Yoram Gal (Hebrew: ÃÂÃÂèàÃÂÃÂ; born 7 January 1952) is an international Israeli painter, playwright, director, actor and theater, TV and cinema producer.
Yoram Gal was born in Jerusalem, son of Ephraim Roytenberg (known as Fima), a Jewish painter born in Harbin, China and who emigrated to Israel in 1949, and Naomi Margalit, born in Jerusalem, a teacher and economist. His parents divorced when Gal was one year old. When he was six, his mother married Yossef Gal, an economist, and the three moved to the center of Jerusalem. Three years later, his sister Aya, later a psychologist, was born, and when he was 11 the family moved to London, UK, where his stepfather represented the state of Israel as the economic attache's in the embassy. Gal began painting at age 12 when he underwent psychotherapy at the Anna Freud Clinic in London.
Gal emerged in the Israeli theater scene in the late 1970s. His first stage play, Everyman (ÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂ), premiered in 1978 at Tel Aviv UniversityâÂÂs theater under the direction of Edna Shavit. That same year, he designed sets and costumes for Hanoch LevinâÂÂs Rubber Merchants (áÃÂÃÂèàÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂ) at the Cameri Theatre (Tzavta, June 1978). Around this time, he began appearing in Israeli television dramas, including Kamikaza (Israeli Educational Television, 1977) and Under a Black CloudâÂÂs Shadow (ÃÂæàâààéÃÂÃÂè, Channel 1, 1980).
Throughout the 1980s, Gal became a leading figure in IsraelâÂÂs alternative and fringe theater movement. His absurdist comedy Billy-Bull the Great (ÃÂÃÂÃÂàÃÂÃÂàÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂ) was staged at the 1983 Acco Festival of Alternative Theater, followed by The Rooster (ÃÂêèàÃÂÃÂÃÂ, 1989) and Jacobo, Ish Goldonia (ÃÂâçÃÂÃÂÃÂ, ÃÂÃÂé ÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂàÃÂÃÂ, 1989). His productions, noted for their visual inventiveness, often featured him as playwright, director, and actor.
During this period, he also appeared in Israeli and international screen productions, including Remembrance of Love (NBC, 1982, starring Kirk Douglas), A Dinner of Herbs (BBC, 1988), and Friends of Yael (Channel 1, 1990).
In the early 1990s, GalâÂÂs traveling theater company staged childrenâÂÂs plays such as Where Did the Laughter Go? (1988) and AnatolyâÂÂs Hope (1990). He performed his one-man adaptation of DostoevskyâÂÂs A Gentle Spirit at the 1993 Teatronetto Monodrama Festival and played Harpagon in MolièreâÂÂs The Miser (1994âÂÂ2003), directed by Edna Shavit. In 2001, Gal and Nili Dotan received the Prime MinisterâÂÂs Prize for Hebrew Drama (Ben-Gurion Memorial Award) for their play The Old Man and I.
In 2024 Gal published his novel I IMAGINE.
Gal wrote, directed, and starred in the feature film Wild (Pra, 1999), produced by Nili Dotan. The film, an allegorical satire on Israeli life, received widespread critical praise in Israeli media. Irit Shammer of MaâÂÂariv (12 October 1999) described it as âÂÂlike a fresh breath of rain, somewhat wet,â while Uri Klein of Haaretz (19 October 1999) called it âÂÂthe Israeli Candide.âÂÂ
In painting, Gal found catharsis for his soul's storms, and at age 15 he passed the A' Level exams in Art, which enabled him to enter art college. According to Gal, his teacher advised against it, and told him simply to paint and observe and study works of masters like Van Gogh and Botticelli by himself. He graduated from JFS, the Jewish high school, at age 17, and returned to Israel, where he joined the IDF, ending his three-year service as a lieutenant. In Jerusalem, he exhibited his first one-man show in Beit Mori. The leading Israeli newspaper Yediot Ahronot published a favorable critique of the show, written by the renowned critic Miriam Tal.
From 1973-1977 Gal studied Theater and Cinema at Tel Aviv University (Hons. BFA).
From 2002 onward, Gal built a global reputation as a painter. He exhibited in major U.S. juried art festivals, including the Sausalito Art Festival (California, 2003âÂÂ2011), Art on the Square (Illinois), and the Cottonwood Art Festival (Texas), winning numerous awards.
Internationally, Gal represented Israel at the 2005 Florence Biennale and participated in the Beijing International Art Expo (2011). The Fu Zhou Museum in Nanjing, China, acquired a dozen of his works in 2011, and the I.P. Stanback Museum (South Carolina State University) added his painting Jesus the Juicy Jew in Jerusalem to its permanent collection in 2012.
In 2015, Gal opened the Yoram Gal Studio in Old Jaffa, where he continues to paint and exhibit. His colorful, expressive works draw from Israeli and Mediterranean landscapes and have been showcased at dozens of art fairs worldwide.
In 1978 Gal married his ex theater professor Edna Shavit, and was her two year old son's stepfather. They divorced in 1994. In 1996 he married Nili Dotan, playwright and screenwriter, and in 2000 their son Nimrod was born. They divorced in 2013. In 2016 he married Tzlila Hurvitz, their marriage lasted 4 years.
Gal has written many plays which have not yet been produced, among them Psyche (1983), Spiritolini (1989), Professor Bergman (1982), Gabriella (1993), Hanita sets out on Life (1994), El Rais Is Coming (1994), The Egotist (1994), The Individualist and The Devil (1993), The Buick and The Caravan (1992) and Shira from T (1990).
Wrote and directed the feature film "WILD",