An electric guitar, a crown of thorns and one of the most-recorded melodies of the 20th century: Jesus Christ Superstar is coming to Hong Kong for the very first time. From 8 July to 1 August 2026, the Olivier Award-winning Regent's Park Open Air Theatre production lands at the Grand Theatre, Hong Kong Cultural Centre in Tsim Sha Tsui — a rock opera that has divided and thrilled audiences for more than half a century, finally getting a Hong Kong stage. Here is everything you need to plan the night.
In This Guide
Why this Hong Kong debut matters
Hong Kong gets plenty of touring pop concerts, but full-scale Western musical theatre arrives far less often. That is what makes this booking notable: Jesus Christ Superstar has never played Hong Kong before, and the version arriving is not a tired road show but a celebrated revival.
This is the staging that London's Regent's Park Open Air Theatre first mounted in 2016 and that won the 2017 Olivier Award for Best Musical Revival — the most prestigious prize in British theatre. It has since toured the West End, North America and now Asia, with Hong Kong sitting alongside Manila, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand on the international leg.
It also slots neatly into a busy cultural summer. If you are mapping out the season, our round-up of the biggest events in Hong Kong this summer sets it against the concerts, festivals and exhibitions also fighting for your calendar, while the best things to do in Hong Kong this week keeps the short-term picture fresh.
What is Jesus Christ Superstar about?
Conceived by Andrew Lloyd Webber (music) and Tim Rice (lyrics), Jesus Christ Superstar began as a 1970 concept album before exploding onto the stage. It retells the final week of the life of Jesus of Nazareth — but the clever twist is the point of view. The story is seen largely through the eyes of Judas Iscariot, his betrayer, who frets about fame, politics and the man at the centre of the movement.
It is sung-through, meaning there is no spoken dialogue — the entire drama unfolds in music that fuses rock, gospel and pop. The score gave the world standards such as 'Superstar', 'I Don't Know How to Love Him' and the searing solo 'Gethsemane', songs that have outlived every controversy the show once provoked.
The result is part rock concert, part passion play. You do not need to be religious — or to know the songs — to be swept along; the music does the heavy lifting, and this production is built around it.
The production: Olivier-winning and reimagined
The creative pedigree here is the selling point. GMG Productions, David Ian for Crossroads Live and Work Light Productions present the Regent's Park Open Air Theatre staging, directed by Timothy Sheader with high-octane choreography by Drew McOnie.
Sheader's reading strips the show back to a raw, almost gig-like intensity — think exposed scaffolding, a glitter-and-grit aesthetic and a cast that moves like a dance company. The design is by Tom Scutt, with lighting by Lee Curran, sound by Nick Lidster and music supervision by Tom Deering. Critics on the tour have praised its energy; it is the kind of revival that converts sceptics.
For more on the touring company and current casting, the producer's official Hong Kong show page is the place to check before you book.
Dates, showtimes & running time
The Hong Kong season runs for just under four weeks, from 8 July to 1 August 2026. According to the published listings, performances fall on the schedule below, with the theatre dark on Mondays. Exact times vary by date, so always confirm your specific performance on URBTIX before booking.
| Day | Performance time(s) |
|---|---|
| Tuesday – Friday | 8:00pm (evening) |
| Saturday | 3:00pm & 8:00pm |
| Sunday | 2:00pm & 7:00pm |
| Monday | No performance |
The running time is listed at approximately 1 hour 50 minutes, including one interval. As is standard at the Cultural Centre, latecomers may not be admitted until a suitable break in the performance, so plan to be in your seat in good time.
How much are tickets and how do you book?
Tickets are priced from roughly HK$588 to HK$1,088 across several tiers, and they are sold exclusively through URBTIX, the official ticketing system for Hong Kong's government-run performance venues. Public sale opened on 27 March 2026, so seats are already moving — weekend and matinee performances tend to go first.
Book through the official URBTIX event page or the URBTIX app rather than third-party resellers, where prices are marked up and tickets are not guaranteed. Concessionary tickets (for full-time students, seniors aged 60 and above, people with disabilities and a minder, and CSSA recipients) are usually available — check the listing for the discount and any limited availability.
Jesus Christ Superstar — Hong Kong Essentials
Note: showtimes vary by date and the production runs to its own schedule. Confirm the exact time and seat availability on the official URBTIX listing before you travel.
How do you get to the Grand Theatre?
The Hong Kong Cultural Centre (香港文化中心) sits on the Tsim Sha Tsui waterfront at 10 Salisbury Road, beside the Clock Tower and the Star Ferry pier — one of the easiest cultural venues in the city to reach. The Grand Theatre is the building's largest auditorium.
By MTR, the quickest route is East Tsim Sha Tsui Station (Tuen Ma Line) and Exit J, which brings you out by the museum complex about five minutes' walk from the door. Alternatively, Tsim Sha Tsui Station (Tsuen Wan Line) Exit E or F is roughly a 10-minute walk through the underpass to the waterfront. From Hong Kong Island, the Star Ferry to Tsim Sha Tsui drops you almost outside — a lovely way to arrive across Victoria Harbour. Full venue details are on the LCSD Hong Kong Cultural Centre site.
The theatre is the perfect anchor for an evening in Tsim Sha Tsui. With a museum-rich district on the doorstep, it also pairs well with a daytime culture run — our guide to the Palace Museum's Forbidden City show across the harbour in West Kowloon makes an easy companion outing.
Is Jesus Christ Superstar suitable for children?
This is a question worth asking before you buy a family block of seats. The short answer: it is best for older children, teenagers and adults rather than young kids.
The show dramatises the arrest, trial and crucifixion of Jesus, and Sheader's production leans into the emotional and political intensity of that story. It is not graphic, but the themes are mature and, for some, religiously sensitive — the Singapore leg of the same tour carried an Advisory 16 rating. No official age restriction has been announced for Hong Kong, so if you are bringing teens, check the URBTIX listing for any guidance and use your judgement.
Music-loving teenagers, drama students and anyone who grew up with the cast recording, on the other hand, are exactly the audience this revival was made for. For more on the city's live-music and stage calendar, see our overview of the best live music and concerts in Hong Kong in 2026.
How to make a night of it
A West End-calibre musical deserves more than a dash from the office. A little planning turns it into a proper night out on the Kowloon waterfront.
Plan Your Evening
- Book early for the weekend. Saturday and Sunday shows, plus the matinees, sell fastest; midweek evenings are your best bet for last-minute seats.
- Arrive 30 minutes early. Latecomers wait for a break, and the harbourfront approach is worth a few photos before curtain-up.
- Eat in Tsim Sha Tsui first. The streets behind the waterfront are packed with options, from dai pai dong to hotel dining rooms minutes from the door.
- Take the Star Ferry. Crossing from Central at dusk is the most scenic — and cheapest — way to reach the theatre.
- Make it a culture day. The Museum of Art and Space Museum are next door; pair an afternoon exhibition with the evening show.
- Check the weather. In a black rainstorm or Typhoon Signal No. 8, performances can be cancelled — keep an eye on the forecast in our typhoon-prone summer.
Before You Book
Buy only through URBTIX or the URBTIX app — not unofficial resellers, where tickets are marked up and may not be valid. Double-check the date and time of your specific performance, as showtimes vary across the run. Photography and recording are not permitted during the performance, and under-2s are generally not admitted to Cultural Centre shows.
Planning a wider July in the city? Our guide to the Hong Kong Book Fair 2026 covers another of the month's big draws, just across the harbour at the Convention Centre.
Frequently Asked Questions
Book Before the Curtain Rises
Jesus Christ Superstar plays Hong Kong for the first time this July — and the best seats are going fast. Reserve through URBTIX, then let YumChaNow keep you ahead of the next big show in town.