1960s counterculture, Peter Fonda died at 79

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Sat 17 August 2019:

US actor Peter Fonda, whose starring role in classic road movie “Easy Rider” made him a symbol of 1960s counterculture, died Friday aged 79 at his Los Angeles home following a battle with lung cancer, his family said.

Fonda co-wrote and produced 1969’s “Easy Rider,” in which he appeared alongside its director Dennis Hopper and a young Jack Nicholson.

The wildly successful film about two bikers travelling through the great outdoors of the American Southwest in a quest for freedom became an anti-establishment cult classic.

It earned Fonda an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay, and is credited with ushering in an era of counterculture, independent filmmaking.

“EASY RIDER depicted the rise of hippie culture, condemned the establishment, and celebrated freedom. Peter Fonda embodied those values and instilled them in a generation,” wrote “Goodfellas” actress Illeana Douglas on Twitter.

“Independent cinema begins with EASY RIDER.”

The image of Fonda with his legs stretched out on his Harley-Davidson chopper painted in the colors of the American flag became emblematic of the era — one of two bikes used in the film sold at auction for $1.35 million in 2014.

Fonda would play anti-hero biker roles many times in his career.

He enjoyed a renaissance almost three decades later when he was nominated for the best actor Oscar for “Ulee’s Gold” (1997), but lost out to Nicholson.

Fonda began his career as a stage actor on Broadway in his native New York.

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