Irish Daily Mail

Troubled past of Hollywood’s HOTTEST NEW HUNK whose topless shots have propelled him into the stratosphe­re

Jeremy Allen White won an Emmy for the cult TV hit The Bear. Now it’s his pants everyone’s talking about. But he’s also a recovering alcoholic whose draconian separation agreement demands he’s breathalys­ed every time he sees his daughters

- from Tom Leonard

WITH his tattooed biceps, artfully dishevelle­d hair and mournful, blue-eyed gaze, Carmen ‘Carmy’ Berzatto hardly needs to display his ability with a paring knife to show that chefs can be sexy.

Not that he has any time for romantic distractio­ns in the hit TV series The Bear, in which the character gives up a glittering career as an acclaimed chef in New York to take over his late brother’s rundown sandwich shop in Chicago.

A sensitive, scarred soul, Carmy struggles with the repercussi­ons of his brother’s suicide and daily screaming matches with his kitchen staff.

‘I understand people having a crush on Carmy. I think I have a bit of a crush on Carmy,’ jokes Jeremy Allen White, the actor who plays him.

That sounds like false modesty, as 32-year-old White knows full well that his huge female following sees little distinctio­n between him and the character he plays – witness the wild whooping that greeted White on Monday night as he took to the stage at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles to accept the award for outstandin­g lead actor in a comedy series at the Emmys.

Yet his decision to dedicate the gong, which he won shortly after picking up the best actor award at the Golden Globes, to his two young daughters was surely bitterswee­t given that the troubled actor now has to have an alcohol breathalys­er test every time he wants to see them.

The enormous appeal of Tinseltown’s latest heartthrob – whose roguish image has created such carnal frenzy on social media that he’s been dubbed ‘the internet’s new boyfriend’ – was driven home earlier this month when Calvin Klein launched an advertisin­g campaign featuring a muscleboun­d White stripping down to a pair of its skintight boxers.

A TV commercial released in the U.S. on January 4 shows White climbing the stairs to the roof of a sun-splashed office building in his native New York. Once there, the camera lingers lovingly over his heavily muscled torso as he peels off his singlet and shorts, athletical­ly scales a ladder and vaults a fire escape before sprawling provocativ­ely on a red sofa.

It helps that White was in peak physical condition when the shoot took place, thanks to a punishing fitness regime designed to bulk him up for his role as a wrestler in the film The Iron Claw.

It certainly had the desired effect. Sexually provocativ­e adverts are the stock-in-trade of the fashion giant but the results were astonishin­g: industry experts estimate that the ad generated $12million worth of media exposure for Calvin Klein in less than 48 hours.

The buzz surroundin­g the ads was turned up a notch shortly afterwards when the UK’s Advertisin­g Standards Authority (ASA) banned posters from a Calvin Klein campaign which featured the British singer FKA Twigs with a breast partially exposed. The regulator said it presented her as ‘a stereotypi­cal sexual object’ and could not be shown in Britain.

In a comment widely seen as a reference to the White advert, the ASA’s ruling was condemned by Twigs as ‘double standards’, thus ensuring yet more media coverage for Calvin Klein.White may be a ‘stereotypi­cal sexual object’ himself now, but this transition from TV star to global love god certainly hasn’t been bad for him.

His breakout role was in a U.S. remake of the Channel 4 comedy drama Shameless that first aired in 2011.

But his career has shot into the stratosphe­re on the back of two series of The Bear – shown on Hulu and Disney+ – which have led to his first major feature film, The Iron Claw, which is already out in the U.S. and will be released here on February 9.

The biographic­al drama about a

beefcake American profession­al wrestling family, the Von Erichs, will, inevitably, provide White’s legions of breathless fans with an extended opportunit­y to once again appreciate the hard work he has been putting in at the gym. He gained 40lb of muscle to play the strapping Kerry Von Erich – a huge amount given that White is only 5 ft 7 in tall.

It may also offer further confirmati­on of something that industry insiders have been whispering for months – that the chain-smoking Brooklyn-born actor could well be Hollywood’s next superstar.

Despite his diminutive stature and strong resemblanc­e to a young Gene Wilder, the social media generation – which often prefers its pin-ups to be ‘alt’ (alternativ­e) rather than convention­ally Hollywood handsome – reckons White has the right stuff.

Also, ‘alt’ would be the fact that he has so far shunned romantic roles in favour of playing struggling ordinary Joes. In interviews, he comes across as self-assured but down-to-earth and unstarry, preferring to chat about his favourite pairs of trainers and how he cycles round with a music speaker attached to his bike rather than partying with A-listers.

However, this unpretenti­ous image conceals considerab­le personal turmoil. In grand Hollywood tradition, insiders say that sudden and intense fame has been something that White, and some of those close to him, have found hard to handle.

In May last year, his actress wife Addison Timlin, with whom he has two daughters, Ezer, five, and Dolores, three, announced that she was divorcing him, ending their marriage after less than four years. Timlin later revealed that they had actually separated the previous September.

The couple, who live in LA, met as teenagers on the set of 2008 film Afterschoo­l and first hinted that they were in a relationsh­ip five years later.

Shortly after news of the divorce broke, Timlin confided on Instagram that ‘being a single mum is not how I pictured it’. In a soulbearin­g post, she wrote: ‘It is so f***ing hard. It is all out covered in s*** crying on the floor kick you in the shins screaming with no sound coming out hard. It’s not the natural order of things. It can be exhausting but more than anything it can just be so lonely.’

This was quite a blow for White’s fans. A few months earlier he had not only declared his love for his wife on stage at the Golden Globes while picking up his first Globe for The Bear, but also told Vanity Fair: ‘I probably wouldn’t have done well if I were single or without children, or just younger and dumber. If you don’t have a foundation outside of your career, that can be a lonely existence.’

White was reportedly ‘blindsided’ by his wife’s outburst on social media as he regarded himself as an ‘involved’ dad, but a source quoted by Entertainm­ent Tonight said the couple had been having ‘trust issues’ that led to the divorce.

Friends insisted that he didn’t cheat on her, dismissing an anonymous claim on a showbusine­ss gossip site that he’d had an affair with a personal assistant on the set of The Bear.

They instead claimed that White’s packed filming schedule in Chicago had put intolerabl­e pressure on their relationsh­ip.

Then, last October, it was revealed that, in order to gain joint custody of the children, White had agreed to undergo regular alcohol testing while he was looking after them.

Apparently, Timlin had insisted on these draconian terms after observing ‘red flags’ when White drank ‘a few too many’ during their relationsh­ip.

As a result, White had to use Soberlink, an at-home alcoholmon­itoring device fitted with a facial-recognitio­n feature that ensures the people monitoring his behaviour can be certain he is the person using it.

ACCORDING to legal filings related to the divorce, White must conduct two Soberlink tests on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays when he is spending time with his daughters. On Saturdays, when he has custody, he must take three tests, while on Sundays only one test is required.

The results are automatica­lly sent in real time to designated individual­s and, should White test positive, his custodial time with Ezer and Dolores would be ‘terminated’ until such time as the former couple’s lawyers have had an opportunit­y to meet and thrash out a new arrangemen­t.

In addition, White must attend a minimum of two Alcoholics Anonymous meetings a week, as well as individual therapy sessions at least once a week. Should Timlin, 32, demand proof that he has been going, the actor would have three days to provide it.

Not that such onerous conditions appear to be cramping his style. Within three months of the divorce announceme­nt, White was photograph­ed kissing model Ashley Moore, 30, on an LA street. Less than two months later, that relationsh­ip was replaced by his current one with Spanish singersong­writer Rosalia, 31.

Such amorous pursuits are catnip to his starry-eyed fanbase. That red corduroy sofa, on which he throws his sweaty body in the Calvin Klein advert, was made available on Facebook Marketplac­e and a frenzy of bidding from his admirers is expected.

White, though, plays down the adulation, claiming he does not ‘really pay much attention to it’. He says it is his mother, Eloise Zeigler, who tells him ‘what they are saying on Twitter [X]’.

BORN in 1991 to Eloise and Richard White, both theatre actors, and raised in the nowgentrif­ied Brooklyn neighbourh­ood of Carroll Gardens, White has a younger sister, Annabelle, who studied cinema, radio and TV.

‘I had a lot of energy and not a lot of focus as a kid,’ White has said. ‘My parents would throw me into anything physical. I did soccer, wrestling, baseball, lacrosse, dance.’

At primary school he trained in ballet, tap and jazz, but says he ‘stumbled’ into acting classes when he was 12. He started getting small roles in films and commercial­s, before being cast aged 20 as alcoholic Phillip ‘Lip’ Gallagher in the American version of Shameless, a series about a dysfunctio­nal, impoverish­ed family who live on Chicago’s crimeridde­n South Side.

White stayed with the show for ten years and, soon afterwards, was cast as the lead in streaming service Hulu’s The Bear. He has said that his ultimate ambition is to follow his parents on to the stage and act on Broadway. To that end, he’s in talks about production­s that could start early next year.

As an actor he has been described as ‘continuall­y looking like his dog just died’ and, sure enough, he says he seeks out roles that involve loneliness, adding: ‘I feel very close to it all the time.’

White told GQ that, for him, 2023 had been ‘insane... a lot of high highs, a lot of terribly low lows’.

It’s not entirely clear whether he can expect the same in 2024, but he will need to start by investing in some bigger clothes. On stage at Monday night’s Emmys, he suffered a minor wardrobe malfunctio­n when his rippling chest threatened to burst through his straining shirt.

Chalk that up as yet another meme moment for the internet’s favourite heartthrob.

 ?? ?? Undressed to impress: Another shot from that Calvin Klein ad
Award-winner: As Carmy Berzatto in The Bear
Undressed to impress: Another shot from that Calvin Klein ad Award-winner: As Carmy Berzatto in The Bear
 ?? ?? Causing a frenzy: A well-honed Jeremy Allen White in Calvin Klein’s ad campaign this month
Causing a frenzy: A well-honed Jeremy Allen White in Calvin Klein’s ad campaign this month
 ?? ?? Family time: With ex-wife Addison and daughters Dolores and Ezer
Family time: With ex-wife Addison and daughters Dolores and Ezer

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