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Timothée Chalamet “Could Have Spared Himself” Opera-Ballet Uproar, Says ‘Call Me by Your Name’ Director Luca Guadagnino

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CitrixNews Staff
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Timothée Chalamet “Could Have Spared Himself” Opera-Ballet Uproar, Says ‘Call Me by Your Name’ Director Luca Guadagnino
Chalamet and Guadagnino in 2023. Chalamet and Guadagnino in 2023. Courtesy of Getty

The uproar over Timothée Chalamet‘s comments on opera and ballet may have died down, but the star’s Call Me by Your Name director has belatedly come to his defense.

Luca Guadagnino spoke to Italian daily La Stampa over the weekend ahead of the premiere of his adaptation of John Adams’ 1991 opera, The Death of Klinghoffer, in Florence.

The filmmaker, whose gay 2017 age-gap romance threw Chalamet into the mainstream and earned him his first Oscar nomination, touched on the 30-year-old’s viral faux pas earlier this year, where he said “no one really cares” about ballet or opera. (Such was the public ire around his statement that it was Conan O’Brien’s opening quip at March’s Academy Awards.)

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Guadagnino, conceded that the star “could have spared himself.” Translated from Italian, he told La Stampa: “I am not on social media and don’t understand how one [single] comment can become a planetary polemic.

“Maybe Timothée could have spared himself. But he’s young, smart, sensitive, and he fears that cinema could become marginal. And that’s exactly why every form of imagination should be nurtured. We must unite the arts, not separate them,” Guadagnino added.

The pair haven’t worked together since 2022’s Bones and All, in which Chalamet co-starred with Taylor Russell.

The young actor was hoping to earn his first Oscar for his performance in Josh Safdie’s ping-pong caper Marty Supreme, but a bold awards campaign took a nose-dive in early March, unhelped by Chalamet’s opera-ballet comments.

“I don’t want to be working in ballet or opera where it’s like, ‘Hey! Keep this thing alive, even though no one cares about this anymore,’” he said with a laugh in a live conversation with Matthew McConaughey for Variety and CNN. “All respect to the ballet and opera people out there … I just lost 14 cents in viewership. I’m taking shots for no reason.”

American opera singer Isabel Leonard responded at the time: “Honestly, I’m shocked that someone so seemingly successful can be so ineloquent and narrow-minded in his views about art while considering himself as [an] artist as I would only imagine one would as an actor,” while Canadian opera performer Deepa Johnny called it a “disappointing take.”

She continued: “There is nothing more impressive than the magic of live theatre, ballet and opera. We should be trying to uplift these art forms, these artists and come together across disciplines to do that.”

Chalamet will next be seen in December’s buzzy Dune concluder from Denis Villeneuve.

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Originally reported by Hollywood Reporter