‘Cultural exchange makes better art and better music’: UK musical actor JOJ touring China after 4 years

After a concert Monday night at Shanghai Cultural Square theater, renowned Welsh musical theater actor and singer John Owen-Jones met his Chinese fans at the “More than Music” event hosted by the British Consulate-General in Shanghai on Tuesday to share his career experience, and celebrate the rich cultural exchanges between the UK and China.

John Owen-Jones, also known as JOJ, is most famous for his portrayals of Jean Valjean in Alain Boublil & Claude-Michel Schönberg's Les Misérables and the Phantom in Andrew Lloyd Webber's The Phantom of the Opera.

Shanghai is the second leg of his China tour covering Beijing, Shanghai, Nanjing and Changsha after a four-year hiatus. Tickets for the one-night Shanghai show sold out in less than seven minutes.

The Global Times reporter witnessed about 2,000 Shanghai audience members actively interacted with JOJ throughout the entire performance, immersing themselves in more than 25 classic musical theater scenes, including Nature Boy, Thunderball, Kiss of the Spiderwoman, This Is the Moment, Proud Lady and Love Changes Everything. 

Besides his long-time partner John Quirk, special guest Chinese soprano Pan Hangwei also performed on stage with JOJ.

“This year I was very much concentrating on using local musicians and local talents, so whenever I travel to a new country, I much prefer to work with local artists because it brings a different dimension to my performance… And I thought it would be a great idea to put together Chinese instruments into the recording, and in that way, we celebrate the two musical cultures and the differences and combine them and make one unique thing,” JOJ told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Speaking of blending Western and Chinese instruments and making a very unique version of the Phantom of the Opera, which they performed during the China tour, JOJ said, “It's always one of the most exciting parts of the show for me because I get to see how the audience reacts to that, because cultural exchange is such a rich tapestry of different things all over the world that we can all learn from each other and make better art and make better music. And that's what's so exciting about being here in China. I think I'd like to explore more, so I definitely would like to integrate, explore more cultural opportunities between where I'm from, where you are from.”

JOJ’s remarks were echoed by the British Consul General in Shanghai Matt Burney. The consul general told the session that “Regardless of where we come from, music is this universal language, and it reminds us of that shared humanity and the things that bind us together emotionally and spiritually. Music really does have the ability to transcend all of the challenges that life presents us. It can take us back to the past, and it can also give us optimism.”

The consul general went on to introduce the “More than Music” campaign. “We wanted to use the media of music and through this project to bring people closer to the UK. We're bringing you a really exciting, UK music campaign that I really do hope that you will engage in and hope that through this campaign you can understand more about British music and British musicians.”

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