Jean-Marc Généreux

Jean-Marc Généreux

Généreux at the NRJ Music Awards ceremony, January 2013.
Born December 25, 1962 (age 52)
Saint-Hubert, Quebec, Canada
Occupation Choreographer, Television Personality, Dancer, Artist, Costume Designer
Spouse(s) France Mousseau (m. 1987)
Children Jean-Francis (b. 1996)
Francesca (b. 1999)
Website jeanmarcgenereux.com

Jean-Marc Généreux (/ʒɑ̃-maʁk ʒeneʁø/; born December 25, 1962) is a French Canadian ballroom dance champion, choreographer and television personality from Longueuil, Quebec, Canada. He is most prominently known for his roles as judge and choreographer on the American and Canadian versions of So You Think You Can Dance, and the French version of the hit television series: Dancing with the Stars.

Biography

Généreux met his partner and wife, France Mousseau, when they went to elementary school together. At a young age, he joined the dance school "École de Danse Loisirs Galaxia Inc." in Longueuil, Quebec, and was partnered with France's younger cousin, Chantal Marshall (née Grenon). While Marshall considered ballroom dancing as simply a sport or pastime and Généreux had greater dance aspirations, Marshall switched partners with Mousseau, who attended the same dance school. Généreux and Mousseau competed successfully as amateurs starting in 1977, and then professionally in 1986, in the Latin and 10-dance dancesport divisions, and retired in 1998.[1]

They have been featured dancers on the PBS series Championship Ballroom Dancing and most recently, were guest choreographers on the Fox dance competition-reality show So You Think You Can Dance.[2] They were also featured dancers on the big screen in the film Dance with Me, starring Vanessa L. Williams. Also, Généreux played a "Smarmy Old Man" in the ballroom dance film Shall We Dance, starring Jennifer Lopez.[3]

Along with dancer/choreographer Tré Armstrong, Généreux has appeared as a Permanent Judge on CTV's So You Think You Can Dance Canada for the first four seasons. In 2010, he appeared in an episode in the tenth season of Degrassi as a Ballroom instructor for a remedial gym class. As of February 2011, he also appears as the Head Judge on TF1's Danse avec les stars, the French version of Dancing With The Stars

On the August 8, 2011 broadcast of So You Think You Can Dance Canada, Généreux announced the creation of his new dance shoe company, JMG Dance.

Marriage and children

Généreux married his dance partner, France Mousseau, and they had their first child, Jean-Francis, in 1996, and their second, Francesca, in 1999. Their daughter, Francesca, suffers from Rett Syndrome; Généreux and his wife work with others to raise awareness and money around this rare neurological condition.[4] On Season 4 of So You Think You Can Dance, Généreux choreographed a Viennese waltz for Kherington Payne and Stephen "Twitch" Boss, a dance that he openly dedicated to daughter Francesca. Généreux also revealed in the second season auditions of So You Think You Can Dance Canada that his son had a vanishing twin.[5] The couple now resides in Boucherville, Quebec where France stays permanently with the kids, unless she is needed to appear on one of the TV shows of which Jean-Marc is a part. The couple also design and make ballroom costumes for professional dancers.

Awards

Amateur titles

Professional titles

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
1998 Dance With Me Professional Latin Dance Finalist joined France Mousseau
2004 Shall We Dance? Smarmy Old Man
2011 Funkytown Choreographer
2013 La boîte à musique des Enfoirés Himself TV Movie

Television

Year Title Role Notes
2006-10 So You Think You Can Dance Himself - Choreographer and Judge 14 episodes
2008-11 So You Think You Can Dance Canada Himself - Choreographer and Judge Permanent judge
2010 Degrassi: The Next Generation Mr. Menard Episode 10.15 and 10.16 "My Body Is A Cage: Part 1 & 2"
2011 Le Grand Journal (Canal+) Himself Interview
2011–present Danse avec les stars Himself - Judge Permanent Judge
[Tessa and Scott]

Himself Episodes 1 and 5

2013–present Le grand saut Himself - Judge

See also

References

External links

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