Timothée Chalamet was the first actor to be a host and musical guest on "Saturday Night Live." It's the latest stunt to promote "A Complete Unknown" to fans and the Academy Awards panel, alike.
Timothée Chalamet made another stop on his awards season promotional tour this weekend by pulling a double shift on “Saturday Night Live,” hosting as himself and singing like Bob Dylan, the rock legend he plays in the Oscar-nominated film “A Complete Unknown.”
Bob Dylan will play a show in Mankato on April 4 as part of his ongoing "Rough and Rowdy Ways" tour. Tickets go on sale on Feb. 1. It will be Dylan's first show in Minnesota since 2019. MANKATO, Minn.
The singer's increase in streams following "A Complete Unknown" highlights how music biopics can elevate an artist's popularity to new heights
The Bob Dylan biopic ‘A Complete Unknown’ has scored eight Oscar nominations, while Elton John and Brandi Carlile received a nod for Best Original Song.
"The Academy has always been a unifying force within the film industry, and we are committed to standing together in the face of hardship."
But at first sight, Chalamet’s stint as the frontman of a Dylan cover band coinciding with his Best Actor campaign was less loosey-goose anything-goes ’70s style than akin to the more nakedly promotional Garth-Brooks-as-Chris-Gaines type of deal.
From Nicole Kidman and Angelina Jolie missing Best Actress nominations to strong showings for The Substance and I'm Still Here.
Chalamet’s appearance on the show comes comes less than a week after he received an Academy Award nomination for best actor for his portrayal of music icon Bob Dylan in the biopic “A Complete Unknown.” It marks the second Oscar nod of Chalamet’s career, as he was previously nominated in the same category for the film “Call Me by Your Name.”
Bob Dylan has won all sorts of awards over the course of his career, but his one and only Academy Award nod came remarkably late on.
The actor pulled double duty as the host and musical guest after his Oscar nomination for "A Complete Unknown."