Jane Fonda | Activism Through The Years | Who What Wear
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May 1, 2025
Interview with Jane Seymour Fonda; actress and activist. Jane Fonda's work spans several genres and over six decades of film and television. Produced by Who What Wear
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0:00
So, hi, I'm Jane Fonda, and I've been asked to very briefly talk about the role of activism in my life
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It has helped me focus and be a better actor and be a better person and be a happier person
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So I invite you to join me. Right, this is kind of funny
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I had just finished making clute, and I was traveling around the country speaking on campuses where I would be paid $2,000 a speech
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and all the money was going to fund the Winter Soldier investigation
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which was members of the American Armed Forces, all branches, came together in Detroit, Michigan
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to discuss what they had seen and done in Vietnam, and the documentary was made
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And before I started making clute, I became friends with a fashion designer who had a factory of knitwear in San Francisco named Alvin Duskin
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And he gave me a lot of free clothes in this coat. Even though it's not knit, it was leather
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But this was one of them. And so that's what I had on. It's fortuitous that I was wearing a very fashionable long suede coat
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When I was arrested, the arresting officer told me, as he was holding me in his office, that he was arresting me under orders from the White House
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That would be Richard Nixon. I had flown in from my first speech in Windsor, Canada, into Cleveland, where I was stopped at customs, and all of my notes, my address books, everything were taken
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I had a lot of vitamins in a little plastic, little plastic bags, breakfast, lunch, and dinner
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And they accused me of smuggling drugs. Right after this picture was taken see I have double jointed hands I slipped my hands out of the handcuffs and threw a fist This was the early 70s so I still had that iconic haircut
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It was the wonderful Paul McGregor in Greenwich Village who gave me this haircut
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I had been making a film in France with Jean-Luc Godard, and I went to Italy for a manifestation
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That meant a political rally on behalf of women's rights in Italy
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And I had my well-worn knitwear that Alvin Duskin gave me. He gave me a whole lot of clothes and they were really my wardrobe for years
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I see a little shredding at the cuffs. I wore them a lot. Oh, yes
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Well, this is a day when it was National Secretary's Day. And so I went out in support of women office workers and talked a little bit about them
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and the struggles that they had. I was in the middle of making a film that I produced called Nine to Five
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I'm wearing the wig from that movie. The struggles that women office workers have today
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is even more difficult and more challenging. It's not just sexual abuse
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The spying by employers is worse because they are given computers and cell phones
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and so the bosses know everything of how long they take toilet breaks
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They experience wage theft. It's really, really bad. In other words, the fight continues
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That's Marlo Thomas. That's Whoopi Goldberg, Bella Abzug, me, Morgan Fairchild, Ellie Smeal
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Glenn Close. This was a national march for freedom of choice for women. It was a huge march in
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Washington, D.C. was a very important time. It makes me sad to look at this that we lost Bella Abzug because she was such a force to be reckoned with This was around 1989
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White clothing we associate with the suffragette movement, and so we all wore white
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Again, this is a movement that continues today. The right of women to control their bodies, because if women control their bodies, they control their lives
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And we still live in a patriarchal society that doesn't want women to control their lives
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This is now. This is now. I was in Big Sur with my friends Catherine Keener and Rosanna Arquette
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and I was reading about Greta Thunberg, the Swedish student who began the Friday student school strike
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that became a global movement. Inspired by Greta, I decided to move to Washington, D.C
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and hold what we're calling Fire Drill Fridays. You see, Greta said
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we have to behave like we're in a crisis. We have to behave like our house is on fire because it is
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So Fire Drill Friday. And every Friday, we have a rally that focuses on a specific topic
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Oceans, women, war and military, forests, human rights, migration, and how they are affected by climate change
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We have expert scientists, people who are the most affected from frontline communities, and celebrity friends come and join me
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And after the rally, we engage in civil disobedience, which means risking getting arrested
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So I'm being arrested. Note the white plastic handcuffs, whereas the arrest photo back in 1970 were metal handcuffs
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These are white plastic and they hurt more. These rallies aren't in order to get arrested
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They are to try to raise the sense of urgency around this looming disaster of climate crisis For 40 years we marched we rallied we written we petitioned
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We haven't succeeded in getting enough people and enough elected officials to really deal with this like the crisis it is
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And so we have increased our activism to include civil disobedience, which is an extremely honorable thing to do
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to commit nonviolent civil disobedience for an important cause like the potential destruction of human civilization
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No kidding. So when we started meeting about these Fire Drill Fridays
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we decided that we should try to wear something red every Friday
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and I didn't have anything red, so I found this coat. I don't even know who designed it
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On sale. This is the last item of clothing that I will buy
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so much of our identity, especially in this country, is about shopping, buying things
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See, I grew up, I was born in 1937, and for the first decades of my life, we weren't so focused
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on shopping. Consumerism wasn't a big thing. Plastics didn't exist, nor did television
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by the way. And I'm grateful that I lived at a time when we did just fine, thank you
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without television, without consumerism, and without plastic. Trying to minimize consumerism, I have to walk the talk
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It's not easy. I had to do an interview in the upstairs floor of Saks the other day
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and as I'm walking through Saks, I'm going, Oh, look at that. Oh, no, I can't
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Oh, no, I can't. It's hard, so I can't shop anymore, but that's okay because I have other things to do
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