PeterRS Posted Monday at 02:43 AM Posted Monday at 02:43 AM Is it a sign of age that Awards shows just seem to get more and more boring each year? But then why watch them? This year it was in the hope that Timothee Chalamet would not win the Best Actor Oscar - and he didn't! Like so many, I really enjoyed his performance in Call Me By Your Name. Increasingly since then, I find him - frankly - boring. I also have little respect for anyone who says he wants to be the GOAT. You can have achieved the acclamation of GOAT but to state that as your goal in your professional life for me is a definite no-no! This is what he said after he won for the movie A Complete Unknown at last years SAG Awards - “I can’t downplay the significance of this award because it means the most to me, and I know we’re in a subjective business, but the truth is, I’m really in pursuit of greatness,” Chalamet said. “I know people don’t usually talk like that, but I want to be one of the greats." And who can respect anyone who says he is going out with Kylie Jenner? As one commentator has asked, is that just a stunt to prove he is probably not gay? https://www.onstageblog.com/editorials/2026/1/5/timothe-chalamet-wants-to-be-the-goat-and-im-here-for-it Quote
PeterRS Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago The chatter about Chalamet has recently mostly been about his remark to Matthew McConaughy on TV when he basically trashed opera and ballet performances in saying that he did not want to be working in dying art forms which no one cares about any more. Leave aside it was a very stupid comment considering his mother and sister were trained at one of America's most prestigious ballet companies and worked in ballet and dance. Leave aside the actual numbers which prove that ballet and opera audiences, whilst often intensely loyal to their art forms, are indeed falling. Let's just recall that movie stars in general have never been to a performance of either art form. I remember when the BAFTA Awards ceremony moved to London's Royal Opera House in 2008, Stephen Fry was the host. In his inroduction, he told his audience how wonderful it was to be on the same stage where Nijinsky sang and Nellie Melba danced. There was not one titter from anyone in the packed theatre. Yet it was a joke. Nijinsky was arguably the greatest male ballet dancer the world has ever known and Melba, whose name is carried forward in Melba Toast and Peach Melba both created in her honour by the renowned chef Escoffier, was one of the greatest opera singers. Quote