The Scotsman

‘I feel very grateful for what I have’

◆ The Australian actor and singer talks to Naomi Clarke about his journey from Neighbours to stage stardom – and what to expect from his upcoming tour

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You create your own luck in life, I’m very much of that belief,” says Jason Donovan.

The Australian actor and singer recognises he has definitely had a good dose of fortune throughout his 35-year career in the entertainm­ent industry, but he feels his work ethic has spurred him along.

Born to Australian actress Sue Mcintosh and Britishbor­n stage and TV actor Terence Donovan, he was aged nine when he took on his first profession­al acting role. His major break into stardom came after he landed a role as Scott Robinson alongside Kylie Minogue’s Charlene Mitchell in the Australian soap Neighbours, making his first appearance in 1986.

He later followed Minogue into the pop world and worked with her producers, Stock, Aitken and Waterman. With them he released his debut single Nothing Can Divide Us in 1988, which soared through the charts Down Under and in the UK. His second track, Especially For You, was a collaborat­ion with Minogue, which secured him his first UK number one.

They both appeared on his chart-topping album Ten Good Reasons, which was supported by his 1990 Doin’ Fine Tour.

“I landed in a TV series which gave me leverage,” Donovan, 55, tells me as he reflects on being propelled into the spotlight.

“I’ve always been passionate about acting and entertainm­ent, through my parents and my dad, particular­ly, so it’s not really by coincidenc­e.

“But timing in life is everything and the timing for me back in those days couldn’t have been better and I embraced it and I worked my ass off, and I took some risks.

“I mean, some people might say jumping in the bed with Stock Aitken Waterman wasn’t really a risk, but a lot of people told me not take up music at all.

“A lot of people when they heard some of my vocals thought maybe I shouldn’t take up music ever.

“But that changes as one gets older and one works harder at focusing in on stuff, and I think that’s why people have stayed with me.

“It’s not really how you start, it’s how you progress and you grow.”

Donovan followed up his success with five more albums and branched out further into the world of theatre. Within his career, he has starred in a West End run of Priscilla Queen Of The Desert and a touring production of The Rocky Horror Show, but he is arguably best known for his time playing the titular role in Joseph And The Amazing Technicolo­r Dreamcoat.

He feels these roles helped show that he was an artist that was “willing to try some good stuff and keep working at it”.

However, amongst the brilliance of fame, he also struggled with his sudden rise initially.

“I’ll be honest, success came very young to me and I probably didn’t know how to deal with it,” he muses.

“I was down to earth but I didn’t know how to deal with it in my own head.”

He admits he went through a belated teenage rebellion in his 20s as he began to find everything “claustroph­obic”.

“Most of my friends when I was 19 were putting surfboards on the top of their cars and heading up the coast and doing a number of things that, probably, we shouldn’t be talking about, but I didn’t really have those experience­s,” he recalls.

“But in my mid 20s, I needed to go out and just be Jason Donovan and I did that quite successful­ly. But I realised the real value of life is not trying to be cool, it’s about your friends and your family and not going out to nightclubs, as much fun as it was.

“At my age, I feel very grateful for what I have, which is a lot of stability and a lot of knowledge and possibly even a bit of respect these days, which is quite nice.”

These days, the father-ofthree is more focused on putting his family first, which has only become heightened as he has gotten older.

“While my career might have been important for a while, I’m one of the lucky people to say that is quite solid in my life,” he says.

“But it’s my friends and family and my people that are the most important and the most vulnerable in the world that I live in.”

He has also got more concerned about his health and home, revealing that he can be “a bit OCD” at times.

“I double check the front door’s locked about 16 times before I go to bed, make sure that all the taps are not running and the stove is turned off – and that’s getting worse,” he adds.

However, this attitude means he does not procrastin­ate, which is probably one of the reasons he can still put on a tour across the UK.

His Doin’ Fine 25 tour, which will come 35 years after his first one, will take fans on a journey through his hits on stage and screen, accompanie­d by his live band.

Kicking off in February 2025, Donovan will visit cities including Birmingham, York, Glasgow, Edinburgh and London.

“I’ve got 35 years of work, theatre work, music and I always try and bring my own personalit­y to a show.”

In the future, he is open to writing a film and says “never say never” at the idea of collaborat­ing with his former co-star Minogue again.

He also wants to start winding back, adding: “I want to not do as much work and I want to be content just having six months off and going ‘That’s cool, don’t need to stress, don’t worry about it’.”

Tickets for Jason Donovan’s tour Doin’ Fine 25 tour are on sale now.

 ?? ISABEL INFANTES ?? Jason Donovan’s tour includes the Usher Hall, Edinburgh, on March 17, 2025
ISABEL INFANTES Jason Donovan’s tour includes the Usher Hall, Edinburgh, on March 17, 2025

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