![]() Attended Yale University in New Haven, Conn. 19, 1962Īttended Lycee Francais in Los Angeles, Calif., in 1980. It really is your own feelings about how the experience is." You don't need that other identity that's dependent on whether people feel you're successful or not. But I'm just so lucky to have been a part of their lives. "But having kids gives you an identity - a part where you get to fail in some ways and be successful in other ways, but ultimately you look at them and you say, they don't really have anything to do with me. "Maybe that's what propels me forward to try harder, and try harder, and not let things go. "It's perhaps my nature that I feel like a failure a lot," she says. I would stay in the background and make sure they had somebody who was a part of their career, who we felt good about, who we trusted."Įven though she has won two Academy Awards and directed several well-recieved films, Foster does not consider herself a success. I don't want to be a part of your career. If they said this is something we really want to do, I'd say, I'm with you. I, of course, always wonder who I might have been, had I not been in the film business. Mostly because it is a tough life and most actors don't achieve a certain amount of success. "I don't have any burning desire for them to become an actor. "I would say: How about those Mets!" she jokes. In partnership with Carleton University's Future of Journalism Initiative and journalism schools across Canada, Maclean's is striving to capture the richness of each life lost in elegant obituaries.On a personal note, Foster, who started her career when she was very young and managed by her mother, says if one of her children asked her about wanting to follow her in her footsteps, she would try to change the subject. Our goal: to pay tribute to everyone who has died of COVID-19 in Canada, and every Canadian who has died of the disease abroad. They Were Loved is an obituary project to commemorate thousands of coronavirus victims, as well as to mark this historic moment in Canadian history. Public health guidance around social distancing has resulted in restrictions around traditional mourning customs and rituals-heart-wrenchingly, many were unable even to say goodbye. Canada has already lost more than 20,000 people to the pandemic, with the number ticking steadily upwards each of those losses has cascaded through families and communities, leaving many more thousands bereaved. The magnitude of COVID-19's impact on Canadians' lives is difficult to fathom. ![]()
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