Lee Hyori | |
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Lee Hyori in 2012.
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Native name | 이효리 |
Born |
Lee Hyori May 10, 1979 Cheongwon, North Chungcheong Province, South Korea |
Residence | Jeju, South Korea |
Occupation | |
Spouse(s) | Lee Sang-soon (m. 2013) |
Musical career | |
Genres | |
Instruments | |
Years active |
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Labels |
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Associated acts | Fin.K.L |
Website |
www |
Lee Hyori | |
Hangul | |
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Hanja | |
Revised Romanization | I Hyo-ri |
McCune–Reischauer | Yi Hyo-ri |
Mnet Media (2006–2010) B2M Entertainment (2010–2013)
Lee Hyori (Hangul: 이효리; Hanja: 李孝利; born May 10, 1979), is a South Korean singer, actress, record producer, activist, and television presenter. Dubbed as the "Nation's Fairy" during her Family Outing days, she debuted as a member of the successful K-pop girl group Fin.K.L, but has since become a solo artist. In 2003, she released her debut solo album Stylish which won several "Artist of the Year" awards. In 2006, Lee was the highest-paid female singer in her native country when she signed a contract with Mnet Media.
Lee Hyori began her career as part of South Korean pop girl group Fin.K.L. As the eldest member, she was the leader of the group. Lee was discovered while taking sticker pictures with her friends and was actually the last to join Fin.K.L, just before their debut in January 1998. Fin.K.L debuted officially on May 22, 1998 with their first single "Blue Rain", which was received quite well. The second release from their debut album, "To My Boyfriend", became the first of their multiple number one hits. Fin.K.L became one of the most popular and successful South Korean pop groups of all-time, rivaling fellow popular girl group S.E.S.
A year after Fin.K.L's fourth studio album Forever, her solo debut album was released in August 2003, entitled Stylish. The lead single "10 Minutes" became one of her signature hits and the singer nearly swept the Daesangs, the most prestigious South Korean music award, winning more than seven of them, including three of the four most prestigious Daesangs. Stylish sold 144,182 copies in South Korea alone, according to the Music Industry Association of Korea in 2003. Her popularity in her various activities eventually was dubbed as the "Hyori Syndrome" in South Korea, and the Korean Media nicknamed 2003 "The Year of Hyori" as she was rarely out of the news all year.