Frances Ford Seymour
Frances Ford Seymour | |
---|---|
Born | Westport, Ontario, Canada | 4 April 1908
Died | 14 April 1950 Beacon, New York, U.S. | (aged 42)
Resting place | Ogdensburg Cemetery, Ogdensburg, New York, U.S. |
Occupation | Socialite |
Spouses | |
Children | 3, including Jane and Peter Fonda |
Frances Ford Seymour Fonda (4 April 1908 – 14 April 1950) was a Canadian-American socialite. She was the second wife of actor Henry Fonda and the mother of actors Jane Fonda and Peter Fonda.
Biography
[edit]Born in Brockville, Ontario, Canada, Seymour was the daughter of Sophie Mildred (née Bower) and Eugene Ford Seymour. According to her daughter Jane, who gained access to medical records with help from lawyers, Seymour was a victim of recurrent child incestuous abuse and had nine abortions in her lifetime.[1][2]
On 10 January 1931, she married George Tuttle Brokaw, a millionaire lawyer and sportsman. They had one daughter, Frances de Villers "Pan" Brokaw (10 October 1931 – 10 March 2008).
A year after Brokaw died, Seymour married actor Henry Fonda on 16 September 1936, at Christ Church, New York City. She had met Fonda at Denham Film Studios in England on the set of the film Wings of the Morning.[3] The couple had two children, actress Jane (born 21 December 1937) and actor Peter (23 February 1940 – 16 August 2019), but their marriage was troubled. According to Peter Fonda, these difficulties later gave him empathy for the marital problems of actor Dennis Hopper, his co-star in the 1969 film Easy Rider.[4] Hopper's then-wife Brooke Hayward is the daughter of Margaret Sullavan, Henry Fonda's first wife.
Seymour died by suicide while she was a patient at the Craig house in Beacon, New York.[5] Her suicide came three and a half months after Fonda asked her for a divorce.[6] She is buried in Ogdensburg Cemetery, Ogdensburg, New York.
References
[edit]- ^ Trafford, Abigail (2005-05-03). "Mothers, Lost And Found". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-07-01.
Fonda is able to track down old medical records and learns that her mother was sexually molested as a child. She also interviews her mother's friends. A very different mother emerges.
- ^ Cohen, Sandy (2014-09-28). "Jane Fonda gets personal at Rape Foundation brunch". Associated Press. Retrieved 2024-10-14.
- ^ Andersen, Christopher P. (1990). Citizen Jane: The Turbulent Life of Jane Fonda. Dell Pub. p. 450. ISBN 9780440209430.
- ^ Ayers, Chris (22 June 2014). "Uneasy riders". The Sunday Times. Times Newspapers Limited. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
- ^ Jane Fonda "Needed" To Keep Working With Lily Tomlin | Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend, retrieved 2023-12-13
- ^ Bosworth, Patricia (24 September 2011). "Connected, Darkly, to Jane Fonda". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
External links
[edit]- Frances Ford Seymour at Find a Grave
- "Mothers, Lost and Found" The Washington Post, Abigail Trafford, May 3, 2005
- Excerpt: 'My Life So Far' ABC News, April 5, 2005