Jodie Foster

by Hal Erickson film biography
The youngest of four children born to Evelyn "Brandy" Foster, Jodie Foster entered the world on November 19, 1962, under the name Alicia, but earned her "proper" name when her siblings insisted upon Jodie. A stage-mother supreme, Brandy Foster dragged her kids from one audition to another, securing work for son Buddy in the role of Ken Berry's son on the popular sitcom Mayberry RFD. It was on Mayberry that Foster, already a professional thanks to her stint as the Coppertone girl (the little kid whose swimsuit was being pulled down by a dog on the ads for the suntan lotion), made her TV debut in a succession of minor roles. Buddy would become disenchanted with acting, but Jodie stayed at it, taking a mature, businesslike approach to the disciplines of line memorization and following directions that belied her years. Janet Waldo, a voice actress who worked on the 1970s cartoon series The Addams Family, would recall in later years that Foster, cast due to her raspy voice in the male role of Puggsley Addams, took her job more seriously and with more dedication than many adult actors.
After her film debut in Disney's Napoleon and Samantha (1972), Foster was much in demand, though she was usually cast in "oddball" child roles by virtue of her un-starlike facial features. She was cast in the Tatum O'Neal part in the 1974 TV series based on the film Paper Moon -- perhaps the last time she would ever be required to pattern her performance after someone else's. In 1975, Foster was cast in her most controversial role to date, as preteen prostitute Iris in Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver. Both the director and the on-set supervisors made certain that she would not be psychologically damaged by the sleaziness of her character's surroundings and lifestyle; alas, the film apparently did irreparable damage to the psyche of at least one of its viewers. In 1981, John Hinckley Jr. attempted to assassinate President Reagan, and when captured, insisted he'd done it to impress Foster -- a re-creation of a similar incident in Taxi Driver. The resultant negative publicity made Foster (who'd been previously stalked by Hinckley) extremely sensitive to the excesses of the media; through absolutely no fault of her own, she'd become the quarry of every tabloid and "investigative journalist" in the world. Thereafter, she would stop an interview cold whenever the subject of Hinckley was mentioned, and even ceased answering fan mail or giving out autographs. This (justifiable) shunning of "the public" had little if any effect on Foster's professional life; after graduating magna cum laude from Yale University (later she would also receive an honorary Doctorate), the actress appeared in a handful of "small" films of little commercial value just to recharge her acting batteries, and then came back stronger than ever with her Oscar-winning performance in The Accused (1988), in which she played a rape victim seeking justice. Foster followed up this triumph with another Oscar for her work as FBI investigator Clarice Starling (a role turned down by several prominent actresses) in the 1991 chiller The Silence of the Lambs.
Not completely satisfied professionally, Foster went into directing with a worthwhile drama about (perhaps significantly) the tribulations of a child genius, Little Man Tate (1991) -- a logical extension, according to some movie insiders, of Foster's tendency to wield a great deal of authority on the set. Foster has in recent years managed to balance the artistic integrity of her award-winning work with the more commercial considerations of such films as Maverick (1994). She made her debut as producer in 1994 with the acclaimed Nell, in which she also gave a stunning Oscar-nominated performance as a backwoods wild child brought into the modern world. Foster then returned to directing (as well as producing) with 1995's Home for the Holidays, a comedy starring Holly Hunter. The production was not a box-office success, though it did draw positive reviews. Foster then returned to acting with her role as Ellie Arroway in Robert Zemeckis' 1997 film Contact. After the film, she turned her attentions to raising her son, Charles, born in 1998. Still smarting from the public scrutiny thrust upon her by the Hinckley incident, Foster kept out of the glare of publicity as much as possible, going so far as refusing to identify the father of her child, a decision which became the subject of much scrutiny in the media. For the most part her efforts were successful, and following the lukewarm response to her turn in Anna and the King (1999), Foster continued to raise her son in peace and solitude. It wasn't until Nicole Kidman dropped out of the lead of stylistic director David Fincher's The Panic Room (2002) that Foster once again found herself the center of attention in the media circus. A tense nail-biter that chronicled a brutal night's struggle for survival as a mother and daughter attempted to fend off a trio of determined burglars, The Panic Room received mixed reviews though it held fast to the box-office Top Ten in the weeks following its release. Appearing refreshed and invigorated in the numerous press junkets coinciding with the film's release, it was obvious that the time out of the limelight had certainly kept Foster in good spirits.
After three years away from the bigscreen--save a pair of supporting turns in the indies The Dangerous Lives of Alter Boys and A Very Long Engagement--Foster returned in 2005 with Flightplan, a suspense thriller referred to by many as "Panic Room in the sky." The familiarity worked to the film's benefit, as it performed nearly as well at the box-office as the former picture.
The following year, Foster could be seen alongside Denzel Washington and Clive Owen in the Spike Lee-helmed heist flick, Inside Man. She also ventured into the revenge genre with 2007's The Brave One, helmed by Neil Jordan. In 2011, Foster opted to work on both sides of the camera, both directing and starring in the quirky dramedy The Beaver, about a troubled husband and father, who reconnects with his family by talking through a child's beaver puppet. Mel Gibson was cast as the male lead, and unfortunately, the film came out on the heels of a series of very public scandals for Gibson, with the actor's reputation soiled by allegations of racism, alcoholism, spousal abuse, anti-semitism, and even a complete mental breakdown. The Beaver consequently came and went quietly, but Foster was still on her feet and ready for her next project: starring with Kate Winslet, John C. Reilly, and Christoph Waltz in the Roman Polanski directed domestic comedy Carnage.

filmography snapshot

1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
Year Title Rating    
1970 Menace on the Mountain

Actor

1972 Bonanza: A Place to Hide

Actor

1972 Ironside: Bubble, Bubble, Toil and Murder

Actor

1972 Kansas City Bomber

Actor

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1972 Napoleon and Samantha

Actor

1973 Alexander

Actor

1973 One Little Indian

Actor

1973 Rookie of the Year

Actor

1973 The Partridge Family: The Eleven Year Itch

TV Guest Appearance

1973 Tom Sawyer

Actor

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1974 Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore

Actor

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1974 Paper Moon [TV Series]

Actor

1974 Smile, Jenny, You're Dead

Actor

1974 The Addams Family: Ghost Town

Actor

1974 The Addams Family: Left in the Lurch

Actor

1974 The Addams Family: The Addams Family in New York

Actor

1974 The Addams Family: The Circus Story

Actor

1975 The Secret Life of T.K. Dearing

Actor

1976 Bugsy Malone

Actor

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1976 Echoes of a Summer

Actor

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1976 Freaky Friday

Actor

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1976 Saturday Night Live: Jodie Foster

TV Guest Appearance

1976 Taxi Driver

Actor

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1976 The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane

Actor

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1977 Candleshoe

Actor

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1977 Moi, Fleur Bleue

Actor

1980 Carny

Actor

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1980 Foxes

Actor

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1980 Il Casotto

Actor

1982 O'Hara's Wife

Actor

1983 Svengali

Actor

1984 The Blood of Others

Actor

1984 The Hotel New Hampshire

Actor

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1986 Mesmerized

Actor, Co-producer

1987 Five Corners

Actor

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1987 Siesta

Actor

1988 Stealing Home

Actor

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1988 The Accused

Actor

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1989 Rabbit Ears: The Fisherman and His Wife

Voice

1991 Backtrack

Actor

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1991 Little Man Tate

Actor, Director

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1991 Shadows and Fog

Actor

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1991 The Silence of the Lambs

Actor

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1993 Hollywood Remembers: All About Bette

Actor

1993 It Was a Wonderful Life

Voice

1993 Sommersby

Actor

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1994 Maverick

Actor

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1994 Nell

Actor, Producer

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1995 Home for the Holidays

Director, Producer

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1996 Frasier: Moon Dance

TV Guest Appearance

1997 Contact

Actor

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1998 AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies: Fantastic Flights

Actor

1998 AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies: In Search of...

Actor

1998 AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies: The Antiheroes

Actor

1998 NOVA: Everest - The Death Zone

Voice

1998 The Baby Dance

Executive Producer

1998 Three Gorges: The Biggest Dam in the World

Voice

1999 Anna and the King

Actor

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2000 The Directors: Martin Scorsese

Interviewee

2000 The Directors: Robert Zemeckis

Actor

2000 Waking the Dead

Executive Producer

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2002 20th Century Fox: The Blockbuster Years

Interviewee

2002 Panic Room

Actor

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2002 The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys

Actor, Producer

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2004 A Very Long Engagement

Actor

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2004 In the Company of Women

Interviewee

2004 The Cutting Edge: The Magic of Movie Editing

Participant

2005 Boffo! Tinseltown's Bombs and Blockbusters

Participant

2005 Flightplan

Actor

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2006 Inside Man

Actor

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2007 100 Films and a Funeral

Interviewee

2007 The Brave One

Executive Producer, Actor

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2008 Nim's Island

Actor

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2011 Carnage

Actor

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2011 The Beaver

Director, Actor

2013 Elysium

Actor

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