Robert Forster


Actor
Robert Forster

About

Also Known As
Robert Wallace Foster Jr.
Birth Place
Rochester, New York, USA
Born
July 13, 1941
Died
October 11, 2019

Biography

Film and television actor Robert Forster worked hard for decades, establishing a solid career. Everything changed, and Forster suddenly found himself even more famous and acclaimed, when director Quentin Tarantino cast him as a forlorn bail bondsman in "Jackie Brown" (1997), a role that boosted his career and earned him his first-ever Academy Award nomination. After "Jackie Brown," Forst...

Family & Companions

Marlene
Companion
Mother of Forster's son Robert; Forster told the <i>New York Times</i> in 1972 that he was not married to the mother of his son.
June Provenzano
Wife
Met in 1962 while attending the University of Rochester; married on May 14, 1966; divorced in 1975; mother of Elizabeth, Kathrine and Maeghen.
Zivia Foster
Wife
Married in 1978; divorced in 1980.
Dani Janssen
Companion
Widow of David Janssen; dating.

Notes

There was a European actor who took the name "Robert Forster" in tribute to the American actor.

"I always hoped that some kid who liked me when he was young was going to turn into a filmmaker and hire me. And that's what I kept saying to myself: Play for that kid." --Robert Forster quoted in Us, April 1998.

Biography

Film and television actor Robert Forster worked hard for decades, establishing a solid career. Everything changed, and Forster suddenly found himself even more famous and acclaimed, when director Quentin Tarantino cast him as a forlorn bail bondsman in "Jackie Brown" (1997), a role that boosted his career and earned him his first-ever Academy Award nomination. After "Jackie Brown," Forster appeared in numerous high-profile film and television projects like "Me, Myself & Irene" (2000) and "Heroes" (NBC, 2006-2010), proving that will and determination were equally as important to success as talent.

Born on July 13, 1941 in Rochester, NY, Forster was raised by his father, Robert, a former elephant trainer for Ringling Bros. who later worked as an executive for a baking supply company, and his mother, Grace. When he was young, his parents divorced, while his mother later committed suicide in 1966. After attending Heidelberg College in Tiffin, OH, he spent a year at Alfred University, after which he transferred to the University of Rochester, where he earned his bachelor's in psychology in 1964. During this time, Forster was performing on local stages and moved to New York City to pursue an acting career. He made his Broadway debut as the much younger paramour of Arlene Francis in "Mrs. Dally Has a Lover" (1965). Meanwhile, his performance as Stanley Kowalski in a stock production of "A Streetcar Named Desire" led to his feature debut in John Huston's "Reflections in a Golden Eye," playing a young officer who is caught between a repressed homosexual major (Marlon Brando) and his nymphomaniac wife (Elizabeth Taylor). While critics compared the young Forster to John Garfield and Jack Palance, he garnered more attention for his nude scenes.

He went on to co-star with Gregory Peck and Eva Marie Saint in the ponderous "The Stalking Moon" (1968) before receiving international attention for his starring turn as the detached cameraman in Haskell Wexler's arresting "Medium Cool," shot against the backdrop of the 1968 Democratic Convention, from which actual footage was used. His dark skin and ethnic look allowed him to branch out into other characters throughout his career, including playing an Arab in the period drama "Justine" (1969). Meanwhile, Forster continued to attract attention and controversy as a priest who falls in love in the maudlin "Pieces of Dreams" (1970). Following the lead role in "Cover Me Babe" (1970), an atrocious and amoral drama about obsession, he landed his first television starring role with "Banyon," a 1930s-set cop drama that followed the exploits of a tough, but honest private investigator in Los Angeles. Though the show was unceremoniously short-lived, Forster nonetheless bounced back with "Nakia," playing a Native American deputy in New Mexico who often finds his heritage at odds with the law he is supposed to uphold. Once again, however, the series was dropped from the schedule in short order.

As Forster continued to work, he found himself struggling more and more to establish himself as a star. He continued playing various tough guys, including an alleged Mafia snitch in "The Don Is Dead" (1973), an Eastwood-esque detective rooting out bad cops in "The Death Squad" (ABC, 1974) and a Los Angeles cop hunting down a psychotic country music fan with his partner (Don Johnson) in the police drama pilot "The City" (NBC, 1977). By this time, Forster's career was entering a downturn that would last for a long time. Over the course of the next two decades, he appeared in B-movies that barely saw the light of day, like "Stunts" (1977), in which he delivered a solid performance as an ace stuntman who investigates the suspicious death of his brother on a movie set. In "Standing Tall" (NBC, 1978), he was a Depression-era rancher of mixed Native American and Caucasian ethnicity who defends his land from a ruthless cattle baron (Chuck Connors). He next co-starred in "The Black Hole" (1979), a futuristic sci-fi adventure about a team of space travelers who examine a ship sitting on the edge of a spiraling black hole.

Following supporting turns in "The Darker Side of Terror" (CBS, 1979) and "The Lady in Red" (1980), Forster returned to hardboiled cop territory in the cult classic horror comedy, "Alligator" (1980), playing an everyman hero battling a giant reptile roaming the sewers in Chicago. But he continued his slide into mediocrity, thanks to films like "The Kinky Coaches and the Pom Pom Pussycats" (1981) and "Vigilante" (1983). In the latter film, he played a factory worker who joins a group of vigilantes on a vicious killing spree to clean up the streets after his wife and son are killed. After portraying a down-and-out cab driver who helps a woman exact revenge in "Walking the Edge" (1984), Forster produced, directed and starred as a poor man's Sam Spade in the detective spoof "Hollywood Harry" (1985), playing a shameless gumshoe who makes female clients pay for the privilege of sleeping with him while constantly drinking himself into a stupor. Using his ethnic looks to his advantage again, he was a militant Palestinian in "The Delta Force" (1986), which led to a voice role as a cartoon detective on "Once a Hero" (ABC, 1987), which lasted only three episodes.

Forster's career was on a serious slide by the end of the decade, which included redundant turns in cop thrillers like "Dead Bang" (1989) and "The Banker" (1989). In a rare turn as a villain, he was a hit man from another planet in the straight-to-video release "The Peacemaker" (1990). After playing a maniacal Middle Eastern dictator in the made-for-television movie "Counterforce" (1991), he played yet another detective in the Fred Williamson-produced, "South Beach" (1993). Following a turn alongside a host of blaxploitation stars, including Pam Grier, Ron O'Neal and Richard Roundtree, in "Original Gangstas" (1996), Forster's career was resurrected from the grave by Quentin Tarantino when he was cast in "Jackie Brown" (1997), the director's adaptation of Elmore Leonard's crime novel, Rum Punch. As a down-on-his-luck bail bondsman who falls for a flight attendant (Grier) caught up in a money smuggling scam, Forster exuded a soft romantic side underneath a weariness brought on by a lifetime of longing and regret. Forster was the heart and soul of the movie and for his efforts, earned an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor - the first of his long career.

The plump role and ensuing Academy Award nod pumped fresh blood into his career, which he parlayed into dozens of new roles in subsequent years. He appeared in two Hitchcock remakes, starring alongside Christopher Reeve as his detective pal in the television version of "Rear Window" (ABC, 1998), which he followed with a cameo as Norman Bates' psychotherapist in Gus van Sandt's unnecessary shot-for-shot regurgitation of "Psycho" (1998). The actor was characteristically low-key, but always dazzling in a slate of indie films, including "Outside Ozona" (1998) and "Diamond Men" (2000), in which he delivered a highly praised turn as a jewelry salesman who must mentor a young replacement (Donnie Wahlberg) when his company downsizes. He also made memorable supporting turns in diverse films such as the Jim Carrey/Farrelly Brothers comedy "Me, Myself & Irene" (2000), director David Lynch's hypnotic drama "Mulholland Drive" (2001), the kid-skewing basketball comedy "Like Mike" (2002), and the high-octane action sequel, "Charlie's Angels 2: Full Throttle" (2003).

On television, Forster had notable turns in small screen movies including "Like Mother, Like Son: The Strange Story of Sante and Kenny Kimes" (CBS, 2001), playing patriarch Ken 'Pappa' Kimes opposite Mary Tyler Moore and Gabriel Olds as the real-life mother-son murderers. He also portrayed Steve Carroll in the television adaptation of former detective Mark Fuhrman's book "Murder in Greenwich" (2002), the story of the long unsolved 1970s-era murder of 15-year-old Martha Moxley. Returning to series television, Forster was particularly winning and showed tremendous paternal chemistry with co-star Carla Gugino when he played Marshall Sisco, the private investigator father of federal marshal "Karen Sisco" (ABC, 2003-04), a series adaptation of the Elmore Leonard characters first depicted on the big screen in "Out of Sight" (1998). Though a promising role for Forster, the series was canceled after its first season. Meanwhile, he continued to work steadily, turning in several episodes of "Huff" (Showtime, 2004-06), while appearing in high-profile features like "Firewall" (2006), "Lucky Number Slevin" (2006) and "Cleaner" (2007). He also landed the recurring role of Arthur Petrelli, grandfather of regenerating cheerleader Clair (Hayden Panettiere), during the third season of "Heroes" (NBC, 2006-2010). Back on the big screen, he ventured into romantic comedy territory playing a cop in "Ghosts of Girlfriends Past" (2009) and starred opposite Luke Wilson in the crime comedy "Middle Men" (2010). In Alexander Payne's acclaimed comedy-drama, "The Descendents" (2011), Forster portrayed the mean-spirited father-in-law of a wealthy man (George Clooney) who goes in search of his wife's lover in Hawaii after she lapses into a coma.

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

Hollywood Harry (1986)
Director

Cast (Feature Film)

What They Had (2018)
Damsel (2018)
Bigger (2018)
The Philosophy of Phil (2017)
Small Town Crime (2017)
Small Crimes (2017)
The Case for Christ (2017)
London Has Fallen (2016)
The Confirmation (2016)
Too Late (2015)
Survivor (2015)
Automata (2014)
Olympus Has Fallen (2013)
Somewhere Slow (2013)
Hotel Noir (2012)
Girl Walks Into a Bar (2011)
The Descendants (2011)
Kalamity (2010)
Middle Men (2010)
American Grindhouse (2010)
Narrator
The Trial (2010)
Ghosts of Girlfriends Past (2009)
The Code (2009)
Touching Home (2008)
Mala Wielka Milosc (2008)
Jack and Jill vs. the World (2008)
Rise: Blood Hunter (2007)
Dragon Wars (2007)
Cleaner (2007)
Lucky Number Slevin (2006)
Firewall (2006)
The Hunt for the BTK Killer (2005)
Grand Theft Parsons (2004)
Stanley Parsons
Night Vision (2004)
Teak Taylor
Undefeated (2003)
Confidence (2003)
Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (2003)
Like Mike (2002)
Due East (2002)
Jesse Rapple
Dominick Dunne Presents: Murder in Greenwich (2002)
Mulholland Dr. (2001)
Detective McKnight
Like Mother, Like Son: The Strange Story of Sante and Kenny Kimes (2001)
Ken "Papa" Kimes
Human Nature (2001)
Nathan'S Father
Look out Haskell, It's Real! The Making of 'Medium Cool' (2001)
Himself
Diamond Men (2000)
Eddie Miller
Lakeboat (2000)
Supernova (2000)
Me, Myself and Irene (2000)
Family Tree (2000)
The Magic of Marciano (2000)
Demolition University (1999)
Gentry
Outside Ozona (1998)
Odell Parks
Psycho (1998)
Uncle Sam (1998)
Rear Window (1998)
American Perfekt (1997)
Doctor Jake Gordon Nyman
Jackie Brown (1997)
The Method (1996)
Original Gangstas (1996)
Scanners: The Showdown (1995)
Body Chemistry 3 (1994)
Cover Story (1994)
American Yakuza (1994)
Sex, Love and Cold Hard Cash (1993)
South Beach (1993)
In the Shadow of a Killer (1992)
Diplomatic Immunity (1991)
Committed (1991)
Doctor Desmond Moore
29th Street (1991)
Satan's Princess (1990)
Peacemaker (1990)
Yates
The Banker (1989)
Sergeant Dan Jefferson
Tank Malling (1989)
Esmeralda Bay (1988)
Hollywood Harry (1986)
The Delta Force (1986)
Abdul
Walking the Edge (1985)
Jason Walk
Vigilante (1983)
Eddie Marino
The Kinky Coaches and the Pom-Pom Pussycats (1981)
Arnoldi
Alligator (1980)
The Black Hole (1979)
Darker Side Of Terror (1979)
Avalanche (1978)
Standing Tall (1978)
The City (1977)
Lieutenant Matt Lewis
Stunts (Do Not Use) (1977)
Glen Wilson
Stunts (1977)
Glen Wilson
Nakia (1974)
The Death Squad (1974)
Eric Benoit
The Don Is Dead (1973)
Journey Through Rosebud (1972)
Frank
Banyon (1971)
Myles C Banyon
Cover Me Babe (1970)
Tony
Pieces of Dreams (1970)
Gregory Lind
Medium Cool (1969)
John Cassellis
Justine (1969)
Narouz
The Stalking Moon (1968)
Nick Tana
Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967)
Private Williams

Producer (Feature Film)

Diamond Men (2000)
Executive Producer
Hollywood Harry (1986)
Producer

Film Production - Main (Feature Film)

Demolition University (1999)
Swing Gang

Misc. Crew (Feature Film)

Look out Haskell, It's Real! The Making of 'Medium Cool' (2001)
Other
The Lady in Red (1979)
Other

Cast (Special)

The Envelope Please (1998)
Interviewee
Checkered Flag (1990)
Royce (1976)
Higher and Higher, Attorneys at Law (1968)
Doug Payson

Cast (TV Mini-Series)

The Grid (2004)
Kiss Toledo Goodbye (2000)
It's The Rage (2000)
Counterforce (1991)
Dictator
Goliath Awaits (1981)

Life Events

1965

Made Broadway debut as Frankie in "Mrs. Dally Has a Lover" opposite Arlene Francis

1967

Made feature debut playing Private Williams in John Huston's "Reflections in a Golden Eye"

1967

Played Stanley Kowalski in a stock production of "A Streetcar Named Desire" co-starring Julie Harris

1968

Co-starred with Gregory Peck and Eva Marie Saint as Indian scout Nick Tana in "The Stalking Moon"

1969

Starred in the critically acclaimed semi-documentary "Medium Cool"; his full-frontal nude love scene with Verna Bloom earned the film an X rating

1971

TV-movie debut in the title role of "Banyon" (NBC)

1972

Reprised part as Miles C Banyon for short-lived NBC series "Banyon"

1973

Played Stanley Kowalski in a Broadway revival of "A Streetcar Named Desire"

1974

Starred in the title role of the ABC movie "Nakia" and its short-lived series spin-off

1978

Portrayed a small-time half-breed cattle rancher in the NBC TV-movie "Standing Tall"

1979

Made uncredited appearance in key supporting role in Lewis Teague's "The Lady in Red"; scripted by John Sayles

1980

Reteamed with Teague for "Alligator"; also scripted by Sayles

1982

Starred opposite Fred Williamson in "Vigilante"

1985

Starred (also produced and directed) in the detective spoof "Hollywood Harry"

1986

Portrayed militant fanatic Abdul in "The Delta Force"

1987

Was a regular in the short-lived ABC series "Once a Hero"

1990

Played an extraterrestrial cop in "Peacemeaker"

1991

Portrayed maniacal Middle Eastern dictator in syndicated TV-movie "Counterforce"

1993

Acted with Williamson (also film's producer) in "South Beach"

1996

Did another turn in a Williamson-produced film as Detective Slatter in "Original Gangstas"

1997

Portrayed Max Cherry in Quentin Tarantino's "Jackie Brown"; received Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actor

1998

Acted in the Gus Van Sant color remake of "Psycho"

2000

Co-starred in "Supernova"

2000

Appeared in the Farrelly brothers comedy "Me Myself & Irene"

2001

Starred in and produced "Diamond Men"

2001

Had co-starring role in "Lakeboat"

2001

Starred as Detective Harry McKnight in David Lynch's "Mulholland Dr."

2002

Appeared in the TV-movie "Murder in Greenwich," about Martha Moxley's unsolved murder

2003

Cast as Marshall Sisco in the ABC drama "Karen Sisco"

2004

Had a recurring role in the Showtime series, "Huff"

2004

Cast in the low-budget comedy "Grand Theft Parsons"

2007

Co-starred in the Korean CGI dragon fantasy "Dragon Wars"

2008

Cast as Arthur Petrelli in the third season of the NBC show "Heroes"

2009

Appeared in the romantic comedy "Ghosts of Girlfriends Past"

2010

Cast opposite Luke Wilson in the crime film "Middle Men"

2011

Appeared in the acclaimed film "The Descendants"

2013

Appeared in the action film "Olympus Has Fallen"

2015

Co-starred in the action thriller "Survivor"

2016

Joined the cast of the comedy "The Confirmation"

2017

Took the place of Michael Ontkean's Sheriff Harry S. Truman on season 3 of David Lynch's "Twin Peaks," playing Harry's brother, Sheriff Frank Truman

2018

Played a supporting role in the drama "What They Had"

Photo Collections

The Black Hole - Movie Posters
Here are two different one-sheet movie posters for Disney's science-fiction adventure The Black Hole (1979). One-sheets measured 27x41 inches, and were the poster style most commonly used in theaters.

Videos

Movie Clip

Black Hole, The (1979) -- (Movie Clip) Opening, Unscheduled Course Correction Music by John Barry and the voices of Roddy McDowall (as V.I.N.CENT the robot), Anthony Perkins (Dr. Durant) and Robert Forster(Capt. Holland) open Disney's 1979 sci-fi adventure The Black Hole.
Black Hole, The (1979) -- (Movie Clip) I'm A Little Concerned The crew (Robert Forster, Anthony Perkins, Yvette Mimieux, Ernest Borgnine) comes upon the legendary Dr. Reinhardt (Maximilian Schell) who's apparently named his own robot in The Black Hole, 1979.
Medium Cool (1969) -- (Movie Clip) Better Call An Ambulance Little explanation, only Robert Forster on camera and Peter Bonerz sound, on a Chicago highway, recording an accident, before they call for help, which arguably is the main issue posed by the first and only feature film by renowned cinematographer Haskell Wexler, opening Medium Cool, 1969.
Medium Cool (1969) -- (Movie Clip) You Are The Exploiters Interviews interjected with Chicagoans selected by the director, cinematographer Haskell Wexler, as citizens who insisted on being interviewed by cameraman John (Robert Forster), whose next shoot, with sound man Peter Bonerz, features Peter Boyle as a gun salesman, in Medium Cool, 1969.
Medium Cool (1969) -- (Movie Clip) Peace Now! Director and cinematographer Haskell Wexler now directly imposing his story on real events, finds his main character John (Robert Forster) covering the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago, then his friend Eileen (Verna Bloom), whose son has gone missing, among the protesters milling outside, in Medium Cool, 1969.
Medium Cool (1969) -- (Movie Clip) I'm The Enemy Minutes into the picture, Robert Forster as news cameraman John, in cocktail conversation with friends and associates of the director, cinematographer Haskell Wexler, then working with sound man Peter Bonerz covering an Illinois National Guard riot rehearsal, in Medium Cool, 1969.
Stunts (1977) -- (Movie Clip) I Thought She'd Love It The FX man and director (Richard Lynch, Malachi Throne) set up stunt man Glen (Robert Forster) for the next shot, whereupon he picks up adversarial journalist B.J. (Fiona Lewis), who doesn’t know cameras are rolling, in Stunts, 1977, from New LIne Cinema and director Mark L. Lester.
Reflections In A Golden Eye (1967) -- (Movie Clip) There Is A Fort In The South Quoting from the novelist and establishing the extraordinary visual treatment, the introduction of Williams (Robert Forster) and Major Penderton (Marlon Brando), in one of director John Huston's personal favorites, Reflections In A Golden Eye, 1967, also starring Elizabeth Taylor.
Reflections In A Golden Eye (1967) -- (Movie Clip) Firebird Is A Stallion Leonora (Elizabeth Taylor) home from a ride, really a tryst, finds Williams (Robert Forster) doing yard work, and upsetting her arriving husband Major Penderton (Marlon Brando), their tension clear in their first scene together, in John Huston's sepia-toned Reflections In A Golden Eye, 1967.
Vigilante (1983) -- (Movie Clip) I've Had It Up To Here Leave it to Fred Williamson (second-billed, as citizen “Nick”) and director Bill Lustig, the bracing opening of the 1983 low-budget revenge drama Vigilante, co-starring Robert Forster, in the role that inspired Quentin Tarantino to cast Forster in Jackie Brown, 1997.
Vigilante (1983) -- (Movie Clip) You Punks Make Me Sick! Brooklyn mom Vickie (Rutanya Alda) intervenes as Rico (Willie Colon) and his gang bash a gas station owner, while her husband Eddie (Robert Forster) hits a bar with his buddies (Fred Williamson, Joseph Carberry, Richard Bright), whom we know run a citizen’s vengeance gang, in Vigilante, 1983.
Vigilante (1983) -- (Movie Clip) People Trying To Help Each Other Unaware that his wife has been badly hurt and his son killed in a home invasion, Brooklyn mechanic Eddie (Robert Forster) asks associates (Joseph Carberry, Fred Williamson and Richard Bright as Burke) about why a cop questioned them earlier about an unexplained assault, in Vigilante, 1983.

Trailer

Family

Robert Wallace Foster
Father
Executive, former animal trainer. Worked as elephant trainer with Ringling Bros. before working as an executive for a baking supply company; divorced from Forster's mother c. 1949.
Grace Dorothy Foster
Mother
Divorced from Forster's father c. 1949; committed suicide in 1966.
Robert Foster
Son
Born c. 1965; mother identified only as Marlene.
Elizabeth Foster
Daughter
Born in 1967.
Kate Forster
Daughter
Actor, producer. Born October 1969; played father's niece in "Hollywood Harry" (1985).
Maeghen Foster
Daughter
Born in 1972.

Companions

Marlene
Companion
Mother of Forster's son Robert; Forster told the <i>New York Times</i> in 1972 that he was not married to the mother of his son.
June Provenzano
Wife
Met in 1962 while attending the University of Rochester; married on May 14, 1966; divorced in 1975; mother of Elizabeth, Kathrine and Maeghen.
Zivia Foster
Wife
Married in 1978; divorced in 1980.
Dani Janssen
Companion
Widow of David Janssen; dating.

Bibliography

Notes

There was a European actor who took the name "Robert Forster" in tribute to the American actor.

"I always hoped that some kid who liked me when he was young was going to turn into a filmmaker and hire me. And that's what I kept saying to myself: Play for that kid." --Robert Forster quoted in Us, April 1998.