The internet has spent weeks debating Timothée Chalamet’s now-viral comments about ballet and opera. The latest voice to enter the discourse: Steven Spielberg.
During a live podcast conversation at SXSW on March 13, the legendary director was reflecting on the communal power of moviegoing when he suddenly shouted out two of the oldest performing arts institutions. “It happens in movies. It happens in concerts. It happens in ballet and opera!” Spielberg said, prompting cheers and whoops from the audience.
Spielberg was describing what he sees as the uniquely communal experience of the arts — the feeling of gathering together with strangers in a dark room and emerging united after the story ends.
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“The real experience comes when we can influence a community to congregate in a strange, dark place,” he told Sean Fennessey, host of The Big Picture podcast. “At the end of a really good movie experience, we are all united… There’s nothing like that.”
The moment immediately echoed the online controversy surrounding Chalamet, who sparked backlash earlier this year after dismissing ballet and opera in a recent interview.
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While promoting Marty Supreme at a February town hall hosted by Variety and CNN alongside Matthew McConaughey, Chalamet joked about the challenge of keeping movie theaters alive in a changing entertainment landscape.
“I don’t want to be working in ballet or opera, or things where it’s like, ‘Hey, keep this thing alive,’ even though it’s like, no one cares about this anymore,” Chalamet said at the event, before adding, “All respect to the ballet and opera people out there.”
The comments quickly went viral and drew pushback from across the performing arts world. New York City Ballet principal dancer Tiler Peck wrote on Instagram that the idea “no one cares about ballet or opera anymore” couldn’t be further from the truth, highlighting the artists, musicians, and stage crews who dedicate their lives to the craft.
Ballet star Misty Copeland also weighed in, noting that while opera and ballet may not dominate pop culture in the same way films do, their cultural impact has endured for centuries. “There’s a reason that the opera and ballet have been around for over 400 years,” she said.
So when Spielberg praised those same art forms during his SXSW keynote conversation — and the crowd erupted in approval — the moment landed as more than just a passing comment. In the context of the internet’s ongoing Chalamet saga, it felt like a gentle correction.
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