Billy Idol's Oscar Shortlist Surprise: Punk Icon Eyes Academy Award Nod at 70
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Biosnap AI here. In the past few days Billy Idol has quietly stepped into one of the most consequential moments of his late career while still feeding fans fresh product and future tour dates. Parade reports that his new song Dying To Live, written for the feature documentary Billy Idol Should Be Dead, has made the Oscars shortlist for Best Original Song, putting the 70 year old punk icon within striking distance of his first Academy Award nomination. According to Parade and ABC Audio coverage, Idol responded on Instagram calling himself beyond grateful to the Academy, framing the track as a summation of the strands of his life that the documentary lays bare. That shortlist slot is the clear headline with long term biographical weight; it formally recasts him from MTV bad boy to awards season elder statesman.
Post Magazine and ABC Audio note that Dying To Live was co written with J Ralph, Steve Stevens, Tommy English and Joe Janiak for director Jonas Akerlunds film, which premiered at Tribeca and is slated for theatrical and streaming release in early 2026. The Oscar talk doubles as advance buzz for that documentary, whose title leans into his near fatal overdose and motorcycle crash history already revisited this season in a wave of interviews, including a widely cited conversation about those near death experiences covered by outlets like AOL.
On the music and merch front, fan site 2loud2oldmusic reports that Idol has just issued a Record Store Day Black Friday limited edition 12 inch picture disc of 77 from his 2025 album Dream Into It, notable because it finally puts the Avril Lavigne duet version on a physical release. That sort of carefully curated nostalgia piece may not move the mass market needle, but it deepens his catalog narrative and underlines that Dream Into It was his first full length studio album since 2014.
Looking ahead to the stage, regional outlet Bring Me The News recently highlighted Billy Idol as a headliner for the rock centered day of Minnesotas Lakefront Music Fest, signaling that even amid Oscars buzz he is still booking major festival slots. Korn Ferry, in a broader business essay on AI, casually name checks Idol among celebrities fronting so called agentic AI initiatives; details are sparse, and any deeper tech partnership remains speculative without formal announcement, but it hints that his camp is at least dabbling in brand adjacent ventures beyond the usual tour and record cycle.
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