[The article paying tribute to actress Jane Fonda (b. 1937), the 2024 recipient of the SAG Life Achievement Award, appeared in SAG-AFTRA, the membership magazine of SAG-AFTRA, the media performers' union, in the Digital Special Issue 2025 (Volume 14, Number 1).
[SAG-AFTRA, the union that represents film and television actors, journalists, radio personalities, recording artists, singers, voice actors, and other media professionals worldwide, is the successor in 2012 to the Screen Actors Guild (SAG, created in 1933) when it merged with the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (created in 1937 as the American Federation of Radio Artists [AFRA], becoming AFTRA in 1952 after merging with the Television Authority).
[The SAG Life Achievement Award retains the name under which it was established in 1962. It’s awarded for “outstanding achievement in fostering the finest ideals of the acting profession.” Last year’s honoree was Barbra Streisand; see Barbra Streisand, 2023 Life Achievement Honoree of the Screen Actors Guild (17 September 2024) on Rick On Theater.]
The 60th SAG Life Achievement honoree embodies profound commitment to advocacy and self-actualization.
Throughout her nearly seven-decade career that began at the Omaha Community Theater in 1954 [making her début with her father in the OCT production of Clifford Odets’s (1906-63) The Country Girl], Jane Fonda has worn many labels. Growing up, her much-celebrated father, actor Henry Fonda [1905-82], convinced her she was “fat.” In 1958, legendary acting coach Lee Strasberg [1901-82] concluded she was “talented.” Early critical reviews of her work called her everything from “fragile” to “coltish” and even “translucent.” And in a recording made Sept. 17, 1971, President Richard Nixon [1913-94; 37th President of the United States: 1969-1974] opined that, “She’s a great actress. She looks pretty. But boy, she’s often on the wrong track.”
To be a high-profile woman is to be the target of those with an agenda. For many, Fonda was — and still is — something to be weaponized, celebrated, demonized, idolized, mythologized and chastised.
Few have been defined and redefined by the cultural narrative as thoroughly and frequently.
Of course Fonda, with her fearless commitment to authenticity, both in her craft and in her persona, has refused to take a passive role in any part of her public evolution. In fact, she’s been among the rare politically active Hollywood figures who’s managed to remain so consistently on the right side of history. A rewatch of Fonda’s many speeches from her early days of activism reveals well articulated points that are as relevant today as they were more than half a century ago. In countless Nixon-era interviews, Fonda’s demeanor is direct, her confidence unwavering, as she exposes the lies of multiple administrations, speaks about the unsustainability of capitalism and encourages her interviewers to question their own beliefs. “Everyone seems to think that the word revolution means violence,” she observes. “Any healthy country, like any healthy individual, should be in perpetual revolution.”
Revolutionary Performance
Onscreen, many point to Fonda’s Academy Award winning role as Bree Daniels in Klute (1971) as her first major artistic revelation. Still grappling with the nuances of feminism, Fonda initially hesitated to agree to a role that would have her play a sex worker. Once she understood that true gender equity is about “going deep” and depicting a human being — any human being — with honesty and authenticity, she and director Alan J. Pakula [1928-98] meditated on all the psychological ramifications of sexual abuse on an individual.
Prior to production, Fonda was undergoing a transformation — she’d gone to India, became an advocate and had experienced getting arrested (nearly half a dozen times). Thanks to her newfound personal and political growth, Fonda insisted that Pakula cast a woman, not a man, to be Daniels’ psychiatrist. And in her most emotional scene — where she recalls her visit to the morgue to view photos of female victims — Fonda found herself “crying for women . . . for the pain of women who are abused.” She was “changing,” “and that’s what made this scene right.”
Fonda’s much-acclaimed performance in Klute compelled film historian Richard Shickel [sic; Schickel, 1933-2017] to note in his Life magazine review [“New Heights for a Fallen Fonda,” 30 July 1971], “It seems to me unquestionable that Jane Fonda here emerges as probably the finest screen actress of her generation.”
A Feb. 22, 1960, feature in Life [Tom Prideaux, “Flowering of a New Fonda”] celebrating Fonda’s silver screen debut in Tall Story declares, “Like an ancient goddess who was born full-grown out of her father’s head, Jane Fonda at 22 has sprung up almost magically as a full fledged and versatile actress.” [In Greek mythology, Athena, a goddess associated with wisdom, warfare, and handicraft, had no mother and was born from the forehead of her father, Zeus.]
While Fonda’s life may have some parallels to the myth of motherless Athena to which the author was alluding — Fonda’s own mother died by suicide when Fonda was just 12 — it could be argued that her journey as an artist and an individual is more akin to the symbolism of Inanna, the Sumerian deity whose mythology, like the true nature of womanhood, contains more contradictions than can be counted. In her life, Fonda has lived communally as a Marxist, and then sumptuously on 2 million acres as a billionaire’s [CNN founder Ted Turner (b. 1938; m. 1991-2001)] wife. She’s a feminist working to “heal the wounds the patriarchy had dealt,” but whose journey toward authenticity has been heavily influenced by each of the marriages to her wildly diverse husbands [French screenwriter, film director, and producer Roger Vadim (m. 1965-73); social and political activist, author, and politician Tom Hayden (m. 1973-90); Turner]. Depending on the audience, she may be known as a subject of the male gaze (Barbarella, 1968), a symbol of feminism (9 to 5, 1980) or a fitness guru (Jane Fonda’s Workout, 1982).
One could even make a case for Fonda’s prophetic abilities following her prescient role in The China Syndrome (1979), in which she portrays reporter Kimberly Wells discovering a cover-up at a nuclear power plant. Twelve days following the film’s premiere, the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania experienced a partial meltdown [28 March 1979] — the most devastating accident of its kind in U.S. history. And then, mirroring 2023’s TV/Theatrical/ Streaming strike strategy, the film that enabled her to heal some of the emotional wounds inflicted by her father, On Golden Pond (1981), was produced thanks to a SAG interim agreement during the 1980 strike — a labor action that achieved the first-ever residuals for pay-per-view, video cassette and disk sales. Fonda, of course, donated $5,000 to the strike fund. Following a decade of established success in the ’80s as a star, producer and workout authority, Fonda — like the ancient goddess descending into the underworld [the ancient Mesopotamian goddess of love, war, and fertility, Inanna, descended into and returned from the Mesopotamian underworld] — took a 15-year retreat from acting. It was a time in the heroine’s journey for reassessment. Fonda’s conclusion following her hiatus? She needed to stop putting another person’s needs first.
“There was this angel on my shoulder,” she said in a 2018 interview with People about her divorce from media mogul Ted Turner [Gillian Telling, “Jane Fonda Explains Why It Took Her Until Her 60s to ‘Become Who I Was Supposed to Be,’” 19 Sept. 2018]. “If you stay, you will die without ever becoming who you can be. You will not really be authentic.”
The Third Act
Fonda has said it took her 30 years to understand feminism. Her frequently quoted epigram, “We are not meant to be perfect; we are meant to be whole,” is the crystallization of decades of lessons from acting, relationships, activism and living. It’s the type of wisdom that leads to performances that resonate with multitudes. In Fonda’s self-labelled “third act,” she has portrayed Grace & Frankie’s [Netflix TV series, 2015-22] Grace Hanson, a character who validates the vulnerabilities and complexities of older women. And, 50 years after their first onscreen pairing in Barefoot in the Park (1967), Fonda and Robert Redford reunited for Our Souls at Night (2017), a drama that allowed Fonda to deliver an intimate, subtle and exquisitely realized performance — an achievement crafted from a lifetime of devotion to understanding humanity and herself.
And all that understanding can make a woman extremely funny. It’s no wonder comedy has also been a defining feature of this onscreen chapter. Book Club (2018), Book Club: The Next Chapter (2023), 80 for Brady (2023), and Fonda and Lily Tomlin’s women-in-comedy celebration Ladies’ Night Live (2022) are all projects that showcase the unique humor and sexuality that comes from a life well-lived.
With the rare ability to question her role in the world, reflect on her own motivations and examine her interior life, Fonda is the embodiment of what it means to be an artist truly dedicated to the spiritual nature of performance. It’s the secret sauce that makes her work so stunningly, captivating.
Climate and Beyond
Now 87, nearly all of Fonda’s focus is centered on the most crucial issue of our time: climate change. Her Jane Fonda Climate PAC is a political action committee with a mission to “do what it takes to defeat fossil fuel supporters and elect climate champions at all levels of government.” Supporters are encouraged to sign up for updates at janepac.com.
Fonda’s lifetime of accolades include[s] two Oscars, two BAFTA [British Academy of Film and Television Arts] Awards, an Emmy, seven Golden Globes, the 2015 AFI Life Achievement Award, the Cecil B. DeMille Award, Elle’s Women in Hollywood Icon award and the Women in Film Jane Fonda Humanitarian Award, named after Fonda for her lifelong activism and philanthropic commitments.
She accepted the Harry Belafonte Voices for Social Justice Award at the 2023 Tribeca Film Festival. Most recently, in April of 2024, Fonda accepted the Time Magazine Earth Award.
On Sunday, Feb. 23 [2025], Fonda will receive the 60th SAG Life Achievement Award at the 31st Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards [at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles]. “Jane Fonda is a trailblazer and an extraordinary talent, a dynamic force who has shaped the landscape of entertainment, advocacy and culture with unwavering passion,” said SAG-AFTRA President Fran Drescher [b. 1957; President of SAG-AFTRA: 2021-Present]. “We honor Jane not only for her artistic brilliance, but for the profound legacy of activism and empowerment she has created. Her fearless honesty has been an inspiration to me and many others in our industry.”
“I am deeply honored and humbled to be this year’s recipient of the SAG Life Achievement Award.” Fonda told SAG-AFTRA. “I have been working in this industry for almost the entirety of my life and there’s no honor like the one bestowed on you by your peers. SAG-AFTRA works tirelessly to protect the working actor and to ensure that union members are being treated equitably in all areas, and I am proud to be a member as we continue to work to protect generations of performers to come.”
[The SAG Life Achievement Award Statuette is made using a process that involves creating two molds from wax models and then pouring in molten bronze heated to 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Once the bronze is cooled and freed from the ceramic, each mask is polished and refined. After the comedy and tragedy masks are carefully welded together, the finished statue is then oxidized with a process that involves a mixture of chemicals and heating with a blow torch to give the award its green patina.]
* *
* *“ORIGINALS”
[In the 31st Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards special edition of SAG-AFTRA magazine, the union paid tribute to some of the 61 previous recipients for Life Achievement (in 1985 and 2000, the award was given to two honorees). The union selected 18 former award recipients and quoted some of their remarks from their acceptance speeches (or from those who accepted the awards for them).
[Needless to say, these are all esteemed and even beloved film actors whose names are known far beyond Hollywood. Wikipedia has a chart of all 62 past awardees, and SAG-AFTRA has a photo montage of them all on which one can click for bios of each individual winner.]
As Queen Latifah said in 2008 [at the Kennedy Center Honors on 7 December in the Kennedy Center Opera House] while paying tribute to Barbra Streisand — the woman who would become the 2023 Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award honoree — “An original doesn’t conform to our expectations, she changes them . . . forever.”
Such is the legacy we honor in each of our 60 Life Achievement recipients chosen by the union’s Honors and Tributes Committee. They are talented originals who have made a lasting impact in creating a kinder, more equitable world while enhancing the art of the craft.
James Stewart [1908-97]
“This award you have so generously given me is ‘for outstanding achievement in fostering the finest ideals of the acting profession.’ Well, alright, I can live with that,” said sixth recipient Stewart. “There have been a lot of tears, but then also there have been a lot of laughs, and that’s what show business is all about. Thank you. Thank you very much.” [Stewart was the 6th recipient of SAG Life Achievement Award in 1968.]
Eddie Cantor [1892-1964]
The first Life Achievement honor [1962] was presented to Screen Actors Guild’s second president [1933-35] and first president of American Federation of Radio Artists (AFRA) [1937-40]. Unable to attend the presentation during the annual membership meeting, his friend, the legendary Jack Benny [1894-1974], accepted on his behalf.
Bob Hope [1903-2003]
“This is a beautiful award. It looks like [Bing] Crosby [1903-77] before and after the honeymoon,” joked third honoree Bob Hope [1965]. “I don’t know what can possibly top this unless Lawrence Welk [1903-92] lets me run his bubble machine . . . I am proud to be a member of the Screen Actors Guild. I thank you very, very much for this award, and it just proves that a miracle can happen if you pay your dues regularly.”
Pearl Bailey [1918-90]
When SAG President Kathleen Nolan [b. 1933; President of SAG: 1957-62] presented the award, she listed some of Bailey’s past accolades that contributed to her being selected for this honor: “The March of Dimes award for 1968 and the USO Woman of the Year award for 1969 . . . [and] on Nov. 24, 1975, she was appointed by President Gerald R. Ford [1913-2006; 38th President of the United States: 1974-77] as special advisor to the U.N. Mission to the United Nations, a role which she feels will fulfill her desires to help all humanity more.” [Bailey was the 14th honoree in 1976.]
Danny Kaye [1911-87]
Wife Sylvia Fine Kaye [1913-91; m. 1940] accepted on his behalf, as he was in the hospital: “He . . . particularly wanted to be here today . . . He’s very proud of the acting profession, which has a long and glowing tradition of democracy in action and wholehearted public service, and if you feel that he has added luster to your traditions, he’s proud indeed and I thank you for him.” [Kaye was the 19th awardee in 1982.]
Katharine Hepburn [1907-2003]
“Good afternoon, everybody — I should say ‘fellow workers.’ That makes me sound revolutionary,” said 17th recipient Hepburn [1979]. “I am dumbfounded, and at the same time, I am very proud to have been chosen by the Screen Actors Guild as a good example, professionally and personally. It’s always heartening to be told by one’s own fellows that one is first rate, and that they wish to say so publicly.”
Audrey Hepburn [1929-93]
“I am more than ever awed and overwhelmed by the monumental talents it was my great, great privilege to work for and with,” 29th honoree Hepburn [1992] wrote in an acceptance letter just two weeks before her death. “There is therefore no way I can thank you for this beautiful award without thanking all of them . . . [who] guided and nurtured a totally unknown, insecure, inexperienced, skinny broad into a marketable commodity.”
Burt Lancaster [1913-94]
Daughter Johanna [b. 1951; film and television producer; “Joanna,” according to the website MyHeritage], accepting on his behalf: “I think my father is an enemy of anything that would erode the human spirit . . . My father doesn’t think of himself as a philanthropist. The word is too sedate to inspire him. I’ve always seen him more as a compassionate anarchist, someone who likes to stir it up and who feels an obligation to give back to the people and organizations which make a difference in his life. Thank you.” [Lancaster was the 28th recipient in 1991.]
Brock Peters [1927-2005]
“I could bemoan all the barriers and difficulties I have experienced and witnessed and fought over the years, but I have been extremely fortunate in my life to find friends who have gathered around me in the times of greatest need or who are just there to be helpful or to seek help from me or to just be friends,” said 27th recipient Peters [1990]. “Today I know that my family is even greater — you are all part of my extended family.
Kirk Douglas [1916-2020]
“You know what? When they first spoke to me about this award, lifetime achievement, I was scared. I saw a committee going over my medical file: ‘We have to give him something,’” joked 35th honoree Douglas [1998]. “Well, maybe then they learned that I have just finished a movie, they might want to take the award back! But what the hell, I am young, I have made 82 movies.”
Clint Eastwood [b. 1930]
“I got in the Screen Actors Guild back in the early ’50s, and Walter Pidgeon [1897-1984; President of SAG: 1952-57] was the president then,” recalled 39th recipient Eastwood [2002]. “I remember calling my parents and saying that I’m in the same union with Walter Pidgeon, [James] Cagney [1899-1986] and [Gary] Cooper [1901-61] and Barbara Stanwyck [1907-90] and Bette Davis [1908-89] . . . I thought I was hot stuff, until I started knocking on doors and getting the turndowns. So I appreciate everything that all of you have had to go through at some time in your life.”
Elizabeth Taylor [1932-2011]
“This award is especially important to me because it’s given by my peers,” 34th recipient Taylor [1997] penned in an acceptance letter. “Not only for my first career, acting — but, for what has now become my life: the eradication of the AIDS epidemic . . . Thank you for honoring me tonight.” [Throughout the 1990s, Taylor focused her time on HIV/AIDS activism. In 2001, President William Clinton (b. 1946; 42nd President of the United States: 1993-2001) awarded Taylor the Presidential Citizens Medal, the nation’s second-highest civilian honor, for her AIDS philanthropy.]
Dick Van Dyke [b. 1925]
“I am looking at the greatest generation of actors in the history of acting,” 49th honoree Van Dyke [2012] told the audience. “You’ve all lifted the art, I don’t know, to another place now. And besides that, you’re everywhere. You’re in Darfur, Somalia, Haiti, New Orleans, you’re all over the place, trying to do what’s right . . . And all I have to say is if this very heavy object means that I can refer to you as my peers, I’m a happy man.”
Mary Tyler Moore [1936-2017]
“In 1955 . . . I sought out the Screen Actors Guild in hopes of becoming a member. [Moore appeared in live TV commercials for Hotpoint home appliances that ran during The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (1952-66).] But . . . there were six other Mary Moores on the SAG pages. Word came back: ‘Want to work in ‘the business’? Change your name, sweetheart.’ . . . [Since at least 1933, SAG rules have prevented members from using the same professional name as another member, or a name that could be easily confused with another member’s name, to avoid confusion and ensure clarity.] Tyler was my middle name,” said the 48th recipient [2011]. “I spoke it out loud. ‘Mary Tyler Moore.’ It sounded right . . . SAG was happy. My father was happy. And tonight, after having the privilege of working in this business among the most creative and talented people imaginable, I too, am happy, after all. Thank you.”
James Garner [1928-2014]
“You look at the list of wonderful actors who have been recipients of this award — and I’m not at all sure how I got here. I’m just so humbled to be a part of such a distinguished group,” said 41st honoree Garner [2004]. “And, well, we actors, we seldom know how we are perceived by others, but this wonderful award lets me know, ‘Hey, Jim, you must have done something good.’ So to have actors think of me in these terms, it touches me deep, deep, deep, deep in my heart.”
Debbie Reynolds [1932-2016]
“God gave us talent, so we’re very fortunate, we all are . . . [.] My favorite movie was The Unsinkable Molly Brown [MGM, 1964; adapted from the 1960 Broadway musical of the same title by Richard Morris and Meredith Willson]. And I had a lot of fun doing that. In that movie I got to sing . . . a song called I Ain’t Down Yet. Well, I ain’t. Thank you all very much for this wonderful award.” [Reynolds was the 51st honoree in 2014.]
Morgan Freeman [b. 1937]
“These moments in one’s life usually will call for an entire litany of thank yous. I can’t do that because I don’t know all of your names. So I won’t try,” joked 54th recipient Freeman [2017]. “I do want to thank SAG-AFTRA for this enormous honor. This is beyond honor. This is a place in history.”
Sally Field [b. 1946]
“I’ve worked my whole life. I’ve ridden the highs and tried to learn from the lows. And in all of these almost 60 years, there is not a day that I don’t feel quietly thrilled to call myself an actor,” 58th honoree Field [2022] told the audience. “Thank you. Thank you. Thank you for this great honor from you, the people I most wanted respect from in my life: actors. Thank you.”