
The Marrakech Film Festival began last Friday, and Jodie Foster is there in support of her latest film A Private Life, a French comedy-thriller she screened earlier this year in Cannes. But that’s only her second reason to attend, as the festival honored Jodie with a tribute award on Sunday, where she also sat down for an in-depth career retrospective. At 63, Jodie has been candid lately about being in her “I don’t care” era, in the best way possible — as in no longer inhibited by limiting ideas or outside opinions. This liberated attitude made for honest and loose comments from Jodie. For instance: filming Taxi Driver as a tweenager, she found Robert De Niro “not the most interesting person on earth.” Jodie was also quite frank that she doesn’t think she’d have ever become an actor if her mother hadn’t thrown her into it as a child. Some highlights:
Premiering Taxi Driver at Cannes as a 13-year-old: “Nobody wanted to bring me because they didn’t want to spend money on me.” However, her mother — who was also her manager and enrolled her at a French school in Los Angeles — pushed for her to go. “My mom said, ‘No, it’s really important. She speaks French. This is Cannes!’” Foster said. “And so we paid for our own flights.” Foster had a laugh remembering that De Niro, Harvey Keitel and Scorsese “were really paranoid” because there was some buzz around the Croisette around the film being too violent and perhaps needing an X rating. “We all did the press conference together, but then after the press conference, they all got too scared, and they wouldn’t leave their rooms at the Hotel du Cap,” Foster said. “So I ended up doing all the interviews in French for the entire team of ‘Taxi Driver’!”
She wouldn’t have chosen acting herself: “I would never have chosen to be an actor, I don’t have the personality of an actor. I’m not somebody that wants to dance on a table and, you know, sing songs for people,” she said. “It’s actually just a cruel job that was chosen for me as a young person that I don’t remember starting. So right there, it makes my work a little bit different because I am not interested in acting just for the sake of acting. If I was on a desert island, I think probably the last thing I would ever do is act. So I was just trying to survive.”
The last four films she made were directed by women: “I mean, really up until 15 years ago, when you look at the list for mainstream movies and you go down the director’s list, I never saw a female name,” she said, before highlighting the glass ceiling that female directors face when they’re courting bigger-budget movies. “If you’re making a movie that has a certain risk attached to it … they would say, ‘Wow, there’s no woman that’s directed a movie that cost $12 million,’” she pointed out. She said “the idea was not to give women these huge mega movies if they had not had any experience. How about giving women the experience first?”
Killers of the Flower Moon should have been a limited series: “What we had was a very interesting movie about two guys who go back and forth and they talk to each other. I think everybody was excited that the Native story was going to be told. And what they found was like, ‘Wow, all the Native women are dead,’” she continued. “What they said was, ‘Well, it’s a feature, we didn’t have time!’ But there was time. There was an eight-hour limited series that was not made, that could have been made, where if you really needed to explore all of that male toxic masculinity, you could have done that, but you could have had Episode 2 actually center the Native story.”
I’d actually call that a fair assessment of (just some of) the mistakes Scorsese made in adapting KOTFM. Jodie’s thoughts on not being an actorly type were similarly pretty blunt, though I think it’s a misconception that all actors are extroverts. (Michelle Williams, anyone? Merritt Wever? Cillian Murphy?) And in reading more of what she said at this event, it’s clear that Jodie is excited by her own profession. Otherwise, continuing with it her whole life would have been an extended exercise in torture, non? (Or perhaps nothing seems tortuous after a lion picks you up in his mouth on set as a kid…) But even back to the conversation about working with De Niro at 12, Jodie shared that he introduced her to improvisation and it blew her mind at the time: “I remember being kind of sweaty and excited and giggly and coming back up into the hotel room to meet my mom and say, ‘I’ve had this epiphany.’” And speaking of Taxi Driver, I simply ADORE her anecdote of handling all the Cannes press while the male adults cowered in their hotel rooms — in French no less. Vas-y ma belle!
Photos credit: Best Image/Backgrid, Romuald Meigneux/Starface Photo/Cover Images, Julie Edwards/Avalon

















I used to give Jodie hard side eye for spouting feminist ideals while never seeming never to lift a finger for her fellow women and working with severely problematic men (and I’m putting that lightly).
But, she was put in a fight-for-your life situation at a young age. I’m glad she’s out of the closet and speaking openly about her professional life. She’s giving fascinating interviews now, not the cagey protective stuff of all the years before. I’ll stamp National Treasure Years on this, wish her well and move on.
Love me some Jodie. Always have, always will.
If she wouldn’t have chosen being an actor, why didn’t she do something different when she became an adult? She went to college. She could have gone in another direction.
Because this is the insight you have in your sixties, having raised children of your own, not what you saw as possible when you were in your twenties. And she did move into directing fairly young.
As to Marty and Bobby and Harvey hiding out in their hôtel rooms in Cannes being “paranoid.” Let’s be honest, they were coked out of their minds. It was a cocaine binge that left Jodie doing all the press.
Let’s not be reductive and say a woman has to have raised children (let alone “children of your own”) to be able to reflect on their life choices and feel differently as 60 versus 20…
And let’s not be rude and demoralizing. This True has a point. I am older (61) and my perspective has changed drastically since I was 20. While I can concur that one need not have “children of their own,” (I have stepchildren), various life experiences change our perspective over time. Children are merely one of them.
I love her and have watched her seem more and more at home in her skin as the decades passed. Jodie Foster and I are the same age, speak French. In the mid-late 1970s, I recall seeing her being interviewed on French tv. My strong impression at the time was she wanted to appear older and more sophisticated than maybe she actually was. In other words, she was trying pretty hard to hit that nonchalant cool note. We’re all like that in our 20s but maybe she was awkwardly more try hard simply because of her job.
I love that she played an unapologetic lothario in Night Country as a woman in her 60s. You know who can still be sexy on our 60s? Women. And you don’t have to pull a Kris J either.
Jodie, no one is forcing you to continue acting.
I would say at 60 she is doing exactly what she wants to do. She’s directed a few movies, raised her sons, and is now openly gay, also something she couldn’t do 30 years ago. It’s a blunt assessment made from the rear view mirror. The woman you are at 23 versus the woman you are at 63 are vastly different and you realize that you had more choices than you knew.
If Jodie hadn’t chosen acting for herself, what would she have chosen? She spent four years at Yale; she could easily have found another passion. Other actors have left the business or moved behind the camera. There must be something about acting that she likes, since she continued her career after graduating.
She did move behind the camera. She did direct, and she raised her children.
Jodie being able to speak great French has been a thing forever in France. She’s still the first person mentioned when French people talk about foreign actors who speak French. Now Timmy C comes up a lot because he was born bilingual and Brad Coop is actually quite fluent but Jodie will always be the most mentioned.
She just did a really terrific long interview on France Culture (which I listen to in the car, to pretend I’m not stuck here with the impending fascism and all). My French is okay, but not fabulous, and I loved hearing her say that working in and even still, speaking French fills her with terror!
Add Emma Thompson. She did many french shows, some in a long format, such as Bouillon de culture with the late Bernard Pivot and was as quick witted as in her native English. Kristin Scott Thomas is bilingual and Viggo Mortensen speaks an impeccable french
And if we don’t restrict foreign actors to Anglo Americans, Diane Kruger or Victoria Abril are fluent. I would mention some of them before Foster.
Why is everyone so critical about what she said? She didn’t say she hated acting or wanted to stop acting. Just that she wouldn’t have chosen it way back when, because she isn’t the actor personality type.
Agreed. It’s like Brooke Shields that was put into playing hyper sexualized roles at a young age and went to Princeton. Good for them for getting an education. So they returned to acting. I see nothing wrong with what Jodie is saying.
They had the contacts and it’s what they knew. They probably had to process a lot of trauma too. It’s too easy to tell her she could have quit.
I remember seeing The Accused in the theater with my mom. I don’t know how well it’s aged but it really was a ground breaking film that changed the discourse about rape at that time
I’ve always loved her but come on. She lives a privileged life full of choice. As someone working my azz off, I get really annoyed. REALLY annoyed at people like this whining.
Multiple Thoughts: I have been a huge fan of Jodie Foster since I was a child (we are the same age) and pretty sure I first saw her in “Napoleon and Samantha.” (The lion incident.) So glad she is opening up now about her experiences.
Jodie was the breadwinner for her family. Her mom and Brooke Shields’ mom were notorious stage moms in the day, those two girls didn’t have a choice to do anything different. Acting is what she (and Brooke) know. Maybe she could have done something different, but it was what she understood. And as a commenter said, a survival instinct that none of us can understand. (I wonder if her and Brooke have ever chatted.) I have friends who are artists who always say facing a blank canvas — and finishing a piece — is torture, so there’s that, too.
She survived being a child star when many don’t.
I get a kick out of the 14- or 15-year-old Jodie facing the press. I also agree the DeNiro, Keitel and Scorcese paranoia was related to coke usage! (Though I can see them backing out just because most men hate confrontation.)
I’ve always loved her but come on. She lives a privileged life full of choice. As someone working my azz off, I get really annoyed. REALLY annoyed at people like this whining.
I have a lot of empathy for child performers: Beiber, Selena, Millie Bobby, etc, etc… those that actually make it through the other side are survivors that a lot of drug addicted or dead ones aren’t. Sure they had a “privileged” life but it came at the cost of their childhood, working adult hours and being the breadwinners of their families which no child should be expected to do. Calling that out and reflecting on it is healthy imo.
Jodie foster was working as a toddler. She was the family breadwinner as a child. I can’t imagine having adult responsibility, an adult job, and yet an adult who’s supposed to be protecting me actually seeing me as a meal ticket and an investment. Where was the choice in that?
Sure, she went to college, but college is 4 years–and then she had to deal with a crazy man trying to assassinate the president to get her attention! Who wouldn’t retreat to the little safety and security she knew under those circumstances? Calling Foster “people like this” is pretty damn dismissive. I would never call your hard work “whining” when I don’t know your struggles. Fame and success from a young age doesn’t mean freedom from struggles, and I highly doubt it even means riches. Foster made prestige projects, not blockbusters. I highly doubt she has Robert Downey Jr or George Clooney or even Julia Roberts money. Most actresses who make tons of money get it from fashion and beauty campaigns and Foster doesn’t do those. And since her teenage years (and imagine how TERRIFYING the John Hinkley Jr stuff had to be to a teenaged girl) she has likely had security costs up the wazoo. And she’s had to live in the closet for decades to protect her career. Calling Jodie Foster a whiner is a pretty uninformed take.
Perfect summary @Lanne I forgot about that Hinkley stuff. Crazy. Sure she “could have” done something else but she was Jodie Foster. She couldn’t have gone into law or another field with her name recognition at the time. And like you said she had prestige but not like today’s franchise money. Actually kudos to her for doing important projects and not money grabs
I really admire this woman. And I am sorry she feels that she was pushed into this job as I have enjoyed almost everything I have ever seen her in. I think Taxi Driver is an important film on so many levels. (and the fact that NYC is a huge character in the film is just a bonus, it shows a view of a city that is completely different than now) I have always found her inspirational, not afraid to be herself. Not bowing to pressure to look a certain way, share her personal life, etc.
I hope she knows how appreciated she is for her talent. Foxes helped me to be the one who took care of my friends instead of being the one who needed to be taken care of. Thanks Jodi.
My respec for her talent hasn’t wavered but in the last two decades she went from being cool and confident to bitter. She’s made several comments over the years about her distaste for the profession, going so far as to keep it a secret from her children. She essentially stopped acting at seventeen to attend Yale and could have pursued another career after graduation.