The Invisible Bearing: Cherie Zhou’s Dance of Spirit and Steel

The stage at the 2014 New Tang Dynasty Television International Classical Chinese Dance Competition became a vessel for time travel. When Cherie Zhou stepped into the light, the modern context faded, replaced by the weight of ancient armor and the delicate resolve of a daughter’s promise.

Zhou’s solo performance was an embodiment of Hua Mulan, the legendary figure who disguised herself as a man to take her father’s place in war. For the observer, the dance was not merely a display of technique but a study in duality: the friction between feminine grace and martial rigidity, between the longing for home and the duty to the state.

“I’ve kind of idolized Mulan ever since I learned about her in our classical Chinese class,” Zhou reflected. The ancient Ballad of Mulan provided the textual foundation for her movement, a story of selflessness that resonated with the young dancer. “I’ve always wanted to become that strong and feminine character.”

Shen Yun Performing Arts dancer Cherie Zhou portrays the ancient legend of MulanShen Yun Performing Arts dancer Cherie Zhou portrays the ancient legend of Mulan

The Architecture of the Soul

Born in Chicago, amidst the city’s triumphant skyscrapers and Midwestern practicality, Zhou’s early life was structured by Western sensibilities. Piano, painting, and ballet formed a classical foundation, yet they remained external pursuits. It was not until age 12, when she traveled to New York to join the Fei Tian Academy of the Arts, that the trajectory of her artistic life shifted from hobby to vocation.

“A voice told me that living in Chicago—going to school or practicing piano every day—may not be as wonderful as going to New York to dance,” she recalled.

However, the transition to classical Chinese dance presented a profound challenge. Unlike ballet, which often emphasizes line and form, classical Chinese dance demands “bearing” (yun)—the expression of deep inner meaning driving the physical movement. For a dancer raised in the West, this internal landscape was initially foreign. The physical mechanics were accessible, but the “inner feeling” of ancient characters remained elusive.

The Cultivation of Bearing

The breakthrough lay in a philosophical shift: the realization that the body is secondary to the intent. “Classical Chinese dancing starts from the heart,” Zhou explained. The movement is a ripple effect of emotion; the internal world must be fully constructed before a single limb is lifted. “When the music begins, your heart needs to get ready and start first, even before your body moves.”

This approach transformed her body into a conduit. No longer focusing solely on flexibility or acrobatic techniques, she began to see her physical form as a piece of art requiring constant cultivation. Every stance and hand gesture became a language, bridging the gap between the dancer’s thought and the audience’s perception.

Cherie Zhou portraitCherie Zhou portrait

From Heroine to Folklore

The versatility of a classical dancer is tested not only in tragic roles but in the grotesque and the whimsical. To deepen her understanding, Zhou immersed herself in Chinese literature, discovering that a single movement, much like a single character in poetry, could contain layers of meaning.

This literary depth informed her performance in the 2014 Shen Yun tour piece, Monkey King Thwarts the Evil Toad. Here, Zhou navigated a stark contrast, playing both the cute Jade Rabbit of Lady Chang’e and the wicked rabbit transformation of a monster.

The role demanded a surrender of vanity. “I needed to throw out my pride because the movement of the monster was ugly and weird,” she noted. “Few dancers wanted to do it. But as a dancer, this is the spirit of being professional.” By embracing the “ugly,” she expanded her range, proving that aesthetic beauty in dance often relies on the ability to portray its opposite authentically.

A Mirror Across Centuries

It was, however, the role of Mulan that earned her the Bronze Award in the Junior Female Division, largely because the character’s emotional arc mirrored Zhou’s own reality. Choreographing the piece with the guidance of her teachers, she focused on Mulan’s vulnerability—the homesickness hidden beneath the warrior’s facade.

“She was just a young girl, definitely. She didn’t belong on the battlefield,” Zhou observed.

This sentiment echoed the dancer’s own journey. Leaving Chicago at a young age to train in New York required a sacrifice of comfort and family proximity paralleling the legend she portrayed. Mulan fought with a sword; Zhou fights with the rigorous demands of her art form. In capturing the specific longing of a daughter far from home, Zhou found the universal emotional anchor that turns a dance routine into a living, breathing history.