USA TODAY International Edition

Chalamet says regal bowl cut was ‘ freeing’

Netflix’s production of “The King” drops Friday

- Patrick Ryan

NEW YORK – Bowl cuts, like greatness, can be thrust upon you.

Take it from Timothee Chalamet, who was forced to shear his famously luscious locks to play young Henry V in Netflix’s “The King” ( in theaters Friday in New York and Los Angeles, expanding nationwide throughout October before streaming Nov. 1), a somber mashup of William Shakespear­e’s plays about the 15th- century English monarch.

“We put a breakfast bowl on his head and just went for it,” jokes co- star Joel Edgerton, who co- wrote the film with director David Michod and worked the severe cut into the script after researchin­g paintings of the reallife Henry.

Seeing himself for the first time, “I was like, ‘ Does this really look that bad?’” Chalamet says with a grin, his mop of curls now blessedly restored. Eventually, “I realized what a burden I put on myself by having these window blinders, and it was very freeing.”

“King” follows defiant prince Hal ( Chalamet) as he reluctantl­y ascends the English throne after his father’s death and becomes King Henry V. But his hopes for a peaceful reign are dashed after a perceived threat from the Dauphin of France ( Robert Pattinson), and Henry makes the difficult decision to wage war as he second- guesses his subjects’ loyalty, save for trusted adviser Sir John Falstaff ( Edgerton).

Having played Henry on stage in his native Australia, Edgerton was eager to tell a version of Shakespear­e’s story

that depicted the battles in all their “claustroph­obic, dangerous, panicked” messiness, without losing the characters’ emotional integrity. But the gritty retelling struggled to find financing for years because of its period setting, until Netflix came on board and helped lure Chalamet, 23, who earned a best actor Oscar nomination for his breakthrou­gh role in gay romance “Call Me By Your Name.”

“If we had made it ( earlier), it wouldn’t have been Timmy,” says Edgerton, 45. “I would’ve had to drag him by his school bag out of eighth grade.”

Before “King,” Chalamet mostly starred in low- budget, awards- friendly fare such as “Lady Bird” and “Beautiful Boy,” which made this film’s epic scope daunting at first.

“Things that are scary are good, and this scared the ( expletive) out of me,” Chalamet says. But he was heartened by “David’s faith in the project and that I could do it. The goal was never to match what Sir Laurence Olivier and Sir Kenneth Branagh did ( in past ‘ Henry V’ movies), but rather to get a searing portrait of a young man with good intent, ( who faces) circumstan­ces beyond what he can control or affect.”

Before shooting in England and Hungary last year, Chalamet spent a month and a half training to sword- fight and ride horses while wearing hulking suits of armor and chainmail: “Not to get to a place of ( butt)- kicking, but to a place of it being believable that I can hold my own in battles or duels,” he says.

It was useful preparatio­n for next year’s ambitious sci- fi adventure “Dune,” in which he plays prophetic young leader Paul Atreides. Adapted from Frank Herbert’s 1965 novel, and directed by Denis Villeneuve (“Blade Runner 2049”), the big- budget remake offers a “grounded” take on the mindbendin­g source material, Chalamet teases, and marks his most commercial project yet as a leading man.

Chalamet, for his part, seems primed for Hollywood stardom, appearing next as heartthrob Laurie in Greta Gerwig’s highly anticipate­d “Little Women” ( in theaters Christmas Day). He savvily sidesteps questions about working with “King” co- star and rumored girlfriend Lily- Rose Depp, who plays a small but impactful role as Henry’s betrothed Catherine of Valois. (“It was awesome and what great scenes,” he says, expounding on her character’s “fearless, righteous” nature.)

And with more fame comes less privacy, which the New York native has taken with humility and humor. He brought bagels to the Manhattan premiere of “King” last week and handed them to fans, many of whom have pinpointed his favorite local bagel haunt, where they wait outside on a near- daily basis to snap selfies with him.

“I was just saying to my mom the other day that I need to scope out some new bagel places,” Chalamet says. “Thankfully, New York is the best city in the world for that – it’s not like looking for bagels in Paris.”

 ?? ROBERT DEUTSCH/ USA TODAY ?? “The character was ... part of my imaginatio­n for ... 20 years,” says Joel Edgerton, left, of Henry V, played by Timothee Chalamet.
ROBERT DEUTSCH/ USA TODAY “The character was ... part of my imaginatio­n for ... 20 years,” says Joel Edgerton, left, of Henry V, played by Timothee Chalamet.
 ?? NETFLIX ?? King Henry V is played by Timothee Chalamet in Netflix’s “The King,” which opens Friday.
NETFLIX King Henry V is played by Timothee Chalamet in Netflix’s “The King,” which opens Friday.

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