Peter Fonda

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peter Fonda
Born Peter Henry Fonda
February 23, 1940 (1940-02-23) (age 68)
New York, New York, United States
Spouse(s) Susan Brewer (1961-1972)
Portia Rebecca Crockett (1975-)

Peter Henry Fonda (born February 23, 1940) is an Academy Award-nominated and two time Golden Globe-winning American actor. He is the son of Henry Fonda, the brother of Jane Fonda, and the father of Bridget Fonda. Fonda is associated with Western counterculture of the 1960s.[1]


Contents

[edit] Personal life

[edit] Career

Fonda found work on Broadway where he achieved notice in Blood, Sweat and Stanley Poole, before going to Hollywood to make films. He started his film career in romantic leading roles. He debuted in Tammy and the Doctor (1963), which he called "Tammy and the Schmuckface". But Fonda's intensity impressed Robert Rossen, the director of Lilith (1964). Rossen envisioned a Jewish actor in the role of Stephen Evshevsky, a mental patient. Fonda earned the role after removing his boss' glasses from his face and putting them on so as to look more "Jewish". He also played the male lead in The Young Lovers (1964), about out-of-wedlock pregnancy, and The Victors (1964), an "anti-war war movie".

By the mid-1960s, Peter Fonda was not a conventional "leading man" in Hollywood. As Playboy magazine reported, Fonda had established a "solid reputation as a dropout". He had become outwardly nonconformist and grew his hair long, alienating the "establishment" film industry. Desirable acting work became scarce.

Through his friendships with members of the Byrds, Fonda visited The Beatles in their rented house in Benedict Canyon in Los Angeles in August, 1965. While John Lennon, Ringo Starr and George Harrison were under the influence of LSD, Lennon heard Fonda say, "I know what it's like to be dead". This phrase became the tag line for their song "She Said She Said", which appeared in their groundbreaking Revolver (1966) album. In 1966, Fonda was arrested in the anti-war Sunset Strip riot which the police ended forcefully. The band Buffalo Springfield protested the department's handling of the incident in their song "For What It's Worth".

Replica of the "Captain America"-Harley which Fonda rode in Easy Rider, on display in a German Museum.
Replica of the "Captain America"-Harley which Fonda rode in Easy Rider, on display in a German Museum.[2]

Fonda's first counterculture-oriented film role was the lead character Heavenly Blues, a Hells Angels chapter president, in the Roger Corman directed film The Wild Angels (1966). The Wild Angels is still remembered for Fonda's "eulogy" delivered at the fiasco of a fallen Angel's funeral service, which was sampled in the Primal Scream recording "Loaded" (1991), and in other rock songs. Then Fonda played the male lead character in Corman's film The Trip (1967), a TV commercial director experiencing the ambivalence and turmoil of divorce.

In 1968, Fonda produced and starred in Easy Rider, the classic film for which he is best known. Easy Rider is about two long-haired bikers traveling through the southwest and southern United States in a world of intolerance and violence. The Fonda character was the charismatic, laconic "Captain America" whose motorcycle jacket bore a large American flag across the back. Dennis Hopper played the garrulous "Billy". Jack Nicholson was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his turn as George Hanson, an alcoholic civil rights lawyer who rides along. Fonda co-wrote Easy Rider with Terry Southern and Hopper, who directed.

Hopper filmed the cross-country road trip depicted in Easy Rider almost entirely on location. Fonda had secured funding in the neighborhood of $375,000 - (largely based on the fact he knew that was the budget Roger Corman needed to makeThe Wild Angels), and they released the film in 1969 to massive international success. Robbie Robertson was so moved by an advance screening that he approached Fonda and tried to convince him to let him write a complete score, even though the film was nearly due for wide release. Fonda refused, using the Byrds' song "Ballad of Easy Rider", Dylan's "It's Alright Ma, I'm Only Bleeding" sung by the Byrds' Roger McGuinn. Fonda, Hopper and Southern were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay.

After the success of 'Easy Rider, both Hopper and Fonda were in a position to make any film project they wanted. While Hopper chose to make the drug addled jungle epic The Last Movie, (in which Fonda co-starred along with Michelle Phillips), Fonda displayed considerable maturity as a film maker and directed the Western film The Hired Hand. Fonda took the lead role in a cast that also featured Warren Oates, Verna Bloom and Beat poet Michael McClure. Despite generating mixed-reviews upon it's initial release, In 2001, The Hired Hand was fully restored and exhibited at a number of festivals to a generally enthusiastic critical response. Subsequently, the Sundance Channel released a DVD of the film in two separate editions that same year, and the film has since found an audience as a cult Western classic. In 1979, Fonda directed and starred in the drama Wanda Nevada alongside Brooke Shields. His father Henry Fonda made a brief appearance as well, making it the only time the father and son appeared together on film. In a later nod to his roles in The Wild Angels and Easy Rider, Fonda also had a cameo as the "Chief Biker" in the 1981 slapstick comedy The Cannonball Run.

Fonda received high-profile critical recognition and universal praise for his role in Ulee's Gold (1997). Fonda portrayed a stoic north Florida beekeeper who, in spite of his tumultuous family life, imparts a sense of integrity to his wayward convict son, and takes risks in acting protectively toward his drug-abusing daughter-in-law. His performance resulted in an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor. Fonda's movie career has made the more interesting for the extreme contrast between the wide-eyed and questing (though possibly amoral, certainly drug-dealing) rebel motorcyclist in Easy Rider and the upright war-veteran father he played nearly three decades later in Ulee's Gold — a character who tries to share his wisdom about integrity with his wayward son and saves his addicted daughter-in-law's life. Two years later, Fonda appeared in the 1999 Steven Soderbergh neo noir crime film The Limey, as the money laundering/celebrity rock music producer Terry Valentine.

Fonda lent his voice talent to the video game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas as the hippie, The Truth. In 2002 Fonda was inducted into the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame.

In 2007, Fonda made a notable return to the big screen in the critically acclaimed 1957 Western remake 3:10 to Yuma, appearing alongside Christian Bale and Russell Crowe as the Bounty Hunter Byron McElroy. The film received two Academy Award nominations, and received positive reviews from critics.

[edit] TV Work

In addition to his film work, Fonda's lent his talents to TV as well, particularly notable in the Time Life: "Flower Power" infomercial series. He appeared in the critically-acclaimed 2004 TV movie "Back When We Were Grownups" with Faye Dunaway, Blythe Danner and Jack Palance,and he also appeared in a 2008 remake of "Journey to the Center of The Earth" with Rick Schroeder. Fonda also made a special guest appearance on ER 's 300th episode as a man who gave up his Down Syndrome child for adoption and finally has a chance to meet him years later. This episode aired on December 6, 2007.[3]

[edit] Filmography

[edit] Primary sources

  • Fonda, Peter, "Don't Tell Dad", Hyperion Books (April, 1998).
  • Playboy, "Playboy Interview: Peter Fonda", HMH Publishing Co., Inc., pp. 85-108, 278-79 (September, 1970).
  • Filmography: Internet Movie Database.
  • Olso in thomas and the magic railroad

[edit] References

  1. ^ Interviews. AVclub.com. Retrieved on 2003-10-01.
  2. ^ Startseite. Zweirad.de. Retrieved on 2007-10-27.
  3. ^ Peter Fonda Enters ER. TVGuide.com. Retrieved on 2007-10-26.

[edit] External links

Awards
Preceded by
Geoffrey Rush
for Shine
Golden Globe Award for Best Actor - Motion Picture Drama
1998
for Ulee's Gold
Succeeded by
Jim Carrey
for The Truman Show
Preceded by
Gregory Peck for Moby Dick
Don Cheadle for The Rat Pack
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Series, Miniseries or Motion Picture Made of Television
2000
for The Passion of Ayn Rand
Succeeded by
Robert Downey Jr.
for Ally McBeal
Persondata
NAME Fonda, Peter
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION American actor
DATE OF BIRTH February 23, 1940
PLACE OF BIRTH New York, New York
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH