Harold Mendez, a Dancer Who Doesn’t Fit the Traditional Ballet Aesthetic, Ends His Career While Still in His Prime
Image: Courtesy Photo
It was never a given that Harold Mendez would succeed as a dancer. When he was chosen by the Cuban government to enter its state-run ballet training program at the age of 10, there was no guarantee he would ultimately develop the combination of physique, ability, discipline and ambition it takes to make it in a notoriously difficult and competitive art form.
But Mendez turned out to have that rare combination of raw talent, inner drive and emotional intellect that propelled him into a professional career when he was still a teen. Yet this week, months shy of his 25th birthday—an age that represents the prime of a dancer’s career—Mendez will give his final performance on the Sarasota Opera House stage with the Sarasota Cuban Ballet, where he finished his training and gave his first professional performance 10 years ago.
Because while he has been able to overcome the limitations of his feet, his finances and his lack of flexibility, there is one obstacle no amount of grit and tenacity has been able to overcome. His size.
In the Beginning
When Ariel Serrano’s former teacher and mentor from the National Ballet School in Cuba called him in Sarasota in 2014 and asked him to take on an aspiring 13-year-old dancer from Havana whose family was moving to Florida, Serrano wasn’t immediately on board.
Since founding the Sarasota Cuban Ballet School (SCBS) in 2011 with his wife, Wilmian Hernandez—in large part to prepare their son, Francisco, for a ballet career—Serrano had provided training and housing for any number of promising dancers with insufficient resources. Now, with Francisco leaving home to pursue a scholarship with The Royal Ballet in London and their daughter, Camilla, having just earned her driver’s license, relieving Serrano of chauffeuring her to school and activities, he was looking forward to a bit of a break from parental oversight.
“You wanna give me another kid so I have to get up at 6 to take him to school?” Serrano complained to his teacher, the late Ramona de Saa, with whom he’d created an exchange program for students of their respective schools.
“I promise you,” de Saa assured him, "it will be worth it.”
Image: Courtesy Photo
She proved to be right. Almost as soon as Mendez arrived in Sarasota, Serrano was getting up at dawn to drive him to school and, in the studio, “throwing at him all the hard things to do because he could handle it.”
“He was one of a kind. Very precocious, very fast to take everything in like a sponge,” Serrano recalls. “He was humble and worked incredibly hard. I immediately fell in love with the idea of continuing to coach him and our family fell in love with him. As good as the dancer is, the person is even better.”
Although Mendez lacked “perfect” ballet feet or extreme flexibility, he overcame his deficits with a work ethic that took Serrano’s breath away.
“He made no excuses,” Serrano says. “To him it was like a challenge, a game. Stretching is one of the most painful things there is, and this boy took some stretches that… well, if you did it to me, I would tell you my deepest secrets. This guy would do it and go for more. The response from him to difficult work was enjoyment.”
Soon, not only was Serrano driving Mendez to school, he was accompanying him to ballet competitions around the country, some of which he had to raise funding to attend. In 2019, Mendez finished third among the men at the Youth America Grand Prix in the U.S., earning a full ride scholarship to the San Francisco Ballet School, and was selected as one of only 10 American dancers to compete at the prestigious Prix de Lausanne in France.
But at 5 feet, 5 inches tall, Serrano believes that regardless of his outsized talent, Mendez’s lack of stature relegated him to less acclaim and opportunity than he deserved.
“He put on a show that, if I close my eyes, I can still see it,” Serrano says, remembering Mendez's Prix de Lausanne appearance. “At every turn, at every challenge, the recognition was there. But the reward always came short.”
Harold Mendez at age 17 in “Diana and Acteon.” / Photo provided by SCBS
After making his debut at the Sarasota Opera House in the SCBS annual “On Stage” gala in 2016, Mendez accepted the scholarship in San Francisco and moved there, solo, at 17 to finish his training. After less than a year, he auditioned at the State Street Ballet in Santa Barbara and was offered a position. But before he could accept it, the Covid pandemic hit and “everything stopped.” He came back to Sarasota, quit dancing and took a job at Sam’s Club.
A Career Reignited… and Stunted
In 2021, State Street re-extended its offer and Mendez returned to California. Though the relatively small company of less than 20 dancers has no official rankings, for the past five years he has danced primarily principal and soloist roles. The company even hired a petite female dancer specifically so Mendez would have someone to partner, though equal size isn’t necessarily the only requirement for a successful partnership.
But, other than the perennial Nutcracker, Mendez didn’t have an opportunity to dance any of the classical ballets or major male roles he grew to know and love as a child in Cuba. Though he has appreciation for the opportunities he was given at State Street, he grew bored with ballets that didn’t challenge or motivate him.
Image: Heidi Bergesteren
“The ballet world is… complicated,” Mendez says during a break between rehearsals for the SCBS “On Stage 2026” performance at the Sarasota Opera House this week, which will mark his professional swan song. “Sometimes even if you can dance well and do everything right, you may not have the perfect body or the perfect height. Dance is very aesthetic, and of course it looks beautiful with someone tall, with long legs. Maybe they can do less turns, but if they’re tall and beautiful, that’s good enough.
“It is what it is," he continues. "Nobody chooses how tall they’re going to be.”
His discouragement and frustration over limitations to his advancement had led him to consider leaving the art form multiple times before. The first time he mentioned it to Serrano was the only “bad encounter” his mentor can ever recall between the two of them.
“I was angry,” Serrano admits. “To me, this is a crime. I know what it takes to become so good and I respect this boy. He’s one of the best and one of most intellectual dancers I’ve seen. If you’ve overcome all your challenges, there should be a payoff, a reward.”
That time, Serrano convinced him not to leave. But recently, when Mendez arrived to rehearse for the gala, Serrano again asked him what his plans were for the coming dance season. When Mendez looked at his feet and shook his head slightly, Serrano knew a final decision had been made.
“This time I am just sad,” Serrano says. “Because this is another casualty of our industry, which is not yet where it needs to be. It looks down on a dancer that is not that tall. It looks down on a dancer that may not have the same flexibility as another.”
Serrano acknowledges that a company like the Paris Opera Ballet, the oldest national ballet company in the world, is unlikely to give up its historical aesthetic.
“But there should be other places to embrace the differences and still present good work and not let that beautiful, talented dancer go to waste," he says.
A New Outlook
Mendez is hardly the first male dancer to encounter height discrimination. At 5’3”, Drew Travis Robinson, a dancer with Sarasota’s Azara Ballet, says he can “relate to that struggle.” He’s encountered company websites that stipulate a minimum height requirement; met rejection from partners who feared he couldn’t support them; watched roles being given to dancers with far less experience or ability; and attended auditions where the male dancers were lined up by size and the shorter half of the line was excused with a “Thank you for your time.”
“All I did was put on my shoes and hand them $50,” Robinson says wryly.
Perhaps worse are the times he’s been told he has the technical ability for a role but that the company was “going with this other person because they have the right look,” he says.
Image: Courtesy Photo
Drew Travis Robinson of Azara Ballet. / Photo provided by Azara Ballet
“That’s their way of saying, ‘They’re taller,’” Robinson says. “A lot of times I wish they just come out and say, ‘This person is six feet tall and has blonde hair and blue eyes and is what the average person would think of as a prince,' rather than 5 feet, 3 inch-tall, curly-haired me. If they say you don’t look the part, that digs into a lot of other issues. Now I’m feeling like I don’t even look like a dancer.”
After dancing for more than a decade since receiving a degree in dance and pedagogy from the University of Arizona, Robinson, at 31, has overcome the obstacles—or worked around them—by embracing opportunities in widespread dance arenas. Currently, in addition to dancing with Azara, he teaches at multiple studios, helps direct an apprentice program for a national competition and is a rehearsal director and guest artist.
“A lot of times, if I feel I’ve been either disrespected or decisions were made not in the interest of making me a better dancer, I will step away and find somewhere else to be,” Robinson says. “Life is too short—and for dancers, it’s crazy short. So it’s important that I recognize I need to go somewhere I can be happy.”
Coming to Azara—a company formed expressly with a mission to be more inclusive not only of a dancer’s size or shape, but of all kinds of physical, mental. sexual-orientation and gender differences—has been “a breath of fresh air,” he says.
“It’s almost like you’ve been working in a cubicle and now you’re let loose in the yard to go run,” Robinson says. “There’s so much talent that’s not in stereotypical dance bodies. Azara exists, so there are places for dancers like that.”
An End… and a Beginning
Mendez, however, has decided to apply his work ethic elsewhere. Despite his recent engagement to a dancer he met while performing as a guest artist in Costa Rica, he has committed to entering the military, joining the Marines.
“I want to do something that gives me purpose,” he says. “Something that in some way helps, and also something where I’m learning new things. From dance I learned discipline, critical thinking and a drive to work. I’m happy I danced professionally for five years, but I’m ready for a new chapter.”
He says his final performance in Sarasota wasn’t planned, but nevertheless feels like “coming full circle.”
Image: Courtesy Photo
As for Serrano, he has come to terms with his protégé’s decision. Whereas before he thought Mendez wanted to quit because “they were bullying him out,” now it feels more like “he worked his way up and now it’s his time to stop.”
“I truly, truly feel happy for him,” he says. “He’s found himself and he’s going to be great. This is a really good example of what ballet does for you. He’s going to leave something behind that he’s a superstar at to become something else that he’ll be a superstar at.”
Still, the small changes Serrano acknowledges have occurred in the ballet world in recent years in terms of who fits in to this historical art form—including more inclusion of dancers of color—are hardly enough, he says.
“It’s an opening, but there are still miles to go,” Serrano says. “The industry has to create more spaces. Not 'you put me there because I’m Black'—[it needs to be] 'you put me there because I’m good.' Don’t put [someone] there with a little asterisk. The industry has to become more flexible to the untraditional look if they want the art to become more popular.”
“On Stage 2026,” by the Sarasota Cuban Ballet School Studio Company and students, plus guest artists Harold Mendez and Ariel Martinez of Washington Ballet, takes place at 6 p.m. on July 18 at the Sarasota Opera House, 61 N. Pineapple Ave., Sarasota. Tickets are $36-$56. Click here for more information.
This story was originally published by ArtsBeat, a nonprofit cultural journalism initiative powered by DreamLarge in partnership with Gulf Coast Community Foundation and Suncoast Searchlight. Learn more at ArtsBeat.org.