Coco Lee
Coco Lee | |||||||||||
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李玟 | |||||||||||
Born | 17 January 1975 | ||||||||||
Alma mater | Presidio Middle School Raoul Wallenberg Traditional High School University of California, Irvine | ||||||||||
Occupation(s) | singer, songwriter, actress, dancer | ||||||||||
Years active | 1993–present | ||||||||||
Spouse | |||||||||||
Awards | Awards 1994 Top 10 Most Popular Idol Best New Artist awards the Golden Dragon Chart Awards 1996 Best-selling album (Coco Lee) of 1996 Best MV (Yesterday's passion) Awards 1997 Best Female Artist by the Best 10 Artists MTV Asia Music Awards 1998 Best Album (DiDaDi) Best Music Video (DiDaDi) MTV/CCTV Chinese Music Awards 1999 Artist of the year Radio Music Awards 1999 (Singapore) Best international newcomer Yale and Harvard Universities 2000 Asian-American of the year Best Performer of the year Awards in Hong Kong 2001 Best Mandarin Female Artist Top 10 Artist of the Year International Golden Melody Awards Malaysia 2001 Most Popular Stage Showmanship Female M'sia Awards 2002 best song MTV/CCTV Chinese Music Awards 2002 Best female artist of the year MTV Style Awards China 2003 Breakthrough International Artist of the Year Asia's Most Outstanding Performer[1] Lycra Style Awards 2004 Asian Style Artist[2] 10 Best dressed of 2004 Changchun festival 2004 Best new talent (Master of everything) QQ Star Awards 2010 Female Singer of the Year 2009 Album of the Year 2009 Hit Music Awards 2010 Best song of the year 2009 (BYOB) Best female artist in Taiwan and Hong Kong area of the year 2009 Awards 2010 China's Top 10 Barbie Dream Girls | ||||||||||
Chinese name | |||||||||||
Chinese | 李玟 | ||||||||||
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Musical career | |||||||||||
Origin | British Hong Kong | ||||||||||
Genres | Pop, C-pop, dance-pop, hip hop, R&B, soul | ||||||||||
Labels | Capital Artists Fancy Pie Sony Music Entertainment 550 Music Epic Sony BMG Warner Music Group Universal Music Group | ||||||||||
Coco Lee (Chinese: 李玟; pinyin: Lǐ Wén; born Ferren Lee, 17 January 1975)[3] is a Hong Kong-born American singer-songwriter, record producer, dancer, and actress.[4][5] Lee's career began in Hong Kong and then expanded to Taiwan.[4][5] Her single, "Do You Want My Love" also entered the US music charts. Her first full-length English language album was Just No Other Way. As a Chinese American, Lee is the first and only person of Chinese ethnicity to perform at the Oscars; she performed the Best Original Song nominated, "A Love Before Time" from the movie Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.
Early life
Born in British Hong Kong, Lee is the youngest of three children and was born to an Indonesian Chinese father and a Hong Kong Chinese mother.[6] She has two elder sisters, Nancy, who was her manager before, and Carol. Her father died before she was born. When she was 9 years old, her mother brought Lee and her sisters to live in San Francisco. She attended Presidio Middle School and Raoul Wallenberg Traditional High School, both in San Francisco. The summer after graduating from high school, she was offered a recording contract in Hong Kong and attempted to juggle her burgeoning career there with her studies at the University of California, Irvine[7] but eventually left after her freshman year to concentrate on her pop career.[8]
Career
Career beginnings and Sony Music: 1992–1998
After Lee graduated from high school in 1992, she returned to Hong Kong to see her sisters participate in the Miss Hong Kong Pageant. While there, she took part in the 12th Annual New Talent Singing Awards and was the first runner-up, singing Whitney Houston's Run to you. The following day, Capital Artists offered her a recording contract. She made her debut by appearing in several compilation albums, such as Red Hot Hits '93 Autumn Edition (火熱動感93勁秋版). In 1994, working with Fancy Pie Records, she released her first solo albums in Mandarin, Love from Now On (愛就要趁現在) and Promise Me (答應我). In 1995, she released an English language cover album, Brave Enough to Love, as well as her third Mandarin album, Woman in Love (被愛的女人). In 1996, Lee signed a contract with Sony Music Entertainment and her subsequent album, "Coco Lee" became the best-selling album of 1996 in Asia.[citation needed] In 1997, she released the Mandarin album "Sincere" as well as a self-titled Cantonese album. In 1998, the Mandarin album Di Da Di was released and sold to 1 million copies in less than 3 months.[citation needed]
International collaborations and English debut: 1998–2005
From her next album Sunny day, "Colors of the World" was used for the opening of the Football World Cup, and the song The answer (答案) for the Chinese movie Bishonen. Walt Disney Pictures hired her to sing the theme song "Reflection" (自己) and be the voice of the heroine Fa Mulan in the Mandarin version of Mulan. On August 1998, Coco performed in Taiwan to a concert audience of more than 30,000 fans, the second largest concert audience in Taiwan (a feat that only Michael Jackson has claimed in the past).[citation needed] She also performed in Michael Jackson's "Michael Jackson and friends" charity concert.[citation needed] In 1999, under 550 Music, Lee made her debut Just No Other Way which included the smashing hit, Do You Want My Love. Her love song Before I Fall In Love was included in the soundtrack of the movie Runaway Bride. She also had a duet called Can't get over with singer Kelly Price. Lee recorded the charity singles "We meet the future" and "Hand in hand" for SARS with other artists including Wang Leehom, Stefanie Sun, Elva Hsiao, and Jolin Tsai. Back in Asia, she released a Mandarin album You & me. In 2001, Lee sang the song A Love Before Time for the movie Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. Her album, Promise Coco released in October 2001. In 2002, Lee released her remix album D. Is Coco (Dance is Coco). She sang a song against tobacco called From the beginning til' the end (煙絲萬縷) with singer Jacky Cheung. She sang the anti racism song A dream of one with Korean singer Jin Young Park. In 2003, she performed with Shaggy at the "MTV Asia awards" in Singapore and also presented the show with him. Lee co-starred in the Chinese comedy movie Master of Everything (自娱自乐) with John Lone, which won the Best Foreign Film award in the 2005 Beverly Hills Film Festival. In 2004, as the Youth AIDS ambassador, she attended the global AIDS conference in Bangkok, Thailand as the representative of the Asian artists to meet various youth groups discussing what she can do to educate them about AIDS.
Second English album and Warner Music: 2005–2011
In 2005, Sony BMG released her second English album, Exposed. The album was banned in Mainland China for sexy lyrics in a few songs such as Touch or So good.[citation needed] Lee's next Mandarin album, Just Want You (要定你) was released on 22 September 2006. In 2008, Lee was chosen to sing one of the Olympic songs, "Forever Friends", opposite Sun Nan.[9] She changed her record company to work with Warner Music Group (Taiwan) from Music Nation. On 14 August, she released her new Mandarin album East to west (CoCo的東西) with Warner Music Group. It contains the songs "Party time", "Turn" (流轉) which is the soundtrack of the movie "The Legend of Silkboy" (世博总动员-湖丝仔) for the Shanghai World Expo 2010 and "BYOB" ("Bring Your Own Bag") a song to encourage people to bring and recycle their own shopping bags to save the environment. She recorded the song "Smile Shanghai" (微笑上海) with other artists including JJ Lin, Andy Lau, Jam Hsiao or Jane Zhang for Shanghai World Expo 2010. On 27 March 2010, Lee began her "East2West" World Tour Concert in Taipei at Taipei Arena. She performed at the Encore Theatre in Wynn Casino in Las Vegas on 3 and 4 July, then in Singapore Indoor Stadium in Singapore on 2 October[10] and in Nanning on 16 December. In March 2011, Lee was one of many artists participating in the recording of "Artists 311 Love Beyond Borders" (愛心無國界311燭光晚會) official theme song called Succumb not to sorrow (不要輸給心痛) in Cantonese version. On 7 April 2011, her song Dreams on oriental seas (梦在东方的海上) featuring Sun Nan was broadcast. It was named as the theme for the 14th FINA world championships, that took place in Shanghai on 16 July 2011.[11][12]
New album: 2011–present
On 8 June 2011, Lee announced that she set up her own studio. On 25 June, her song Four seas alliance (四海盟約), the theme song for the 2011 China television drama All men are brothers (水滸傳), was broadcast. On 17 December 2011, she performed at "Booey Lehoo Concert" in Beijing with will.i.am and apl.de.ap from The Black Eyed Peas, John Legend and Shunza. On 9 February 2012, she performed at "I AM WILL / I AM ANGEL Benefit Concert" at Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles with will.i.am, apl.de.ap and Taboo from The Black Eyed Peas.[13]
Her new album Illuminate (盛開) was released on 31 May 2013 with Universal Music.
In 2016, she competed in the fourth season of the Chinese reality show I Am A Singer, but she admitted she faded out as a singer since 2014 due to bronchitis. However, she recovered from it and participate, and eventually gone on to win the competition, making her the first non-mainland Chinese singer to win the series.[14][15] Lee later returned as guest singers for two more seasons (whicn now rebranded with the new title Singer), on the fifth season during the biennial concert, and on the sixth season as with a guest performer for Jessie J, the eventual winner for that season.[16]
Personal life
Lee married Bruce Rockowitz (born 24 October 1958),[17] a Jewish-Canadian businessman and former CEO of Li & Fung[citation needed] on 27 October 2011 in a lavish Jewish wedding ceremony in Hong Kong.[18][19] For her wedding, she registered the song "I just wanna marry u" (Chinese and English version), which was released on 24 October 2011. In 2016, she revealed that she has two adult step-daughters from her husband's previous marriage.[20]
Discography
Studio Albums
Live Albums
Compilation Albums
Remix Albums
Extended Plays
Maxi Singles
Digital Singles
Various Artists Compilation Albums
Videography
Filmography
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- 1975 births
- 550 Music artists
- Actresses from the San Francisco Bay Area
- American dance musicians
- American female dancers
- Dancers from California
- American contemporary R&B singers
- American film actresses
- American musicians of Chinese descent
- Record producers from California
- American dancers of Chinese descent
- American mezzo-sopranos
- American hip hop singers
- American female hip hop musicians
- Cantopop singers
- 21st-century American singers
- 20th-century American singers
- 21st-century American actresses
- English-language singers from Hong Kong
- Epic Records artists
- Hong Kong emigrants to the United States
- Hong Kong female singers
- Hong Kong film actresses
- Hong Kong hip hop musicians
- Hong Kong Mandopop singers
- Hong Kong record producers
- Hong Kong songwriters
- Hong Kong television actresses
- Hong Kong mezzo-sopranos
- Living people
- Musicians from the San Francisco Bay Area
- New Talent Singing Awards contestants
- Sony BMG artists
- University of California, Irvine alumni
- Warner Music Group artists
- Mezzo-sopranos
- Songwriters from California
- 20th-century American women singers
- 21st-century American women singers
- American soul singers
- American women record producers