Adam Garcia
Biography
Adam Garcia is an Australian actor who is best known for lead roles in musicals such as Saturday Night Fever and Kiss Me, Kate. He is also a trained tap dancer and singer. Garcia has been nominated twice at the Laurence Olivier Awards in 1999 and 2013. Garcia is the son of Jean Balharry and Fabio Garcia. His mother is Australian, and his father is from Colombia. Garcia's mother is a retired physiotherapist. Garcia attended Knox Grammar School where he completed his high school education. He also received formal tap dance training at Capital Dance Studio in Sydney, Australia. Garcia attended Sydney University, but did not complete his education as he left the university to take the role of Slide in the production of the musical Hot Shoe Shuffle, which toured Australia for two years before transferring to London, England. Garcia began his film career in 1997, playing the role of Jones in Brian Gilbert's Wilde. Garcia played Tony Manero in the stage version of Saturday Night Fever, which premiered on 5 May 1998 at the London Palladium, and closed on 26 February 2000.[9] He was nominated for his work in the play at the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actor in a Musical category in 1999, but lost to the cast of Kat and the Kings.[10] Garcia also reached number 15 in the UK Singles Chart in 1998, with his cover version of the Bee Gees song "Night Fever", taken from the film version of Saturday Night Fever (1977). In 2000, he played a major role in his second feature-film, Coyote Ugly. Later that year, Garcia also appeared in Dein Perry's Bootmen, playing the lead role. In 2004, he also played alongside Lindsay Lohan and Megan Fox in Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen, as the character Stu Wolff, a drunk rock star, who is part of the band Sidarthur and is, in Lola's words, "a greater poet than Shakespeare". Between 2006 and 2007, Garcia played the character of Fiyero in the original West End production of Wicked alongside Idina Menzel, Kerry Ellis and Helen Dallimore. He previously played the same role during the show's early Broadway theatre workshops in 2000. Garcia appeared in two ITV dramas, Britannia High and Mr Eleven, in 2008. In January 2010, Garcia appeared with Ashley Banjo and Kimberly Wyatt as a judge on the British reality show Got to Dance. He was a judge in the four seasons of the competition, from 2010 to 2012 and then again in 2014. In 2011, Garcia co-starred with Mischa Barton in The Hen Do, but the film never left the cutting room floor. In 2012, he appeared in Cole Porter's musical Kiss Me, Kate at the Chichester Festival Theatre, directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Stephen Mear. Garcia was nominated for his role at the 2013 Laurence Olivier Awards in the category Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a Musical
Also Known As
Movie Appearances

Riot at the Rite
as Vaslav Nijinsky
2005

Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen
as Stu
2004

Riding in Cars with Boys
as Jason
2001

Bootmen
as Sean Odken
2000

The First $20 Million Is Always the Hardest
as Andy Kasper
2002

Coyote Ugly
as Kevin O'Donnell
2000

Death Link
as Dr. Yates
2021

Love's Brother
as Gino Donnini
2004

Bruce's Hall of Fame with Alexander Armstrong
as Self
2016

The Performance
as Benny
2024
A Woman Called Job
as Lee
2014

Best Possible Taste: The Kenny Everett Story
as Tony Windsor
2012

Fascination
as Scott Doherty
2004

Nativity 3: Dude, Where's My Donkey?!
as Bradley Finch
2014

Wilde
as Jones
1997

Branagh Theatre Live: The Winter's Tale
as Lord Amadis
2015

Standing Still
as Michael
2005

Murder on the Orient Express
as Italian Fan
2017

An Audience with Kylie Minogue
as Self
2001
With Friends Like These
as Gerry
TBA
TV Appearances

Flight of the Conchords
as Obnoxious Australian
2007

Britannia High
as Stefan
2008

Celebrity Juice
as Self
2008
Tonight's the Night
2009

Hawthorne
as Nick Mancini
2009

Big Brother's Little Brother
as Self
2001
Mister Eleven
as Alex
2009
The Michael Ball Show
as Self
2010

Perception
as Dr. Kenny Esper
2012

The Code
as Perry Benson
2014

Camp
as Todd
2013

An Audience with...
as Self
1978
