TimothΓ©e Chalamet’s extensive pingpong training for ‘Marty Supreme’

TimothΓ©e Chalamet’s extensive pingpong training for ‘Marty Supreme’


First clue that someone is serious about pingpong: They call it table tennis.

Second clue: They bring their own paddle.

TimothΓ©e Chalamet dropped a third clue on movie sets all over the globe. To prepare for his role in the delightfully frenetic β€œMarty Supreme,” the two-time Oscar nominee traveled for years with a table in tow, training and presumably enjoying the sport at the center of the current holiday season hit.

Director Josh Safdie enlisted the husband-and-wife table-tennis teaching tandem of Diego Schaaf and Wei Wang β€” a former U.S. Olympian β€” to elevate Chalamet’s game as well as serve as technical advisors on set.

But Chalamet was already playing nearly well enough to emulate a world champion on screen. He’d taken lessons and done his homework β€” setting up a table in the living room of his New York apartment and playing throughout the pandemic.

β€œEverything I was working on, it was this secret,” Chalamet told the Hollywood Reporter. β€œI had a table in London while I was making β€˜Wonka.’ On β€˜Dune: Part Two,’ I had a table in Budapest [and] Jordan. I had a table in Abu Dhabi. I had a table at the Cannes Film Festival for β€˜The French Dispatch.’”

It seems implausible that Chalamet was immersed in table tennis while also learning to sing and play guitar for the role of Bob Dylan in β€œA Complete Unknown.”

β€œIf anyone thinks this is cap, as the kids say β€” if anyone thinks this is made up β€” this is all documented, and it’ll be put out,” he said. β€œThese were the two spoiled projects where I got years to work on them. This is the truth. I was working on both these things concurrently.”

Wherever Chalamet found the time, Schaaf was impressed by the result.

β€œHe was singularly dedicated to getting this to be the same quality as the rest of the movie,” Schaaf told the Hollywood Reporter.

Eschewing a stunt double for the table tennis scenes was a point of pride for Chalamet. The only concession to modern moviemaking was that several of the longer sequences during games were choreographed without a ball, which was added later via computer-generated imagery (CGI).

β€œWe realized it had to be scripted to be able to film it,” Schaaf told the Washington Post. β€œAnd because it was scripted, we had to practice it first with a real ball. He had to understand the physical layout of the point: Where does he have to go? When does he have to go there? When you later on do [visual effects] and put the ball in there, it’s critical that the player goes to the right place.”

Schaaf said about 60 points were scripted.

β€œWe needed a lot of rehearsal, and I was amazed,” he said. β€œTimothΓ©e wound up getting a better feel for it than most professional players because professional players take the cue from the ball. You take the ball away, they all were like β€˜What is the timing?’

β€œOf course, they have a good sense of timing and then they learned it quickly. But TimothΓ©e was right there on top of it.”

The on-screen rival of Chalamet’s character, Marty Mauser, is Koto Endo, portrayed by real-life Japanese table tennis champion Koto Kawaguchi. Their dynamic approximated the real-life rivalry between 1950s U.S. champion Marty Reisman and Japan’s Hiroji Satoh.

In her review of β€œMarty Supreme,” Times film critic Amy Nicholson noted that well-struck pingpong balls travel up to 70 mph.

β€œSet in 1952 New York, this deranged caper races after a money-grubbing table tennis hustler (he prefers β€˜professional athlete’) who argues like he plays, swatting away protests and annoying his adversaries to exhaustion,” she wrote.

Nicholson offers that Reisman would be pleased by the movie, β€œwhich time-travels audiences back seven decades to when American table tennis players were certain bright days were ahead.

β€œAs an athlete, Chalamet seems to have lost muscle for the role. Yet as funny as it is to see a guy this scrawny carry himself like Hercules, he leaps and strikes with conviction.”

Nothing gives an actor β€” or an athlete β€” self-assurance like practice, repetitions and rehearsals. Chalamet’s paddle performance is proof.



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