What is the personality type of Fan Bingbing? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Fan Bingbing from Actors & Actresses Asia and what is the personality traits.
Fan Bingbing personality type is ESFP, which means she is the type of person who is fun-loving, vulnerable, playful, and abundant.
Bingbing was born on February 9, 1985, in Nanjing, China. She was first discovered by a talent agency at the age of nine. When she was 11, she was cast in one of the lead roles for an English language film titled The Message, which was based on the novel by Nobel Laureate Liu Xie. The movie failed to attract an audience, but became a big hit in Taiwan. Bingbing’s performance gained attention from the Chinese media, which then led to her career breakthrough after starring alongside Jackie Chan in the film The Legend of Drunken Master.
Later on in her teenage years, Bingbing starred in several successful television dramas including Heartstrings and Sovereign Road. She also starred in several big budget action films including The Forbidden Kingdom and X-Men: Days of Future Past. In addition, she has also starred in a number of Hollywood films including The Green Hornet, The Longest Ride, and Resident Evil: The Final Chapter.
In 2017, Bingbing was accused of tax evasion and fraud by her business partner, Wei Jiang.
Fan Bingbing (Chinese: 范冰冰, born 16 September 1981) is a Chinese actress, model, television producer, and pop singer. Fan rose to fame in East Asia in 1998–1999 with the TV costume drama series My Fair Princess. In 2003, she starred in Cell Phone, which became the highest-grossing film in China of the year, and received critical acclaim at the Hundred Flowers Awards. She has starred in many Chinese films, most notably Lost in Beijing (2007), Buddha Mountain (2011), Double Xposure (2012) and I Am Not Madame Bovary (2016). She has participated in many foreign-language films, such as the French film Stretch (2011), the Korean film My Way (2011), X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014), in which she portrayed Blink, and the Hong Kong-Chinese-American film Skiptrace (2015).