Boy George's life is as colourful as his costumes and make-up.
Not only is there his career - Culture Club, DJ, solo artist, fashion label B-Rude, and the musical Taboo - there is his personal life, played out like a soap opera in the media - including a former drug addiction and stint as a street cleaner in New York as community service.
But The Boy is Back in Town, goes the title of his new tour, and the singer is in top form as he chats to the guide with friendly, cheerful enthusiasm about not just the good things happening now, but, unreservedly, the bad times too.
"I'm back doing music again really. I've been doing a bit of road sweeping and other stuff," he says, candidly throwing in a reference to his community service.
"I've got back not with Culture Club, but my own band.
"We did a tour at the beginning of the year. It was really to see if anyone wanted it - if anyone cared."
They must have done because there were few tickets left at Croydon's Fairfield, and now Boy George, or George as he is happy to be called, is kicking off the new UK tour at Dorking Halls on Wednesday (October 1), before taking it to Croydon two week's later.
So why is he choosing to play live gigs again?
"I think there is definitely a market for live work," says George, now 47.
"This is because I really feel it now - it's the right thing to do."
George considers the work of Amy Winehouse and Duffy.
"I have a place in there. It's what I do - melodic soulful stuff.
"When I returned 10/15 years ago and did my DJing I felt I didn't really have a place. It was all manufactured pop bands and kids. I felt like the older person at the disco. I felt I should be doing something else.
"It's really right for me to be doing it now."
George's gig will include new songs, solo hits and of course, those classics from his days as lead singer with Culture Club, which was responsible for spurning hits such as Do You Really Want To Hurt Me?, Church of the Poison Mind and Karma Chameleon.
And he is quite happy to play the old favourites.
"In a way I have reclaimed them," he says. "I am performing them with conviction."
George also has a new single out on Sunday October 12. Called Yes We Can it is inspired by the speeches of Barack Obama, US senator of Illinois, whose voice is sampled throughout.
He explains the song talks about the problems he has been through and also relates to singer Amy Winehouse's widely publicised problems with drugs, someone George has expressed empathy for in the media.
"It's not about Barack - it's about me, it's about the s*** I've been through.
"The first verse is more about me, the second verse is more about Amy Winehouse," he says.
"'Please forgive these crimes against myself' is about being self destructive," explains George, quoting lyrics from his single.
Now "definitely clean" of drugs, George looks back at his heroin addiction in the 1980s and once again, refers to Winehouse.
"If you look at Amy Winehouse, until she decides to stop no one else can do anything.
"I look back at family and friends being really concerned and you are blind to it.
"It's only when you get out of that it all makes sense. When you're stuck in that s*** you just don't think, you don't realise.
"The publicity around at that time was possibly the most extreme. People forget what it was like - 'Find him' - it was like it was a fox hunt.
"On the flip side there were a lot of people who supported me - I had so much love from the public."
George portrayed his rise to fame and the glamour and dark side of showbusiness in his musical Taboo which ran in London and on Broadway in 2004, and featured a score which was nominated for a Tony Award.
"It was a triumph to actually put on a musical. It ran for a year and a bit in London and was a great success," George says.
He has still been plagued with a less than positive press in recent years - including over his community service stint as a New York street cleaner in 2006, after being found guilty of wasting police time.
But he got stuck in with fulfilling his punishment.
"It really wasn't that big a deal. A lot of other people would have been brought down by that. I'm quite robust. There were a couple of moments when I was picking up chow mein when I did say to myself, 'What have I done?' I thought, 'How the hell did this happen?' But you have to put things into perspective.
"Everyone was expecting me to crack. I remember my mum saying, Just do it - get it done.'
"I was there five days - I became a bit of a veteran."
And negative media stories have still circled him last year and this year. This summer George was unable to play his US tour dates after being denied a visa to the country. A statement on his website says he had been refused permission to enter by the USA Administration because he is facing a trial in London in November. This is for a charge to which he has pleaded not guilty.
"There are other places to go, there are countries that are not so strict," says George, who has just finished a series of dates in South America.
"Actually, I lost a really good friend of mine a few days ago [in August] and they have not given a visa - that was much more hurtful.
"Kind of getting angry about it is not helpful.
"I will go to America next year."
Now George just wants to get on with making music.
"I'm 47 - I'm bored of all that - I really am bored of it," he says.
So what further plans does Boy George have for the future?
"I don't really have an agenda. I'm not trying to recreate anything - I'm just trying to be.
"I'm just doing what I feel and putting out some kind of positive out there."
Boy George brings The Boy is Back in Town to Dorking Halls on Wednesday October 1 at 8pm, as part of Mole Valley's Arts Alive festival. For tickets, priced £25, call 01306 881717 or log on to www.dorkinghalls.co.uk
He then visits Fairfield, Croydon, on Wednesday October 15 at 8pm. For tickets, priced £26, call 020 8688 92981 or log on to www.fairfield.co.uk