Luo Jian Fan
This article is about a living person and appears to have no references. All biographies of living people must have at least one source that supports at least one statement made about the person in the article. If no reliable references are found and added within a seven-day grace period, this article may be deleted. This is an important policy to help prevent the retention of incorrect material. Please note that adding reliable sources is all that is required to prevent the scheduled deletion of this article. For help on inserting references, see referencing for beginners or ask at the help desk. Once the article has at least one reliable source, you may remove this tag. Find sources: "Luo Jian Fan" – news⧼Dot-separator⧽newspapers⧼Dot-separator⧽books⧼Dot-separator⧽scholar⧼Dot-separator⧽JSTOR Reviewer tools: policy project (talk • bio • log) Move: draft space This article may be deleted without further notice as it has not been referenced within seven days. Timestamp: 20251004141430 14:14, 4 October 2025 (UTC) Administrators: delete |

Luo Jian Fan (simplified Chinese: 罗剑凡; traditional Chinese: 羅劍凡, born on 23 September 1963 in Anhua, Hunan), is a playwright and novelist. He had worked as an actor and musician in his early years in a local musical troupe in Hunan and later he was admitted to Shanghai Theater Academy for playwriting studies. During the third year in drama school, he wrote his first full-length play, Black Stallion (simplified Chinese 黑骏马; traditional Chinese 黑駿馬). The play was performed in Shanghai, Beijing and Hohhot in 1986, and it was very successful. "It is the monument of a decade in our new era", cited from the symposium held by China Theatre Association. In 1986, after his graduation, Luo Jian Fan was invited by China's national theatre, China Youth Art Theatre (at the time), to be the playwright. Luo Jian Fan relocated to the United States due to family reunion in 1994 and later became a US citizen.[citation needed]
Main works
Theater plays (playwright): Black Stallion, King Gesar, The Cornered Beast, To Be Stranded.[citation needed]
Films (screenwriter): My Mongolian Mother, Paerzatege (The Homeland).
TV dramas: The Silent Aimin River, The House of Detention.
Novel: An Exhausted Life 疲惫人生
Awards
Black Stallion, won Tianhan Drama Prize, 1986
The Silent Aimin River, won Five Ones Project Award (from the central Chinese government), 2003
nominated for The Golden Eagle Award, 2003[citation needed]
won Steed Award (from Inner Mongolian government), 2003
My Mongolian Mother, won the Best Scriptwriting (the 29th Fajr International Film Festival, Iran), 2011[citation needed]
won the 14th Chinese Huabiao Film Award for Best Actress, 2011[citation needed]
won the 28th Chinese Golden Rooster Award for Best Actress, 2011[citation needed]
References
This article "Luo Jian Fan" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Luo Jian Fan. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.
