Jane Fonda attends the opening ceremony and "La Vénus Electrique" (The Electric Venus) screening during the 79th annual Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals on May 12, 2026 in Cannes, France. Photo by Ernesto Ruscio/Getty Images
The Hollywood Reporter India At Cannes 2026

Exclusive | Jane Fonda at Cannes 2026: 'I Went to India By Myself... It Really Changed Me'

The Oscar winner recalls how traveling alone across the subcontinent in her youth forced a defining choice between ashrams and activism, turning a life-changing encounter with inequality into a political awakening

Team THR India

At the 79th Cannes Film Festival, Jane Fonda reveals that a solo trip across India, Nepal and Sikkim in her youth fundamentally reshaped her life. Encountering extreme poverty for the first time, she says India “posed a choice”: follow the hippie trail to ashrams and drugs, or commit to fighting inequality. That moment, she recalls, is when she consciously became an activist.

Jane Fonda has spent decades dominating screens and captivating audiences. With a career so dynamic and iconic, she barely needs an introduction. However, only few would know that the story behind one of the most defining parts of her life that millions know her for–activism–traces back to a single trip to India.

In an exclusive conversation with Anupama Chopra for the Hollywood Reporter India at the 79th Cannes Film Festival, Fonda is taken back to her solo journey across India and how the country “posed a choice” for her–one that would later birth her identity as an activist.  

“It really changed me,” says Fonda with an insightful expression on her face that suggests deep reflection and fondness of memory. “I traveled all through India alone, on bus, and I also went into Nepal and Sikkim,” she adds, with subtle but evident enthusiasm.

She further reveals that she had “never seen poverty before,” and how the many Americans visiting ashrams and smoking weed wanted her to come along too. For Fonda, however, it was in that moment she realized she had a choice. “India posed a choice to me,” she says, that she would either become a hippie and go to an ashram as she had seen others do, or become an activist herself and work toward poverty. And her choice was clear. “That’s when I became an activist,” she recalled.