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Leia Zhu
British Asian violinist (born 2006) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Leia Zhengying Zhu (Chinese: 朱蕾雅, born in October 2006) is a British-Chinese violinist.
Early life and education
Leia Zhengying Zhu[1] was born in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, to Yanhong Bi[2] and a Chinese father.[3] She has a younger brother, Leo.[3] Zhu's grandmother gave her a violin when Zhu was age three,[4][5] after developing an interest in classical music inspired by her parents' listening habits.[6] Zhu's father taught her how to hold the violin, and she first learned how to play "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star".[7][8] Zhu took weekly violin lessons with a female teacher for a few months,[7] and was advised to find someone who could further nurture her.[8] She spent the next two years changing violin teachers,[7] before settling on a teacher from the Royal College of Music.[8]
Zhu attended Fellside Community Primary School in Gateshead,[2] and St Edward's School in Oxford.[3][5] She graduated from St Edward's School in 2023, and achieved eight A* grades in the GCSE.[9] Zhu is fluent in English and Chinese, and is learning French and German.[5] She completed a Level 4 Diploma for Financial Advisers at the London Institute of Banking & Finance in 2024.[10]
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Career and other ventures
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Debuting at age four,[11][12] Zhu's first public performance was at the North East Last Night of the Proms in Newcastle City Hall,[3] with around 2000 people in attendance.[8] She first performed overseas at the age of six, in nine cities throughout Spain.[2][5][8] In 2019, Zhu became the youngest artist to be managed by the London-based artist agency HarrisonParrott at age 12,[8] and the youngest artist-in-residence with the London Mozart Players in October 2021, at age 14.[13][14][15] In December 2021, she performed a violin solo of "You Raise Me Up" with Westlife, which was livestreamed on WeChat and received 27 million views on the platform.[8] Classic FM named Zhu as one of its group of 'Rising Stars 2022' artists.[16] She was nominated in the Young Artist Award category at the Royal Philharmonic Society Music Awards in 2025.[17]
Zhu has been involved in education outreach programmes established by London Mozart Players, promoting classical music to adolescents.[4][5] In 2020, she entered a partnership between Google Arts and Culture and HarrisonParrott on YouTube, introducing and performing works by Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst.[18][19] Zhu has shown an interest in filmmaking, having a film shortlisted at CineMagic in 2020.[3] She published her autobiography titled Bows, Strings, and Dreams in October 2023.[7][20]
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References
External links
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