Gael Garca Bernal Net Worth
What is Gael GarcĂa Bernal's Net Worth?
Gael Garcia Bernal is a Mexican actor, director and producer who has a net worth of $12 million. Gael GarcĂa Bernal is best known for his roles in such Spanish-language films as "Amores Perros," "Y Tu MamĂĄ TambiĂ©n," "Bad Education," "The Motorcycle Diaries," and "No." He has also appeared in numerous English-language films, including "A Little Bit of Heaven," "Rosewater," and "Old." On television, Bernal has starred in the Amazon streaming series "Mozart in the Jungle," for which he won a Golden Globe Award, and the Disney+ special "Werewolf by Night."
Early Life and Education
Gael GarcĂa Bernal was born on November 30, 1978 in Guadalajara, Mexico to actor and director JosĂ© Ăngel GarcĂa and actress and former model Patricia Bernal. When he was still young, he acquired a stepfather named Sergio Yazbek, through whom he has two half-siblings named DarĂo and Tamara. Active in the community as a teenager, GarcĂa Bernal taught indigenous people how to read and participated in demonstrations supporting the 1994 Zapatista uprising. For his higher education, he attended the National Autonomous University of Mexico before a major student strike halted his studies. In response, he traveled around Europe. GarcĂa Bernal eventually moved to London, where he became the first-ever Mexican student accepted to the Central School of Speech and Drama.
Career Beginnings
GarcĂa Bernal began his acting career as a teenager on telenovelas in the late 80s. He first appeared in three episodes of "Teresa," which starred Salma Hayek and also featured GarcĂa Bernal's mother. Later, in 1992, GarcĂa Bernal played a lead role on "El Abuelo y Yo."
Film Career, Part 1
GarcĂa Bernal made his feature film debut in the 2000 psychological drama "Amores Perros," which was also the directorial debut of Alejandro GonzĂĄlez Iñårritu. A huge critical and commercial success, the film earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Foreign Language Film. GarcĂa Bernal next appeared in "Don't Tempt Me" and starred alongside Diego Luna and Maribel VerdĂș in Alfonso CuarĂłn's "Y Tu MamĂĄ TambiĂ©n," which was a major crossover success in the US. In 2002, GarcĂa Bernal starred in another hit film, "The Crime of Padre Amaro," which broke box office records in Mexico. The year after that, he appeared in the English-language films "Dreaming of Julia" and "Dot the I." GarcĂa Bernal went on to give two of his most acclaimed performances in 2004, in Pedro AlmodĂłvar's "Bad Education" and Walter Salles' "The Motorcycle Diaries." For his portrayal of Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara in the latter film, he earned a BAFTA nomination for Best Actor. GarcĂa Bernal subsequently starred in "The King."
In 2006, GarcĂa Bernal reunited with Alejandro GonzĂĄlez Iñårritu for the director's psychological drama "Babel." The same year, he starred in Michel Gondry's surrealistic fantasy comedy "The Science of Sleep." In 2007, GarcĂa Bernal starred in "The Past" and "DĂ©ficit," the latter of which also marked his directorial debut. He went on to write and direct a segment in the 2008 anthology film "8." GarcĂa Bernal subsequently appeared in such films as "Blindness," "Rudo y Cursi," "Mammoth," "The Limits of Control," "Letters to Juliet," and "Even the Rain." In 2011, he starred in three very disparate films: the romantic dramedy "A Little Bit of Heaven," the Western comedy "Casa de mi Padre," and the psychological drama "The Loneliest Planet." The next year, GarcĂa Bernal starred in Pablo LarraĂn's acclaimed historical drama "No."
Film Career, Part 2
In 2014, GarcĂa Bernal starred in the Western "The Ardor" and Jon Stewart's political drama "Rosewater," in which he portrayed Iranian journalist and political prisoner Maziar Bahari. His credits the following year were "Desierto," "Zoom," and "Eva Doesn't Sleep." In 2016, GarcĂa Bernal stepped behind the camera again to write and direct a segment of the anthology film "Madly"; he also starred in "Neruda," "Salt and Fire," and "You're Killing Me Susana." GarcĂa Bernal went on to star in "If You Saw His Heart" in 2017. Also that year, he voiced the deceased trickster HĂ©ctor in the Pixar animated film "Coco." In 2018, he had a starring role in the heist film "Museo" and supporting roles in "The Kindergarten Teacher" and "The Accused."
GarcĂa Bernal had one of his most prolific film years in 2019. That year, he returned to the director's chair with "Chicuarotes," and starred in Pablo LarraĂn's "Ema" and Olivier Assayas's "Wasp Network." He also appeared as himself in Elia Suleiman's "It Must Be Heaven." After a rare one-year break from the big screen, GarcĂa Bernal returned in 2021 to star in M. Night Shyamalan's thriller "Old."

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Television Career
After appearing on telenovelas for a few decades, GarcĂa Bernal made his English-language television debut in 2014 on the Amazon streaming series "Mozart in the Jungle." He played Rodrigo De Souza, the new conductor of the New York Symphony. The show ran for four seasons through 2018, garnering GarcĂa Bernal a Golden Globe Award. He returned to the small screen in 2021 to play the recurring role of Arthur Leander in the miniseries "Station Eleven." The following year, he starred as Jack Russell in the Disney+ special "Werewolf by Night," based on the Marvel Comics character.
Film Entrepreneurship
In 2005, GarcĂa Bernal and his friend and frequent costar Diego Luna founded the production company Canana Films. Later, GarcĂa Bernal founded the Ambulante Documentary Film Festival and helped create the Amnesty International short documentary series Los Invisibles.
Personal Life
From 2006 to 2014, GarcĂa Bernal was in a romantic relationship with Argentine actress Dolores Fonzi. The couple had a son named LĂĄzaro and a daughter named Libertad. GarcĂa Bernal began dating Mexican journalist Fernanda AragonĂ©s in 2019; they had a child in 2021.
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