Chicago Sun-Times

FONDA MEMORIES

Actress garners Chicago film honor as Roeper guides Oscar- winner through her career highlights

- BY RACHEL HINTON Staff Reporter Email: rhinton@suntimes.com Twitter: @rrhinton

Cinema/ Chicago, the organizati­on that heads up the Chicago Internatio­nal Film Festival, paid tribute to Jane Fonda Saturday night. The two- time Academy Award winner received the festival’s Gold Hugo Career Achievemen­t Award for her contributi­on to film and television.

Before receiving the award, Fonda talked with Richard Roeper, film critic for the Chicago SunTimes, about her career.

The interview meandered through Fonda’s film history, hitting highlights like “Barefoot in the Park,” “Klute,” which landed her her first Academy Award and “Coming Home,” a film about the consequenc­es of the Vietnam War that garnered her an Academy Award for best actress.

Though “Klute” and “Coming Home” won awards, Fonda said the role that stuck with her most was the character of Chelsea Wayne in “On Golden Pond.”

Fonda got the chance to act opposite her father, Henry Fonda, and Katherine Hepburn, who helped her during a scene even though the two had a difficult relationsh­ip.

“When it came time to shoot [ my main scene] I was as dry as a tent and I didn’t know what to do,” Fonda said of the scene where she tries to repair her relationsh­ip with her father.

“I turned my back to the camera and I looked up and, crouching in the bushes, [ Hepburn] leaned forward and said ‘ you can do it.’”

Fonda’s friends and costars, including Robert DeNiro, Robert Redford, Lily Tomlin and Geraldine Chaplin, sent their congratula­tions for her award and heaped praise on her acting career.

The actress’ roles in TV were also mentioned. Her roles as Leona Lansing on “The Newsroom” and Grace Hanson on “Grace and Frankie” are two of her more recent roles.

Of her role in “Grace and Frankie,” Fonda said that she was happy to be doing it.

“For a long time I’ve wanted to give a face to older women and show we’re not the stereotype­s people think we are,” she said.

Her role as Judy Bernly in “Nine to Five” had interestin­g things to say about the workplace in the 1980s, Roeper said.

The movie was initially sup- posed to be a dark comedy, but turned into a comedy once Lily Tomlin was added. Fonda also said the movie was unusual because the song Dolly Parton, who also starred in the film, wrote for it, became “the anthem for a movement.

“It had a big effect on what working women in offices were doing around the country,” she said.

Though the night was a look back, Fonda is looking forward. She’ll be in another movie with Robert Redford, called “Our Souls At Night,” that’s set to premiere in fall at the Venice Film Festival. She’s also starting work on a movie called “The Book Club” on Monday.

Fonda tries to pay it forward by educating younger actors but feels it’s difficult because she still feels like a newbie, she said, since she left show- business for 15 years and returned at the age of 65.

When asked what roles lingered with her she said “On Golden Pond” and her role as Gertie Nevels in a show called “The Dollmaker.”

When asked how she’d like to be remembered, she smiled.

“I’m too young to be able to answer that,” Fonda said to applause.

 ?? MAX HERMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? Jane Fonda speaks with Richard Roeper as part of a tribute to the actress on Saturday at the Radisson Blu Aqua Hotel.
MAX HERMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES Jane Fonda speaks with Richard Roeper as part of a tribute to the actress on Saturday at the Radisson Blu Aqua Hotel.

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