producer Richard Perry. It ended in 2017.
          In 2011, Fonda published the book Prime Time: Love, health, sex, fitness, friendship, spirit – making the most of all of your life which offers stories from her own life as well as from the lives of others, giving her perspective on how to better live what she calls “the critical years from 45 and 50, and especially from 60 and beyond”.
          Fonda currently co-stars as Grace Hanson in the Netflix comedy series Grace and Frankie, which debuted in 2015 and has earned her nominations for a Primetime Emmy Award and three Screen Actors Guild Awards.
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          Jane Fonda