Guo Degang (center) and his performance partner, Yu Qian (left), escort visiting Australian politician Daniel Andrews on a tour of the Forbidden City. Jiang Dong / China Daily |
Guo goes with the flow of the Internet age.
His Sina Weibo micro blog has more than 20 million followers, and each of his tweets easily gets thousands of re-tweets.
"Weibo is a very good platform for promotion and audience interaction," Guo says.
"With my Weibo, I feel like I own several newspapers."
Cross-talk became popular throughout North China throughout the late Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).
However, the art form declined after the 1960s because of China's political movements and the planned economy under which cross-talk artists had to be recruited by State-owned troupes.
The genre has undergone a revival since the late 1990s, as independent artists have been staging more shows in teahouses and theaters.
Guo and his colleagues at Deyun Co are a major force in the revival movement.
He's certainly the most successful among the independent cross-talk artists and private troupes performing in Beijing, Tianjin and other cities.
He not only performs cross-talk, but also hosts TV shows and acts in films and TV dramas.
He owns five theaters where his contracted artists perform, a clothing brand and a restaurant.
He ranks 32nd on the 2012 Forbes China Celebrities Chart. He earned 27.1 million yuan ($4.35 million) this year, making him by far the richest cross-talk performer.
Guo was born into an ordinary family in Tianjin and didn't finish secondary school. But he made millions through witty interpretations of the urban poor's perspectives.
He's a hero for many youth with comparable backgrounds. More than 100 students from across the country apprentice under him through Deyun.
Guo gave talks about the culture of cross-talk at two top US universities - Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Columbia University - at the invitation of their Chinese students' unions.
One young woman at Columbia asked if she could become Guo's apprentice. He suggested she remain a listener.
"Listening to cross-talk is very easy and enjoyable, but performing it is extremely difficult," he says.
"Otherwise, why would you pay to hear me talk?"
Contact the writer at muqian@chinadaily.com.cn.
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