Calgary Herald

Double the fun

Oscar-winner J.K. Simmons juggles dual roles in new series Counterpar­t

- BILL BRIOUX

Counterpar­t Debuts Sunday, CraveTV

Imagine, if you PASADENA, CAL IF. will, there were two of you. One, the ordinary, everyday you, the other a secret you’d hidden in a parallel dimension. That’s the shocking reality confrontin­g Howard Silk (played by J.K. Simmons), in Counterpar­t, a new spy thriller debuting Sunday on CraveTV.

Shot in Los Angeles and Berlin, the 10-episode first season originates on the U.S. premium cable network Starz. British actress Olivia Williams bolsters a strong internatio­nal cast, but it’s mostly Simmons on screen in a dual performanc­e making even him wonder might that be one role too many.

Last week, Simmons joked with reporters attending the Television Critics Associatio­n press tour in Pasadena that he now considers himself, “my favourite actor to work with.” Afterward, however, during a small, internatio­nal roundtable gathering, the 63-yearold Michigan native confessed he thought twice before taking on the dual roles.

While he loved the script by creator-executive producer Jus- tin Marks, the idea of being not just No. 1 but also No. 1A on the call sheet “was actually kind of daunting.”

“I love the writing,” he told Marks, “but my kids are in high school. I like to be able to have a job and have a life at the same time.”

But the producer told Simmons that subsequent episodes branch out, with other characters doing more of the heavy lifting.

The two Howard Silks break down this way: one is a lowly cog in a bureaucrat­ic world deep inside a United Nations spy agency office in Berlin. His “counterpar­t,” part of a Cold War experiment, is a ruthless super spy assassin on the other side of a parallel dimension.

Being opposite himself onscreen required technical finesse. The idea of shooting one character’s scenes, stopping, having Simmons gain 20 kilograms and then shooting the “counterpar­t” was considered, but abandoned.

Simmons says he ended up “playing the scenes with another actor who would then unfortunat­ely be erased from everything and replaced by another version of me.” It was a learning curve, he says, “as indeed life itself is.”

While fame came to him late, Simmons has been acting his entire adult life, honing his craft, as he sees it, “on a very small level on the way up. It’s not like I had a plan.”

He was studying music at university when he fell in love with being on stage at the Bigfork Summer Playhouse in Montana in 1970.

“We were working in rep and most us got to be the leading man one night and a chorus boy the next night and a character actor the next night,” he says.

After years on the stage, including Broadway, his first television job came with the bit part “patrolman in park” in the mid-’80s made-for-TV movie Popeye Doyle starring Ed O’Neill.

In the ’90s, Simmons started to get national attention as one of TV’s nastiest villains ever, fear- some inmate Vernon Schillinge­r in the HBO prison drama Oz.

“I didn’t want to spend the rest of my life crawling into that skin every day,” says Simmons, who switched gears and became a Comic-Con favourite as hot-headed editor J. Jonah Jameson in Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man trilogy.

His career was further boosted through a series of roles with Montreal- born director Jason Reitman. The two have collaborat­ed on several features, including Thank You for Smoking, Juno and Up in the Air. In what has been a busy past year for Simmons, he found a couple of days to make a cameo appearance in Reitman’s upcoming Hugh Jackman feature, The Front Runner.

“I always have a great time working with him,” says Simmons of Reitman.

The biggest boost, of course, came after winning an Academy Award for playing a savagely intense conductor in the 2014 drama Whiplash. Since then, Simmons can pick and choose his scripts, or take a summer off as he did last year, touring Europe with his wife and two children. Then there’s his favourite kind of casting: fishing, which he occasional­ly does in Canada.

“I look back 10, 20, 40 years ago when I was trying to get a line on a soap opera, anything,” he says. “It’s surreal to be in the position I’m in now.”

 ?? CRAVETV ?? J.K. Simmons signed on for Counterpar­t despite having reservatio­ns about playing the two starring roles.
CRAVETV J.K. Simmons signed on for Counterpar­t despite having reservatio­ns about playing the two starring roles.

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