Rob Lowe just recently exposed he accidentally scrubed salt on Bradley Cooper’s injury of shedding the Golden Globe to Cillian Murphy.
Robert Downey Jr. might have had a significant occupation resurgence in 2008 with Iron Guy, yet in 2015 became his resurgence as an acting pressure with his efficiency in Oppenheimer getting honors acknowledgment. Downey Jr. preserves that he feels his job as Tony Stark went neglected with the preconception of Iron Guy being a superhero movie. Nonetheless, his representation of Lewis Strauss in the Christopher Nolan dramatization made him a Golden Globe win, which currently gas the broach an Academy Honor election.
While Downey Jr. won the Golden Globe for Ideal Sustaining Star, his Oppenheimer co-star, Cillian Murphy, would certainly likewise take home a statuary for Ideal Star. Murphy would certainly defeat Bradley Cooper for the honor, as he was likewise up for his efficiency as Leonard Bernstein in Master, yet if it weren’t poor sufficient for Cooper, he would certainly likewise accidentally get a congratulatory message fromRob Lowe According to Range, Lowe shared a narrative on Jimmy Kimmel Live where he implied to send out Robert Downey Jr. a praise on his win, yet he recognized it was really sent out toCooper
Lowe humorously described, “Downey does this amazing acceptance speech at the Golden Globes, and I’m so excited for him so I text him, ‘So glad you won. That is the most beautiful acceptance speech I’ve heard in a long time. Boy, do you deserve it.’ I hit it and I realize, ‘Oh shit. I just sent that to Bradley Cooper.’” Lowe proceeded, “I said, ‘No, no, I meant that for Robert Downey Jr.’ Now that’s even worse! I made the guy feel worse! It was terrible.”
Just Recently, Downey Jr. recognized Murphy with a Desert Hand Accomplishment Honor and provided his co-star full marks for his representation of J. Robert Oppenheimer. Downey Jr. mentioned Murphy, claiming, “I’ve been in this game for 40-something years and I’ve never had the experience like watching Cillian carry the weight of J. Robert on his back for the whole time with his heart on his sleeve and all the required sophistication and restraint.”