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- <text id=91TT2311>
- <title>
- Oct. 14, 1991: A Screen Gem Turns Director
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 14, 1991 Jodie Foster:A Director Is Born
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 68
- COVER STORIES
- A Screen Gem Turns Director
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A movie moppet at nine, Jodie Foster went on to become one of
- Hollywood's most talented actresses. Now, at 28, she has taken
- a bold directorial leap with Little Man Tate, and it's an
- audacious winner.
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss--Reported by Martha Smilgis/Los Angeles and
- Linda Williams/New York
- </p>
- <p> The rest of us have family albums to remind us of what we
- looked like in youth. Jodie Foster could have a movie library
- and a stack of press clippings. Because she has been an actress
- for 25 of her 28 years, she can screen the public record of her
- childhood. Anyone can. You can review her evolution from
- tadpole to tomboy and beyond: in the Coppertone commercial, the
- Disney pictures, the sitcoms, Taxi Driver, Bugsy Malone. And you
- can scan the interviews she gave to magazines from age 11
- onward. Dear reader, we have in our possession a tape of a
- lunchroom chat you had in seventh grade. Care to hear what you
- said? Care to be held to it?
- </p>
- <p> Foster could pass this test because she was always a
- bright young woman as well as a symbol of precocious girlhood.
- At seven, she had entered Los Angeles' Lycee Francais, where she
- would perfect her French and emerge as valedictorian before
- heading off to Yale. So the child star could be expected to have
- thoughts, and to turn thoughts into sentences. Even today her
- teen talk is worth attending to, as another kind of Jodie Foster
- retrospective.
- </p>
- <p> On acting: "People assume I've been robbed of my
- childhood. I don't think that's true. I've gotten something
- extra. Most kids, all they have is school. That's why they get
- so mad when it's boring and feel so bad if they fail. I have my
- work; I know how to talk to adults and how to make a decision.
- Acting has spared me from being a regular everyday kid slob. I
- used to think of it as just a job, but now it's my whole life,
- it's all I want to do."
- </p>
- <p> On sisterhood: "My friendships with girls usually don't
- last too long. I'm not interested in a lot of the things they
- are, I guess." On femininity: "I never had the gift of looking
- cute. I hate dresses and jewelry, and the only doll I played
- with was a G.I. Joe. And I've got this deep voice. That's why
- they call me Froggy at school."
- </p>
- <p> On her mother Brandy, a single parent: "She always
- listened to me. She thought of me as her best friend. If it
- weren't for me, she wouldn't have anything, and if it weren't
- for her, I would be nothing." Being raised without a father was
- "the best thing that ever happened to me. I never realized there
- was any difference between men and women. It never occurred to
- me I would have to be a nurse and not a doctor."
- </p>
- <p> On directing: "It would be great to be a director. They
- get to do anything! They have people killed, blow things up,
- make people cry and laugh. Directing is just like creating
- life." "It is a very masculine thing to do; they all end up in
- the hospital after a picture. It's a hard job." She said she
- hoped to start with a small-budget film. "Something sensitive
- with two people." She was determined, though, not to appear in
- a film she also directed. "That is the biggest mistake, unless
- you're Woody Allen."
- </p>
- <p> It's a wise child, or maybe a witch, who knows so
- precisely and presciently what she wants to do. Acting is
- Foster's life--enough of it, at least, to have earned her an
- Oscar in 1989 for playing the raped party girl in The Accused,
- and to have won raves and huge audiences for her role as a
- dogged FBI trainee in The Silence of the Lambs, the
- third-highest grossing movie released this year. Next year she
- co-stars in...a Woody Allen picture. But right now she is
- a director, and a damned fine one, of a small-budget film.
- Little Man Tate is something sensitive with three people: a
- gifted child (Adam Hann-Byrd), his sympathetic teacher (Dianne
- Wiest) and the mother, a defiant single parent, torn between
- love and loss.
- </p>
- <p> One part of Foster's teen prophesy proved timid. She
- directed herself as the mother. Destiny, if not autobiography,
- demanded it. Not that this is the Brandy and Jodie Foster story;
- that would be too simple. It is more aptly an emblem of the
- strength, intelligence and self-awareness Jodie Foster has
- applied to ensure that a perishable commodity (actor) becomes
- a lasting presence. The movie can stand as both an artful
- commentary on growing up strange and a calling-card film for a
- director who promises much and delivers most of it. Still,
- reverberations from Foster's extraordinary youth pulse through
- Scott Frank's script and inform the fierce care the director
- took in realizing it.
- </p>
- <p> When he was a year old, Fred Tate could read the insignia
- on the back of a dish. At seven he is a displaced person, a
- brilliant adult mind imprisoned in second grade. In class he
- flummoxes his teacher with complex answers to simple questions.
- (Q. Which of the numbers one through nine can be divided by two?
- A. All of them.) On the schoolyard asphalt he draws elaborate
- Madonnas in colored chalk. But he can't catch a basketball
- without falling down, or fail to be oppressed by his genius.
- Seems Fred is a kid too, envying the boy's ease of one rowdy,
- popular classmate: "All I want is someone I can eat lunch with."
- He's a Mozart in awe of Bart Simpson.
- </p>
- <p> Fred is mature enough to have a child of his own, and in
- a way, he does: his mother Dede. Coarse and loving, she waits
- tables in a Chinese lounge to support herself and her son with
- no help, thank you, from the long-departed Mr. Tate. ("Dede says
- I don't have a dad," Fred notes in the film's narration. "She
- says I'm the Immaculate Conception. That's a pretty big
- responsibility for a little kid.") They are a sublime mismatch
- of the sort usually found only in marriages. Fred balances Mom's
- checkbook and, as a Mother's Day gift, writes her an opera. Dede
- brags, like a tough schoolkid, about how she aced out some
- fastidious jerk in her basement laundry. For her, chain letters
- are literature. The boy, a nonstop reader, also dotes on Van
- Gogh's flower studies. Sometimes, Fred says, "I wake up in his
- paintings."
- </p>
- <p> He confides this to Jane Grierson, who runs a school for
- gifted kids. A former prodigy, Jane can appreciate what Fred has
- to give; she can empathize with his anguish, isolation,
- nightmares. She will protect him, nurture him--mother him, if
- he and Dede give her half a chance. Thus begins a kind of
- custody battle between the two women, each offering part of what
- Fred needs. Dede is heart, Jane is mind; Dede is sense, Jane
- sensibility. Neither is a whole number: Dede spits out cherry
- pits faster than she does ideas, and Jane bakes a meat loaf that
- looks like a moon rock. The movie asks, How many mothers can
- divide a boy's loyalty? And the answer is, Both of them. But is
- there an answer? A child can't choose who cares for him.
- </p>
- <p> In the wrong hands, this material could get pretty twee
- and reductive; give the kid a disease, and you have a TV movie
- of the week. And, in fact, the second half of Little Man Tate
- threatens to take sides, to turn Jane into an exploitative
- klutz, to provide a happy, even triumphant solution to the
- dilemma, full of hats and horns and two birthday cakes. But,
- really, that's just dessert to a film that offers much chewy
- food for thought. The comforting dream of communion at the end
- can't erase the picture's careful wit about good people in
- desperate situations or, especially, the wan isolation shadowing
- a boy who knows his genius has made him alien. Says French
- filmmaker Louis Malle: "Jodie's film is basically about the
- profound loneliness of childhood, and she's dealt with it
- head-on. I would be very happy and proud to have made the film
- that she did."
- </p>
- <p> Foster would be happy and proud to hear that; Malle's
- Murmur of the Heart is among her favorite pictures and one of
- the inspirations for Little Man Tate. The perpetual film
- student, who at Yale wrote a paper on Francois Truffaut's Jules
- and Jim, still believes that French directors go "for the truth
- of a scene. This movie is my first statement, and I wanted a
- French film sense." That means not rushing or spoon-feeding the
- audience, not forcing easy moral judgments through camera
- effects or the placement of actors in the frame. This is not,
- in Foster's words, "a $20 million nightmare"; her directorial
- hand does not conceal a joy buzzer. She caresses each movie
- moment as if it were privileged.
- </p>
- <p> Little Man Tate isn't all French. It speaks with a
- distinctly American accent; it saunters where a French film
- might slouch. Foster has worked for some superfine American
- directors--among them Martin Scorsese (Alice Doesn't Live Here
- Anymore and Taxi Driver), Jonathan Kaplan (The Accused),
- Jonathan Demme (The Silence of the Lambs)--and this movie
- indicates that she paid attention. A pool-hall montage, all
- slow-mo and Saturn-ringed balls and electric-blue vectors, plays
- like a fast tribute to Scorsese's The Color of Money.
- </p>
- <p> At heart, though, this movie isn't an homage to anybody.
- Foster has her own confident style, her own cinema craft to
- create a world that is both familiar and unique. The look is
- cool and bright for Jane's scenes (she's the perky techno-mom),
- and warmer but tarnished for Dede's. The apartment Dede and Fred
- live in is a domestic mess bathed in an autumnal glow--as if
- they lived inside a jack-o'-lantern and its teeth were the
- boy's cage.
- </p>
- <p> The movie screen is a cage too. Animal instincts are on
- display in there, prowling for our pleasure. Handsome creatures
- (the performers) assume the shapes of pretty beasts (the
- characters). Being observed through these gilded bars, in brutal
- or glamorous close-up, has to be confining for a film actor. The
- mixture of exhibitionism and vulnerability in any performer must
- be volatile, toxic. Even more so for an actress, since the
- history of movies, as has been said a million times, is the
- history of men looking at women. And most certainly for a child
- starlet who, at first, is utterly spontaneous, innocent, exposed--often exploited and, perhaps, as isolated as Fred Tate.
- </p>
- <p> Foster says she directed the Little Man Tate script
- "because I understood it so much." How could she not? She was
- an exceptional child from the age of three, when she shot her
- first Coppertone commercial. She was in TV shows and movies at
- nine: a beautiful blond girl, her sad eyes overwhelming a
- toothsome smile. She was Becky Thatcher, Tom Sawyer's muse of
- civility, and Addie Pray, beguiling con artist of the Paper Moon
- series, and a one-kid sorority of spunky Disney heroines. How
- many girls of the '70s wanted to be Jodie Foster? Movie stars
- are to fall in love with. Or, if they are children, to adopt.
- How many parents wanted to trade in their daughters for this
- one?
- </p>
- <p> It takes a smart heart and the carapace of an armadillo to
- emerge sane, let alone healthy, from child celebrity. Jodie
- Foster somehow did it, and the somehow is her mother. Brandy,
- a former publicist, separated from Lucius Foster III, a real
- estate agent, before their fourth child, Alicia Christian
- (Jodie), was born in Los Angeles on Nov. 19, 1962. The atypical
- stage mother, Brandy won Jodie's loving respect because she
- urged and loved rather than pushed and shoved. "She'd seen a lot
- of wayward souls in Hollywood. She didn't want a cripple for a
- child; she wanted me to fly. She also wanted me to have a
- serious and heroic career. So she chose some risky, off-beat
- movies."
- </p>
- <p> In any kind of movie, Jodie was off-beat because from
- girlhood she always seemed the older woman. Not yet 10, playing
- Becky Thatcher, she instructs the young truant in the meaning
- of the word philanderer. A year or so later, as wizened Audrey
- in Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore, she shows Alice's son how
- to steal guitar strings from a music store, asks him if he wants
- to get high on Ripple, and nonchalantly reveals that her "mom
- turns tricks in the Ramada Inn from 3 on in the afternoon." Not
- long after Alice, she was Tallulah, a sleek gun moll, in Bugsy
- Malone, Alan Parker's weird-but-it-works munchkin musical. The
- same year she played Iris, Taxi Driver's notorious pre-teen
- hooker--rude talk and skimpy clothes ill-suiting a good girl
- stranded in hell. And with each new movie, it seemed as if Jodie
- had skipped another grade. Her intelligence gave her a
- precocious maturity; the Foster child was already a Foster
- parent.
- </p>
- <p> Even for Jodie, so spookily poised on- and offscreen,
- growing pains appeared inevitable. Everyone passes through an
- awkward stage, and for many child stars that stage is adulthood.
- They seem like less perfect versions of their lost miniature
- selves. Their cuteness is shed, and with it their earning power.
- At 16 they can be obsolete. Many aging child actors, once
- sprung from the pampered captivity of, say, sitcom stardom, are
- as unready for real life as zoo pets suddenly released in the
- wild. They try, too quickly, to catch up on the rambunctious
- youth they missed, and wind up in the police blotter or on the
- cover of supermarket tabloids. They can spend their 20s torpid,
- discarded, in rehab from their early fame.
- </p>
- <p> If any child star could escape the Hollywood hothouse and
- blossom, it would be Jodie Foster. And indeed she considers when
- she was 18 to 24, "the years I went off to college and had a
- life." She armored herself in friends, cocooned herself in the
- anonymity of a newly plump figure, tangled with the
- deconstructionist teachers in her comp-lit classes at Yale.
- </p>
- <p> But someone else was flipping through her movie family
- album. On March 30, 1981, John Hinckley Jr. shot President
- Reagan and subsequently professed his love for Foster--or,
- really, for Iris in Taxi Driver. (The film was based in part on
- the diary of Arthur Bremer, the would-be assassin of Governor
- George Wallace.) Hinckley won the prize any deranged, unrequited
- lover seeks: he would be forever linked with his unknowing
- inamorata.
- </p>
- <p> Foster could speak eloquently of the rank underside of
- stargazing--of fandom fanned into fanaticism. Understandably,
- she does not speak on the subject (just last week she canceled
- an appearance on the Today show because Hinckley was to be
- mentioned), or on other aspects of her personal life. She knows
- that Hollywood movies are all about the marketing of emotion,
- and that it is difficult for actors, the onscreen vessels of
- emotion, to keep their lives sensible and their sensations
- private. Nonetheless, Foster is determined to separate public
- persona from private person.
- </p>
- <p> She hopes that moviegoers will do the same. "My work is my
- work," she says. "It has always been a way to express myself,
- and to be things I'm not. My character precedes my job. I was
- who I was before I became an actress. I became an actress
- because I like to act, not to get my picture in the paper and
- have people wonder what color socks I wear--not to be able to
- get the best table at the Polo Lounge or to be good friends with
- Barry Diller."
- </p>
- <p> Foster graduated (cum laude) from Yale in 1985. But at
- that time Diller, chairman of 20th Century Fox, was probably
- not much interested in being good friends with her, or casting
- her in a movie. She wasn't box-office poison; she was
- box-office invisible. Another actress's hope was her fear: that
- she might end up as a regular on The Bold Ones. "My career was
- at a low point when I graduated," she notes, "but I couldn't let
- it go without a real push. Then it struck me that I wasn't going
- to do dreck," and she took roles in some eccentric good films
- (Siesta, Five Corners) and at least one ordinary bad one
- (Stealing Home). Then The Accused came along. Or rather, she
- stormed after it. The part got her the Oscar and a place on the
- actresses' A list. Only fitting: A is the grade she has earned
- all her life, in class and onscreen.
- </p>
- <p> As an actress-director, she knows her subject. She could
- teach Hollywood to moguls; they might learn something. "This is
- not a business that is kind to women, but it needs them," she
- says. "The female pioneers have to be 10 times better than a
- man. Maybe someday there will be an old-girl network. But I'm
- not interested in alienating the audience. I believe in the
- system. I'm acutely conscious of the business in this town and
- how I organize my career. As an actor you must have
- self-knowledge and an understanding of your limits. I know I
- can't play a Chicano gang leader, but I could play Queen
- Victoria. I'm also a structure hound. If the choices are too
- great, I'm paralyzed."
- </p>
- <p> She is never paralyzed; she is always prepared, whether
- playing a scene or carrying a film. The ferocious focus has
- always been there. When she was 13, she directed a short "tone
- poem," Hands of Time, a series of shots of hands that depict
- life from cradle to old age: a baby, a couple getting married,
- a man cocking a rifle, a man's hand on a pregnant woman's
- stomach, and an old man holding hands with a little kid. In one
- day, she had to write the treatment for it, select the cast,
- direct the crew, and decide on the editing order. Foster
- remembers the film as "lyrical, very pretty."
- </p>
- <p> As director of Tate, she amassed storyboard details on
- each scene--not just the camera blocking but the underlying
- emotions of each character. "Films are too important not to have
- a drawn road map," she says. "I won't wing it. When I come into
- a shot, I always have an idea." She has an idea too of the
- field-marshalry of directing a movie. "You must learn to lead,
- to be a benevolent king. You try to communicate your vision and
- monitor those who don't get it. I feel safe there. I can be
- vulnerable. The code is, they'll catch you if you fall down. I
- have camaraderie with these people. It's like going through a
- war together."
- </p>
- <p> By all accounts, there was no war between the Tates.
- Foster made sure it was a happy set; everybody watched the
- rushes; the young boss won new acolytes, none stronger than
- screenwriter Frank, who had hoped to direct the movie. "There's
- no one in this town like her," says Frank. "She seems small and
- sad; you want to protect her. Then you find she's a pretty and
- intelligent woman who knows kick boxing. She's one of the few
- people who's not tongue-lashed in the business. This town is the
- biggest collection of dips, dopes and dunderheads. Most are
- illiterate; their entire vocabulary can be summed up in MTV. But
- Jodie's resourceful. She knows movies, but she knows more than
- movies. She's unpretentious--99% of the time she dresses in
- sweats. And she's maternal; she eats healthy and tells you how
- to eat."
- </p>
- <p> What she told the actors is a collegial secret, except for
- her instructions to young Adam Hann-Byrd. "Adam is a very
- realistic kid, very aware," she says. "I wouldn't know how to
- direct a kid to be that way. So I'd load him up with a lot of
- technical things--kids usually connect with the technical--and then he would just relax. Or I'd say, `Make your eyebrows
- like you're scared,' and that would make him a little nervous.
- And then I'd get what I wanted."
- </p>
- <p> Adam, a Manhattan nine-year-old who greets a reporter with
- a plastic fly on his outstretched tongue, remembers it
- differently. The parts he remembers, that is. (He's a little
- fuzzy on the audition: "That was a year and a half ago," he
- patiently explains.) Adam thought the work was "all fun," except
- for one scene where he had to wear leg braces, another where he
- rides a pony, and a few others where he was supposed to cry.
- Could Fred be someone Adam might know? "No, he's too smart for
- me." Could he exist somewhere? "It could be possible. It's true
- that some people are like that. Yeah, maybe in Cincinnati." They
- shot the movie in Cincinnati.
- </p>
- <p> We promise not to reprint this quote 20 years from now in
- a cover story on Adam Hann-Byrd, world-famed entomologist. But
- chances are good that Adam, who doesn't plan a lifelong career
- as a little-boy actor, will evade the ravages of celebrity.
- Whether he wants to or not. Most people go through graceful,
- productive phases, and they pass with the same inexorability as
- the awkward ones. Not many people shine in or on every stage.
- Not many people are Jodie Foster.
- </p>
- <p> But think of this: as the child performer was to the adult
- actress, so the tyro director may be to the mature auteur.
- Little Man Tate, for all its acuity of craft and gallantry
- toward its characters, could be simply the first step: the
- Coppertone commercial of filmmaker Foster. If this is the larva,
- imagine the butterflies to come.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-