Breandán de Gallaí

Breandán de Gallaí, a.k.a. Brendan de Gallaí or Brendan Galway (born 10 June 1969), is a former professional Irish dancer who is most famous for his lead role in Riverdance and as a TV personality on TG4. He is currently a dance director for Riverdance and an artistic director for the Ériu Dance Company.[1]

Breandán de Gallaí
Born (1969-06-10) 10 June 1969
OccupationIrish dancer
Years active1994–2003
Former groupsDualta, Riverdance
DancesIrish stepdance

Dancing career

Early years

de Gallaí was born into a family of seven by his father Gerry of Belfast and his mother Nellie of Donegal. In 1987, he moved to the United States and joined Gus Giordano’s dance academy in Chicago where he studied ballet, jazz, modern dance and tap dancing. In 1988, he moved back to Ireland and enrolled at Dublin City University and studied Applied Physics for four years. He was also an occasional substitute primary school teacher in physical education, Gaelic and mathematics.[2]

Riverdance

In early 1994, de Gallaí received a call to audition for Riverdance's Eurovision Song Contest interval act. It was here that he met Michael Flatley, and after just two weeks of rehearsals, he was picked as one of just 24 dancers for the performance. Around that time, de Gallaí and long-time friend Joanne Doyle set up their own dance company called Dualta.[2] He and Joanne both went on to be part of the Riverdance: The Show premiere in Dublin in February 1995, and both later starred for Riverdance as lead dancers for the Liffey Company.[3] de Gallaí's tenure with Riverdance spanned 9½ years, with his final gig for the show coming in 2003 at the Opening Ceremony of the Special Olympics at Croke Park, Dublin.[4][5] As the lead male dancer for seven of those years, he performed in Europe, Asia, Australia and New Zealand, and performed live for Presidents McAleese and Robinson of Ireland, Queen Elizabeth, and Prince Charles. He was also honoured to perform for and to meet King Hussein of Jordan, the Emperor of Japan, the Crown Prince of Japan, Princess Diana, Prince Rainier of Monaco, and Queen Sonia of Norway.[5] de Gallaí continued on with Riverdance as a dance director and later helped out behind the scenes with the 2010 DVD, Riverdance: Live from Beijing.[6]

Outside of Riverdance

As a choreographer, de Gallaí has created several works, most notably Noċtú and Rite of Spring. In 2011, Noċtú completed a five-week residency at the Irish Repertory Theatre in New York. On the back of this run, the show was nominated for two Drama Desk awards, “Outstanding Choreography” and “Unique Theatrical Event”. His second work, Stravinsky's Rite of Spring, premiered at the opening of the Fleadh Fringe in August 2012, attracting 14,000 spectators. The work received a nomination for the coveted Allianz Business to Arts Awards (Dublin 2012).[7] His 2016 work : "Linger"-an extended 90 minute duet for 2 male dancers premiered at Dublin's Project Arts Centre in January 2016.

gollark: You should send a \@\Devping for that poll, not a potatoping.
gollark: This seems somehow unreasonable.
gollark: abby
gollark: Also, you're not competent enough to "make polished software for long-distance communication".
gollark: /home good, lack of /home bad.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.