At the bequest of her father, Zhou abandoned her European concert tour and returned home to Shanghai in 1947. In 1949 she became acquainted with Premier
Zhou Enlai and writers
Ba Jin and
Ding Ling at a cultural conference on literature and art organized by the Chinese government. The three men encouraged her to pursue work performing for and teaching her craft to the people of China. She spent the next ten years performing wherever the Chinese government sent her; whether it be for everyday people at factories and shipyards, or on official tours overseas to the countries of India, Poland, North Korea, and the Soviet Union. She also joined the faculty of the Shanghai Conservatory in 1949. She married Chinese film director
Zhang Junxiang on May 5, 1952.
Exile With the rise of the
Cultural Revolution, Western music was no longer accepted by those in power and Zhou found herself out of favor. She was accused of
counter revolutionary activities in 1965. This led to her being exiled on a farm with her husband in the Chinese provinces for five years. Speaking of her experience with
The New York Times, Zhou stated:I was made to realize that I knew very little about my country. It was when I learned what it is to be Chinese—before I had been so cosmopolitan ... It was not so brutal. Zhou Enlai couldn't directly help me, but somehow I think he protected my family, who were mostly in Beijing. Red Guards never went near their house.
Return to Shanghai In 1970 Zhou returned to Shanghai and her post at the conservatory. However, it was not until
Deng Xiaoping came into office in 1978 that Zhou was able to achieve the freedom and support she needed to build a high quality opera program. Under Deng, Zhou's program slowly grew in size and strength. In 1988 she established the Zhou Xiaoyan Young Opera Singers Trainee Center on the fourth floor of the Shanghai Conservatory. With the financial backing of the Nanjing government she coordinated a fully staged production of Verdi's
Rigoletto in the Chinese language in 1989 at the Shanghai Music Festival with her students as the cast. Several more Chinese language productions followed until a newly forged partnership between the
San Francisco Opera and the Shanghai Conservatory enabled productions in other languages to be mounted by the school—beginning with a French language production of Gounod's
Roméo et Juliette in 1996. She and her program flourished with many of her students working successfully on the international stage. Among her pupils were opera singers
Liao Changyong,
Ying Fang,
Ying Huang,
Shenyang,
Wei Song,
Gu Xin,
Guanqun Yu, and
Jianyi Zhang. ==Death==