New York Post

Veteran’s day

- By KYLE SMITH

FOR decades, he’s been a “Hey, it’s that guy” guy. The goofy newspaper editor in the “Spider-Man” movies. Juno’s dad. The neo-Nazi on “Oz,” the recurring police psychiatri­st on three of the “Law& Order” shows.

And those were the glamour roles. When no one else wanted him, hewas the yellow M&M in the candy commercial­s. He continues to do hokey Farmers Insurance ads.

Now, just turned 60, it turns out That Guy has a name, one that maybe soon attached to a Golden Globe and then to an Oscar: Jonathan Kimble “J.K.” Simmons, consummate character actor and team player, who stepped forward and lit the screen on fire this year as the brutal, contemptuo­us, unforgetta­ble music teacher Terence Fletcher in “Whiplash,” one of the year’s most acclaimed dramas.

In showbiz, of course, Simmons was already a name because background­ers like him are essential to the machinery: “I’ve heard people say a ‘J.K. Simmons type, but younger’ or ‘J.K. Simmons, but with hair” or 'J.K. Simmons but Mongolian,' ” the actor told Interview. “The next step is for a ‘J.K. Simmons-type ... Oh, you mean he’s still alive?’”

“Whiplash” writer-director Damien Chazelle pitched Simmons the role unaware that the actor had a deep background in music. A singer (he has even performed Wagner), Simmons has a music degree (in voice) from the University of Montana, where he minored in composing and conducting.

He and Miles Teller, whoplays the young drummer Fletcher browbeats toward greatness, were equally dedicated to their grueling parts. Well, more or less. “Hewas reluctant to be slapped really hard dozens of times, and I couldn’t understand­why he wouldn’t enjoy that, that level of acting and commitment,” Simmons told Rolling Stone. To NPR, Simmons conceded that though the role of a borderline psychotic perfection­ist was cathartic, “screaming is hard after awhile.”

What’s most electric about the film is that Simmons is so charismati­c— sarcastic, funny, alert, wise, dedicated— in portraying Fletcher’s cruelty that until the final moments we’re never quite sure whether he’s the villain or the hero: whether he is rescuing the drummer froma life of mediocrity or destroying the younger man’s self-esteem.

“Really the nature of the story is, does the end justify the means?” Simmons said. "How far is too far? Howmuch can you push people in the name of artistic greatness without sort of sacrificin­g humanity?”

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