Vancouver's Gabriel LaBelle says snagging his first Golden Globe nomination feels so "surreal" he hasn't wrapped his head around it yet 鈥 though that might be because he was among the last to hear the news.
The 22-year-old earned a nod Monday for best actor in a motion picture comedy for playing a young Lorne Michaels in Jason Reitman鈥檚 鈥淪aturday Night,鈥 a film dramatizing the shambolic 90 minutes before the inaugural episode of 鈥淪aturday Night Live.鈥
"Literally everyone else knew before I did," the 22-year-old said during a call from San Diego on Monday evening, explaining he was fast asleep when the nominations were announced.
"I turned my phone on from airplane mode to about 150 messages from friends and family. I was just really grateful that I knew that many people who would reach out to me," laughed the actor, who broke out for playing a fictionalized version of a young Steven Spielberg in 2022's "The Fabelmans."
LaBelle said he hasn't had time to process the nomination's significance.
"I think it's too soon to actually know what it is or if it means anything at all. But I think it does. I hope it does."
LaBelle will square off against Jesse Eisenberg from "A Real Pain," Hugh Grant from "Heretic," Jesse Plemons from "Kinds of Kindness," Glen Powell from "Hit Man" and Sebastian Stan from "A Different Man."
He was among several Canadians to receive Golden Globe nominations, including fellow first-timer Pamela Anderson, who is up for best actress in a dramatic film for her starring role in "The Last Showgirl," about a veteran Las Vegas performer struggling to reinvent herself when her show suddenly ends after a 30-year run.
In "Saturday Night," LaBelle portrays a frazzled and frustrated Michaels, navigating a series of unforeseen challenges while leading a group of inexperienced comedians and writers. He stars opposite Dylan O鈥橞rien as Dan Aykroyd, Cory Michael Smith as Chevy Chase and Rachel Sennott as Rosie Shuster, Michaels' wife at the time.
LaBelle said Shuster, who was a writer for "SNL," showered him with praise after "Saturday Night" had its Canadian premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.
"She said all the things that a young actor could dream of. That meant so much to me. I cried in the bathroom at the wrap party after hearing them," he said, adding that she commended him for capturing Michaels' mannerisms and energy.
LaBelle said that after receiving Shuster's compliment, the Golden Globes nod just feels like "extra candy and icing on the cake."
"In terms of getting him down as a person, I think that will always be the most meaningful (honour) because she was actually there and she knew him."
LaBelle said while filming "Saturday Night," Reitman stressed that the actor shouldn't fall into the trap of doing "a Lorne Michaels impression."
"He just wanted me to focus on (playing) a young artist who's making something different that people don't believe in, and everything goes wrong. So how do you convey that level of care and passion and still be someone that people root for?"
LaBelle, who made his acting debut in CTV's 2013 police procedural "Motive," said it feels "super cool" to receive his first Golden Globes nod for playing a Canadian icon.
"I feel like people don't really know about Canadians through Hollywood. And it's not like this is a PSA movie on Canadians and sa国际传媒, but it definitely feels cool."
Other Canadians competing for awards include Hamilton, Ontario's Martin Short, who received his fourth nod for playing a theatre director in Disney Plus鈥 鈥淥nly Murders in the Building," and Quebec filmmaker Denis Villeneuve, who's up for best drama film for his sci-fi sequel 鈥淒une: Part Two."
LaBelle said he hasn't yet received feedback on his performance from Michaels himself.
"As far as I'm concerned, I don't know if he's even seen it. And if I was him, I wouldn't watch it. He's got to finish this latest season of his show before he has time to be nostalgic."
The 82nd Golden Globes will be hosted by comedian Nikki Glaser on Jan. 5, 2025, airing live on Citytv.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 10, 2024.
Alex Nino Gheciu, The Canadian Press