The 19-year-old musician was drawn to New York by the promise of counterculture in a part of the city that's a-changin'
Traces remain of the bohemian and cultured city of the 1960s, where Robert Zimmerman became Bob Dylan January is supposed to be a time for New Year resolutions; for making changes to your life amid the otherwise unpromising gloom of mid-winter...
Production Designer François Audouy tells IndieWire about recreating Bob Dylan's Greenwich Village apartment for 'A Complete Unknown.'
For a guy who couldn’t really sing and who drifted in and out of key like a drunk on a tightrope, Bob Dylan had an outsized influence on the way the Western world listened to mu
Timothée Chalamet appeared at the Rome photo call for his latest film, “A Complete Unknown,” where he stars as Bob Dylan. For the event on Friday, the actor’s Prada look paid homage to the iconic American singer-songwriter’s early 1960s style.
Bob Dylan has always had a fraught relationship with the world of progressive social change. He wrote some of the most penetrating socially conscious songs of the early 1960s — “Blowin’ in the Wind,” “The Times They Are A-Changin’,
Bob Dylan's life story is being brought to life on the silver screen thanks to Timothée Chalamet and A Complete Unknown, introducing the singer and his work to a whole new generation. The movie sees Chalamet portray the soft-spoken musician during his rise to fame in the folk music scene,
In light of the popularity of Timothée Chalamet as Bob Dylan in "A Complete Unknown," the actor will take the stage of "Saturday Night Live."
Filmmaker James Mangold tapped production designer François Audouy to create a replica of Dylan's New York. Their first stop? New Jersey.
A Complete Unknown has officially become one of the year’s most talked-about films. James Mangold ’s masterful take on the life of Bob Dylan —portrayed by Timothée Chalamet —has not only reached new heights for a musical biopic;
The 141-minute movie has generated renewed interest in Dylan, particularly that period of his career. For the rest of the story — and the true story — we offer these albums, books and additional
In recreating New York’s Greenwich Village in the early ’60s for the Bob Dylan biopic, “A Complete Unknown,” production designer François Audouy adopted as his mantra the fabled line from ...