With her patrician looks and Hollywood pedigree, it would have been easy for Jane Fonda to coast through life. Instead, she cast herself against type, using her classic beauty and detached sexiness in deliberately off-kilter roles like the future-worldly sex-kitten Barbarella and the cynical—if extremely well-coiffed—prostitute Bree Daniels in Klute. She did the same in her personal life, where her anti-Vietnam War activities put her at the center of a political firestorm in the early ’70s. Fonda's idiosyncratic evolution, ten years later, into the first aerobics guru to the masses, only reiterated her dedication to following her own, individual path.

—Janet Ozzard







newsletter and mobile alerts
WEEKLY STYLE NEWS
keep up on the latest trends, fashion news, and celebrity style
FASHION SHOW UPDATES
get exclusive alerts during the fashion shows
MOBILE FASHION ALERTS
send show alerts plus breaking style news to my phone


rss content feeds podcasts
site map    |    subscription services & feedback    |    newsletters    |    style.com widget    |    press center    |    advertising
visit our sister sites
Concierge.com | Epicurious.com | Men.Style.com | Style.com | Flip.com | Wired.com | Lipstick.com | NutritionData.com | YM.com | Allure | Architectural Digest | Brides | Cookie
Condé Nast Portfolio | Domino | Glamour | Gourmet | Lucky | Men's Vogue | Self | Teen Vogue | The New Yorker | Vanity Fair | W