Imagination Companions, A Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends Wiki
Register
Advertisement
This article is about the subject with the redirect "Madame". You may be looking for the other Madame, Madame Mustachio.
Madame Foster
Gallery

Martha Foster, better known as Madame Foster, is a recurring character in the animated television series Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends whose voice is portrayed by Candi Milo. She is the founder of Foster's, creator of Mr. Herriman, and the paternal grandmother of Frankie Foster. She's portrayed as a sweet and loving grandmother/caretaker with a lot of energy and spunk with a larger-than-life persona.

Biography[]

Madame Foster-soccer

Madame Foster playing with a soccer ball.

Madame Foster founded the home that bears her name. She's had a strange life, having once gotten lost in the house for a week, eating nothing but acorns and toothpaste. She also spent forty-six days in the horse stables when her granddaughter Frankie accidentally let the Scribbles out from the forbidden door in the cold autumn of 1984. She owns what looks like a late 1970's Pontiac Trans Am sports car, complete with the "screaming chicken" on the hood similar to the one shown in the Smokey and the Bandit movies, which she likes to drive around town. She has a long-standing feud with the neighbor across the street, Old Man Rivers. According to her, Rivers borrowed a cup of sugar from her in 1962 "and did not return one single granulation ounce!" However, Rivers has a secret crush on Madame Foster that he eventually reveals to her. She also possesses a chest of pirate treasure buried near a hydrangea bush on her property.

When Madame Foster was a child, she created her first (and apparently only) imaginary friend, Mr. Herriman, a giant rabbit who wears a top hat, monocle, vest, bowtie, and mustache while speaking in a posh English accent in a personification of the Edwardian era. Herriman would often perform for the younger Madame Foster, doing an assortment of dances and songs, which he continues to do to this very day, much to his own slight embarrassment. Much like with the series main characters Bloo & Mac, Madame Foster and Mr. Herriman are polar opposites. While Madame Foster is kooky and full of boundless and endless energy, Herriman is reserved and obsessed with rule following. However, their friendship remains as strong as it ever was, particularly in the fact that even as Madame Foster grew, she never gave away Mr. Herriman like so many other children did with their own imaginary friends. When at last Madame Foster created her foster home for imaginary friends, she made Mr. Herriman the president of the house, in charge of running the home and handling the adoption of the friends.

In later years, Madame Foster would take in her granddaughter, Frankie Foster. Frankie would stay with her grandmother throughout her own childhood and into her teen years and would later take on the role of 'estate manager' and caregiver towards the friends.

Personality[]

Kooky, sweet, loving, friendly, caring, charming, and always wearing a smile for anyone to cheer them up as their surrogate grandmother, Madame Foster is a fun-loving old woman who always finds a way to have a good time, even if she has to break Mr. Herriman's rules in order to do so; she is truly a kid at heart. She loves having wild tea parties while everyone is out as seen in "Foster's Goes to Europe." Mr. Herriman is never happy about this, but since it was Madame Foster who created him in the first place, he doesn't have much of a say about it. She often pokes good-hearted fun at others, like in "Mac Daddy" where she made jokes about Mac and Cheese and "Bloo Cheese" (a type of cheese). She is quite sneaky and malicious when she needs or wants to be, as seen in "Foster's Goes to Europe", when she stole Mac's tickets to Europe with a rather long hug. She then went on vacation with her friends and a homesick imaginary friend named Eurotrish. In "Something Old, Something Bloo", it's shown that she thinks she's a superhero. As noted by Mr. Herriman, "This never turns out very well." She even bought the stuff Mac put up for auction on internet auction website SchmeBay (a parody of eBay) in "One False Movie", not knowing that she was buying her own stuff or funding much of the movie that Mac and Bloo were making. She also helped Bloo trick Mac into a surprise party disguised as an imaginary friend named Artie, four years old, in "I Only Have Surprise for You".

Madame Foster sometimes makes rude jokes out of someone else's unfortunate situations (most notably while Bloo was eating a horrible meal Frankie specially prepared) with a below-basic level of sarcasm. She dotes on her granddaughter Frankie, but at the same time is not above driving the younger woman to distraction. Madame Foster and Mac seem to be kindred spirits, as she has never gotten rid of her imaginary friend (Mr. Herriman) and Mac refuses to give up Bloo. Sometimes, Madame Foster's daily actions tend to change from kindhearted to eccentric (such as running with scissors inside the mansion, using exaggerated methods to solve many problems such as using a garden hose to cure Bloo of the hiccups, or even performing semi-nudism). Mr. Herriman is similar: he always acts as a cultured and refined imaginary friend, but sometimes loses his composure. Regardless of her age and mild senility, though, Madame Foster is always composed and still very sharp.

Trivia[]

  • Madame Foster tends to be famous for her tasty cookies, which she only makes once a year.
  • Madame Foster appears in the fewest episodes of all the main characters.
  • In Cartoon Network: Punch Time Explosion and the updated XL version, Madame Foster appears as an assist character who leads a stampede of imaginary friends that damage all enemies in their path. In the XL version, she is Chowder's synergy partner who gives him a big plate of cookies. After eating them, Chowder becomes fat and rolls around the stage damaging any opponents in his way, with Madame Foster riding on top.
  • In Cartoon Network's comic series, Madame Foster appears as a little girl in the "Ill Will" issue, and in one of Mr. Herriman's memories he recalls how in the early 20th century (presumably the 1930's), Madame Foster spilled stuff all over the floor, and she blamed the mess on Herriman. To avoid getting in trouble again, Herriman became obsessed with cleaning up all of Madame Foster's spills in the house to the point where he uses cleaning chemicals in an airless room and Madame Foster finds him unconscious. In the comic, she is depicted as a little girl with curly blonde hair and a pink dress.
  • In "The Big Picture", it is shown, in old pictures, that she used to be tall, but got shorter every year; however, in "The Trouble With Scribbles", it is shown that she was the same height as she appears in during the present. This is due to "The Trouble With Scribbles" being made in 2004 (considering it ahead of its time) and "The Big Picture" 2 years later.
  • Her possible first name, Martha, was revealed in "Neighbor Pains" when Old Man Rivers was shouting at her when she and Bloo were throwing the crumpled-up adoption forms at his house.
  • The most controversial role she ever had was "Foster's Goes to Europe", as she stole plane tickets from Mac by giving him a hug, and Mac took the blame. Because of this, that concept would not be given to Madame Foster again.

Gallery[]

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/98/Wikipedia_small_logo_rounded.png This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia (view authors).
Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends
Characters Main CharactersSecondary Characters
MacBlooFrankieMadame FosterGooWiltCocoEduardoMr. HerrimanCheese Jackie
Media Episodes and DVD releases
Movies/Specials House of Bloo'sA Lost ClausGood Wilt HuntingCheese a Go-Go
Nightmare on Wilson WayRace for Your Life Mac & Bloo
Destination ImaginationGoodbye to Bloo
Games Big Fat Awesome House PartyFoster's Home for Imaginary FriendsImagination InvadersFoster's Home for Imaginary Friends Didj
Creators Craig McCrackenLauren Faust
Advertisement