Rulan Chao Pian was born in 1922 to a prominent Chinese family: her parents, the linguist
Yuen Ren Chao and the physician and food writer
Buwei Yang Chao, had resided in Cambridge since 1920, after her father was appointed to the faculty at Harvard. After travels in China and France, the family returned to the United States, traveling to Hawaii, New Haven, and Washington D.C. Pian enrolled in
Radcliffe College where she received a
Bachelor of Arts and
Masters of Arts in music history (Western music) in 1943 (dated 1944) and 1946, respectively, and a Ph.D. in both East Asian Languages and in Music in 1960. In 1945, she married
Theodore Pian, later a Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics at
MIT with whom she had a daughter, Canta Chao-po Pian. Pian was also one of the first female housemasters; a portrait of her with Chinese musical instruments hangs in the house. She retired from Harvard in 1992, but continued to teach students individually in her home, some of whom lived with her upon their arrival from China, such as the composer
Lei Liang who credits her as one of his most important mentors and musical influences. With her father, she edited and translated her mother's
How to Cook and Eat in Chinese, the book responsible for inventing and introducing the terms
stir fry and
pot sticker into English. ==Death==