ZOOMER Magazine

BACK ON THE BEAT

Jodie Foster embraces her 60s – and a new season of True Detective – with aplomb

- By Radheyan Simonpilla­i

JODIE FOSTER is positively glowing and she’s blaming it on her age. “It is amazing how content I am,” says the Oscar-winning actor and director, who turned 61 in November. “Maybe it’s like a chemical thing that happens when you turn 60. You have a hormone that goes through your body, where suddenly there’s a contentedn­ess and satisfacti­on.”

Foster has been racking up nomination­s for her supporting role opposite Annette Bening in the Netflix drama Nyad, about the American athlete who came out of retirement in her 60s to swim from Cuba to Florida. Now, in the latest season of HBO’s

True Detective, she can be spotted up in the Arctic with boxer-turned-actor Kali Reis, as they play Alaskan cops who investigat­e the murder of eight scientists found buried in ice.

We’re seeing a lot more of Foster after a decade where she popped up sporadical­ly to direct TV episodes

(House of Cards, Black Mirror) and one feature (Money Monster), and starred in the odd movie, like the underrated thriller Hotel Artemis.

She describes that mid-life period as a struggle to live up to her potential while facing the ageist baggage that so often weighs women down. “The 50s were tough,” says Foster on a Zoom video call with a group of journalist­s.

“There was a lot of self-hatred. You’re competing against your old self. I turned 60 and that all changed. The pressure is off. You’re able to say, ‘This is not my time. I had my time.’”

Foster is in a Los Angeles hotel, where her gunmetal blouse and blond streaks complement the room’s gold-and-grey colour scheme. She speaks warmly about an onscreen career that began at age three with a Coppertone baby ad, and includes her breakout role, at 12, opposite Robert De Niro in an Oscarnomin­ated performanc­e as the vulnerable but spirited teenage sex worker Iris, in 1976’s Taxi Driver.

Foster went on to win two Best Actress Oscars before 30: the first for her heartbreak­ing performanc­e as a rape victim fighting for justice in 1988’s The Accused, and the second for 1991’s The Silence

of the Lambs, where Foster played Clarice Starling, an FBI trainee who goes toe-totoe with Hannibal Lecter, a serial killer played by Anthony Hopkins.

While there have been few acting opportunit­ies that could match the staying power of Starling, Foster never settled for passive roles regularly thrown at

women. “I didn’t really make a career playing the mother of, the sister of, the girlfriend of,” she says, laying out intentiona­l choices such as the cunning power broker in Inside

Man, a fiercely protective mother in Panic Room and a vigilante avenging her murdered boyfriend in The

Brave One. True Detective: Night Country

marks the first time Foster has played a detective since Starling, but she points out the chilling franchise’s first season was inspired by the 1995 film, Seven, which, in turn, was inspired by her Oscar-winning movie. “Silence of the Lambs,” she says, “is the great-great-grandfathe­r of this show.”

The Silence of the Lambs and True Detective share genre mechanics and gothic horror accents, but there is also a telling gulf. The film was revolution­ary because it inhabited a female consciousn­ess within a very masculine-coded genre. True Detective, one of prestige TV’s first anthology series, with its mostly bro-y pairings and voyeuristi­c approach to violence against women, has been largely expressed through the Y chromosome.

Foster’s presence, alongside Reis – and aided by this season’s showrunner, Issa López – is significan­tly changing that purview. In the new season, Foster’s Liz Danvers is trying to solve a case playing out amid the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women epidemic. Much like Starling, Danvers is moving through a toxic and violent world shaped by men, only she’s doing it in a more calcified and destructiv­e way.

Foster speaks contentedl­y about her victory lap. “Having the two female detectives who are complicate­d, whose internal spiritual messiness reflects a lot of the place, was such an opportunit­y to take the franchise and bring that to women’s lives. I don’t know why they didn’t think about that before in

True Detective.”

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