‘My mom, from the time I was little, told me my career would be over by 40. So what do you do after that?’
For Jodie Foster, the answer was to just ‘keep going’. 58 years into her career, she’s currently enjoying a moment only a very exclusive club of actors will ever experience, starring in the first must-see television drama of 2024 in True Detective: Night Country while also eyeing up her third Oscar for Netflix biopic Nyad.
All in all, it’s an excellent time to be Jodie Foster but still it’s clear she doesn’t take anything for granted.
When we meet, Jodie is right in the deep end of promoting the HBO and NOW thriller, the fourth instalment in the traditionally testosterone-driven True Detective franchise in which she stars as racist, selfish and horny Chief Liz Danvers.
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‘She’s so awful,’ Josie laughs – and she means it. Danvers is anything but likeable. She wasn’t intended to be quite so unpleasant though, until Foster got her hands on the script – which was written for her in mind. Danvers was in part a creation inspired by Foster’s Silence of The Lambs FBI agent Clarice Starling.
‘I said, “I can’t play this character.” She was written for somebody who’s probably 42 and had just lost a child. She was quite soft in some ways, not able to cope or keep her emotions in check. And I said, “No, I don’t want to play that.”
Jodie Foster on why she ‘couldn’t play’ True Detective character and changes she made