of Nicholson's memorable restaurant scene in Five Easy Pieces in which he orders a chicken salad sandwich: "Hold the chicken salad." Of School of Rock, Black said, "This is my crowning achievement, my run for the border. This is my chance for the time capsule. You want to make a mark. You always think they'll move on to the next funny guy. For this movie, the planets lined up." Black wrote a lot of the music, including tunes he introduces in the classroom. He spent weeks with the cast of hyper-talented, young musicians in rehearsal, then filmed with them in New York for four months. He earned their respect. Said Robert Tsai, 12, a classically trained pianist from New Jersey, "I had to try not to laugh because Jack is so funny." Said bass player Rebecca Brown, 11, of Chicago, "Jack? So cool." Said drummer Kevin Clark, 13, from Highland Park, Ill., "He's a riot. First time my mom saw him, she said, `My son loves your CD.' Said Jack, 'I am so sorry.'" It took time, Black said, to bond with the kids, all of who were accom- plished musicians, most of who had never before acted. "We got to know each other," said Black. "They were scared of me at first because I was coming at them real hard. They got used to it. Off the set, we'd just be hangin' out, you know, like rockers hangin' out." Director Richard Linklater made his reputation with such independent films as Slacker, Waking Life and Dazed and Confused. He was an unusual choice for a more mainstream studio picture like School of Rock. But the Austin, Texas-based filmmaker got the Jack Black thing. "You have a bull in a china shop," he said, "That was the metaphor. This is a performance piece for him, so specific to his skills; he's an actor who's really funny. "\X/hat Jack did was treat the kids like peers, pulling them into his world." Added co-star Sarah Silverman, an edgy Jewish comedian in her own right, who spent a season a decade ago on Saturday Night Live: "He's like a Dungeons and Dragons nerd who's a rock star and a comic. There's an Everyman quality about him and a no- other-man's quality about him." A Major Voice It was with the irreverent tone of Tenacious D (named for a basketball term used by New York sportscaster Mary Albert: "The Knido are playing tenacious d") that Black found his rock 'n' roll voice, which he brings to the movie. His interest in music was inspired in part by his older half-broth- er, Howard Siegel, who has engineered albums for many leading bands.) "When I was in high school, I tried with a band to take rock serious," he said. "We did a party one night and were ignored. We just left. It devastated me. Then, when I met (his Tenacious D partner) Kyle Gass (in Tim Robbins' the Actors Gang theater company at UCLA), we thought, 'Let's approach this tongue-in-cheek.'" Now there'll be a movie "in which we chronicle Tenacious D's rise to power," said Black. "Got Meat Loaf to play my father; he doesn't understand me. We hope it'll be out by the end of next year." (In real life, Black's father came to all his plays, and "my mother has always supported me in the hard times," he has said.) Amid the raucous humor, Black is a guy with a major voice, an instrument that sneaks through on the Tenacious D tunes "Tribute" and "Wonderboy." It gets showcased in High Fidelity, with a version of Marvin Gaye's "Let's Get It On" (said his director, Stephen Frears, "I've never met anyone like Jack Black; its as if he came from the moon") and flourishes in the heavy-metal songs from School of Rock. The voice soars through the octaves, soulful one moment, hitting falsetto screams the next. "I think about maybe doing a [stage] musical," he says. "There's talk of a Rocky Horror Picture Show remake. I'd play one of those roles." But what he really adores, still pines for, is heavy-metal success. "It's the passion of the music," he said. "There's something primal about it: the screaming; something that seems right. The drama is what's exciting; the sinister aspect is cool, particularly when you're a kid." These days, Black is listening to the White Stripes: "Jack White's a great live performer, connected to blues roots and rough parts of Detroit, great style"; the Strokes; Queens of the Stone Age; and a band called The Darkness, "a frenzied heavy metal mind, from England." He is Jack Black, School of Rock star, schooling in rock. ❑ Arts er Entertainment Editor Gail Zimmerman and jewhoo.com Editor Nate Bloom contributed to this article. School of Rock," a drug and sex- free comedy rated PG-13, is cur- rently in area theaters. 10/17 2003 73