Read The Man Who Saw a Ghost: The Life and Work of Henry Fonda Online
Authors: Devin McKinney
Tags: #Biographies & Memoirs, #Arts & Literature, #Actors & Entertainers, #Humor & Entertainment, #Movies, #Biographies, #Reference, #Actors & Actresses
(1928) leaves Omaha for Cape Cod
(1929) Broadway debut
(1931–1932) difficult times in New York
(1931) marries Margaret Sullavan
(1932) divorced from Margaret Sullavan
(1934) called to Hollywood
(1935) possible attempted suicide of
(1936) marries Frances Seymour
(1939) contract with Zanuck
(1942) volunteers for military service
(1942–1945) war experiences
(1943) paternity suit brought against
(1947) return to Broadway
(1950) death of Frances
(1950) marries Susan Blanchard
(1951) on tour with
Mr. Roberts
(1953) adopts Amy
(1955) meets Afdera Franchetti
(1955) Susan divorces
(1957) marries Afdera Franchetti
(1958–1962) four Broadway plays
(1960s) mediocre movies made during
(1961) Afdera divorces
(1965) marries Shirlee Mae Adams
(1968) theatrical producing by
(1971) new play about Lincoln
(1973) new play about Clarence Darrow
(1981) last film
(1981) last stage play
(1982) death of
acting style on-stage
Americanness of
as angry man
as antihero
artist pursuit as painter
assessment of, by his father (“he was perfect”)
assessments of, by friends
autobiography.
See Fonda: My Life
awards
business apprenticeship in Omaha
childrearing style
college education
commercial endorsements by
construction and landscaping pursuit of
criticized by his children
criticized by sixties radicals
dancing manner in performances, inhibited
early acting roles
early experiences of loss
early films
emotional distance of
extramarital affairs of
face of
farming and gardening pursuit of
fatalistic roles played by
feeling restricted by family and domesticity
first Broadway success
first spoken words on film
florist job
health problems in final years
healthy living of
hidden vs. public self of
hiding on stage
hobbies
Hollywood commitment
Hollywood life when starting out
hospitalizations
intelligence work during World War II
interview with Grobel
itinerant life in repertory
lasting place in film history
liberal politics of
loner roles
love life, early experiences
manliness on-screen
marital strife and failures
marriages of
obituaries and tributes
parents of, remembered reverently
passionlessness of
performs on stage on day of Frances’s suicide
playing himself, discomfort at
point of view of this book
political campaigning by
postage stamp honoring
president roles
a private person, in roles
in radio
reserve and simplicity of
retrospectives
reviewers’ doubts about, as actor
reviews of work
roles and characters, diversity of
roles for which he was overaged
stardom of
in television
temper and rages of
and the Vietnam War
voice of
wanted man roles
war experience, effect of
will and bequests
workingman roles
work of, “majesty and trash scrambled together”
work pace and refusal to take it easy
World War II action
Fonda, Herberta (mother).
See
Jaynes, Herberta Lamphear
Fonda, Herberta Jayne (Jayne) (sister)
Fonda, Jane (daughter)
birth (1937)
Broadway debut
criticism of HF
early acting career
fictionalized
marriages.
See
Hayden, Tom; Vadim, Roger
memoir
quoted
radicalism of
Fonda, Jellis Douw
Fonda, Justin
Fonda, Margaret.
See
Sullavan, Margaret
Fonda, marquis de
Fonda, N.Y.
Fonda, Peter (son)
accidental shooting of self
birth (1940)
criticism of HF
early acting career
incidents with the police
inspires a Beatles song
interview with
marriage
neurotic upbringing of
quoted
rebelliousness of, growing up
Fonda, Shirlee.
See
Adams, Shirlee Mae
Fonda, Susan.
See
Blanchard, Susan
Fonda, Ten Eyck Hilton
Fonda, William Brace (father)
HF’s veneration of
print shop of
takes HF to view the 1919 Omaha race riot
Fonda family
origins in Europe, and arrival in America
turning into ordinary Americans
upstate New York cemetery of
Fonda: My Life
(autobiography “as told to”)
For a Few Dollars More
Ford, Francis
Ford, Gerald
Ford, John
directorial style
fistfight with HF
patriotism expressed in films
Foreign Correspondent
Forrest Theatre (Philadelphia)
Forsaking All Others
Forsythe, John
Fort Apache
(film)
Fort Lee, New Jersey
Fort Lewis military reservation, Tacoma, Washington
Fort Omaha, Nebraska
46th Street Theatre (New York)
Fox.
See
Twentieth Century—Fox
Fox Film Corporation
France, student protests
Franchetti, Afdera (fourth wife)
memoir by
Franchetti noble family
Franco, Francisco
Frankenheimer, John
Franklin, John Hope
Freel, Aleta
Free Speech Movement
Freud, Sigmund
Freudianism
Front Page, The
FTA (“Fuck the Army”) (musical revue)
Fugitive, The
(film)
Fulton Theatre (New York)
Fun Couple, The
Gahagan, Helen
Galusha, Joan
Game of Love and Death, The
(play)
Garbo, Greta
Garnett, Tay
Gaver, Jack
gay liberation
Gaynor, Janet
General Aniline and Film Corporation (GAF)
General Electric Theater
(TV show)
Generation
(play)
Genoa
Germany
Gettysburg, Battle of
Get Yourself a College Girl
ghosts
Gibson, William
The Cobweb
The Seesaw Log
Gide, André,
The Immoralist
Gift of Time, A
(play)
Glenville, Peter
Godard, Jean-Luc
Godfather
movies
Golden Globes
Goldfarb, Mr. (florist)
Goldwater, Barry
Goldwyn, Samuel
Good, the Bad and the Ugly, The
Goodhart, William
Good Years, The
(TV special)
Gordon, Ruth
Gostas, Ted
Graham, Sheilah
Grand Island, Nebraska
birthplace of HF
Grant, Cary
Grapes of Wrath, The
(album of readings)
Grapes of Wrath, The
(film)
Grapes of Wrath, The
(novel, Steinbeck)
graves
of Ann Rutledge
of the westward migration
Gray, Amy
Great Depression
Greatest Show on Earth, The
Great Platte River Road
Great Smokey Roadblock, The
(film)
Great Train Robbery, The
Green Berets
Green Berets, The
Greene, Graham
The Power and the Glory
Greenwich, Connecticut
Count Palenclar House
Greenwich Village
Gregory, Don
Gregory, Paul
Griffith, D. W.
Grizzard, George
Grobel, Lawrence
Guam
Gulf + Western
Gunn, Moses