Jonathan Del Arco

Actor

Birthday March 7, 1966

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Uruguay

Age 58 years old

Nationality Uruguay

Height 170 cm

#52562 Most Popular

1966

Jonathan Del Arco (born March 7, 1966) is an Uruguayan American actor and gay rights and political activist.

He is best known for his role as Hugh the Borg in Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Picard, and for his series regular role as medical examiner Dr. Morales in The Closer and Major Crimes.

1987

His New York theater debut came in 1987 in Milcha Sanchez-Scott's Roosters at the INTAR Theatre.

Theater critic Mel Gussow called his a "most sensitive performance", and said his debut was "auspicious".

1988

His Broadway theater debut followed in 1988, when he understudied and then played Martin in Michael Weller's play Spoils of War at the Music Box Theatre, replacing Christopher Collet.

1990

In 1990, with a role on the Miami Vice television show and a role in the independent film Lost Angeles under his belt, Del Arco moved to Los Angeles, California.

Guest starring roles on the television series True Colors, Sisters, The Wonder Years, and Blossom as well as a small role in the film The Mambo Kings followed.

This was followed in 1990 by an off-Broadway role in John Jesurun's Everything That Rises Must Converge at the Kitchen Theatre Company.

Del Arco's other stage performances include Amulets Against the Dragon Forces by Paul Zindel, House Arrest by Anna Deavere Smith, The Virgin Molly by Quincy Long, Common Infractions / Gross Injustices (produced by American Repertory Theater), and Blood Wedding by Federico García Lorca.

1992

His most notable role during this period was as the Borg drone "Hugh" on Star Trek: The Next Generation in 1992, which he reprised in 1993 and again in 2020.

Del Arco has appeared in a wide range of live theatrical plays.

1995

Del Arco turned to waiting tables in 1995 for an income.

Instead, through a friend, he found paid work on an environmental campaign being led by actor/director Rob Reiner.

Del Arco then worked on numerous political campaigns.

Del Arco credits the political activism with allowing him to find a new passion and expansiveness as an actor, which led to new acting roles.

1996

In 1996, Del Arco joined the Hispanic Playwrights Project at the South Coast Repertory and spent six seasons there.

1998

He also spent the summers of 1998 and 1999 at the Institute on the Arts and Civic Dialogue at Harvard University, working under Anna Deavere Smith.

2003

His breakout role came in 2003 when he landed a recurring guest star role FX Networks's series Nip/Tuck, playing a transgender woman named Sofia Lopez.

Roles on other highly rated shows such as 24, The Sopranos, and Dollhouse followed.

2007

Beginning in 2007, Del Arco had a series regular role on TNT cable network's The Closer as the openly gay medical examiner, Dr. Morales.

He continued the role in the series' spin-off, Major Crimes.

2012

Del Arco volunteered for Barack Obama and has worked for five presidential campaigns, including as a celebrity surrogate for President Obama in 2012, Hillary Clinton in 2016, and the Biden/Harris campaign in 2020.

2013

He was awarded the 2013 Visibility Award by the Human Rights Campaign.

As a teenager, Del Arco became interested in acting and the theater.

He often traveled by commuter train from his home in Port Chester, New York to Manhattan, where he attended plays.

He eventually enrolled in acting classes there, and after graduating from high school, he moved to New York City permanently.

Shortly after, Del Arco won a role in the touring company of Torch Song Trilogy.

In 2013, Del Arco was awarded the 2013 Visibility Award from the Human Rights Campaign and now works with the campaign as a guest speaker.

Del Arco is a member of Actors' Equity Association.

Del Arco was born in Uruguay.

When he was 10 years old his family left their home for the United States, moving into a two-bedroom, “rat-infested” apartment in Port Chester, New York.

When Del Arco was age 24 and living in New York City, he lost his first partner, Eddie, to AIDS.

Later, when preparing the role of Hugh for Star Trek, Del Arco based the character's "innocence" and "wonder" upon Eddie, and channelled his own grief into the part: "I had just lost my partner a year before, so I was broken and lost and lonely, and I was willing to share that."

Del Arco subsequently met Kyle Fritz, a talent manager, a year and a half after moving to Hollywood.

2014

In 2014, he appeared in the episode "Love Sucks" of The Crazy Ones, as the previously offscreen husband of Brad Garrett's character.

2020

Del Arco also reprised his role of the Borg drone "Hugh" in Star Trek: Picard (2020), a direct sequel to The Next Generation.

In addition to acting, Del Arco is a political, environmental, and gay rights activist.

Most recently, he has volunteered as surrogate for Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock for their campaigns in the 2020 Georgia Senate runoff elections.

He works to raise awareness for the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN), which Del Arco described as life-changing.

"Never did I imagine that working for a nonprofit organization would have such a great effect on me personally. It's changed the structure of how I use my career as an actor because now I have a reason beyond entertainment to promote something other than me."