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1 billion fans can’t be wrong:
In China, George is Elvis.
In Canada, George is Greek.
In Greece, George has a dream…
I first met George in Guangzhou, China. I was
sitting in a restaurant (I couldn’t order
food, as I could barely speak a word of Chinese)
and in walked an odd-looking, guitar-carrying
Greek-Canadian. He sat down to chat with me, and
then he surprised me by turning around and ordering
us a full meal in fluent Mandarin. The waitresses
were all stunned—one by one, they all crowded
around our table, blushing and giggling, listening
to this hairy foreigner speak Chinese.
Then to everyone’s surprise, George whipped
out his guitar, and started to sing folk songs…again,
in fluent Mandarin. Suddenly, I was sitting with
Elvis! (You know the TV concert where all the
girls sit on the stairs around Elvis, as he sings
and plays the acoustic guitar? That Elvis) To
me it was like watching Neil Diamond, or Don Ho,
but to the waitresses this was ELVIS, clapping,
singing and swooning dreamily along. His impromptu
concert shut down the restaurant for 45 minutes
and opened up an entirely new China to me. I decided
there and then I wanted to make a film about this
guy.
So imagine how I felt when I when met up with
George in Canada…and learned that “Elvis”
still lived with his mother. He was no longer
the troubadour ladies man I had met in China,
but instead a government statistician! I was a
bit confused, since this George was so different
from the one I’d seen charm the ladies in
China.
Then he told me about his Olympic dream: to perform
at the closing ceremonies of the Athens Olympics,
as Athens passed the torch to China. As the “only
Greek in the world who can sing in Chinese”,
it was his duty to sing at the Olympics. And it
was my duty to follow George on his quixotic journey
through Greece, China and Canada, chasing his
dream, during an exhausting, extraordinary 2-year
period.
Chairman George is about a man finding his place
in our chaotic, globalized planet. Where a Greek-Canadian
statistician can learn Mandarin, print up some
trilingual business cards and re-invent his life
in China. Where he can aspire to bring the ancient
cultures of Greece and China together for a brief
moment at the Olympic games. Let George be your
guide through this strange new world…
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