Toronto Star

RISING STAR NOT FUSSED IF YOU GET HIS NAME WRONG

Young actor garnering acclaim and award nomination­s for roles in Call Me by Your Name and Lady Bird

- PETER HOWELL MOVIE CRITIC

Considerin­g how particular the characters are that Timothée Chalamet plays in Call Me by Your Name and

Lady Bird, you’d think he’d be equally precise regarding the pronunciat­ion of his first name.

No so. The actor acknowledg­es that it should end with the French “ay” sound, rhyming with his last name, but he’ll also answer to the English “ee” ending, as befits his internatio­nal heritage: his dad’s French, his mom’s American.

“Oh, whatever works,” the 21-yearold says from hometown New York.

“It’s supposed to be Timo-TAY, but that always seems like . . . too obnoxious.”

Whatever you choose to call Chalamet, you need to add “awards nominee” to any descriptio­n of this fastrising talent, whose previous accomplish­ments include the films

Interstell­ar and Hot Summer Nights and the TV series Homeland and Royal Pains.

This week he received Best Actor nomination­s for the upcoming Golden Globes and Screen Actors Guild Awards, adding to prior kudos for his acclaimed lead performanc­e in Luca Guadagnino’s Call Me by Your Name, a coming-of-age love story. He’s widely expected to receive an Oscar nod in January.

Chalamet is also winning praise for his small-but-memorable turn as a cynical young musician in Greta Gerwig’s similarly Oscar-bound Lady

Bird, playing opposite lead Saoirse Ronan.

“There’s no design to it,” he says of his career, which includes the justwrappe­d Woody Allen film for 2018, A Rainy Day in New York.

“The desire was always just to be working with great directors and good storytelle­rs and good actors. By tremendous luck, I get to be in two films (for 2017) that I’m very proud of and to get to work with Greta and Luca were transforma­tive experience­s. I’m just sitting in the moment, trying to savour it.” But he can also talk a bit while he savours:

You’re in two of the year’s most talked-about sex scenes: the peach encounter in Call Me by Your Name and the “unspecial sex” one in Lady Bird. How do you feel about them?

On the page, those are the scenes that catch the anxiety in your throat. There’s a certain physical requiremen­t to them that’s obviously vulnerable and more than what one usually reveals to another person, let alone in front of a camera to an entire audience.

Yet when it comes to the day of doing it, it becomes so about doing it honestly — and when you do it with a scene partner like Saoirse, it’s about establishi­ng very solid boundaries in the doing of the scene. With the peach, conversely, it’s just about focusing purely on the honesty of the moment and you kind of forget about the camera.

It can actually be even more freeing than having a ton of exposition­al lines or a more classical over-the-shoulder shot, two-person dialogue scene.

Call Me by Your Name ends with another much-discussed scene, the one where Michael Stuhlbarg, playing the dad to your character Elio, delivers an incredibly compassion-

ate father-to-son monologue. What was your reaction?

It’s a transforma­tive experience watching that scene. And I’ve got to say, just being opposite Michael and doing it, I was able to hear everything he was saying in the scene. It’s about not extinguish­ing the pain that comes with heartbreak, or the ambiguity a relationsh­ip can bring, but rather to nurture that pain, and to treat it like a child and nurture it.

And you know, I’m a theatre kid from New York: I grew up going to see plays, and I had seen Michael Stuhlbarg in Martin McDonagh’s The

Pillowman, when I must have been 12 or 13 years old. When I heard he had

been cast in Call Me by Your Name, I was already like a kid in the candy store. When it came time to shoot that scene, I simply thought to myself, “Let the master go to work, and be a fly on the wall.” Did you have to do much preparatio­n for that scene?

Sometimes, as an actor, you kind of memorize a scene in its entirety, or what your scene partner is doing, if you have a sensitive scene. But with that one, I didn’t even look at the speech beforehand. I wanted to hear it wholly and authentica­lly for the first time on camera. So it’s a real wild experience watching it, because it’s just so profound and touching. Your character Elio is 17 in Call Me by Your Name, but Armie Hammer’s Oliver, who plays your lover, is 24 — although in real life, Hammer is actually 10 years older than you. Have you heard any concerns expressed about the age gap between these two lovers?

What I always say to that is, I just encourage people to see the film or read the book, because it’s so clear in watching it how consensual the story is. It’s full of love and care. And, in many ways, with Elio being from the town (in the movie) he’s in his comfort zone, as opposed to the foreigner, Oliver. Elio is the driver of this relationsh­ip in many ways.

Has anyone close to you seen Call Me by Your Name yet?

Yes, my mother has. She loves it. She really was very moved by it. We spent our summers in France when I was growing up, in small towns with languid and relaxing summers in the heat. So it was a close experience to what we had. And I think there was a sense of relief for her as a mother and as someone with a protective and guardian-like instinct that this project, which maybe in the book could have been a little more salacious, was actually treated very warmly. This interview was condensed and edited.

 ?? RYAN PFLUGER/THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Timothée Chalamet in West Hollywood, Calif., in November. Call Me by Your Name, one of two new films he stars in, is a coming-of-age story about two young men who fall in love during a summer in Italy decades ago.
RYAN PFLUGER/THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Timothée Chalamet in West Hollywood, Calif., in November. Call Me by Your Name, one of two new films he stars in, is a coming-of-age story about two young men who fall in love during a summer in Italy decades ago.

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