Timothée Chalamet shared a photo of himself meeting his Interstellar ‘movie dad’ Matthew McConaughey during a college football game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta last Saturday.
The 28-year-old Oscar nominee mail caught the attention of Interstellar’s official Instagram account, which commented: ‘This is everything and more!’
The Oscar winner, 55, seemed excited to cheer on his alma mater, the University of Texas at Austin, but unfortunately the Georgia Bulldogs beat the Texas Longhorns 22-19.
Timothée even appeared on ESPN’s College GameDay, where he impressed hosts Kirk Herbstreit, Rece Davis, Pat McAfee and Desmond Howard with his expertise in the sport.
Chalamet was just 17 years old in 2013 when he filmed his role as Tom, the 15-year-old son of NASA test pilot Joseph Cooper, on the Canadian set of Christopher Nolan’s critically acclaimed sci-fi epic.
Oscar winner Casey Affleck played the older, angrier version of Tom Cooper in the $165 million-budgeted dystopian drama, which just returned to theaters in honor of its 10th anniversary.
Timothée Chalamet shared a photo of himself meeting his Interstellar ‘movie dad’ Matthew McConaughey during a college football game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta last Saturday.
The 28-year-old Oscar nominee’s post caught the attention of Interstellar’s official Instagram account, which commented: ‘This is everything and more!’
When the Dune: Part Two action star finally saw Interstellar at a screening for the first time, he “cried for an hour” because many of his scenes were cut from the film, which was only his second.
Timothée confessed Variety‘s Actors on Actors in 2018: “I didn’t really have a career at this point, so I was a bit of the fraud in the room.”
Last month, Chalamet told Apple Music Zane Lowe that Interstellar “is still my favorite movie I’ve ever been in,” but “I thought it was going to do something for my career in a way that it didn’t.”
The native New Yorker will attend Tuesday night’s Hollywood premiere of his film A Complete Unknown, in which he produced and stars the legendary Bob Dylan.
Timothée has been receiving rave reviews for his transformation into the enigmatic 83-year-old for Searchlight Pictures’ fully authorized biopic, which hits US cinemas on December 25 and UK cinemas on January 17 .
Chalamet reportedly recruited the exact same team (movement coach Polly Bennett, vocal coach Scott Flaherty, and dialect coach Erik Singer) that his Dune co-star Austin Butler hired to play Elvis.
The Bleu de Chanel brand ambassador was nominated for the Best Actor in a Motion Picture (Drama) trophy at the 82nd Golden Globe Awards, airing January 5 on CBS/Paramount+.
Timothée faces tough competition against Conclave’s Ralph Fiennes, Queer’s Daniel Craig, Sing Sing’s Colman Domingo, The Apprentice’s Sebastian Stan and The Brutalist’s Adrien Brody.
The Oscar winner, 55, seemed excited to cheer on his alma mater, the University of Texas at Austin, but unfortunately the Georgia Bulldogs beat the Texas Longhorns 22-19.
Timothée even appeared on ESPN’s College GameDay, where he impressed hosts Kirk Herbstreit, Rece Davis, Pat McAfee and Desmond Howard with his expertise in the sport.
Chalamet (left) was just 17 years old in 2013 when he filmed his role as Tom, the 15-year-old son of NASA test pilot Joseph Cooper, on the Canadian set of Christopher Nolan’s critically acclaimed sci-fi epic .
Oscar winner Casey Affleck (right) played the older, angrier version of Tom Cooper in the $165 million-budgeted dystopian drama, which just returned to theaters in honor of its 10th anniversary.
When the Dune: Part Two action star finally saw Interstellar at a screening for the first time (pictured in 2014), he “cried for an hour” because many of his scenes were cut from the film, which was only his second
Timothée confessed to Variety’s Actors on Actors in 2018: “I didn’t really have a career at the moment, so I was a bit of a fraud, in the room.”
Last month, Chalamet told Apple Music’s Zane Lowe that Interstellar “is still my favorite movie I’ve ever been in,” but “I thought it was going to do something for my career in a way that it didn’t.”
The native New Yorker will attend Tuesday night’s Hollywood premiere of his film A Complete Unknown, in which he produced and stars the legendary Bob Dylan.
Timothée has received rave reviews for his transformation into the enigmatic 83-year-old for Searchlight Pictures’ fully authorized biopic, which hits US cinemas on December 25 and UK cinemas on January 17.
Chalamet was nominated for the Best Actor in a Motion Picture (Drama) trophy at the 82nd Golden Globe Awards, airing Jan. 5 on CBS/Paramount+.
Chalamet has already won awards for his performance at the Gotham Awards, the Boston Society of Film Critics, the Astra Film Awards, the Palm Springs Film Festival and the Santa Barbara Film Festival.
Two-time Oscar winner Cate Blanchett previously played young, electric-age Dylan, aka Jude Quinn, in Todd Haynes’ critically acclaimed 2007 experimental drama I’m Not There.
However, A Complete Unknown was produced by Bob himself.
James Mangold’s big-screen adaptation of Elijah Wald’s 2015 book, Dylan Goes Electric! It also stars Elle Fanning, Edward Norton, Boyd Holbrook, Monica Barbaro, Nick Offerman, Dan Fogler and Joe Tippett.
Wonka’s triple threat has also been hard at work on the Manhattan set of Josh Safdie’s $70 million-budgeted ping pong drama Marty Supreme, which he produces and stars in the lead role.