Author: JF.com

The Women’s Media Center presents the New York premiere of D.A. Pennebaker’s “Jane”

April 20, 2011 The Women's Media Center: New York premiere of D.A. Pennebaker's "Jane"

USA Weekend: Jane Fonda: 73 and sensational!

One look at Jane Fonda, 73, on our cover and across these pages raises the question: How on earth does she do it? “Nothing is more important as you age than staying physically active,” the septuagenarian says with characteristic conviction. Her message is in the medium: She recently released two new fitness DVDs geared to Baby Boomers and featuring her age-defyingly slender and fit self. Since she was first on screen as the babelicious Barbarella, then as an Oscar winner and, in the ’80s, as a founding mother of the aerobics revolution, Fonda has been an icon of fitness and beauty. And she’s not about to let age put an end to all that. We asked her to tell us more about how she does it: Diet. A super-healthy eating plan is the centerpiece of her regimen. Fonda, who had bulimia and anorexia when she was younger, says she eats “zero trans fats, zero partially hydrogenated oils.” And “no desserts, period.” On her daily menu: lots of grilled or steamed fish and chicken, fresh fruit and vegetables (especially dark green), dairy and the occasional piece of lean, red bison meat. “Look, I was married to Ted Turner for 10 years,” she says with a laugh. (Turner owns the largest private herd of bison in the world.) She laments having to give up wine (“unless it’s really good”) to avoid acid reflux. The discipline has paid off, says Fonda, who credits it with keeping her cholesterol and blood pressure low and her heart “perfect, a 20-year-old’s” — unlike her father’s. Actor Henry Fonda died of heart failure at age 77. Exercise. It’s key — and constant. To maintain her 121-pound, 5-foot-8 frame, she walks, hikes, swims or rides an exercise bike for 60 minutes four or five days a week. She also works out with weights three to four times a week and does yoga. “I don’t get up in the morning and say, ‘Oh, boy, I’m going to work out,’ ” she says. “I do it because of how I feel inside when it’s over. There’s nothing better for depression than exercise.” That’s especially good news for Fonda. Both sides of her family have suffered from depression. Her mother committed suicide when Fonda was 12, “and my father suffered from undiagnosed low-grade depression,” she says. Fonda herself got help over the years from therapy and medication, “and I didn’t get depressed,” she says. click here for full article

NBC LA: Jane Fonda Stars in Time-Bender, Heart-Tender Play

The words “it’s been the talk of the theater world…” tends to be slapped on the front of every third play, whether the play has earned that opener or not. But certainly “33 Variations” is deserving. After all, the work, which goes into previews at the Ahmanson on Sunday, Jan. 30, is from Moisés Kaufman, the talent behind “The Laramie Project,” not to mention the director of “Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo.” Much of the buzzity-buzz however, which we’re certainly joining in here, is over the star: Jane Fonda. And it isn’t as if Ms. Fonda will pass on and off stage in a much-ballyhooed cameo; her role provides the central heat in a play that moves between Beethoven’s time and the modern day. Also of interest: A pianist is on stage during the show (“33 Variations” is in reference to music, but then you likely knew that). It’s a Taper production that’s jumped to the Ahmanson, the second change-it-up factor of the play (the first being the jumps through time). We like the unsettled nature “33 Variations” is already promising. Settled=ho-hum. “33 Variations” begins previews on Sunday, Jan. 30 and runs through Sunday, March 6. click here for tickets and more info click here for full article http://www.nbclosangeles.com/around-town/events/114583584.html

MY DAY OFF

I will work with Jen Weinstein most of the day learning lines–or, I should say, re-learning lines. Later today is Oliver Elfman (Bridget Fonda and Danny Elfman’s son) turns 6 and is having a tea party that I will go to. Right now, though, I send kudos to Paul Krugman for his column “Climate of Hate” in the New York Times. He says that though the shooter responsible for the Arizona massacre appears to be mentally unstable, “that doesn’t mean that his act can or should be treated as an isolated event, having nothing to do with the national climate.” And later, “…the purveyors of hate have been treated with respect, even deference, by the GOP establishment.” Asking whether the massacre will make our national discourse less toxic, Krugman answers, “it’s really up to the GOP establishment. Will they accept the reality of what’s happening to America, and take a stand against eliminationist rhetoric? Or will they try to dismiss the massacre as the mere act of a deranged individual, and go on as before?” All of us need to pay attention. If GOP leaders and the right wing media that fans the flames of radical calls for armed resistance do go on as before, we need to make them responsible for the consequences.