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Thoughts on my Jodie Foster story...

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Since the publication Wednesday of my Daily News column on Jodie Foster publicly acknowledging the woman who has long presumed to be her life partner, the story has spread like wildfire across the blogosphere. Some sites like AfterEllen.com, Popnography, Queerty and Towleroad.com have credited my piece and others have not. There's a part of me that wants credit for being the only journalist in the room to pick up on the significance of that part of her speech and to report on it. But then I think about what she did and how she did it, and all the credit goes to Jodie Foster for doing it her way.

I am against the outing of celebrities and would not intentionally do so. I think they should do it in their own time - always. I know from personal experience that it's a lot harder and complicated to live in the closet than out of it. But I had no problem writing the column because as a journalist, I wrote about what I saw and heard at the Women In Entertainment Breakfast where Jodie was being honored.,

She seemed so relaxed the entire morning, cheerfully doing interviews on the red carpet leading to the front steps of the Beverly Hills Hotel. I even chatted with her for a few minutes. Once inside, I was only two tables away and saw how Jodie got up from her seat and greeted her late-arriving mother and led her to her seat.
I was enjoying my scrambled eggs, looking around to see who was where, and thinking about how cool it was to be at the same table as Tilda Swinton and sitting right next to Natalie Zea of ABC's "Dirty Sexy Money."

We saw a film reel of Jodie's best work from early TV spots as a child to the Oscar nomination as a teenager in "Taxi Driver" to the Academy Award winning performances in "The Accused" and "The Silence of the Lambs" plus the big commercial hits like "Maverick," "Contact," "Panic Room" and "Flightplan."

Jodie began her speech and it was really good, a cut above the usual as she thanked her mother and the team of people who have been around her for as long as 30 years in some cases. Then she thanked “my beautiful Cydney who sticks with me through all the rotten and the bliss.”

I did not know who Cydney was, honestly, and had to check various sources once I got back to the office to confirm that it was Jodie's longtime partner.

So I wrote up my column and was ready to turn it in then suddenly wondered, "Should I call Jodie's people and ask, 'Did she really mean to come out?' So I asked my editor, Ron Kaye, to read it. Ron shrugged his shoulders and wondered what the big deal was.

"You've written it like as if it was the most normal thing in the world to thank the person you love on an occasion like that," Ron said. "And, it is."

Comments

It was done with great taste. Very well done. a+ Thank You,Greg.

I agree with your editor, Greg. Great work, as usual!

This has been entirely her call for a considerable number of years. The time when it would have been "brave" to come out is long past.

Moreover "The Brave One" tanked -- so it's back to her "base."

Ditto, tastefully done, Greg.

Mr. Ehrenstein, you amuse me. I'm pretty sure I've heard Ms. Foster say she wasn't brave on many occasions. Why blame her because she's failed to live up to the person you've built her up to be? As for returning to "the base", if you mean lesbians, I don't think they've ever abandoned her. I've noticed they seem to be a lot more understanding than gay men. I'm a gay man myself and sometimes I can't understand why some gay men throw around such vitriol when it comes to "closeted" celebrities. We should focus on attacking the system that perpetuates the problem.

I do not think she really cares one way or the other and i highly doubt she will ever respond to any story written about her. That is just her style and part of her business saavy. To me she is like "a bright smile walking around" whenever i see her. I think her presence makes people feel connected to the past and good in general.

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Greg Hernandez

Greg Hernandez has covered the entertainment industry for the Daily News since 2001. He's considered a bit odd by some for his obsession with box office numbers, has been known to camp out near the kitchen at premieres for first crack at the hors d'oeurves, and Greg's never seen a red carpet he didn't want to stroll down.
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