logo
‘The police were scared there would be riots': When Wham! took Western pop to China

‘The police were scared there would be riots': When Wham! took Western pop to China

Independent06-04-2025
T he Beatles at JFK, this was not. 'Where's all the screaming kids, then?' George Michael asked, scanning the arrivals hall at Beijing international airport in April 1985 to find the wind whistling through the east Asian branch of Club Tropicana. Wham! arrived in China at the peak of their fame, yet rather than scrum their way through hordes of howling girls – as was the custom everywhere else – the doe-eyed pop phenomenon were met by a clutch of photographers, a hall full of nonplussed onlookers and a gathering of besuited government officials.
At least one of their welcoming party had brought his child, toddling up to Michael's bandmate Andrew Ridgeley in the uniform of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, getting a snapshot and then swiftly running away again. 'I think I scared the living daylights out of him,' Ridgeley chuckled, little knowing he'd just lived out a miniature metaphor for the first major Western pop tour of China, staged 40 years ago this week. At the rear, backing singer Janet Mooney was one of the 11-strong band accompanying George and Andrew into this uncharted, awkwardly officious territory. 'We'd never experienced anything like that,' she tells The Independent today. 'Everywhere we went they were mobbed, except in China. They had no experience of Western pop culture. I don't think they had that culture of fans waiting at the stage door and stuff.'
By 1985, these two Hertfordshire heartthrobs had conquered around 80 per cent of the globe. Instant smashes such as 'Young Guns (Go for It)' and 'Bad Boys' had made them overnight UK chart sensations, and their 1984 second album Make It Big had proven a self-fulfilling prophecy. 'Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go' and 'Careless Whisper' had topped the charts on both sides of the Atlantic, pushing the album to over 10 million in sales. In China, closed off to most Western music in the early Eighties, they were far less known. But Wham!'s two pioneering arena shows over 10 days there (Jean-Michel Jarre was the only Westerner to have played the country before, in 1981) were cued up as both a worldwide lap of honour for the band and the last word in barrier-shattering pan-cultural exchanges that would expand China's cultural vista for decades to come.
But behind its outward scenes of polite ambassadors' receptions and big bouffant pop thrills, the tour was routed through a world of oppression, manipulation and outright terror, its wheels greased by government payouts and with both the CIA and the Chinese secret police angling to control it for intelligence and propaganda purposes. The real reason for the absence of 1,000 hair-tearing fans doing the jitterbug across Beijing airport in the throes of Wham!-mania? Manager Simon Napier-Bell, mastermind and facilitator of the tour, had refused to pay the government to supply them.
That the tour happened at all was largely down to the machinations of one mysterious 'Professor Rolf'. Tasked in 1983 with making Wham! the biggest band in the world within 12 months (or lose their management contract), Napier-Bell and his Big Life Management partner Jazz Summers vowed to open up the band to China's potential market of 400 million 14-35-year-olds. On his first scouting trip, he spent days cold-calling ministers of the Chinese Communist Party, inviting them to lunch to discuss the huge investment potential of Western pop music, and got nowhere. Then, on a flight to Japan, he met a gentleman calling himself Professor Rolf, who had strings to pull. '[He] said he had contacts within the Chinese government and could help me,' Napier-Bell told Mojo in 2023.
Sure enough, on his next visit, Napier-Bell's lunch offer was taken up by a minor minister, then another, then another. During his regular monthly visits, he found himself wining and dining more than 140 government delegates to soften China's tight cultural borders for Wham!'s invasion. He even created brochures of a range of acts they might invite to bridge the East-West pop divide, sabotaging Queen's chances by presenting Freddie Mercury in particularly flamboyant style, but George Michael at his most wholesome.
Still, the Chinese authorities objected to Michael's more lascivious dance moves, insisting he avoid any such lewdness lest he pollute the spiritual purity of the nation's youth. The Minister of Culture put out a stern statement ahead of the shows. 'He basically advised the youth that were there to go to the concert and watch it but not learn from it,' Michael said in the tour film Wham! in China: Foreign Skies, 'which seems a pretty ridiculous thing to say.'
This, after all, was a country unacclimatised to the exultant sounds and immoral gyrations of global youth culture. Discos and dancing had only recently been legalised and there was no pop chart. Most foreign radio was blocked and fans of Western pop decadence were treated brutally. 'Back then, if we wanted to listen to pop music with lyrics like that, we had to do that in secret,' Wham!'s onstage presenter Kan Lijun told the BBC. 'If you were caught, you would be taken to the police station and they would keep you there all night. It was a time of many taboos.'
'I was a 15-year-old boy but I had to stay at home after 8.30pm,' a fan called Li Shizhong explained. 'At that time, if you played a guitar on the street, you would be considered a hooligan.' Naturally, pop music had become a signifier of the rising defiance amongst China's young guns and bad boys. 'I was dancing to [Wham!'s] music in underground disco and rock parties in my art school in Chongqing,' another fan, Rose Tang, told The Washington Post shortly before she became a student leader of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. 'The music was really instrumental in cultivating our rebellious spirit.'
Moreover, the tour's organisation became an increasingly tangled web, as the government insisted on the band using a 100-strong local crew at great expense and the US secret service attempted to turn the tour into a clandestine surveillance mission. 'Because we were dealing with this insular regime, the CIA were on my back; they wanted to pay me to work for them, but not tell anyone,' said Napier-Bell. He shunned the spooks' advances. 'I got to know a lot of Chinese secret police, they were a lot more clever.'
On arrival, Mooney was hit by a million-volt culture shock. 'It was a little bit like going back in time,' she says. 'It was very much still everyone on bicycles and [in] Mao jackets. It was completely different to how we perceive it now.' With a film crew and coterie of international journalists in tow, the Wham! entourage was carefully managed. Barred from wandering around on their own, they were ushered between formal dinners, sightseeing trips to the Great Wall and shopping jaunts, where Ridgeley bought a Mao jacket to go alongside his tartan suit stagewear.
The Chinese authorities objected to Michael's more lascivious dance moves, insisting he avoid any such lewdness lest he pollute the spiritual purity of the nation's youth.
Mooney recalls one eye-opening visit to a local market. 'I remember looking at this big open market stall covered in animal bits,' she says. 'There was a big tub beside me and a huge salamander came out of it. There was a woman walking along with these little strings of frogs and live chickens in a string bag. Stuff you don't really see at home.'
According to tour manager Jake Duncan, everywhere they went 'the band, and crew, were treated with a mix of feigned adulation and cultural perplexity'. The first show, at Beijing's 13,000 capacity Workers' Gymnasium on 7 April, was equally disorienting. While the band rocked through 'Club Tropicana', 'Wake Me Up…' and 'Young Guns (Go for It)' with their usual roof-lifting exuberance, the crowd – hemmed in by ranks of police officers – remained polite, subdued and all but motionless. 'You could feel the excitement, but they didn't really know how to respond to it,' says Mooney. 'No one had ever seen anything like that before,' said Lijun. 'We were used to people who stood still when they performed. All the young people were amazed, and everybody was tapping their feet. Of course, the police weren't happy and they were scared there would be riots.'
It later transpired that the Beijing audience was under strict instruction to remain seated. 'I foolishly asked the support act, a breakdancer called Trevor, to go down into the audience and get them all going, which unsettled the secret police,' Napier-Bell said. 'They made an announcement that everyone should stay in their seats.' It didn't help that Lindsay Anderson, the director of the tour film, requested the house lights be turned on for crowd shots, subduing an audience already afraid of retribution for seeming to enjoy themselves. There were reports that one of the more lively attendees was removed and beaten.
The result was one of the hardest shows Wham! ever played, the upper tiers of fans going relatively wild while the spotlit, camera-strewn stalls were rigid with fear. 'The first feeling was of failure,' Michael told Rolling Stone in 1986. 'There was no way we could communicate. And when we actually found out what had gone on I was just furious.'
Michael wasn't the only member of the touring party struggling with the experience. On the flight to the second show in Canton, Portuguese trumpeter Raul D'Oliveira suffered a psychotic episode, reportedly drawing out a knife and stabbing himself in the stomach while backing singers Pepsi & Shirlie stood screaming beside him. When he then forced his way into the cockpit, the pilot made an emergency dive to attempt to disarm and subdue him, and the plane briefly returned to Beijing to offload him into local psychiatric care.
'It was very traumatic for all of us,' says Mooney, 'mostly because we had to land a couple of times in bad weather and that was not great, and of course something not very nice was happening to a friend of ours.' The incident resulted in horrifying headlines back home and much stress on the tour. 'We had no way of contacting [our families],' Mooney says, 'We didn't have mobiles and stuff back then so we couldn't call them and tell them where we were or what we were doing after that plane thing, that everyone was alright.'
D'Oliveira suffered only minor injuries, the rest of the entourage was unharmed, and the two-date tour closed with a more permissive second show for 5,000 fans in the more Westernised Canton. 'Now our country has adopted an open policy, we have the chance to see this type of programme – we are so lucky,' one fan told Anderson's film crew, but the intended cultural explosion soon faltered. It would be 10 years before another major Western band – Roxette – would play in China.
Yet, before it went-went, the tour undoubtedly woke China up to the pizzazz and possibilities of Western pop music. Over the Eighties and Nineties, in Wham!'s image, local acts would develop a thriving homegrown market in Cantopop arena shows, and seeing people dancing around and playing guitars on stage for the first time was a revelation for many fans. 'In the early 1980s, pop songs from Hong Kong were very popular in mainland China,' music writer Wen Huang told the Indiana Times in 2016, 'and after the concert, college students and people in the music industry started to get interested in rock'n'roll.'
The tour made cultural ripples in China, but tsunamis across the rest of the world. 'Wham! were able to leapfrog from an initial, small, handful of satellite theatre dates, directly into outdoor stadiums in the most prestigious US markets,' says Duncan, whileNapier-Bell credits the global publicity around the tour for instigating the modernisation of communist China. 'When Wham! went to China, nobody in China knew they were there, but the whole of the rest of the world knew it,' he told Yahoo!. 'In the next 10 years, billions and billions and billions of dollars floated in. Modern Beijing was built from that money, really.' All of which, at the time, passed Wham! and their band by, like the PA announcements that kept the Wham! devotees of Beijing in check. 'It was a cultural experience like no one else had really ever had,' Mooney says. 'At the time, it's almost too big a situation for you to really understand what is happening.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why Jeremy Clarkson's discovery of 'genuinely alarming' effects of climate change is so important
Why Jeremy Clarkson's discovery of 'genuinely alarming' effects of climate change is so important

Scotsman

timean hour ago

  • Scotsman

Why Jeremy Clarkson's discovery of 'genuinely alarming' effects of climate change is so important

Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... For a long time, I quite liked the bloke-ish bonhomie of the 'classic' Top Gear, with Jeremy Clarkson, James May and Richard Hammond. I didn't particularly mind Clarkson's near-to-the-knuckle jokes, dodgy comments about truck drivers or his dismissal of climate change. He could sometimes make me laugh – and you can't agree about everything. However, his horrendous 'slope' remark – about an Asian man on a bridge they had built over the River Kwai – and his decision to punch a Top Gear producer because of the lack of hot food after a day's shooting both created a sour taste that has lingered. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It wasn't just the potential racism of the slur. It was also the fact that this was a man who had laboured alongside them; it was a sneering betrayal. And as someone who has worked with people known, in all seriousness, as 'the talent' – who were sometimes anything but and comically so – I almost felt that highly entitled punch myself. READ MORE: Demise of hybrid cars in Norway shows how UK is falling behind in technological race Jeremy Clarkson has been a vocal campaigner during farmers' protests about Labour's changes to inheritance tax but is also voicing the concerns of many about the effects of the changing weather on food production (Picture: Carl Court) | Getty Images Clarkson facing 'catastrophic' harvest But Clarkson is still not without redeeming features, including a willingness, for all his bombastic on-screen persona, to change his mind. In 2019, he revealed he had encountered a 'graphic demonstration of global warming' after getting stuck on a boat in a dried-up river in Cambodia. He told The Sunday Times: 'It's the first time that we've ever admitted to there being global warming. It was alarming, genuinely alarming.' More recently, his Prime Video show, Clarkson's Farm, appears to have done a great deal to educate people about the reality of farming and has also revealed a different side to his personality. Last year, while rather optimistically suggesting 'science will solve it eventually, always does', Clarkson told the Guardian that working on his farm, Diddly Squat (a great and very 'Clarkson' name), had made him realise that the effects of climate change were 'happening really fast'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'That's what always surprises me. In the last five years, I've noticed a dramatic change here... It hasn't snowed for five years. We probably get a minute of sleet. We used to get snowed in every year,' he said. While saying this, he apparently smirked and said to his interviewer 'I'm like a Guardian reader's wet dream, aren't I?' – a remark that sounds like a jibe but is begrudgingly conciliatory to people he normally disagrees with. On Friday last week, he wrote on social media: 'It looks like this year's harvest will be catastrophic. That should be a worry for anyone who eats food. If a disaster on this scale had befallen any other industry, there would be a lot of wailing and gnashing of teeth... Normal weather would help. It never stopped raining in 2024 and never started in 2025.' Many farmers have been hit by floods, drought or both in recent years (Picture: Carl Court) | Getty Images Farms hit by extreme weather It is a message that many farmers would like the rest of us, particularly those living in cities, insulated as we are from the realities of food production, to hear. A survey published last month by the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU) found that 86 per cent of farmers had been affected by extreme rainfall, 78 per cent by drought and more than half by heatwaves. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Just 2 per cent had not experienced some kind of extreme weather. Some 84 per cent had experienced a reduction in crop yields or livestock output, and three-quarters had seen a fall in their incomes. Tom Lancaster, the ECIU's land, food and farming analyst, said: 'Farmers are on the front line of climate change and this research reveals what impact that is having on them and their businesses. From lost crops and livestock to soil erosion, farmers are battling these impacts across more fronts than most with repeated heatwaves, droughts and periods of extreme rainfall all taking a toll on farmer confidence.' This, he said, called the UK's food security into question. 'We need to be taking these risks more seriously, with more support for farming to adapt and build resilience, as well as more urgent action to help farmers reduce their own emissions.' Global food prices set to rise Similar problems are being faced by farmers all over the world. In a study published in June by the leading journal Nature, Stanford University academics estimated that, for every degree Celsius of global warming, the world's ability to produce food would fall by 120 calories per person per day. One of the researchers, Professor Solomon Hsiang, warned that 'when global production falls, consumers are hurt because prices go up and it gets harder to access food and feed our families'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It is currently thought the world is on track for about 2.7C of warming by 2100 – well above the 1.5C and 2C limits suggested by scientists to avoid 'dangerous' consequences. Unless and until we reduce carbon emissions to net zero, our climate will keep on getting hotter, less temperate and less benign. While many viewers, including me, may have thought that Clarkson was being himself on Top Gear, he has spoken about playing a caricature of himself, 'a comic creation'. However, his Clarkson's Farm persona seems more like the real person and, fortunately, that is someone who, when confronted by the reality that our climate really is changing, is able to see it for what it is. Ironically, his Top Gear character may help him persuade people – who, for various reasons, are still reluctant to accept that climate change is a problem – to face the increasingly obvious facts that farmers are confronted with on a regular basis.

Netflix fans 'should watch' 6 powerful Western films that are streaming now
Netflix fans 'should watch' 6 powerful Western films that are streaming now

Daily Mirror

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Netflix fans 'should watch' 6 powerful Western films that are streaming now

There's nothing like sitting down and watching a good film that captivates yoy, and in and among the sea of options on Netflix, there are plenty of Western gems to stream There's nothing quite like putting on a brilliant film when you've got some spare time. While many adore thrillers or romantic tales, it's often enjoyable to mix things up a bit. Recently, viewers have been going mad for Western series such as Yellowstone, alongside 1923 featuring Helen Mirren, and Ransom Canyon remained in the top 10 for four weeks earlier this year. ‌ Additionally, there's a wealth of Western films available on Netflix that you might not be aware of, offering loads of action. Well-known film recommendation account, The House of Movies on TikTok, which garners millions of views for its content, has revealed six movies that deserve a spot on your western viewing list. ‌ 1. Sweet Girl ‌ This gripping film, packed with action and adventure, features Jason Momoa and Isabela Merced. Netflix's synopsis states: "He taught his daughter the best way to win an unfair fight is to fight harder. To get justice for all they've lost, these two must fight together." The movie runs for just under two hours and was released in 2021. It holds a 3.7 rating out of 5 on Google reviews. Viewers have described it as "exhilarating and deeply moving", whilst also praising its "remarkable plot". 2. The Ballad of Buster Scruggs This 2018 production, which runs for 2 hours and 13 minutes, secured three Oscar nominations and claimed Best Screenplay at the Venice Film Festival. Crafted by the Coen brothers, the film holds an 89% rating on Rotten Tomatoes and features an impressive ensemble cast, including Liam Neeson, James Franco, and Tim Blake Nelson. ‌ The film showcases 19th-century post-Civil War America during the settling of the Old West. It weaves together the stories of six distinct characters - a singing gunslinger, a bank robber, a travelling impresario, an elderly prospector, a twisted pair of bounty hunters, and a wagon train. 3. The Power of the Dog This psychological drama, released in 2021, is set in 1925. Netflix describes the film as follows: "Amid the wild beauty of the West, a rancher driven to dominate beast and brethren brutally undermines his brother's new bride and her teen son." ‌ If you're a fan of dark, thought-provoking and subtle themes, this film could be just your cup of tea. Directed by Jane Campion, it's based on Thomas Savage's 1967 novel and boasts a 94% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. 4. Concrete Cowboy Produced in 2020, this American drama film, based on the novel Ghetto Cowboy, has earned an 80% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. It features Luther star Idris Elba and Stranger Things' Caleb McLaughlin. ‌ Netflix says: "Sent to live with his estranged father for the summer, a rebellious teen finds kinship in a tight-knit Philadelphia community of Black cowboys." Google reviews describe the film as a "great eye opener", as well as being "touching and powerful". 5. The Ridiculous 6 ‌ This Netflix original tells the tale of Tommy 'White Knife' Stockburn who embarks on a rescue mission across the West with his five brothers he never knew he had, after their outlaw dad is kidnapped. Adam Sandler takes on the role of Tommy in this star-studded film, featuring Terry Crews, Rob Schneider, Luke Wilson, Jorge Garcia and Taylor Launtner. If you're after a blend of western themes with a dash of comedy and satire, then this 2015 flick is just the ticket. One chuffed viewer took to Google reviews to declare it as "absolutely rib cracking hilarious", while another praised "the absurdity of it all is definitely a highlight". 6. The Killer This gripping 2017 film, directed by David Fincher, carries an 18 rating and runs for just over 90 minutes. The plot of this Brazilian western is summarised as: "In lawless badlands, reclusive Cabeleira sets out to discover the fate of his gunman father and grows to be a feared assassin himself." It has earned a solid 6/10 rating on IMDb. Google reviewers have hailed it as a "beautiful film" and a "masterpiece".

Sydney Sweeney's 'Tarantio-esque' thriller release date and trailer
Sydney Sweeney's 'Tarantio-esque' thriller release date and trailer

Daily Mirror

time6 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Sydney Sweeney's 'Tarantio-esque' thriller release date and trailer

The new Western thriller is already picking up rave reviews from critics Sydney Sweeney is back on the silver screen in Tony Tost's new Western thriller, Americana. ‌ The movie serves as Tost's first stint in the director's chair, although he's known for his writing on Netflix's hit series Longmire. His directorial debut has been met with enthusiasm, boasting an 82% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on early critiques. ‌ What's more, the 50-year-old director is being likened to legendary filmmakers such as Quentin Tarantino. IndieWire's verdict praises Americana, describing it as "a film that plays out like an early Tarantino movie directed by the Coen brothers, while never feeling derivative of either of the filmmakers." ‌ But when will audiences be able to see it and who joins Sweeney in the cast? Here's the lowdown, reports the Mirror US. When does Americana come out? Americana premiered at the South by Southwest Film and TV Festival in 2023, where it initially enjoyed a perfect 100% score on Rotten Tomatoes. ‌ After a lengthy two-year anticipation, the gripping thriller is set to hit the big screen on Friday, August 22. What is Americana about? The narrative centres around a heist involving a shy waitress named Penny Jo and a military vet called Lefty Ledbetter, who team up to get their hands on a rare Native American artefact. ‌ The official synopsis states: "After the artefact falls onto the black market, a shy waitress with big dreams teams up with a lovelorn military veteran to gain possession of it, putting them in the crosshairs of a ruthless criminal working on behalf of a Western antiquities dealer. "Bloodshed ensues when others join the battle, including the leader of an indigenous group and a desperate woman fleeing her mysterious past." Who stars in Americana? ‌ Euphoria actors Sweeney and Eric Dane are back together in Americana, with Sweeney taking on the role of waitress Penny Jo and Dane portraying the ruthless criminal Dillon MacIntosh. They're joined by Grammy nominee Halsey, who plays Mandy Starr, a desperate woman escaping her dangerous past along with her son Cal (played by up-and-comer Gavin Maddox Bergman). Hollywood big-hitter Paul Walter Hauser also features as Lefty Ledbetter, hot off his box office run in The Fantastic Four: First Steps and Naked Gun. Rounding out the cast is Fargo's Zahn McClarnon, who steps into the role of Native American group leader Ghost Eye. Americana lands in cinemas on Friday, August 22

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store