Wednesday, October 1

Drawing upon her personal and political past, Jane Fonda has revived an activist group from the Cold War era that was backed by her father and fellow Oscar winner, Henry Fonda.

Jane Fonda announced Wednesday she had launched a 21st-century incarnation of the Committee for the First Amendment, originally formed in 1947 in response to Congressional hearings probing screenwriters and directors — notably the so-called “Hollywood Ten” — and their alleged Communist ties. Signers of the new organization’s mission statement include Florence PughSean PennBillie EilishPedro Pascal and hundreds of others.

Wednesday’s news comes in the wake of Jimmy Kimmel’s brief suspension by ABC over his on-air comments after conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s assassination. President Trump was among those who had called for Kimmel to be fired, and FCC Chair Brendan Carr also made statements criticizing Kimmel, urging ABC to “take action,” and saying in an interview: “We can do this the easy way or the hard way.” 

“The federal government is once again engaged in a coordinated campaign to silence critics in the government, the media, the judiciary, academia, and the entertainment industry,” the committee’s mission statement reads in part.

“We refuse to stand by and let that happen. Free speech and free expression are the inalienable rights of every American of all backgrounds and political beliefs — no matter how liberal or conservative you may be. The ability to criticize, question, protest, and even mock those in power is foundational to what America has always aspired to be.”

Other famous supporters from the list of more than 550 people included Alyssa Milano, Barbra Streisand, Ben Stiller, Julianne Moore, Lily Tomlin, Mandy Patinkin, Melanie Griffith, Natalie Portman, Nicolas Cage, Olivia Wilde, Susan Sarandon, Viola Davis, Whoopi Goldberg and Winona Ryder.

The Fondas each have had long histories of activism, whether Jane Fonda’s opposition to the Vietnam War or Henry Fonda’s prominent support for Democratic Party candidates, including John F. Kennedy, for whom the elder Fonda appeared in a campaign ad in 1960.

In recent years, Jane Fonda has been using her platform to draw attention to climate change. She founded the Jane Fonda Climate PAC in 2022 to help “climate champions” win in mayoral, city council, state and presidential races.

“This isn’t just about the environment,” she told CBS News in September 2024. “This is about the whole planet.”

In 2019, she was arrested five times during Fire Drill Fridays, a protest series she started in Washington, D.C., that was designed to draw attention to global warming. Fonda even spent the night of her 82nd birthday behind bars. The last time Fonda spent the night in jail was in 1970, when she was 32, while on a speaking tour protesting the Vietnam War.

Jane Fonda Mugshot

Jane Fonda in a mug shot following her arrest in Cleveland, Ohio, on Nov. 3, 1970.

Kypros / Getty Images


Henry Fonda, who died in 1982, joined the 1947 First Amendment committee along with such actors and filmmakers as Humphrey Bogart, John Huston, Lucille Ball and Frank Sinatra. Although highly publicized at the time, the committee had a short and troubled history. Bogart and others would find themselves accused of Communist sympathies and would express surprise when a handful of the Hollywood Ten, including screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, turned out to have been Communist Party members at one time or another.

By the following year, Bogart had published an essay in Photoplay magazine entitled “I’m No Communist,” in which he confided that “actors and actresses always go overboard about things” and warned against being “used as dupes by Commie organizations.” Trumbo and others in the Hollywood Ten would be jailed for refusing to cooperate with Congress and found themselves among many to be blacklisted through the end of the 1950s and beyond.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/committee-for-first-amendment-jane-fonda/

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