‘I felt like a bad actor because I couldn’t make that character more likable,’ said the Oscar-winner.
Jodie Foster has opened up about the difficulties she faced while making the 1988 drama The Accused.
Speaking to Marc Maron on the WTF podcast, Foster said: “I don’t have any objectivity about that performance. I felt like a little bit of a failure when I made The Accused, because there were things that the producer and director were trying to encourage me to do differently, and I couldn’t.
Foster describes working with producer Stanley Jaffe, whom she said she “really liked”.
“He exerted a lot of power on the set and he was there every day, and he had a lot of opinions about everything from how mini my miniskirt should be to how I should smoke,” she said. “I was a smoker at the time, and he was not happy with how I smoked [on-camera].
“There was a lot of intervening at the time, because people were worried. They were worried that [the character was] ‘too tough’, or ‘unlikable’. Granted, there was a part of me that worried about that too but I couldn’t do anything any differently.”
Foster, who would also win an Oscar for her leading role in Jonathan Demme’s The Silence of the Lambs, said that she “felt like a bad actor” when she finished production on The Accused, “because I couldn’t make that character more likable for them”.
“[The producers] were worried the character would be offensive to people, and I internalised that.”