NEW YORK, NY.- Dance polyglots abound in the entertainment industry. Need a dancer who can pick up hip-hop and contemporary choreography quickly, and maybe also perform in pointe shoes? At most Los Angeles dance auditions, youll find not one but several.
The television competition So You Think You Can Dance hinges on that kind of spectacular versatility. (A concluding In Many Styles is implied.) When Gaby Diaz won Season 12 of the show in 2015, she seemed like a classic So You Think success story. After auditioning as a tap dancer, she proved exceptionally adaptable, even by the shows high standards, bringing polish and vibrant energy to a wide array of dance genres. In her hyper-capable body, it all looked natural, easy, coherent, fun.
She is the most articulate mover I have potentially ever come across, said choreographer and director Justin Peck, who has worked with Diaz on multiple projects. Shes like this Swiss Army knife of all different kinds of dance styles.
After winning So You Think, Diaz assumed that, like many of the shows alums, shed join the ranks of dazzlingly accomplished Los Angeles dancers. But soon she realized that the expectation of universal proficiency and the demands of maintaining it could breed a sort of flatness, turning dancers into execution robots.
She felt it flattening her. I could pick up choreography really quickly, Diaz said. But I didnt know how to dance any more. I didnt have any ideas of my own. I would freeze any time I was asked to make a choice.
In the years since that epiphany, Diaz, 27, has shaped a surprising freelance career, a new kind of model for Swiss Army knife dancers. Bridging the usually disparate worlds of commercial and concert dance, she has explored different uses of her technical capabilities and sought out jobs that involve more rehearsal time than stage time. In the process, she has become not just a speaker of various dance languages but also a translator, able to put multiple styles in conversation. She has found ways to make versatility a self-defining quality rather than a self-erasing one.
Today, Diaz is often the person that choreographers want in the room when they workshop new ideas. Notably, she has become part of a small team that Peck regularly turns to when developing works outside his base at New York City Ballet, where he is resident choreographer and artistic associate. This month, Diaz will perform in Pecks genre-eliding music-theater premiere Illinois at the Fisher Center at Bard College, a collaboration with composer Sufjan Stevens and playwright Jackie Sibblies Drury. She has been instrumental, Peck said, to the creation of its hybridized dance language.
What Ive discovered over time, Diaz said, is that the process is much more important to me than the performance. A lot of dance is very presentational, and I can do that. But I get even more excited when Im working from the inside out.
Diaz, who is Cuban American, grew up in Miami with a lot of salsa music playing in the house, she said. She found her musical outlet in dance, studying a range of techniques at the Roxy Theater Group and New World School of the Arts, performing in Miami City Ballets Nutcracker and participating in jazz dance competitions.
At 19, Diaz became the first tap dancer to win So You Think, which she had watched religiously as a student. She returned to the show as an All Star partner for two seasons, and other dance jobs werent hard to come by: She performed with Jennifer Lopez and toured with Shaping Sound, a commercially oriented dance troupe that included several So You Think alums. But she began to feel burned out and disoriented, sure of her value as an instrument but not of her perspective as an artist.
In 2017, she enrolled in a new professional training program at the contemporary company Hubbard Street Dance Chicago. It was a step both sideways into the concert dance scene and, in a way, backward: She was a student again, paying rather than getting paid to dance.
Still, it felt like the right path. In contrast to the punishing pace of the entertainment world, Hubbard Streets program featured long rehearsal periods. You would work on something for eight weeks and then perform it four times, Diaz said. It was amazing. She found a particular freedom in choreographer Ohad Naharins Gaga technique, danced without mirrors, in which movement originates from ideas and sensations.
Diaz danced as an apprentice with Hubbard Street but failed to secure a permanent position with the company. Right after hearing that no, she received an email from a childhood hero, former Miami City Ballet principal Patricia Delgado. Delgado had been named the associate choreographer for Steven Spielbergs film version of West Side Story; Delgados offstage partner, Peck, was its lead choreographer. Would Diaz like to audition?
So Diaz changed tacks again, entering the world of feature film. She connected with many of the exceptional dancers in the West Side cast especially Patricias sister Jeanette Delgado, also a former Miami City Ballet star and an idol of Diazs, who danced alongside her in the Shark ensemble. And she felt at home in Pecks choreography, which has roots in ballet but often branches out in other directions.
When the pandemic snuffed out live performance, Diaz worked on more film sets, dancing in the 2021 adaptation of Tick, Tick
Boom! and the 2022 holiday movie Spirited. She even lived out a movie trope: She cut her hair short, a symbol of her continuing artistic transformation.
It sounds so silly, but once I chopped it all off, I felt like, Oh, I am here, she said.
As theaters reopened, Diaz ended up making another right turn this time, into musical theater. Choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler hired her to star in his directorial debut, the off-Broadway musical Only Gold.
Though Diaz had little singing or acting experience, Blankenbuehler ended up shaping the part of the rebellious Princess Tooba around Diazs incredibly spicy energy, he said. Once I met her, I didnt want to fill a role I wanted to hire her. (Diaz won a 2023 Chita Rivera Award for her performance.)
When Only Gold closed last fall, Diaz returned to her happiest place: the rehearsal studio, to help Peck flesh out Illinois a dance narrative for 12 performers that Peck describes as like watching a silent film, live. Set to Sufjan Stevens 2005 album of the same name, the show pulls together many of the threads of Diazs career, using her tap experience and her contemporary lyricism in the service of its storytelling.
Its the most Ive ever been able to teeter-totter between being a human onstage and being a dancer onstage, she said. Thats the place Im most interested in being in right now.
Both Peck and Blankenbuehler said they wanted to create better artistic homes for dancers like Diaz. (The cast of Illinois includes another So You Think winner, Ricky Ubeda; Only Gold featured multiple alums of the show.)
Theres this generation of incredibly talented commercial and theater performers, and the dancing they get to do is often more of a device than a form of expression, Peck said. They deserve shows like Illinois, or Only Gold, that are vehicles for them to really do their thing.
Diazs broad knowledge base and large web of relationships also make her a kind of connective tissue, as Peck describes it, in rehearsals and workshops.
Jeannette Delgado, who is in the cast of Illinois and now a friend of Diazs, said: She is this heart-swellingly beautiful mover, so were all watching her anyway, but then she is open and curious and eager to help everyone figure everything out.
Diaz has begun putting those qualities to use in offstage roles, helping choreographers refine and untangle their ideas. Recently, shes been assisting Blankenbuehler in the early-stage development of a new musical theater project.
Having her as a partner in the studio is like a security blanket, Blankenbuehler said. She can see your vision, and she can bring herself to it. I know shes going to be able to save me when Im stuck in a hole somewhere.
Throughout her career, Diaz has taken jobs selectively, which she acknowledges is a privilege not all freelance dancers have. The name recognition that comes with her So You Think win means dance studios are always happy to hire her to teach classes, a way to supplement her income between larger engagements. But shes also willing to hustle to pursue artistic opportunities that feel right.
I come from a family that works hard, she said. If Im in a pickle, and I need money, Ill work a service job. I know Ill be able to catch myself.
Diaz will be busy with Illinois which, following its summer run, will open at the Yard at Chicago Shakespeare Theater in Chicago in January 2024 for a while. Beyond that, she has deliberately not planned much, leaving space for opportunities as yet unimagined.
The openness to changing my mind is really the one through line in my career, she said. I crave that ability to pivot.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.