Mexico | Mexico City | New Mexico | Gulf of Mexico | Santa Fe, New Mexico | Mexico national football team | American Ballet Theatre | Albuquerque, New Mexico | University of New Mexico | New York City Ballet | ballet | Las Cruces, New Mexico | National Ballet of Canada | Joffrey Ballet | State of Mexico | México | New Mexico Territory | Maximilian I of Mexico | Taos, New Mexico | San Francisco Ballet | National Autonomous University of Mexico | President of Mexico | Los Alamos, New Mexico | Bolshoi Ballet | Pacific Northwest Ballet | New Mexico State University | Socorro, New Mexico | Royal Danish Ballet | Music of Mexico | Boston Ballet |
In 1949, Zamarripa was approached by Amalia Hernández, who developed folkloric dance for theater, and founded Ballet Folklórico de México, after watching him dance with his student group, she invited him to join her company, but he declined because of his ambitions of pursuing a career as a sculptor.