Robert Forster

American actor (1941–2019)


title: "Robert Forster" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1941-births", "2019-deaths", "20th-century-american-male-actors", "21st-century-american-male-actors", "american-male-film-actors", "american-male-stage-actors", "american-male-television-actors", "deaths-from-brain-cancer-in-california", "male-actors-from-rochester,-new-york", "university-of-rochester-alumni", "american-people-of-italian-descent", "american-people-of-english-descent", "american-people-of-irish-descent"] description: "American actor (1941–2019)" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Forster" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary American actor (1941–2019) ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox person"]

FieldValue
nameRobert Forster
imageRobert_Forster_2009.jpg
altPhoto of a smiling Robert Forster
captionForster in 2009
birth_nameRobert Wallace Foster Jr.
birth_date
birth_placeRochester, New York, U.S.
death_date
death_placeLos Angeles, California, U.S.
occupationActor
alma_materUniversity of Rochester
years_active1965–2019
spouse
partnerDenise Grayson (2004–his death)
children4
::

| name = Robert Forster | image = Robert_Forster_2009.jpg | alt = Photo of a smiling Robert Forster | caption = Forster in 2009 | birth_name = Robert Wallace Foster Jr. | birth_date = | birth_place = Rochester, New York, U.S. | death_date = | death_place = Los Angeles, California, U.S. | occupation = Actor | alma_mater = University of Rochester | years_active = 1965–2019 | spouse = | partner = Denise Grayson (2004–his death) | children = 4

Robert Wallace Foster Jr. (July 13, 1941 – October 11, 2019), known professionally as Robert Forster, was an American actor. He made his screen debut as Private L.G. Williams in John Huston's Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967), followed by a starring role as news reporter John Cassellis in the landmark New Hollywood film Medium Cool (1969). For his portrayal of bail bondsman Max Cherry in Quentin Tarantino's Jackie Brown (1997), he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.

Forster played a variety of both leading and supporting roles in over 100 films, including Captain Dan Holland in The Black Hole (1979), Detective David Madison in Alligator (1980), Abdul Rafai in The Delta Force (1986), Colonel Partington in Me, Myself & Irene (2000), Scott Thorson in The Descendants (2011), General Edward Clegg in Olympus Has Fallen (2013) and its sequel London Has Fallen (2016), Norbert Everhardt in What They Had (2018), and Sheriff Hadley in The Wolf of Snow Hollow (2020).

He also had prominent roles in television series such as Banyon (1971–73), Nakia (1974), Karen Sisco (2003–04), Heroes (2007–08), Twin Peaks: The Return (2017) and the Breaking Bad episode "Granite State" as Ed "The Disappearer" Galbraith, for which he won the Saturn Award for Best Guest Starring Role on Television. He reprised the role in the film El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie (2019) and Better Call Saul (2020).

Early life

Forster was born and raised in Rochester, New York. His mother was Italian American, while his father was of English and Irish descent. He earned a Bachelor's Degree in Psychology from the University of Rochester. He performed in a number of plays in college, and decided to become an actor.

Forster added an "R" to his surname as there was another member of the Screen Actors Guild named Robert Foster.

Career

Early stardom

Forster made his Broadway debut in 1965 in Mrs. Dally Had a Lover, opposite Arlene Francis and Ralph Meeker. He also starred in productions of Come Blow Your Horn, The Big Knife, and The Glass Menagerie.

Forster's movie career began strongly, when John Huston cast him in the important role of Private Williams in Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967), opposite Elizabeth Taylor and Marlon Brando. The movie featured a famous scene where Forster rode naked on a horse. Forster also appeared in episodes of the TV series N.Y.P.D., Judd for the Defense and Premiere, the latter also featuring Dustin Hoffman and Sally Kellerman. Forster was then cast in another key role in an important movie: part-Indian Army scout Nick Tana in Robert Mulligan's The Stalking Moon (1968); he was billed third, after Gregory Peck and Eva Marie Saint.

Forster had a key support role in Justine (1969), directed by George Cukor and starring Dirk Bogarde, which was a huge flop. He starred in the critically acclaimed film Medium Cool (1969), which was also a big hit commercially.

Forster played a tormented priest in Pieces of Dreams (1970) and a student filmmaker in Cover Me Babe (1970), which was a box office flop. He was cast in the pilot for a TV series Banyon, playing a private eye in late 1930s in Los Angeles. then starred in Journey Through Rosebud which was not released theatrically. He directed for the Rochester Community Theatre.

A year after the pilot for Banyon was made, it was picked up for a series but had only a short run. After this cancellation Forster said his career "started to slip and then it slipped and then it slipped."

In 1973, he briefly returned to Broadway playing Stanley Kowalski in a revival of A Streetcar Named Desire, opposite Julie Harris. He also played Juror No. 3 in the first New York stage production of Twelve Angry Men at the Queens Playhouse.

Career slump

After a support part in The Don Is Dead (1972), Forster starred in the TV movie The Death Squad (1974) then another short-lived TV series, Nakia (1974), playing a Navajo detective.

Forster guest starred on shows such as Medical Story, Gibbsville and Police Story and played the lead in the TV movies Royce (1976), The City (1977) (with Don Johnson), Standing Tall and The Darker Side of Terror (1979). He toured in a stage production of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and appeared in The Sea Horse on stage in Louisville.

Forster moved into lower-budgeted movies, starring in Stunts (1977) for Mark L. Lester and Avalanche (1978), the latter opposite Rock Hudson and Mia Farrow for Roger Corman's New World Pictures. Also for New World, Forster had an unbilled cameo in The Lady in Red (1979). This was written by John Sayles and directed by Lewis Teague who later collaborated on Alligator (1980), which starred Forster. He played a key support role in Disney's The Black Hole (1979).

Throughout the 1980s Forster alternated between television and low budget films. He was in the comedy Heartbreak High (1981), and the action films Vigilante (1983), Walking the Edge (1985), The Delta Force (1986), and Counterforce (1988). He wrote, starred in, produced and directed Hollywood Harry (1985), in which he invested all his savings. That year he stated "Not one of my movies made a dime. I've never had anything that approached a hit in my entire career of 15 movies and a lot of TV shows."{{cite news|newspaper=Bryan Times |date=12 April 1985|page=24|title=Heroic role off camera}}

Forster appeared in the thrillers Satan's Princess (1989) and The Banker (1989), the mini series Goliath Awaits (1981), and episodes of Magnum, P.I., Tales from the Darkside, Hotel, Crossbow, and Jesse Hawkes. He was in the TV movie Mick and Frankie (1989).

Forster's films by this stage were almost entirely low budget ones: Peacemaker (1990), Checkered Flag (1990), Countdown to Esmeralda Bay (1990), Long Way Back (1990), Committed (1991), Diplomatic Immunity (1991), 29th Street (1991), In Between (1992), In the Shadow of a Killer (1992), Maniac Cop 3: Badge of Silence (1993), South Beach (1993), American Yakuza (1993), *Cover Story * (1993), Point of Seduction: Body Chemistry III (1993), Scanner Cop II (1995), Guns & Lipstick (1995), The Method (1995), Original Gangstas (1996) (directed by Larry Cohen), Uncle Sam (1996), Hindsight (1996) and American Perfekt (1997).

He appeared in series such as Jake and the Fatman, P.S.I. Luv U, Silk Stalkings, Murder, She Wrote, One West Waikiki and Walker, Texas Ranger.

''Jackie Brown'' and later work

Forster appeared in Jackie Brown as bail bondsman Max Cherry, which earned him a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in 1997. Jackie Brown revitalized Forster's career, an effect that occurred for many actors appearing in Quentin Tarantino films. He subsequently had consistent work in the film industry, appearing in Like Mike, Mulholland Drive, Supernova, Me, Myself & Irene (2000), Human Natyre (2001), Confidence (2003), Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (2003), Lucky Number Slevin (2006), and Firewall (2006).

Forster continued to appear in lower budgeted productions like Night Vision (1997) along with the remakes of Rear Window (1998) and Psycho (1998).

He appeared in the made-for-television movie The Hunt for the BTK Killer, as the detective intent on capturing serial killer Dennis Rader. Forster also played the father of Van on the short-lived Fox series Fastlane.

Forster recorded a public service announcement for Deejay Ra's Hip-Hop Literacy campaign, encouraging reading of books by Elmore Leonard, whose book Rum Punch was adapted as Jackie Brown. ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/43/Robert_Forster_Banyon_1972.JPG" caption="Forster as the title character in the [[NBC]] series ''[[Banyon]]'', 1972."] ::

He appeared in the hit NBC series Heroes as Arthur Petrelli, the father of Nathan and Peter Petrelli, as well as the Emmy Award-winning AMC crime drama Breaking Bad as Walter White's new-identity specialist Ed Galbraith (a role he reprised in El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie and Better Call Saul). He played Bud Baxter, father to Tim Allen's Mike Baxter, on the ABC (later Fox) hit comedy Last Man Standing. Forster was also a motivational speaker.

He was the first choice to play Sheriff Harry S. Truman in David Lynch's Twin Peaks, but had to turn it down due to a prior commitment to a different television pilot, and was replaced by Michael Ontkean. He appeared in Lynch's Mulholland Drive, a pilot for a TV series that was not picked up but was later turned into a critically acclaimed movie, and finally appeared in Twin Peaks, playing the brother of Sheriff Harry S. Truman, Sheriff Frank Truman, in Twin Peaks: The Return, when Ontkean was not available to reprise his role.

About this, Forster said: "David Lynch, what a good guy he is. He wanted to hire me for the original, 25 years ago, for a part, and I was committed to another guy for a pilot that never went. So I didn't do the original Twin Peaks, which would have been a life-changer. It's a gigantic hit if you remember those years, a phenomenon. But I didn't do that. [...] And this time, I got a call from my agents and they said, David Lynch is going to call you. When he called me five minutes later, he said, "I'd like you to come and work with me again." And I said, 'Whatever it is, David, here I come!'"

Forster appeared in the TV series Alcatraz.

His final movie appearance was in El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie, reprising the character of Ed the "Disappearer" from the Breaking Bad series. He died on the day the movie was released. According to Aaron Paul (the actor for Jesse Pinkman), they spoke on the day of his death. Forster had been able to see the film. Four months later, Forster again appeared posthumously as Ed in episode "Magic Man" of the fifth season of Better Call Saul. The episode ended with a dedication to "our friend Robert Forster." He also appeared in an episode "Dynoman and The Volt" of the rebooted Amazing Stories television series before his death; the episode was dedicated to Forster.

Personal life

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f1/Robert_Forster_(6855560712).jpg" caption="Forster at the 2012 [[WonderCon"] ::

Forster was married to June Foster (née Provenzano) from 1966 to 1975. The couple had met at their alma mater, the University of Rochester. The marriage produced three daughters. Robert was married to Zivia Forster from 1978 to 1980. He also had a son from a previous relationship. From 2004 to the time of his death, his longtime partner was Denise Grayson.

Death

In June 2019, Forster was diagnosed with a brain tumor, and he died from the disease at his home in Los Angeles on October 11, 2019, at the age of 78, on the day El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie was released, hours after watching it.

Filmography

Film

::data[format=table]

YearTitleRoleNotes
1967Reflections in a Golden EyePrivate L.G. Williams
1968The Stalking MoonNick Tana
1969JustineNarouz
Medium CoolJohn Cassellis
1970Pieces of DreamsGregory Lind
Cover Me BabeTony Hall
1972Journey Through RosebudFrank
1973The Don Is DeadFrank Regalbuto
1977StuntsGlen Wilson
1978AvalancheNick Thorne
1979The Lady in Red'Turk'Uncredited
The Black HoleCaptain Dan Holland
1980AlligatorDetective David Madison
1981Heartbreak HighCoach Alan Arnoldi
1983VigilanteEddie Marino
1985Walking the EdgeJason Walk
1986The Delta ForceAbdul Rafai
Hollywood HarryHarry PetryAlso producer and director
1988CounterforceThe Dictator
1989Satan's PrincessLou Cherney
The BankerDan Jefferson
Esmeralda BayMadero
1990PeacemakerYates
1991CommittedDr. Desmond Moore
Checkered FlagJack Cotton
Diplomatic ImmunityStonebridge
29th StreetSergeant Tartaglia
In BetweenVinnie
1993Maniac Cop III: Badge of SilenceDr. Powell
South BeachDetective Ted Coleman
American YakuzaLittman
Cover StoryTherapist
1994Point of Seduction: Body Chemistry IIIBob Sibley
1995Scanners: The ShowdownCaptain Jack Bitters
*Guns and Lipstick *Captain Dimaggio
1996The MethodChristian's Father
Original GangstasDetective Slatten
Uncle SamCongressman Alvin Cummings
HindsightMichael Donahue
1997American PerfektJake Nyman
Demolition UniversityGentry
Jackie BrownMax Cherry
Night VisionTeak Taylor
1998PsychoDr. Fred Simon
Outside OzonaOdell Parks
1999It's the RageTyler
Family TreeHenry Musser
Kiss Toledo GoodbyeSal Fortuna
2000SupernovaA.J. Marley
The Magic of MarcianoHenry
LakeboatJoe Litko
Cowboys and AngelsBarbequeman At WeddingUncredited
Me, Myself & IreneColonel Partington
Diamond MenEddie MillerAlso executive producer
2001Mulholland DriveDetective Harry McKnight
Human NatureNathan's Father
Finder's FeeOfficer Campbell
2002Lone HeroGus
Strange HeartsJack Waters
Like MikeCoach Wagner
2003ConfidenceMorgan Price
Charlie's Angels: Full ThrottleRoger Wixon
Grand Theft ParsonsStanley Parsons
2006FirewallHarry Romano
Lucky Number SlevinMurphy
Wild SevenWilson
2007Rise: Blood HunterLloyd
D-WarJack Wilson
CleanerArlo Grange
2008Expecting LoveGeorge Patten
Jack and Jill vs. the WorldNorman / NarratorUncredited
Touching HomeJim 'Perk' Perkins
2009Thick as ThievesLieutenant Sam Weber
Ghosts of Girlfriends PastSergeant Mervis Volkom
Middle MenLouie 'La-La'
2010The Bannen WayMr. B
The TrialRay
KalamityTom Klepack
2011Girl Walks into a BarDodge
The DescendantsScott Thorson
2012Hotel NoirJim Logan
2013Olympus Has FallenGeneral Edward Clegg
Coffee, Kill BossWalt Ford
Somewhere SlowChris McConville
2014AutómataRobert Bold
2015SurvivorBill Talbot
Too LateGordy Lyons
The Adventures of Biffle and ShoosterJames Burke / Lieutenant Frank Murphy
2016London Has FallenGeneral Edward Clegg
The ConfirmationOtto
The American SideSterling Whitmore
Bus DriverGeneral Sorbin
2017Small Town CrimeSteve Yendel
Small CrimesJoe Denton Sr.
The Case for ChristWalter Strobel
Acts of VengeanceChuck
2018What They HadNorbert Everhardt
DamselOld Preacher
The Big TakeDetective Aborn
BiggerJoe (2008)
2019PhilBing Fisk
El Camino: A Breaking Bad MovieEd Galbraith
QT8: The First EightHimselfDocumentary; Posthumous release
2020The Wolf of Snow HollowSheriff HadleyPosthumous release
2021Grave IntentionsDon WhalenSegment: "The Bridge Partner"; Posthumous release; Final film role
::

Short films

::data[format=table]

YearTitleRoleNotes
2000It's a Shame About RayWally
2003Where's Angelo?Bob
2007Grampa's CabinGrampa
2010Red Princess BluesThe Storyteller
2015The Biffle Murder CaseJames Burke
The Bridge PartnerDon Whalen
Run FastPeter Cirone
The ProgramMichael
HomeMan
2018NastyBob
::

Television

::data[format=table]

YearTitleRoleNotes
1967N.Y.P.D.TonyEpisode: "To Catch a Hero"
1968Judd, for the DefenseRay ElliottEpisode: "In a Puff of Smoke"
PremiereDoug PaysonEpisode: "Higher and Higher, Attorneys at Law"
1971–1973BanyonMiles Banyon16 episodes
1974NakiaDeputy Nakia Parker14 episodes
The Death SquadEric BenoitTelevision film
1975Medical StoryDavid CorbinEpisode: "The Moonlight Heater"
1975–1977Police StoryVarious roles5 episodes
1977The CityLieutenant Matt LewisPilot
1978Standing TallLuke ShastaTelevision film
1979The Darker Side of TerrorPaul CorwinTelevision film
1981Goliath AwaitsCommander Jeff SelkirkTelevision film
1985Magnum, P.I.Tyler Peabody McKinney2 episodes
1986Tales from the DarksideGary GooleyEpisode: "The Milkman Cometh"
Murder, She WroteGilbert GastonEpisode: "The Perfect Foil"
1987HotelSteve CameronEpisode: "Unfinished Business"
Once a HeroGumshoe7 episodes
1987–1988William TellAymong3 episodes
1989Mick and FrankiFeinsteinFailed pilot
1991Jake and the FatmanEd Delaney2 episodes
P.S. I Luv UDanEpisode: "There Goes the Neighbourhood"
1992In the Shadow of a KillerCharles GalbisTelevision film
1993Silk StalkingsVince RikerEpisode: "Tough Love"
Sex, Love and Cold Hard CashSidTelevision film
1995Walker, Texas RangerRicky RickettesEpisode: "The Big Bingo Bamboozle"
Murder, She WroteFrank RousselEpisode: "Big Easy Murder"
One West WaikikiGerard FosterEpisode: "Flowers of Evil"
1997Walker, Texas RangerLane TillmanEpisode: "Texas vs. Cahill"
1998Rear WindowDetective Charlie MooreTelevision film
1999Todd McFarlane's SpawnMajor ForsbergVoice, 3 episodes
2000Godzilla: The SeriesJack Chapman, Police OfficerVoice, episode: "Wedding Bells Blew"
2001Like Mother Like SonKen 'Pappa' KimesTelevision film
2002Murder in GreenwichSteve Carroll
Due EastJesse Rapple
2002–2003FastlaneRaymond Ray2 episodes
2003UndefeatedScott GreenTelevision film
Street TimeTony DeAngeloEpisode: "Cop Killer"
2003–2004Karen SiscoMarshall Sisco10 episodes
2004The GridJay Aldrich6 episodes
ClubhouseBurt AustinEpisode: "Spectator Interference"
2004–2005HuffBen Huffstodt3 episodes
2005TiltJimmy "Gentleman Jim" Towne2 episodes
Justice League UnlimitedThe PresidentVoice, 2 episodes
Bounty HuntersJerryPilot
The Hunt for the BTK KillerDetective Jason MagidaTelevision film
2006Numb3rsAgent Thomas LawsonEpisode: "Protest"
13 GravesTom FerrisPilot
2007Army WivesGeneral GraysonEpisode: "Truth and Consequences"
Desperate HousewivesNick DelfinoEpisode: "Now I Know, Don't Be Scared"
2007–2008HeroesArthur Petrelli10 episodes
2008The SimpsonsLucky JimVoice, episode: "Sex, Pies and Idiot Scrapes"
2011CSI: NYJoe VincentEpisode: "Indelible"
2012AlcatrazRay Archer4 episodes
Transformers: PrimeGeneral BryceVoice, episode: "Grill"
The Eric Andre ShowHimselfEpisode: "J-Moe"
2012–2018Last Man StandingBud Baxter10 episodes
2013NTSF:SD:SUV::Booth WhitmanEpisode: "Unfrozen Agent Man"
Breaking BadEd GalbraithEpisode: "Granite State"
IronsideVirgil's FatherEpisode: "Hidden Agenda"
2014IntrudersFrank Shepherd2 episodes
2014–2015Teenage Mutant Ninja TurtlesJack J. KurtzmanVoice, 4 episodes
2015Childrens HospitalDonaldEpisode: "The 27 Club"
BackstromSheriff Blue Backstrom2 episodes
2016DivorceDonald2 episodes
2017Twin Peaks: The ReturnSheriff Frank Truman10 episodes
I'm Dying Up HereGuy ApuzzoEpisode: "Pilot"
2020Better Call SaulEd GalbraithPosthumous release
Episode: "Magic Man"
Amazing StoriesGrandpa Joe HarrisPosthumous release
Episode: "Dynoman and The Volt"
::

Partial stage credits

::data[format=table]

YearTitleRoleOriginal venueNotes
1965Mrs. Dally Had a LoverFrankieJohn Golden Theater, Broadway
1971last=Klemesrudfirst=Judydate=4 June 1972title=Robert Forster-How To Succeed in Flops
1972Twelve Angry MenJuror No. 3Queens Playhouse, Off-Broadway
1973A Streetcar Named DesireStanley KowalskiVivian Beaumont Theater, BroadwayReplacement
2017Chasing Mem'riesFranklinGeffen Playhouse, Los Angeles
::

Awards and nominations

::data[format=table]

AwardYearCategoryNominated workResultRef.
Academy Awards1998Best Supporting ActorJackie Brown
AARP Movie Awards2019Best Supporting ActorWhat They Had
Chicago Film Critics Association1998Best Supporting ActorJackie Brown
Chlotrudis Award2002Best ActorDiamond Men
Gotham Awards2011Best Ensemble CastThe Descendants
Georgia Film Critics Association2011Best Supporting Actor
Hamptons International Film Festival2000Special RecognitionDiamond Men
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award1998Best Supporting ActorJackie Brown
Newport Beach Film Festival2018Icon AwardBody of Work
Saturn Awards1998Best Supporting ActorJackie Brown
2008Guest Actor – TelevisionHeroes
2014Guest Actor – TelevisionBreaking Bad
Screen Actors Guild Award2011Outstanding Cast in a Motion PictureThe Descendants
Southeastern Film Critics Association2011Best Ensemble
Winter Film Awards2016Best ActorThe Bridge Partner
::

References

References

  1. "Robert Forster".
  2. [https://www.nytimes.com/1972/06/04/archives/robert-forster-how-to-succeed-in-flops-about-robert-forster-robert.html Robert Forster – How To Succeed in Flops; About Robert Forster] {{Webarchive. link. (October 14, 2019 , nytimes.com; accessed December 18, 2016.)
  3. Vigdor, Neil. (October 12, 2019). "Robert Forster, Oscar Nominee for 'Jackie Brown,' Dies at 78". The New York Times.
  4. [https://playbill.com/production/mrs-dally-john-golden-theatre-vault-0000008441 Mrs Dally] at Playbill
  5. "Robert Forster – Broadway Cast & Staff {{!}} IBDB".
  6. "Robert Forster".
  7. (7 January 1970). "Big Rental Films of 1969".
  8. Silverman, Stephen M. (1988). "The Fox that got away : the last days of the Zanuck dynasty at Twentieth Century-Fox". L. Stuart.
  9. (20 August 1972). "Forster part of the 'Banyon' package". The Shreveport Times.
  10. (14 March 2011). "He's a regular". Los Angeles Times.
  11. [https://playbill.com/personlistpage/person-list?production=00000150-aea6-d936-a7fd-eef6dd780001&type=cp#cc Streetcar Named Desire 1973] at Playbill
  12. (2018-10-25). "Robert Forster: Third act's the charm".
  13. Gussow, Mel. (4 December 1972). "Theater: '12 Angry Men'". [[The New York Times]].
  14. (29 February 1976). "A different Robert Forster". The Courier-Journal.
  15. Cribb, John. (2011). "The Films of Mark L. Lester".
  16. Lawrence, Derek. (October 12, 2019). "What made Robert Forster great is on full display in El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie".
  17. Maltin, Leonard. (October 12, 2019). "Remembering Robert Forster".
  18. Ausiello, Michael. (2015-10-08). "Twin Peaks Recasts Major Role for Revival (and It's a Total Bummer)".
  19. (2016-06-14). "Robert Forster On Filming The New Twin Peaks: "Whatever It Is David, Here I Come!"".
  20. Andreeva, Nellie. (October 24, 2019). "'Amazing Stories' Apple Series To Pay Tribute To Robert Forster". [[Deadline Hollywood]].
  21. Hauser, Scott. "Third Act Surprise".
  22. Haring, Bruce. (October 11, 2019). "Robert Forster Dies".
  23. McNary, Dave. (February 13, 2019). "Director Reclaims Rights to Documentary '21 Years: Quentin Tarantino' (EXCLUSIVE)".
  24. Klemesrud, Judy. (4 June 1972). "Robert Forster-How To Succeed in Flops". [[The New York Times]].
  25. (2018-11-06). "2018 NBFF Fall Honors: About the Honorees".

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