Gytis Ivanauskas

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Gytis Ivanauskas (born 1 June 1980 in Ukmergė) is a Lithuanian actor, dancer and choreographer. In 2005, he established his own theatre, called Gytis Ivanauskas Theatre (GI Theatre).[1]

Biography

Between 1996 and 1998, he studied arts at the

Lithuanian Music Academy. In 2004 he obtained master's degree (dancing actor).[2]

Ivanauskas entered the professional stage in 2000 when he played the teenager Kurt in M. Von Mayenburg play "Fireface" which was directed by

Ivanauskas also takes part in various dance projects, created scenography for his one-man show "Lighthouse" (director Gintaras Varnas). In 2005 he established his own Gytis Ivanauskas Theatre (GIT) where he has directed shows like "Hallmark", "Men in White Skirts", "Red Shoes", "The Birds" and others.

In 2005 he received the Lithuanian Theatre Union's prize "Fortune" for Raskolnikov in the "Crime and punishment" and was nominated for the Lithuanian Ministry of Culture prize "The golden stage cross" for Raskolnikov in "Crime and punishment" and "Boy in Lighthouse". In 2006 he became a laureate of National Debut Premium for young artists awarded by Lithuanian Ministry of Culture. On 6 April 2007, Ivanauskas was awarded a national status of art creator.

Lolita Zero

In 2017, Ivanauskas played a role of Lolita Zero, a

lip-synched to the main vocal of Jurijus Veklenko and the act placed 4th. Lolita Zero returned to the national selection in 2022 with "Not Your Mother". This time the character was more a hermaphrodite singing about releasing inner demons and letting it go on the dance floor. The act placed 3rd.[4]

References

  1. ^ "Gyčio Ivanausko biografija". Archived from the original on 31 May 2013. Retrieved 16 May 2013.
  2. ^ Straipsnis apie Gytį Ivanauską portale „Tūkstantmečio žmonės“[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ Žurnalas „Veidas“, 2009 vasario 2d., Nr. 5.
  4. ^ Zilnys, Ramūnas (12 February 2022). "Lolita Zero – apie eurovizinės dainos potekstę ir neapykantos žinutes: dabar iš jų tik juokiuosi" (in Lithuanian). LRT.lt. Retrieved 20 February 2022.

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