SPORTS> Photo
Sports star and showbiz celebrity
By Chen Nan (China Daily)
Updated: 2008-10-09 15:24

Indeed, Liu's gymnastic career bloomed late. She didn't win her first world championship until 1998, after 14 years of professional training, and a setback during the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta almost forced her to retire.


Liu Xuan competes on the balance beam in this 2000 Sydney file photo. [Xinhua]

But her coach persuaded her to continue. After another four years of hard training, she returned to the Olympic stage.

In 2000, Liu won China's first-ever Olympic gold medal for the balance beam and was China's first All Around medalist, with a bronze. In the year after the Sydney Olympics, Liu retired from the national team.

"I had devoted everything to gymnastics. I knew almost nothing besides gymnastics, but I needed to know more than just sports for the future."

Given her good looks and sunny smile, Liu was invited by ad agencies and the film industry. Nicknamed Xuan Mei Ren (Xuan Beauty) by the Chinese mainland media, Liu's entry into showbiz was a natural next step.

While confident and graceful on the balance beam, she found the showbiz stage to be an altogether different matter. Despite endless media exposure, Liu still does not feel as confident in the public eye as she did on the Olympic stage.

"It is really difficult for me to face the media as a TV star. I feel nervous," she says. "The way you talk, behave and promote yourself is totally different from being an athlete," she adds.

But the small girl has big dreams and sticks to it. "I realized that gymnastics is still my biggest love and so I decided to go back to it."

Liu enrolled at the Media College at Peking University where she graduated with a degree in journalism and communication, and in 2006, was certified as an international gymnastics judge. She is ready to rejoin the sport in a new role.

She also ran as a torchbearer for Beijing Olympic Games this August, her smile reminding people of her victory on the balance beam. She has released two singles with an Olympic theme. Her first single - a pop-rock number titled Chu Fa - delves into what goes on in an athlete's mind ahead of the Olympics.

"I have come to realize that results are not as important as one might think, nor what others think of me. What's most important is that I've tried my best and enjoy what I'm doing," she says.