Legendary ballerina Misty Copeland confirms she'll be performing at the Oscars after saying Timothee Chalamet 'wouldn't be an actor' if it wasn't for 'opera and ballet'

2 hours ago 8

Legendary ballerina Misty Copeland has revealed she'll be performing at this year's Oscars, after criticising nominee Timothee Chalamet over his comments that 'no one cares' about ballet or opera.

The dancer, 43, is set to join Sinners stars Miles Caton and Raphael Saadiq for a live performance of the film's track I Lied to You on Sunday, while Timothee is expected to attend after landing a Best Actor nomination for Marty Supreme.

Timothee has sparked furious backlash after making the controversial remarks during an hour-long Variety/CNN Town Hall, where he said: 'I don't want to be working in ballet or opera. Things where it's like, ''Hey, keep this thing alive, even though no one cares about this anymore''.'

While he went on to try and backtrack his comments, his views have not been received well across the industry, with Misty herself saying that Timothee wouldn't 'opportunities he has as a movie star' without 'opera and ballet.'

Misty shared the announcement of her performance on Instagram Stories, writing: 'Can't wait to perform alongside such incredible talent.'

The dancer's return to the stage will also come just weeks after revealing she'd undergone a hip replacement surgery late last year, posting on February 25 she'd spent the past few months 'healing - physically, mentally, and patiently.'

Legendary ballerina Misty Copeland has revealed she'll be performing at this year's Oscars, after criticising nominee Timothee Chalamet for saying 'no one cares' about ballet or opera

Earlier this week, Misty blasted Timothee's comments about opera and ballet as she insisted it had an 'enduring relevance in culture.'

The performer had previously promoted the actor's film Marty Supreme last year, with a throwback picture of her doing ballet as a child.

Speaking at a panel for Aveeno, she said in a clip shared on TikTok: 'First I have to say that it's very interesting that he invited me to be a part of promoting Marty Supreme with respect to my art form.

'But I think that it's important that we acknowledge that, yes, this is an art form that is not ''popular'' and a part of pop culture as movies are. But that doesn't mean it doesn't have enduring relevance in culture.'

She continued: 'I think it's often mistaken when something is popular that it's meaningful or more impactful. There's a reason that the opera and ballet have been around for over 400 years.

'I think when you have access and you have opportunity to be a part of something that can change your life, and that's the work that I've done been doing with the Misty Copeland Foundation.'

She concluded: 'That's the work I've done my whole career, is to bring more people into it so that people do understand the importance and the relevance of it in our communities and our culture, and you see it reflected everywhere.

'I mean, he wouldn't be an actor and have the opportunities he has as a movie star if it weren't for opera and ballet, and their relevance in that medium. All of these mediums have a space and we shouldn't be comparing them.'

Misty is not alone in her disappointment over Timothée's words, with a number of opera fans and balletomanes left seething at the star, and two other famed classical singers also chastising him publicly.

US opera singer Isabel Leonard took to social media to blast the Dune star's character as 'weak' and 'narrow-minded'.

She wrote: 'Honestly, I'm shocked that someone so seemingly successful can be so ineloquent and narrow-minded in his views about art while considering himself as an artist as I would only imagine one would as an actor.

'To take cheap shots at fellow artists says more in this interview than anything else he could say. Shows a lot about his character.

'You don't have to like all art but only a weak person/artist feels the need to diminish in fact, the very arts that would inspire those who are interested in slowing down, to do exactly that.'

Timothee has sparked furious backlash after an unearthed interview saw him remark he 'doesn't want to work in ballet or opera'

Misty shared that she will take to the stage alongside Sinners stars Miles Caton and Raphael Saadiq for a live performance of the film's track I Lied to You on Sunday

While Canadian mezzo-soprano Deepa Johnny echoed her view, saying: 'What a disappointing take. There is nothing more impressive than the magic of live theatre, ballet and opera.

'We should be trying to uplift these art forms, these artists and come together across disciplines to do that. The impact of these mediums are long, long-lasting and life-changing.'

Timothée's dig at opera and ballet came when he and Matthew were discussing the Hollywood figures who make public statements in support of movie theaters.

'I admire people, and I've done it myself, doing a talk show about how we've got to keep movie theatres alive, you know, we've got to keep this genre alive,' he said.

'And another part of me feels like, if people want to see it, like Barbie, like Oppenheimer, they're going to go see it and go out of their way to be loud and proud about it,' he added, noting opera and ballet do not have that mainstream audience.

When he then apologized for the 'shot' he had taken at the art form, Matthew defended the claim, assuring: 'That's not a shot, I hear what you're saying.'

However, the remark drew a withering response from London's Royal Ballet and Opera and New York City's Metropolitan Opera, with the latter retaliating by posting a montage of its employees hard at work.

Written over the top was the telling comment: 'All respect to the opera (and ballet) people out there,' while the caption left no doubt as to the target of its message, reading: 'This one's for you, Timothée Chalamet…'

To make matters worse, Timothée's 'own mother Nicole Flender and late grandmother Enid Flender were both professional dancers.

Enid - who died at the age of 95 in 2022 - danced in Broadway musicals Kiss Me, Kate at the Shubert Theatre from 1949-1951 and Make Mine Manhattan at the Broadhurst Theatre in 1949.

While Nicole, 68, studied at the School of American Ballet and eventually taught dance from 1990-2015.

The Marty Supreme star's fellow entertainers have also publicly hit out at him and voiced their support for opera and ballet.

Among them are actors Helen Hunt, Eva Mendes, Sarah Hyland, Holland Taylor, Laura Benanti, King Princess and Alexis Knap, as well as director Sam Taylor-Johnson, models Ashley Graham and Poppy Delevingne, and ballerina Misty Copeland.

And on Monday, EGOT winner Whoopi Goldberg branded him 'disrespectful', addressing him directly on The View, as she said: 'You come from a dance family - and so, when you c**p on somebody else's art form, it doesn't feel good.

'It doesn't feel good to see, and you probably didn't realize that until you said, "Oh, I'm in trouble."'

While Whoopi said Timothée 'compounded' his issues in joking that he would have lost a total of 14 cents after the chat, warning: 'When people get mad, it'll be a lot more than 14 cents - so be careful. I'm just saying, be careful, boy.'

Calling the actor 'a boy to me', she said that the A Complete Unknown shouldn't issue an apology, because it came off as inauthentic.

'Really, don't apologize when you've insulted. It doesn't sound right. You can't say, "Oh, this is dumb, no disrespect." That's absolute disrespect,' she fumed.

Rapper and singer Doja Cat, 30, went even further, as she posted a blistering online rant slamming Timothée and praising the opera and ballet industries as 'amazing'.

She said: 'By the way, opera is 400 years old and ballet is 500 years old. Somebody named Timothée Chalamet, had the nerve, big guy by the way, had the nerve, on camera that nobody cares about it.

'I'm pretty sure that if you went to an opera theatre right now, seats will be filled out and nobody saying a word as the performance is going on because everybody has that much respect for it.'

Drawing attention to the dedication of the dancers, the hitmaker added: 'They [dancers] show up, they break and they bleed, every single day, just because they have respect for it. They love it'.

And Oscar winner Jamie, 67, also appeared to clap back as she reposted Broadway thespian Zach McNally's Instagram clip about the scandal, where he asked: 'Why is Timothée Chalamet taking shots at opera and ballet?'

'Why are any artists taking shots at any other artist in the time [when] artificial intelligence threatens literally all art forms, except performing art like plays, ballets and operas and musicals.'

The Halloween actress then went on to re-post clips from prestigious companies like the Nationale Opera & Ballet in Amsterdam before showing a lot of support for Michael B. Jordan, who is up against Timothée in the Best Actor race at the Oscars this weekend.

Gold Derby is now predicting that the Sinners star, 39, has a 48.28 percent chance of winning the gong, while Timothée has slipped to 36.99 percent.

The boyfriend of Kylie Jenner was previously considered the frontrunner after winning best actor at the Critics' Choice Awards on January 4 and the Golden Globe Awards on January 11.

However, many of the 11,000 registered Academy members probably cast their ballot before voting officially closed last Thursday at 5pm PT, so it's unclear if his chances will be affected.

Read Entire Article