Zhuzhuma is a folk dance form popular in the Tianzhuang area of Pingdu. During the night performance, candles are placed on the chest and buttocks of the "bamboo horse", hence the name Zhuzhuma. The performers ride on the Zhuzhuma, mainly showing the scene of Empress Dowager Xiao leading troops to fight in the "Chanyuan Alliance". Zhuzhuma is gradually improved and evolved on the basis of Zhuma. According to the oral accounts of artists such as Mao Jiangling (born in 1896 AD, stage name Erma), Zhuzhuma appeared in the early Qing Dynasty and was a means for people to make a living by begging. They made simple bamboo horses with sorghum stalks and performed begging in the streets and alleys. During the reign of Emperor Kangxi, several villages also set up Zhuma teams and were active in Guandong and Shandong, with Mengjia Village being the best. As a result, many Zhuma teams competed. Zhuma has been improved in terms of performance and props. Candles are placed in the horse, and it can be performed day and night, thus forming Zhuzhuma. Zhuzhuma is usually performed by five men and five women, accompanied by percussion instruments. Commonly used formations include "Cross Plum", "Eye Flower", "Three Armies Fighting Lü Bu", "Seed-Knotting Flower", "Crossing the Street in a Curve", "Meeting the Big Sister", "Hook", "Stove Corner" and more than a dozen others. Over the years, this kind of folk dance has been popular and unpopular, but the performance team and the costumes and props required for the performance have always been retained in the local area. During festivals and large-scale cultural activities, performances are often performed spontaneously, playing a positive role in the local political and economic development, spiritual civilization construction, and invigorating urban and rural cultural life.