With big screen hits like “Call Me by Your Name,” “Little Women” and the blockbuster “Dune” films, Timothée Chalamet has become one of Hollywood’s most in-demand talents. But long before the American-French actor started receiving rave reviews,
Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet managed to spend some quality time together with ehr kids STormie and Aire to celebrate the holidays.
Timothée Chalamet’s lauded transformation into rock icon Bob Dylan in “A Complete Unknown” was so complete, it went all the way down to his cuticles. The “Dune 2” actor, 28, ended rampant speculation about whether the surprisingly long fingernails he has in the new biopic (out Dec. 25) are actually his own during an interview with Fandango.
A Hollywood love letter to Bob Dylan, with all that implies, “A Complete Unknown” works well on its chosen, extremely glossy terms. Its craftsmanship is formidable. Then again, you don’t necessarily need quality to sell one of these things,
Big shoes (and tight pants) to fill. Val Kilmer dutifully performed as Morrison in director Oliver Stone’s account of the singer’s tragic arc, from the sandy beaches of Venice, Calif., to his death in a Paris apartment at the age of 27.
Costume designer Arianne Phillips outfitted Timothée Chalamet as the legendary Bob Dylan for the film “A Complete Unknown,” which charts the musician’s meteoric rise in the early 1960s.
Dylan’s first stop after getting to New York is a hospital in Queens to meet his hero, Woody Guthrie (Scoot McNairy). He plays a song for Woody, who’s bedridden and can’t speak, and Pete Seeger (Edward Norton) and they immediately know the unwashed kid is the genuine article.
Since his rise to fame, there’s been a lot of interest in who Timothée Chalamet is dating now and his girlfriends both past and present. Chalamet—who has starred in movies like Dune, Lady Bird, Call Me By Your Name and Little Women —has dated his fair share of women in Hollywood, including two celebrity daughters.
Timothée Chalamet and Colman Domingo discover their shared history at Manhattan Plaza, reflecting on how the artist hub shaped their journeys
The actor spent years preparing to play the legendary singer, learning the harmonica and guitar in the process.
He respects the reclusive legacy of Bob Dylan while also delivering on one heck of a show that will perhaps inspire a newfound interest in the folk genre and how Dylan came in “like a rolling stone” to shake the whole scene up by going electric.