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Buddy Foster

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Lucius Fisher "Buddy" Foster IV (born July 12, 1957) is an American former child actor. He is the older brother of actress and director Jodie Foster. Beginning his career at the age of eight, he had television roles from the late 1960s through the early 1970s, most notably Mayberry R.F.D. (1968–1971).

Key Information

Early life

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Lucius Fisher Foster IV was born in Los Angeles, California, on July 12, 1957,[1] the son of Evelyn (née Almond) and Lucius Fisher Foster III.[2] He has two older sisters and one younger sister, actress Jodie Foster. His parents divorced in the early 1960s, and his mother obtained a job in the entertainment industry to support her children.[3]

Career

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In the early 1960s, Evelyn Almond Foster[4][5] began managing the career of her son Buddy Foster.[6][7][8]

"Buddy, the first to start acting, lost a Coppertone commercial when 4-year-old Jodie charmed the casting director and got the job."[9]

As a child actor, Foster appeared in a regular role on the 1967 TV western Hondo and Mayberry, R.F.D. (1968–1971), as well as appearing guest roles on numerous other television series throughout the late 1960s and 1970s including Land of the Giants, and The Six Million Dollar Man. He appeared on the Dragnet TV series in the 1969 episode "Burglary Auto: Juvenile Genius" as James "Watermelon" Chambers.

In 1967, Foster appeared on Petticoat Junction in the episode "Temperance, Temperance", as Clint Priddy. He voiced the little boy in the famous 1969 Tootsie Pop commercial Mr. Owl "How Many Licks Does It Take?", often miscredited to fellow child actor Peter Robbins.[a] He made his final screen appearance with a small role in the film Foxes (1980) starring his sister Jodie Foster.

In 1997, Foster released the book Foster Child, in which he chronicled his childhood.[10][11] The book saw Foster allege that Jodie was a lesbian or bisexual, many years before she came out, and claim that their mother had once had a same-sex relationship.[12] Jodie called the book a "cheap cry for attention and money, filled with hazy recollections, fantasies, and borrowed press releases [...] Buddy has done nothing but break our mother's heart his whole life".[13]

In October 1997, Foster owned a construction company in Duluth, Minnesota, where he lived with his second wife.[14][15]

Footnotes

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References

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from Grokipedia
Lucius Fisher "Buddy" Foster IV (born July 12, 1957) is an American former child actor best known for his role as Mike Jones, the son of widower Sam Jones, on the CBS sitcom Mayberry R.F.D. from 1968 to 1971.[1][2] Beginning his professional acting career at age eight, Foster appeared in guest roles on shows such as The Andy Griffith Show, Hondo, and The Six Million Dollar Man, often portraying young boys in family-oriented narratives.[1][2] As the older brother of Academy Award-winning actress and director Jodie Foster, he became the primary financial supporter of their family during his childhood, with earnings from acting funding household needs under the management of their mother, Evelyn "Brandy" Almond.[3][4] Foster's post-acting life included personal struggles, notably a suicide attempt in 1988 amid revelations of familial dysfunction.[5] In his 1997 memoir Foster Child: An Autobiography, he described an abusive home environment dominated by his mother's exploitation of the children's talents for monetary gain, including physical punishments and emotional manipulation, which contrasted sharply with the wholesome images projected in his television work.[6][7] These accounts, drawn from his firsthand experiences, highlighted the causal pressures of early fame and parental opportunism in Hollywood's child acting scene, retiring from performance by 1980 to pursue other endeavors.[1][8]

Early life

Birth and family background

Lucius Fisher Foster IV, known professionally as Buddy Foster, was born on July 12, 1957, in Los Angeles, California.[9][10] He was the third of four children born to Lucius Fisher Foster III, a U.S. Air Force lieutenant colonel (1922–2016), and Evelyn Ella "Brandy" Almond (1928–2019), a former singer, publicist, and talent manager who raised the children as a single mother after divorcing their father.[11][12][13] Almond had two children out of wedlock prior to her marriage to Foster III—eldest daughter Lucinda "Cindy" Foster and second daughter Constance "Connie" Foster—before giving birth to Buddy and youngest daughter Alicia Christian "Jodie" Foster (born November 19, 1962).[14][11] The parents' marriage ended in divorce shortly after Jodie's birth, with Almond assuming primary custody and later guiding her younger children's entry into the entertainment industry to support the family financially.[12][15] Foster III remained largely estranged from the family thereafter, living modestly until his death.[15]

Entry into entertainment industry

Buddy Foster, born Lucius Fisher Foster IV on July 12, 1957, entered the entertainment industry as a child actor managed by his mother, Evelyn "Brandy" Foster, a former model who actively sought opportunities for her children in Hollywood.[9] His professional debut occurred in 1967 at age 10, with a recurring role as Johnny Dow, the son of the widowed protagonist, in the ABC Western television series Hondo, which aired 17 episodes from September to December that year.[16] That same year, Foster appeared in a guest role on the CBS sitcom Green Acres, marking his initial forays into both dramatic and comedic television formats.[1] Brandy Foster's strategy involved taking Buddy to auditions, during which his younger sister Jodie accompanied him and inadvertently launched her own career by securing a Coppertone sunscreen commercial that Buddy had auditioned for but lost.[17] This familial dynamic positioned Buddy as the first Foster sibling to pursue acting professionally, though Jodie's rapid success soon overshadowed his early efforts.[18] Foster's entry relied on these modest television credits, establishing a foundation for subsequent regular roles without prior film work or commercials credited to him at that stage.[1]

Acting career

Television roles (1960s–1970s)

Buddy Foster began his television career as a child actor in the mid-1960s, securing guest spots on shows such as Green Acres, where he appeared in episodes "Culture" (1966) and "The Saucer Season" (1967).[19] He also featured in Petticoat Junction in 1967.[19] In 1967, Foster landed a co-starring role as Johnny Dow, the young son of the titular character, in the Western series Hondo, which aired for one season on ABC.[16] This marked one of his earliest regular television parts, appearing in multiple episodes alongside Ralph Taeger.[1] Foster's most prominent television role came in 1968 when he was cast as Mike Jones, the son of widower farmer Sam Jones (played by Ken Berry), first introduced in the final season of The Andy Griffith Show.[20] The character transitioned into the spin-off series Mayberry R.F.D., where Foster portrayed Mike regularly from 1968 to 1971 across 78 episodes, contributing to the show's depiction of small-town life in rural America.[21] Throughout the 1970s, Foster continued with guest appearances on various series, including Emergency! (1972), Alias Smith and Jones (1972), and The Six Million Dollar Man (1974) as Wolf Boy.[22] These roles showcased his versatility in both dramatic and action-oriented formats before he largely retired from acting by the early 1980s.[1]

Film appearances and transition out of acting

Foster's film appearances were limited compared to his television work, spanning Westerns, comedies, and dramas primarily during his childhood and adolescence. He debuted on screen in the Western television movie Hondo and the Apaches (1967), portraying Johnny Shag alongside Ralph Taeger. This was followed by a supporting role in the theatrical comedy Angel in My Pocket (1969), directed by George Seaton, where he appeared as a child character in a story set in a small town, co-starring Andy Griffith. In 1970, he took the lead role of Little Buck Sorrell in the Walt Disney adventure film Menace on the Mountain, a period drama about moonshiners in the Appalachians during World War I. Later credits included the role of Marv in the coming-of-age drama Sixteen (1973) and a brief appearance as the boy in the car in the teen film Foxes (1980), which featured his sister Jodie Foster in the lead.[23] Following Foxes, Foster's final credited screen role, he ceased pursuing acting professionally in the early 1980s. This transition coincided with difficulties in securing substantial adult roles after his child stardom, a common challenge for former young performers as they aged out of juvenile parts. Personal struggles, including substance abuse and family tensions detailed in his later memoir, further contributed to his departure from the industry, redirecting his focus toward recovery and non-entertainment pursuits.[5] By the mid-1990s, he had pivoted to authorship, publishing Foster Child: The Story of a Family in 1997, which reflected on his acting experiences without resuming on-camera work.[24]

Personal life

Marriage and family

Buddy Foster is married to Leah Foster, with whom he has two children.[1][25] In 1997, he resided in Duluth, Minnesota, where he owned a construction company and lived with his wife and children; contemporary reports described this marriage as his second, though one account referred to it as his third.[7][5]

Addiction, mental health struggles, and recovery

Following the decline of his acting career in his late teens, Foster dropped out of school and turned to drug use, developing an addiction that exacerbated his personal difficulties.[5] [26] In 1988, amid ongoing mental health struggles tied to family dynamics and career setbacks—including his mother's alleged mismanagement of approximately $400,000 in earnings from his child acting roles—Foster attempted suicide by shooting himself.[5] Foster achieved sobriety by the mid-1990s, as detailed in his 1997 memoir Foster Child, where he described his path to recovery; by that time, he was drug-free, employed as a construction worker in Minnesota, and on his third marriage.[5] [26]

Authorship

Writing "Foster Child"

Buddy Foster co-authored the biography Foster Child: A Biography of Jodie Foster with Leon Wagener, a writer known for previous works including biographies of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, which was published by Dutton on May 1, 1997 (ISBN 978-0525941439).[27][28] At age 39, Foster, then working as a construction worker in Minnesota after overcoming drug addiction and a 1988 suicide attempt, contributed firsthand accounts from his perspective as Jodie's older brother and fellow child performer.[5] The collaboration with Wagener facilitated a structured narrative blending Foster's personal recollections with biographical detail, focusing on the siblings' shared experiences in a divorced Hollywood family.[5] Foster's motivation centered on documenting his survival and redemption amid familial dysfunction, framing the book as an insider's chronicle rather than sensationalism, though it drew from his limited prior writing experience.[5] The 352-page hardcover edition emphasized respect for Jodie despite revelations, positioning it as Foster's bid for personal closure and public recognition of his own trajectory.[29][5] A paperback reprint followed in 1998 by Signet (ISBN 978-0451195616), extending the book's reach, though initial reception highlighted its raw, memoir-like quality over polished biography.[30] Foster has not published subsequent major works, marking Foster Child as his primary literary contribution.[6]

Revelations about family dynamics

In Foster Child (1997), Buddy Foster depicted the Foster family as operating under the iron-fisted control of their mother, Evelyn "Brandy" Foster, a former actress who managed the professional lives of all four children while their father remained largely absent after divorcing Brandy in 1956. Foster alleged that Brandy's domineering approach fostered resentment and emotional neglect, with her verbal abusiveness and single-minded focus on securing acting roles for financial stability creating a high-pressure environment that prioritized career advancement over familial bonds.[18][31] He claimed Brandy relied heavily on an unmarried female companion, known as "Aunt Jo," to help raise the children, effectively forming a non-traditional household dynamic that blurred typical parental roles and contributed to interpersonal tensions.[32][7] Foster further revealed strained sibling relations, asserting that Jodie's rising stardom came at the expense of his own opportunities, as Brandy allegedly funneled resources and attention toward her youngest daughter while sidelining the others, exacerbating feelings of competition and inequity within the family.[18] He recounted a specific anecdote from Brandy about Jodie's 1962 conception, stating that it occurred during a visit to their estranged father to "beg" for child support money, which he portrayed as emblematic of the transactional and opportunistic undertones in family decision-making.[5] These accounts painted a picture of a household driven by survivalist ambition rather than nurturing stability, with Foster attributing his later personal struggles partly to this upbringing.[5][7]

Controversies and legacy

Family estrangement

Buddy Foster's relationship with his sister Jodie Foster deteriorated significantly after he began promoting a tell-all biography about her in the mid-1990s, culminating in the 1997 publication of Foster Child: An Informal Biography of Jodie Foster. In the book, Foster alleged that their mother, Evelyn "Brandy" Foster, subjected the family to emotional and physical abuse, including pitting siblings against each other and prioritizing Jodie's career at the expense of the others' well-being; he portrayed their upbringing as marked by manipulation, neglect, and a toxic Hollywood environment that exacerbated mental health issues.[5][33] Jodie Foster responded vehemently to the book's claims, issuing a rare public statement denouncing it as "inaccurate" and characterizing her brother's actions as driven by unresolved personal failures rather than truth-seeking.[33] She emphasized that the narrative distorted family history and invaded privacy, leading to a complete severance of contact between the siblings. This rift was foreshadowed by earlier tensions, as Buddy had been shopping a book proposal as early as 1995, which already detailed parental shortcomings and sibling inequities.[18] The estrangement extended beyond Jodie to include their mother, from whom Buddy became alienated prior to her death in 2014; he has described ongoing family fragmentation, including limited ties with other siblings and his own children, attributing it to the lingering effects of childhood trauma and divergent post-acting life paths.[7] No public reconciliation between Buddy and Jodie has been documented as of 2025, with reports indicating the siblings have had no communication for decades.[17] While Buddy framed the disclosures as redemptive for understanding child stardom's perils, critics and family members viewed them as vengeful exploitation of shared trauma, highlighting disputes over the veracity of insider accounts from estranged relatives.[7][33]

Impact on public perception of child stardom

Buddy Foster's 1997 memoir Foster Child: A Biography of Jodie Foster offered an insider's account of the pressures endured by child actors in the Foster family, depicting their mother Brandy's management of their careers as domineering and financially exploitative. Foster recounted earning roughly $400,000 from roles including Mayberry R.F.D., only for the funds to be depleted by his mother's spending habits, which prioritized family survival and Jodie's rising stardom over his own stability.[5] This narrative highlighted how parental ambition could overshadow child welfare, with Buddy's early success overshadowed by Jodie's talent, leading to his resentment and career stagnation.[5] The book linked these dynamics to long-term personal tolls, including Foster's descent into drug addiction and a 1988 suicide attempt, framing child stardom as a high-risk endeavor prone to emotional neglect within show business families.[5] Reviewers noted its portrayal of a "supremely dysfunctional showbiz family," where violence, financial irresponsibility, and favoritism exacerbated the vulnerabilities of young performers.[5] Jodie Foster's vehement rejection of the memoir as a "sad and ugly" fabrication driven by her brother's greed tempered its reception, potentially curtailing wider discourse on child actor exploitation.[33] She emphasized their mother's solitary efforts in raising four children amid hardship, countering Buddy's claims of abuse and dysfunction.[33] Nonetheless, the ensuing family rift publicized rare familial critiques from within Hollywood's child star milieu, subtly reinforcing emerging awareness of the psychological hazards posed by early fame and unchecked parental control in the industry.[33][5]

References

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