Gonzalo Garcia | |
---|---|
Born | 1979 or 1980 (age 44–45) Zaragoza, Spain |
Citizenship | Spain United States |
Education | San Francisco Ballet School |
Occupation | ballet dancer |
Spouse |
Ezra Hurwitz (m. 2020) |
Career | |
Current group | New York City Ballet |
Former groups | San Francisco Ballet |
Gonzalo Garcia is a Spanish American ballet dancer. He joined the San Francisco Ballet in 1998, and was promoted to principal in 2002, at age 22. In 2007, he left the company and joined the New York City Ballet. He retired from performing in 2022 and remains in the company as a repertory director.
Early life
Garcia was born in Zaragoza, and trained at Maria de Avila's school. In 1995, he attended a summer intensive at the San Francisco Ballet School, where de Avila's daughter Lola taught. Later that year, he won the Prix de Lausanne at the age of 15, making him the youngest dancer to receive the award. After that, he returned to the San Francisco Ballet School as a full time student. At age 17, he was offered a contract to join the San Francisco Ballet by the artistic director, Helgi Tómasson, though Garcia decided to study for one more year.
Career
Garcia joined the San Francisco Ballet's corps de ballet in 1998, at age 18. In 2000, he became a soloist, and won the Princess Grace Award. In 2002, he was promoted to principal dancer at age 22, one of the youngest dancers in the company to reach this rank. He danced leading roles such as Albrecht in Giselle and Romeo in Romeo and Juliet, and originated the role of Nutcracker Prince in Tómasson's version of The Nutcracker. In 2004, he made a guest appearance at the New York City Ballet and danced Ballo della Regina, as a part of George Balanchine's centennial.
In May 2007, Garcia left the San Francisco Ballet after a performance of Don Quixote. Garcia joined the New York City Ballet as a principal dancer in October 2007. His repertoire there includes works by Balanchine and Jerome Robbins, and originated roles in works by choreographers such as Justin Peck and Alexei Ratmansky. He was coached by Mikhail Baryshnikov for Robbins' Opus 19/The Dreamer. He had performed with Christopher Wheeldon's company, Morphoses/The Wheeldon Company, and appeared in video advertisements of Tiffany & Co. and iPhone.
Garcia retired from performing in February 2022. He remains in the New York City Ballet as a repertory director.
Personal life
Garcia is a naturalized American citizen.
In August 2020, Garcia married Ezra Hurwitz, a dancer-turned filmmaker. They live in Upper West Side, Manhattan
Selected repertoire
Garcia's repertoire with the San Francisco Ballet and New York City Ballet includes:
- Apollo
- Divertimento from Le Baiser de la Fée
- Ballo della Regina
- Coppélia (Frantz)
- Dances at a Gathering
- Don Quixote: Basilio
- Donizetti Variations
- The Four Temperaments
- Giselle: Albrecht, Pas de Cinq
- Glass Pieces
- Harlequinade: Harlequin
- "Rubies" from Jewels
- A Midsummer Night's Dream: Oberon
- The Nutcracker (Balanchine version): Cavalier
- Polyphonia
- Opus 19/The Dreamer
- Other Dances
- Romeo and Juliet (Martins version): Tybalt
- Romeo and Juliet (Tómasson version): Romeo, Benvolio
- The Sleeping Beauty: Prince Désiré, Bluebird, Pas de Six
- Swan Lake (Martins version): Prince Siegfried, Pas de Quatre
- Swan Lake (Tómasson version): Prince Siegfried, Pas de Trois, Neopolitan
- La Sylphide: James
- Symphony in C
- Tschaikovsky Pas de Deux
Created roles
- The Nutcracker (Tómasson version): Nutcracker Prince
- Sylvia (Mark Morris version): Aminta
- Bal de Couture
- The Blue of Distance
- Les Carillons
- Concerto DSCH
- Continuum
- The Decalogue
- Grazioso
- Luce Nascosta
- The Most Incredible Thing: The Three Kings
- Outlier
- Pictures at an Exhibition
- Pulcinella Variations
- Rodeo: Four Dance Episodes
- Rotunda
- The Shimmering Asphalt
Awards and honors
- 1995: Prix de Lausanne - gold medal
- 2000: Princess Grace Award
References
- ^ Ganahl, Jane (February 18, 2005). "When not airborne, Gonzalo Garcia's very down to earth about ballet, fame". San Francisco Chronicles.
- ^ "Gonzalo Garcia". New York City Ballet. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
- ^ Howard, Rachel (May 2, 2007). "Garcia's last dance with San Francisco". San Francisco Chronicles.
- Kisselgoff, Anna (May 15, 2004). "Ballet Review; Two Guests Uncover a Different Side of Balanchine". New York Times.
- Kourlas, Gia (September 27, 2019). "Lessons From Baryshnikov on Robbins (Less Is More)". New York Times.
- Macauley, Alastair (August 13, 2017). "A First Turn for Wheeldon and Company". New York Times.
- Sherwin, Amanda (September 30, 2019). "Apple Tapped ABT and NYCB Stars for This Gorgeous iPhone Promo". Dance Spirit.
- Lansky, Chava (November 26, 2019). "This New Video Collab with Tiffany & Co. Features NYCB Dancers Dripping in Jewels". Pointe Magazine.
- Kourlas, Gia (March 2, 2022). "Winter Season at City Ballet: 'Now Is the Time for a New Generation'". New York Times.
- "Gonzalo Garcia on Instagram: "Gordo and I have Dual Citizenship!!!! 💪🦁 he told me he fells more Persian than anything... #americancitizen #spanishcitizen #gordo #catsofinstagram #readytotravel"". Instagram. June 1, 2017.
- "Gonzalo Garcia on Instagram: "@ezrahurwitz and I loved celebrating our love in a last minute garden wedding, and we're gonna love bringing ALL LOVED ONES together in Spain for our post pandemic celebration!"". Instagram. August 11, 2020.
- DeSantis, Marissa (February 13, 2020). "The Dance Power Couples of 2020". Dance Spirit.
- Milzoff, Rebecca (May 16, 2020). "5 Top Ballet Dancers Share Their Work-From-Home Setups". Domino.
External links
Categories:- Spanish male ballet dancers
- New York City Ballet principal dancers
- San Francisco Ballet principal dancers
- Morphoses dancers
- Living people
- People from Zaragoza
- Prix de Lausanne winners
- Princess Grace Awards winners
- 21st-century American ballet dancers
- 21st-century Spanish dancers
- Spanish LGBTQ dancers
- Spanish emigrants to the United States
- Naturalized citizens of the United States