She is the principal dancer with the China Central Song and Dance Company of Nationality (one of the top song and dance companies in China); the Gold Medal winner of Japan Saitama International Creative Dance Contest 2003; and a member of the Chinese Dancer Association and the Chinese Ethnic Minority Dance Association.
She started to dance at 11 years old, and has a strong background in ballet, Chinese classic, Chinese ethnic minorities, folk, and modern dance. In 1997, she successfully presented her personal dance performance “Woman, Emotion and Life” in Beijing Bao-Li International Theatre, which has been broadcast repeatedly on China Central TV Station.
She has given innumerable performances as a principal and solo dancer, both within China and world-wide. Her international tour shows include France, Germany, USA, Japan, South Korea, Philippines, and Columbia. Her solo dances, such as “Butterfly,” “Golden Peacock,” ”Bamboo Beauty,” “Dun-Huang Fresco Modeling,” and ”Mermaid” are highly anticipated and warmly received by critics and live and television audiences. Many of her other works have been shown on television in China, including "The Impression of Li Qing Zhao,” “The Tang Dynasty Dance,” "The Petal,” and "Dream of Flying.”
Recently, she was the chief director for a series of significant Chinese events in the San Francisco Bay Area, including the 2008 Cow Palace Gala for Beijing Olympics, the 2008 Silicon Valley Chinese New Year Gala, and a Poetic Song and Dance Show: "Celebration under the Moonlight" “Homeland in Dream.” She also has acted as a chief judge and organizer of 2007 Bay Area Chinese Dance competitions. Her new works, such as “The Sacred Fire,” “Butterfly From Heaven,” “The Flaming Phoenix,” and “The Morning Bell,” presented locally in Pleasanton, Fremont, Sonoma, Sacramento, and San Francisco, and on Bay Area Chinese television.
In addition, she has been interviewed hundreds of times, including on CCTV, Beijing TV, and Hong Kong Phoenix TV, and in newspapers in China, such as "People's Daily" and "Beijing Youth," and in the USA, such as “American Southwest” and “QiaoBao.”