Fonda on Film: The 1970s Political Movies of Jane Fonda
By (Author) Nelson Pressley
Chicago Review Press
Chicago Review Press
10th June 2026
United States
General
Non Fiction
635.90974
Hardback
320
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
As much coverage as Jane Fonda has elicited through the years, the stories often skim past her prime filmmaking core.
Fonda on Filmspotlights the signature political films Fonda generated in the 1970s-Coming Home, The China Syndrome, 9 to 5 and more-that are still underappreciated even as Fonda endures as one of the world's most admired and controversial performers.
This is a movie book about a mega-celebrity, an origin story voyaging through Fonda's learning years in the 1960s and the calculated payoff of the 1970s. She emerged as a Hollywood scion challenged to prove herself while trying to rise above ingenue roles and sex-angst melodramas. Splitting time between the United States and France to stretch her range, Fonda broke through as the perky newlywed of Barefoot in the Park, the sci-fi pinup Barbarella and the Oscar-winning star of the sleek Klute.
And then Fonda earned her activist stripes with the Vietnam vets' Winter Soldier hearings and her alt-USO F.T.A. tour. She survived the "Hanoi Jane" flap and, by the mid-1970s, transformed into a singular star on an unparalleled moviemaking mission.
Fonda's long post-Klute break ended with bold comeback hits-comedy and economic justice in Fun with Dick and Jane, high drama and political commitment with Julia. Over the following half decade, Fonda's production company generated the purposeful movies that still underpin her actor-activist persona, including the groundbreaking Coming Home on Vietnam, the timely The China Syndrome on nuclear power and the still-relevant 9 to 5 on workplace equality.
Her more recent work protesting the Iraq War in 2005 and ringleading the 201920 Fire Drill Fridays campaigns on Capitol Hill illustrates Fonda's political method-and how it guided her movie work.
Fonda on Film is a movie buff's book, and a portrait of an iconic activist-artist bridging the gap between streets and screens.
Nelson Pressley was a Washington Post theater critic/arts journalist for twenty years, writing reviews, features and profiles, interviewing Tony, Emmy, Oscar and Pulitzer winners, editing in the Weekend section, publishing a weekly theater review newsletter, hosting some of the paper's first Facebook Live projects (including interviewing Kathleen Turner), and creating other video content. His work has appeared in American Theatre, The Sondheim Review, and elsewhere, and for several years he was a panelist on WETA-TV's Around Town. He is the author of the 2014 book American Playwriting and the Anti-Political Prejudice, and he wrote the David Mamet chapter for the 1980s book in Methuen's Decades of American Drama series (2018). His website, A Parallax View, is a notebook on hundreds more movies from 1960 to 1981. He lives in Delaware.