Henry Fonda spent fifty years playing America’s moral conscience on screen — Tom Joad, Abe Lincoln, Juror #8. Off screen he was emotionally remote, struggled through five marriages, and maintained a painful distance from his children that Jane Fonda would spend decades working through publicly.
This episode traces Fonda from his Nebraska childhood through his defining roles, his blacklist-era struggles, and the emotional armor that made him devastatingly effective on camera and nearly impossible to live with off it.
- He did not win an Academy Award until his final film, On Golden Pond, when he was seventy-six
- His emotional distance from his children became a recurring theme in Jane Fonda’s public life
- He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and earned a Bronze Star
- He and Jimmy Stewart were close friends for over fifty years despite opposite political views
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