Jeremy Allen White recently became Candide and revealed what he felt while playing Bruce Springsteen.
The 34 -year -old American actor appeared on the Wtf Podcast, where he shared that he had not had enough musical training before having agreed to play the legendary singer-songwriter and guitarist in his biopic Springsteen: Dis me from nowhere.
While conversing with his Costar Marc Maron, who plays Chuck Plotkin in the next biographical dramatic film written and directed by Scott Cooper, White overthrew the tea by playing Springsteen before the man himself.
He said: “I hadn’t had much experience, nor any experience, singing or playing the guitar, so it was the least intimidating at the start.”
The Mandalorian and the Grogu noted that during the shooting, Springsteen “could not make the difference” between their voice at certain times for which he gave credit to the vocal coach Eric Vetro, whose help in mastery of master’s degree Glory days Crooner’s voice played a crucial role.
“He helped Austin [Butler] With the film Elvis, he helped Timothee Chalamet with the [Bob] Dylan Movie, he is sort of Go-To, and he works with many singers and real singers and performers, “joked White.
Despite Vetro’s constant coaching, he admitted “the song was a bet” and the phrasing on the 1982 record Nebraska was difficult to do well.
“I remember that Bruce was super the first time that he heard one of my pre-rents because he was like” you look like me, but you sing the song, you make the song. You have your connection with the song. “And I think that once he gave me this permission, not only with music, but in a sense the entire film, I have the impression that it freed me a little from anxiety,” recalls Jeremy Allen White.
It is relevant to mention that Springsteen: Delive Me de Nowhere should be published on October 24, 2025.