Anthony Hopkins on What He Loves About ‘Very Cool’ Silence of the Lambs Costar Jodie Foster (Exclusive)

Hopkins says his costar from the 1991 thriller has a “healthy cynicism” about working in show business

120528 13: Best Actor recipient Anthony Hopkins stands with Best Actress recipient Jodie Foster at the 64th annual Academy Awards March 30, 1992 in Los Angeles, CA. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences awarded five Oscars to the film "Silence of the Lambs." (Photo by John Barr/Liaison)
Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster in 1992. Photo: John Barr/Liaison/Getty

Anthony Hopkins has fond memories of working with Jodie Foster on The Silence of the Lambs more than three decades ago.

“She's lovely,” the two-time Oscar winner, 86, who’s now starring in the movie Freud’s Last Session, tells PEOPLE. “What's wonderful about Jodie is that, great actor that she is, she has no entourage. She just comes on the set and does it. Very laid back. Very cool. What I like about her, she's very practical.”

In the 1991 thriller based on Thomas Harris’s 1988 bestseller, Hopkins played Hannibal Lecter, a brilliant psychiatrist and psychotic cannibal who’s locked up in an institution for the criminally insane.

FBI trainee Clarice Starling (Foster) interviews Lecter, hoping to gain insight into another serial killer known as Buffalo Bill (Ted Levine), who kidnaps women and skins them.

Over the course of the film, they develop a strange rapport and respect for each other, despite their obvious differences.

The movie, directed by Jonathan Demme, was a smash hit and won five Academy Awards, including Best Actor for Hopkins, Best Actress for Foster, Best Picture, Best Director for Demme and Best Adapted Screenplay for writer Ted Tally.

THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS
Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster in 'The Silence of the Lambs'. Everett

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Though Hopkins adores his former costar, he says he hasn’t seen her since they reunited for Variety’s Actors on Actors series over Zoom in 2021 to reminisce about the movie for its 30th anniversary. 

"It's a life-changing adventure, that movie, for both of us," Foster, 58, told Hopkins at the time, adding, "I'm sure you still get people who come up to you and say, 'Would you like a nice Chianti?'"

"Oh yeah," he replied. "They do."

The pair also discussed developing their characters and the reaction to the movie.

Film and Television
Anthony Hopkins in 'The Silence of the Lambs'. Moviestore/REX/Shutterstock

Hopkins recalls how Foster, who has been open about her ambivalence regarding acting, told him she wasn’t sure if she wanted to continue in front of the camera, he says. (Foster has since kept busy as an actor, appearing in Nyad and the HBO series True Detective.)

“She's got that nice healthy cynicism about it. It's a job,” adds Hopkins, recalling an old anecdote from actor Robert Mitchum. “When he was asked, ‘Why did you act?’ He said, ‘It beats work.’ I love that. That's good. Beats working.”

Freud’s Last Session is in theaters now.

For more on Anthony Hopkins, pick up the latest issue of PEOPLE.

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