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Biography
One of the saddest by-products of the
Hollywood fame game is the Teenage Burn-Out. Once puberty robs them of
their angelic looks and innate cuteness, child stars traditionally have
a terrible time keeping their feet on the ladder. In a time when image
and box office records mean everything, they've not only become another
person but also carry the burden of not being able to provide what they
once did. Think Macaulay Culkin, or the awful fall of Drew
Barrymore. Then came many TV and film roles, meaning
that, come Taxi Driver she was already a seasoned veteran. After that
burst of teen stardom, she chose college over a short-term career, then
returned in a series of deliberately chosen "interesting"
roles, as she studied techniques on both sides of the camera. And now,
due to these efforts, she's a producer, director, double Oscar-winner
AND, as 2002's hit Panic Room proved, a $10 million-a-picture actress,
capable of carrying a Number One movie on her own. Actually, she first pushed Buddy. By the
mid-Sixties, he'd already made many appearances on TV and in commercials
(he'd later leave it all behind and eventually become a construction
worker). Then came a big campaign for Coppertone sun lotion. Buddy was
up for the ad but, seeing young Jodie, the casting directors had her
star instead. So, at age 3, having her swimsuit pulled down by a dog and
revealing her little bottom in one of the most popular adverts of its
day, she first became nationally known. Buddy starred in all 76 episodes, as
Mike, the near-grown son of star Ken Berry. But this is not to say
Jodie's education was ignored. Fiercely intelligent, she'd been reading
since age 3, and Brandy was keen to give her kids an all-round and
international schooling, starting with the food they ate. She'd
constantly be taking them to restaurants specialising in exotic
cuisines. The work kept coming. Jodie now played Sharon Lee, a young girl breaking into the strictly male preserve of baseball in Rookie Of The Year (the first of many feminist roles to come), then came One Little Indian, a comedy western starring James Garner and once more directed by Bernard McEveety. Then there was Smile, Jenny, You're Dead, a pilot for the hugely successful Harry O series, with David Janssen as the scruffy private dick. As a sign of things to come, Jodie shone
in the movie as a young urchin waiting for her mother to get out of
jail, nabbing all the best lines and delivering them in a manner that
would have seemed precocious were it not so damned professional. Before this had come Paper Moon, a TV
series spin-off from the hit movie starring Ryan and Tatum O'Neal, with
Jodie playing Addie Pray, the little girl who helps her con-man father
sell bibles and trick the unwary. Then there was serious drama, with
Echoes Of A Summer, directed by her Tom Sawyer boss, Don Taylor. Here
Jodie was Deirdre, a young girl suffering from an incurable heart
condition. Her mum and dad (Richard Harris) decide to take her to Canada
for the last few days of her life. She meets a boy, begins to live, then
dies. Heart-warming, and heart-breaking, both. In the movie, Robert De Niro, a Vietnam vet waiting for a "real rain to come", decides to clean up the streets himself. First he considers assassinating a presidential candidate, then he goes after the pigs who are pimping Iris, who he's seen on the street and whose plight disgusts him. His revenge is unbelievably violent. De Niro of course dominated the film with
his "You lookin' at me?" psychosis. But his out-there
performance is allowed to work by the brilliance of the supporting cast
who create an almost surreally degraded world for him to rail against.
And Jodie was a major part of this - hard as nails when touting for
trade, a giggling girl with her friends (one of whom was played by the
real-life prostitute Jodie studied for research), and a vulnerable young
woman, lulled into inaction by the loving words of Harvey Keitel's
disgraceful pimp, Sport. Quite rightly, she received an Oscar
nomination, though that's not her in every sequence. Too young to appear
in the more explicit shots, her place was taken by her sister,
Constance, eight years older. This was the first and best of the
switching roles movies (Dudley Moore and Judge Reinhold would later have
a go) where Jodie and mum Barbara Harris, both thinking the other has it
easy, exchange bodies for one day - to the bemusement of husband and
father John "Gomez Addams" Astin. Jodie - spookily good - was
nominated for a Golden Globe. And then came The Little Girl Who Lived
Down The Lane, a superior thriller where Jodie claims her father is away
but is clearly hiding something in the cellar. Then molester Martin
Sheen takes notice. Jodie played a pregnant nymphet whose
grandparents are trying to get some boy to sleep with her so they can
claim he's the father. Extraordinary stuff, all the more so for the
presence of the preternaturally demure Catherine Deneuve -Il Casotto was
a direct forerunner of the gross-outs of the Farrelly brothers. Throughout the mid-Seventies, Jodie had
enjoyed enormous success - she was nearly cast as Princess Leia in Star
Wars. But now her education was to come first. She was enrolled at the
College Lycee Francais, a private academy in Los Angeles, and threw
herself into study, eventually graduating as valedictorian in 1980. Two
more Jodie films would be released that year. First came Foxes, directed
by Adrian "Fatal Attraction" Lyne, where she played the leader
of a bunch of girls struggling with sex, drugs, and their weight and
boyfriends in the San Fernando Valley (Scott Baio appeared here, having
earlier co-starred with Jodie in Bugsy Malone, and there's a very early
spotting of Keanu
Reeves). Then came Carny, where she played a small town waitress who
takes off with the carnival, having been impressed by the antics of Gary
Busey and Robbie Robertson. Discovering that she'd gone to Yale, he
made up a story about having to attend a writers' workshop in New Haven
in order to get money from his parents, and travelled to Yale. Within
hours of his arrival, he called Jodie at her dorm and managed to speak
to her. For four days he called, finally she wouldn't answer him any
more. So he stalked her, before finally returning to Colorado and making
his plans. After being committed, he wrote to Time
Magazine saying "The most important thing in my life is Jodie
Foster's love and admiration. If I can't have them, neither can anyone
else. We are a historical couple, like Napoleon and Josephine, and a
romantic couple like Romeo and Juliet". To Jodie's immense
consternation, the press came down on Yale like a herd of buffalo. Just at the point in her life when she was deliberately stepping out of the limelight into normality, she had become world-famous, tied in with one of the century's most infamous acts. The injustice of it must have been crushing. And for an exceedingly intelligent, independent, decent young woman to have her name attached to that of an obsessive crackpot, with herself powerless to prevent it, well, that was hard to swallow. How she kept up her studies is anyone's guess. That she made movies in her vacations is miraculous. But she graduated, magna cum laude, in 1985 (she'd receive an Honorary Doctorate from Yale in 1997), with another four movies on her CV. There was O'Hara's Wife, where Jodie played the grown-up kid of Ed Asner, a workaholic whose dead wife returns to get him to slow down and rediscover his children. There was Svengali, with Peter O'Toole as the master teaching Jodie to sing (with Holly Hunter in only her second role). Then there was John Irving's bizarre and
moving Hotel New Hampshire, where a thoroughly strange family struggles
to get by, despite their individual weirdness - Nastassja Kinski, for
instance, is a hideously shy girl who lives in a bear suit. And then
came The Blood Of Others, written by Simone de Beauvoir and directed by
Claude Chabrol, where Jodie played Helene, a woman in occupied Paris
who's torn between Resistance fighter Michael Ontkean and a Nazi
administrator, played by Sam Neill. Jodie also took her first real shot
at directing, helming an episode of Tales From The Darkside. For this she won an Independent Spirit
award. Next was Mary Lambert's truly weird Siesta, and then Stealing
Home, Jodie's first brilliant performance since leaving Yale. Here Mark
Harmon, as a washed-up baseball player, returns home after learning that
his first love (Jodie) had committed suicide. With their relationship
played out in flashback, he gradually realises what he's lost, and finds
himself again. The role of FBI agent Clarice Starling in The Silence Of The Lambs had already been turned down by Michelle Pfeiffer and Meg Ryan, so Jodie stepped in at the last minute to do psychological battle with Anthony Hopkins' Hannibal Lecter. Smart but often out-done, courageous but often terrified, Starling must convince Lecter to help the Bureau catch serial killer Buffalo Bill, then ends up battling Bill herself. It was a superb thriller and, after It
Happened One Night and One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest, became only the
third movie to take all 5 major Oscars, Jodie also snapping up another
Golden Globe. This made Jodie the first actress to win two Oscars before
the age of 30 - and this a woman who'd never taken acting classes. But
when given a chance to reprise the role in Hannibal she turned it down,
feeling Clarice was not well treated by the script - Julianne
Moore would step in. It was a slick and action-packed comedy.
Nell, on the other hand, was a deadly serious drama, where she played
Nell Kellty, a girl raised by her mother in the backwoods of North
Carolina who's never met another soul. When her mother dies, she's
discovered (speaking her own language) by doctors and scientists who
must decide whether to let her live how she is, or spend her life being
studied in a laboratory. It was a strong cast to have to control, including Anne Bancroft, Geraldine Chaplin and Robert Downey Jr (hamming wildly as the gay brother), but Jodie pulled it off. And she brought on another starlet, Claire Danes, who she'd later cast as Flora Plum. Jodie would also be involved in producing The Baby Dance, where Hollywood wife Stockard Channing wants to adopt an unwanted baby from Louisiana trailer-girl Laura Dern (who'd made her debut back in Jodie's Foxes). It was a fascinating clash of cultures, with Jodie being nominated for an Emmy. Now came Contact where Jodie was Dr Ellie
Arroway, a scientist who, after years of searching, suddenly receives
radio proof that aliens exist. It was less a sci-fi movie than a
theological argument, proposing that we should combine science and
religion in our search for truth. But it was stimulating, with good
central performances, Jodie herself receiving another Golden Globe
nomination. Yet more rumours circulated, claiming the
father was Randy Stone, a casting executive at 20th Century Fox and a
close friend of Jodie's. But she remained tight-lipped, as she would in
2001 when her second son, Kit, arrived (she says she'll reveal the
father's identity to her sons when they're old enough). No one protects
their home-life as well as Jodie (considering the Hinckley experience,
no one's had as good a reason to learn). She is a shining example to
anyone whining about press intrusion, and should be closely studied by
all wannabe celebrities (though not to the point of stalking, please). This, another US Number One, came about
when Nicole
Kidman, who'd hurt her knee during the filming of Moulin Rouge,
pulled out after 18 days. In stepped Jodie, as she had with Silence Of
The Lambs, and out popped another superb performance (despite Jodie's
being pregnant during filming - some re-shooting having to be done in
the autumn of 2001, after Kit was born). After a break of some two years, Foster
would return with a small role in the French epic A Very Long
Engagement, which saw the reunion of Audrey
Tautou and director Jean-Pierre Jeunet after their worldwide hit
Amelie. This would see five French soldiers in WWI accused of harming
themselves to escape the trenches and sent out into No Man's Land to
die. Tautou would play the girlfriend of one of them who, believing him
to have survived, goes on a quest to find him, questioning all relevant
parties. Foster, naturally speaking perfect French and adding weight to
proceedings, would play the mistress of another of the condemned men,
pining badly for her lost love. |
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