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Jodie
Foster
1962-
B.A.
1984
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Her debut before the
camera involved partial nudity. At the age of 3, Jodie Foster posed as the bare-bottomed
Coppertone child in the widely circulated suntan lotion ad. After work in commercials,
tlevision, and film, a brief part in Martin Scorsese's Alice Doesn't Live
Here Anymore (1974) led to her main chance: the director cast her as Iris,
the 12-year-old prostitute, in Taxi Driver.
She called the
role her professional turning point. "It was the first time anyone asked me
to create a character that wasn't myself. It was the first time I realized
that acting wasn't this hobby you just sort of did, but that there was actually
some craft."
Foster has hewn
to this unorthodox path, winning Oscars in films that address unpleasant social
issues (The Accused, about a rape victim, in 1988 and The Silence
of the Lambs, a 1991 film opposite Anthony Hopkins in the role of a psychopath).
Directing has been another activity, starting with the story of a child prodigy,
Little Man Tate.
