In 1977, when Zhongmei Lei was 11 years old, she learned that the
prestigious Beijing Dance Academy was having open auditions. She'd
already taken dance lessons, but everyone said a poor country girl would
never get into the academy, especially without any connections in the
Communist Party of the 1970s. But Zhongmei, whose name means Faithful
Plum, persisted, traveled for three days and two nights to get to
Beijing and eventually beat out 60,000 other girls. But getting in was
easy compared to staying in, as Zhongmei soon learned. Without those
all-important connections, she was just a little girl on her own, far
away from family. But her determination, talent, and sheer force of will
were not something the teachers or other students expected, and soon it
was apparent that Zhongmei was not to be underestimated.
Zhongmei became a famous dancer, and founded her own dance company,
which made its New York debut when she was in just her late 20s. In A
Girl Named Faithful Plum, her husband and renowned journalist, Richard
Bernstein, has written a fascinating account of one girl's struggle to
go from the remote farmlands of China to the world's stages, and the
lengths she went to in order to follow her dream.