Timothée Hal Chalamet was born on December 27, 1995, in New York City, to Nicole Flender, an American dancer and actress, and Marc Chalamet, a French journalist. He grew up in Hell's Kitchen, spending summers with his French grandparents in Le Chambon-sur-Lignon — a village whose history of sheltering Jewish children during the Second World War became an important part of his cultural identity. He attended La Guardia High School for Music & Art and Performing Arts, then studied drama at Columbia University before transferring to NYU Tisch for one year before leaving to pursue his acting career full-time.
His performances in Lady Bird (2017) and especially Call Me by Your Name (2017) announced him as one of the most significant actors of his generation. His portrayal of Elio — an Italian-American teenager's awakening desire for an older American scholar, played with a quality of genuine emotional transparency that was startling in a twenty-one-year-old — made him the second-youngest actor in history to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor. His subsequent work in Beautiful Boy (2018), Little Women (2019), and Dune (2021, 2023) maintained the specificity and emotional authenticity of his debut.
His physical grace — he trained as a rapper and dancer as well as an actor at La Guardia — gives him a quality of movement that most actors of comparable dramatic depth don't possess. Dune established him as a movie star in the traditional sense while maintaining the quality of interiority that distinguishes his character work from conventional action-hero performances. A Complete Unknown (2024), in which he played Bob Dylan, demonstrated his continued commitment to powerful biographical roles.
Chalamet's INFP quality is most visible in the emotional directness of his best work: he does not interpret characters from the outside but finds in each role something continuous with his own emotional experience. His interviews demonstrate the same quality: an unusual willingness to engage honestly with actual questions rather than perform engagement, combined with genuine humility about his craft. He has spoken about the anxiety and self-doubt accompanying his work — not as therapeutic disclosure but as honest description of what preparation actually feels like.