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Nicky Katt

Nicky Katt

In 1993, Katt began a career upswing with a small but memorable role as belligerent hard man Clint in "Dazed and Confused." This 70s-set coming of age comedy paired him with filmmaker Richard Linklater and featured him alongside such future stars as Ben Affleck, Matthew McConaughey and Adam Goldberg. He went on to play similarly small parts in the spy thriller "American Yakuza," the AIDS drama "The Cure" and the sci-fi epic "Strange Days" (all 1995). Soon Katt would earn a reputation for chilling portrayals of despicable villains, many of whom had an oddly seductive charm. He was featured opposite Alicia Silverstone as an insidious teenage hood in the direct-to-video "The Babysitter" (1995), perhaps a warm-up for his next prominent part. As one of the perpetrators of a child's rape in Joel Schumacher's "A Time to Kill" (1996), Katt reached his widest audience to that point, and showed an onscreen ease with unsettling characters. Even more people caught his guest turn on a 1996 episode of NBC's "Friends," where he typically played a bully who ousts the coffee-loving pals from their Central Perk perch. The actor reteamed with director Linklater for perhaps his best screen role to date in the film adaptation of Eric Bogosian's "subUrbia" (1997), as one of the more explosive slackers hanging out at the local convenience store. Playing Tim, Katt growled his way through the role of a tattooed ex-Air Force man who got discharged by chopping off a finger.Situated among the ranks of independent film-friendly burgeoning talents (like frequent co-stars Ben Affleck, Giovanni Ribisi, Adam Goldberg, Matthew McConaughey and Cole Hauser), Katt stood out due to his ability and willingness to take on unappetizing but challenging roles attested to by his supporting turns in Schumacher's "Batman & Robin" and Scott Silver's L.A. hustler chronicling independent "johns" (both 1997). Katt next had a more subtly villainous role essaying Renee Zellweger's self-absorbed and insensitive boyfriend in the 1998 tearjerker "One True Thing." That year proved a busy one for him as he had a supporting part in the festival screened independent comedy "Delivered" and reteamed with Affleck in Dean Koontz's pedestrian horror thriller "Phantoms," playing a doomed deputy of a ghost town. Katt was also featured in Adam Goldberg's feature directorial debut "Scotch and Milk," a hipster, commiserative take on the buddy flick co-starring much of the Linklater-veteran boys' club. The actor adeptly flirted with leading man status as star of that year's heartfelt indie "Say You'll Be Mine," playing an aspiring writer questioning exactly what it is he wants from a relationship.Katt impressed audiences with a featured turn as a hit man in Steven Soderbergh's stylized action thriller "The Limey" in 1999, and started out the next year with as a tyrannical young stockbroker who gives Giovanni Ribisi's promising newcomer a vengefully hard time in the compelling drama "Boiler Room." A small role in William Friedkin's "Rules of Engagement" (2000) as the son of Tommy Lee Jones' military lawyer assured moviegoers that Katt could convincingly play a normal, non-maniacal character. In 2000, he took on a regular series role in "Boston Public," yet another David E. Kelley Beantown-set series. Katt played educator Harry Senate iduring the first two seasons of the look at the personal and professional lives of public high school teachers. The actor continued to appear in clever supporting turns in features, including a hilariously obnoxious scene-stealing stint in Soderbergh's return-to-indie-style filmmaking "Full Frontal" (2002) as an obtuse, self-absorbed actor, a convincing amateur rock-and-roller in Linklater's hit comedy "School of Rock" (2003) and a few brilliant moments as an assassin for hire stupefied by an arrow injury in the comic book noir "Sin City" (2005)--his other credits included Linklater's animated "Waking Life" (2001), "Insomnia" (2002), "Secondhand Lions" (2003) and "I Love Your Work" (2003)
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