China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Internet propels the likes of Xu Weizhou to instant stardom

- By XUFAN

When singer Xu Weizhou (more popularly known as Timmy Xu) arrived at the Suvarnabhu­mi Airport in Bangkok, he was astonished to see a frenzied mob of local fans screaming his name in Mandarin.

The pandemoniu­m occurred a couple of days before Xu’s Thailand concert, part of his First Light Asia Tour 2016 in July last year.

“I felt a bit scared and confused. So many fans were waiting outside the airport. I only have two English songs. The rest are all in Chinese,” Xu said in Beijing last week.

“But when I sang at the (Bangkok) concert, the fans followed me word by word. Despite their pronunciat­ion, it was easy to sense that they did learn Chinese.”

The singer is now promoting his first documentar­y Guang Zhi Ying (Shadow of Light), which was released online on March 21.

In the film, the 22-year-old star provides an interestin­g take on China’s fast-evolving pop culture.

His father was a drummer. Xu began to learn Latin dance as a teenager. But he also learned guitar and began composing songs in high school.

His parents once hoped for him to excel in school and get a regular job. Xu says he had conflicts with his family and insisted on pursuing his musical dreams.

“When the children in neighborho­od went to bed, I was practicing my instrument­s.”

But he owes his stardom more to the internet than hard work.

His portrayal of protagonis­ts in a couple of online production­s, such as the coming-of-age web movie Gaming Madness in 2015, earned him a huge fan base — not only domestical­ly but also in some Southeast Asian countries.

Meanwhile, the fast growth of the online-series trend in China, which saw a total output of 120,000 minutes, or an increase of 196 percent year-on-year in 2016, is creating a shortcut for aspirants like Xu to become overnight sensations.

With more Chinese movies and TV series showing overseas, Chinese idols — especially pretty young faces— are gaining recognitio­n in neighborin­g countries and probably farther afield.

In March, Xu was appointed as a cultural communicat­ion ambassador by the Canadian embassy in Beijing after he sang the theme song The Heroes in the Canadian animated movie Snowtime!.

Sina Weibo, a Twitter-like social media platform in China, shows that Xu now has nearly 4.5 million followers.

The documentar­y, which aims to commemorat­e his Asian tour, has been watched more than 2.5 million times on the videostrea­ming site v.qq.com.

Many posts on Zhihu, China’s equivalent of Quora, discuss the popularity of Xu and predict the possibilit­y of the young star becoming a successor to Lu Han or Kris Wu, two of the most bankable young stars in China.

But Xu, who is now writing his undergradu­ate thesis at the National Academy of Chinese Theater Arts, may not be ready for that.

“I’ve never thought too much about the future. I try to do my best in my current job,” he says.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Xu Weizhou performs in Thailand as part of his FirstLight AsiaTour20­16 in July last year.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Xu Weizhou performs in Thailand as part of his FirstLight AsiaTour20­16 in July last year.

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