Liu Xuan | |
Birth Date: | 12 August 1979 |
Birth Place: | Changsha, Hunan, China |
Discipline: | WAG |
Natlteam: | 1994–2000 (CHN) |
Eponymousskills: | "Liu Xuan" (uneven bars) |
Retired: | 2000 |
Show-Medals: | yes |
Liu Xuan (; born August 12, 1979) is a former Chinese artistic gymnast. She competed in the 1996 and 2000 Summer Olympics and won two Olympic medals, including gold on the balance beam in 2000. She was born in Changsha, Hunan.
Liu was coached by Guo Xinming and Zhang Zhen. She took up gymnastics with encouragement from her mother, who had to stop training when her gym closed during the Cultural Revolution. In fact, Liu's decision to continue training for another four years after a disappointing performance at the 1996 Olympics (where she failed to make the beam final because of a fall in the team competition) was partly to realize her mother's unfulfilled dream.
In 2000, Liu became China's first Olympic champion on balance beam, as well as its first all-around medalist in women's gymnastics. She also led the Chinese team to a third-place finish, but in 2010, their bronze medal was stripped by the International Olympic Committee and awarded to the United States instead after one of the Chinese team members, Dong Fangxiao, was found to have been underage during the competition.[1] [2] In March 2012, the bronze medal Liu and her teammates won at the 1999 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships was forfeited to Ukraine for the same reason.[3]
At the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, Liu served as the on-site gymnastics reporter for Hong Kong broadcaster TVB.
In July 2009, she became a contracted actress for TVB.[4]
Liu married her boyfriend, musician Wang Tao, in Happy Valley, Hong Kong in December 2013.[5] The couple have two children.
3rd team (disqualified),[6] 3rd all-around, 1st balance beam
1st team, 1st all-around, 1st beam
3rd team, 7th all-around
4th team
3rd beam, 9th bars
2nd team
1st team, 2nd bars
4th team
Liu was the first female gymnast to perform a one-arm giant swing on the uneven bars; she also performed this skill into a Geinger release move. The skill is named after her in the Code of Points,[7] but because it was considered too risky for women, it was given a low difficulty rating to discourage gymnasts from attempting it. As a result, Liu stopped performing it after the 1996 Summer Olympics.
Year | Album title |
---|---|
2008 | Sweet on the Heart (Chinese: 甜上心頭) |
2009 | Ready...Go! (Chinese: 出發) |
2011 | Return Sight (Chinese: 回見) |
18 February 2011 | Beautiful Faces |
Year | Title | Role | Co-stars | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | Far From Home | Xi Mei | Xu Jinglei, Daniel Chan, Cui Lin | |
2010 | East Wind Rain | |||
2012 | On My Way | |||
2014 | I Am a Wolf |
Year | Title | Network | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | My Father and I | Mainland | Gao Wenjun | ||
2003 | Ultimate Target | Mainland | Liu Jingyi | ||
2004 | Phantom Lover | Mainland | Tian Fei | ||
2011 | Grace Under Fire | TVB | Mok Kwai-lan | Nominated — TVB Anniversary Award for My Favourite Female Character (Top 15) | |
2012 | Strangers 6 | ||||
2018 | Legend of Fuyao | Mainland | Fei Yan (Chinese: 非烟) |
Year | Title | Network | Role |
---|---|---|---|
2005 | Light Blue, Dark Blue | Mainland | Guest |
2006 | Wulin Dahui | Mainland | Guest |
2007 | Mingsheng Dazhen | Mainland | Guest |
2010 | Go! EXPO | TVB | Co-host
|