Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Ian Fang
Chinese sex offender and actor (born 1989) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Ian Fang Weijie (born 13 December 1989; Chinese: 方威捷; pinyin: Fāng Wēijié) is a former Chinese actor who was subsequently convicted on sexual offences in Singapore.
![]() |
Fang was named as one of Mediacorp's 8 Dukes of Caldecott Hill. In 2013, he portrayed a student who lost his grandmother and had to struggle for a living in the drama Don't Stop Believin'. Through that debut role, he was awarded the Best Newcomer Award at the annual Star Awards Ceremony. Fang also starred in the drama On the Fringe 2011 and the cast members of the drama later also appeared in the film Imperfect. Fang left Mediacorp in 2023.
In 2025, Fang was convicted after pleading guilty to sexual offences with a minor. He was sentenced to 40 months imprisonment.
Remove ads
Early life
Fang was born in Shanghai, China.[1] His parents divorced when he was four. He had been brought up by his grandmother before his mother moved him to Singapore in 2002.[1][2]
Career
Summarize
Perspective
Fang made his acting debut in police drama C.L.I.F. in 2011, playing a rich kid who lands himself in trouble after single-handedly masterminding a series of bombings.[3] He was also a production assistant for the medical drama The Oath produced by Wawa Pictures for Mediacorp.[4]
In 2012, Fang made his debut in the film Imperfect. The same year, he also starred in Show Hand alongside Christopher Lee and Don't Stop Believin'.
In 2013, Fang was awarded the Best Newcomer award at Star Awards 2013. He also hosted his first travelogue My Working Holiday where he visited different countries to work in exchange for food and lodging, which earned him a nomination for the Best Info-Ed Host at Star Awards 20.
In 2014, Fang starred as a lead role in Channel U, Served H.O.T.. In the same year, he was given a role in basketball-themed movie Meeting the Giant, directed by Tay Ping Hui.[5]
In 2016, Fang was nominated as the Best Supporting Actor in Star Awards 2016 as Chen Hao Wei in Tiger Mum which won Best Drama in 2016. He also made his debut as a rap artist and released his first single, "1st Attempt", featuring vocals from Sylvester Sim.
In 2017, Fang was nominated as the Best Supporting Actor in Star Awards as Lin Zi Jie in The Dream Job. He also release his second single "Still me" featuring Desmond Ng.
In 2018, Fang was nominated as the Best Supporting Actor in Star Awards as Shuai Ge in Till We Meet Again.
Fang has won 2 Star Awards for Top 10 Most Popular Male Artistes in 2015 and 2017 respectively.
On 27 April 2023, Fang announced he would not renew his contract with Mediacorp when it ended on 30 April.[6] After leaving Mediacorp, Fang worked as an acting teacher at a child modelling school.[7]
Remove ads
Personal life
Since moving to Singapore, he went by a simplified Chinese form of Fang Weijie (simplified Chinese: 方伟杰; traditional Chinese: 方偉傑) and had debuted with this name. In 2022, he revealed that his birth name is Fang Weijie (Chinese: 方威捷) and would be using his birth name henceforth.[8]
In 2015, Fang became a Singapore permanent resident.[2]
In 2019, a series of explicit text messages between actress Carrie Wong and Fang was leaked, suggesting a sexual affair between the two.[9] The leaked texts also contained criticism towards fellow actor Lawrence Wong.[10]
In 2025, Fang was charged for sexually penetrating a 15-year-old minor on numerous occasions in 2024. He was also charged with obstruction of justice and harassment involving the same minor. He was sentenced to 40 months imprisonment and began serving his sentence on 16 June 2025.[11][12][13]
Filmography
Film
Television series
Variety show hosting
Remove ads
Discography
Singles
Awards and nominations
Remove ads
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads