David Foster was born in Katoomba in the Blue Mountains to Sydney's west in 1944. His father, George Foster, whom he met only once, was a vaudeville, radio and later television comedian; his mother, Pam, was an actress. In an occasional address “Red Band Adventures” (1999), taking a sardonic cue from Germaine Greer's comment that the Australian accent is best suited to low farce, Foster identifies himself as “a low farceur”. “I never intended to be one when I started, but my father was a low farceur and so there exists a schism between what I write and what I would like to write, what I would be and what I am” (8). The statement is one of several made over the years in which Foster concedes the genetic nature of his predilection for humour. In terms of nurture, Foster was…
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Citation: Shaw, Narelle. "David Foster". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 03 May 2003 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=1597, accessed 22 November 2024.]