Coco Lee

Chinese-American singer (1975–2023)


title: "Coco Lee" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1975-births", "2023-deaths", "2023-suicides", "20th-century-american-singers", "20th-century-american-women-singers", "20th-century-hong-kong-women-singers", "21st-century-american-actresses", "21st-century-american-singers", "21st-century-american-women-singers", "550-music-artists", "actresses-from-the-san-francisco-bay-area", "20th-century-american-buddhists", "american-contemporary-r&b-singers", "american-dance-musicians", "american-dancers-of-asian-descent", "american-female-dancers", "american-film-actresses", "american-hip-hop-singers", "american-musicians-of-chinese-descent", "american-musicians-of-hong-kong-descent", "american-soul-singers", "american-women-hip-hop-musicians", "american-women-record-producers", "cantopop-singers", "dancers-from-california", "english-language-hong-kong-singers", "epic-records-artists", "female-suicides", "hong-kong-buddhists", "hong-kong-emigrants-to-the-united-states", "hong-kong-film-actresses", "hong-kong-hip-hop-musicians", "hong-kong-mandopop-singers", "hong-kong-record-producers", "hong-kong-women-songwriters", "hong-kong-television-actresses", "musicians-from-the-san-francisco-bay-area", "new-talent-singing-awards-contestants", "record-producers-from-california", "sony-bmg-artists", "songwriters-from-california", "suicides-in-hong-kong", "university-of-california,-irvine-alumni", "warner-music-group-artists", "21st-century-american-buddhists"] description: "Chinese-American singer (1975–2023)" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coco_Lee" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Chinese-American singer (1975–2023) ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox person"]

FieldValue
nameCoCo Lee
imageCoCo Lee at Shanghai 2013718 (cropped).jpg
altCoco Lee wearing a dark sleeveless top with a dark-coloured sweater wrapped around her waist, with sunglasses and a gold watch, facing the camera from a car's seat, grinning and flashing a peace sign with left hand.
captionLee in 2013
birth_nameFerren Lee
birth_date
birth_placeBritish Hong Kong or Wuhan, Hubei, China
death_date
death_placePok Fu Lam, Southern District, Hong Kong
resting_placeShimenfeng Memorial Park, Wuchang District, Wuhan, China
citizenship
educationUniversity of California, Irvine (dropped out)
occupation
years_active1993–2023
spouse
website
module{{Infobox musical artist
embedyes
backgroundperson
origin
genre
label
module2{{Infobox Chinese
c李玟
jLei5 Man4
pLǐ Wén
altnameBirth name
c2李美林
j2Lei5 Mei5-lam4
p2Lǐ Měilín}}
signatureSignature of Coco Lee.svg
signature_size100
::

| name = CoCo Lee | image = CoCo Lee at Shanghai 2013718 (cropped).jpg | alt = Coco Lee wearing a dark sleeveless top with a dark-coloured sweater wrapped around her waist, with sunglasses and a gold watch, facing the camera from a car's seat, grinning and flashing a peace sign with left hand. | caption = Lee in 2013 | birth_name = Ferren Lee | birth_date = | birth_place = British Hong Kong or Wuhan, Hubei, China | death_date = | death_place = Pok Fu Lam, Southern District, Hong Kong | resting_place = Shimenfeng Memorial Park, Wuchang District, Wuhan, China | citizenship = | education = University of California, Irvine (dropped out) | occupation = | years_active = 1993–2023 | spouse = | relatives = | website = | module = {{Infobox musical artist | embed = yes |background = person | origin = | genre = | label = | module2 = {{Infobox Chinese|child=yes | c = 李玟 | j = Lei5 Man4 | p = Lǐ Wén | altname = Birth name | c2 = 李美林 | j2 = Lei5 Mei5-lam4 | p2 = Lǐ Měilín}} | signature = Signature of Coco Lee.svg | signature_size = 100

CoCo Lee (; 17 January 1975 – 5 July 2023) was a Chinese-American singer, songwriter, and actress. She was one of the best-selling artists in Asia and is widely regarded as a significant figure and a diva. Her career began in 1993 in Hong Kong, and she gained early fame in Taiwan through a series of successful albums, establishing herself as an icon. She released 18 studio albums, 2 live records, and 5 compilations.

Lee, who was described as the "Asian Mariah Carey", was noted for her Americanized dance routines. She voiced the lead character of Fa Mulan in the Mandarin version of the 1998 Disney film Mulan and sang its theme song, "Reflection".

Lee was the first Chinese singer to have music released globally, making her the first Chinese singer to break into the western market. Her 1999 album Just No Other Way was the first ever English-language album recorded by a Chinese singer. Her 2000 single "Do You Want My Love" achieved international success, appearing on the US Billboard Hot Dance Breakouts Chart at No. 4 and entering the top 50 of the US Billboard Dance Club Songs Chart while also peaking at No. 14 on the Australian Singles Chart and No. 20 on the Official Chart in New Zealand.

Her 2000 song "A Love Before Time", from the film Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song, and she performed it at the 73rd Academy Awards, becoming the first, and so far only, Chinese artist to perform at the Oscars. Lee was also the first Asian-American singer to sing the US National Anthem at an NBA game, the first Asian singer to hold a concert at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, the first non-mainland Chinese singer to win the Chinese singing reality show I Am a Singer, and the first Asian brand ambassador for Chanel. In her final years, Lee struggled with health problems, having been diagnosed with depression in 2019. She died by suicide in Hong Kong in 2023, aged 48.

Early life

Ferren Lee was born on 17 January 1975 in Hong Kong or Wuhan. She was a posthumous child, as her father had died before her birth due to an illness. Lee had physical defects in her left leg, causing lifelong challenges. After her husband's death, Lee's mother moved the family to Hong Kong to seek support from relatives. They faced difficult times there before emigrating to the US when Lee was nine years old. Lee had two elder sisters, Carol and Nancy, the latter of whom would become Lee's manager early in her career. Growing up in San Francisco, Lee attended Redding Elementary School, Presidio Middle School, and Raoul Wallenberg Traditional High School. She won Miss Teen Chinatown San Francisco in 1991.

|width=580px |align=center |Coco Lee 12.png|Coco Lee during a 2007 interview |CoCo Lee's Redding Elementary School Diploma.jpg|Coco Lee's Redding Elementary School Diploma |CoCo Lee's Presidio Middle School Diploma.jpg|Coco Lee's Presidio Middle School Diploma |Contestants of the 1991 Miss Teen Chinatown pageant, including CoCo Lee Stage 06.jpg|CoCo Lee at the Miss Teen Chinatown Gala, 1991, with BD Wong

At the age of 17, Lee won a local singing contest twice. After graduating from high school in 1993, she entered a TVB competition in Hong Kong and was offered a recording contract. She attempted to juggle her singing career in Hong Kong with her pre-medical studies at the University of California, Irvine, but she eventually left school after one year. During an interview in 1997, Lee said she had never intended to become a star. Her goal in life had been to become a surgeon, following in her mother's footsteps.

Career

Beginnings and Sony Music: 1993–1998

In 1993, Lee returned to Hong Kong to visit her sisters. 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.

When she was 18, Lee came to Taiwan to start her music career. Advised by her sister, Lee chose "Coco" as her English stage name and "Li Wen" (李玟) as her Chinese stage name.

She made her debut on compilation albums such as Red Hot Hits '93 Autumn Edition (zh). In 1994, she released her first solo albums in Mandarin in Taiwan, ** and **, through Fancy Pie Records. Her English-language cover album ** and her third Mandarin album, **, came out the following year.

In 1996, Lee signed with Sony Music Entertainment. Her next Mandarin album, **, became the best-selling record in Asia that year. She subsequently released another English cover album, **, also in 1996. The following year, she issued the Mandarin album ** as well as a Cantonese record, **, the only one she ever recorded in that language. In 1998, her Mandarin album ** came out, selling one million copies in less than three months.

International collaborations and English debut: 1998–2005

From Lee's next album, **, the track "Colors of the World" was used for the opening of the 1998 FIFA World Cup, and "The Answer" (答案) was featured in the Chinese movie Bishonen. In 1998, Lee was hired by Walt Disney Pictures to sing the theme song "Reflection" (自己; translation: "myself") and voice Fa Mulan in the Mandarin version of Mulan (花木蘭). The same year, she sang "Missing You in 365 Days" (zh), one of the theme songs of the film Lotus Lantern, the first commercial animated feature film in mainland China.

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c9/Chien_Yao_And_CoCo_Lee_in_1998_Channel_V.jpg" caption="CoCo Lee and [[Chien Yao]] on "Weekend Commander/周末霸王" at [[Channel V]], 1998."] ::

]]

In August 1998, Lee performed in Taiwan to an audience of more than 50,000 fans. The next year, she performed in a "Michael Jackson and friends" charity concert and later released the Mandarin album **. Later that year, under 550 Music, she released her first English album of original songs, titled Just No Other Way, which included the hit "Do You Want My Love". The song reached No. 4 on the US Billboard Hot Dance Breakouts chart in December, making Lee the first Chinese singer to break into the American market. Her love song "Before I Fall in Love" was included in the soundtrack to the movie Runaway Bride. She also recorded the duet "Can't Get Over" with 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. In Asia, she released the Mandarin album **. By 2000, she had released 20 albums in Asia and sold 7.5 million copies of her records on that continent.

In 2001, Lee sang the song "A Love Before Time" for the movie Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, which she performed at the Oscars. The track was introduced by the actress Julia Stiles as an "evocative love ballad" that combined "the flavor and texture of Eastern music with the orchestral color and sensitive lyrics of Western culture". Lee's next album, **, was released in October 2001 and included a Mandarin cover song titled "Baby, I'm Sorry" (Baby 對不起). The track placed at No. 35 on the Taiwan Yearly Singles Top 100 chart that year. In 2002, Lee released the remix album D. Is Coco (Dance Is Coco). She also sang an anti-tobacco song called "From the Beginning 'til the End" (煙絲萬縷) with singer Jacky Cheung. The same year, at the NBA debut of Yao Ming, Lee performed the US national anthem and became the first Chinese-American singer to sing at an NBA game. She also sang the anti-racism song "A Dream of One" with Korean singer Park Jin-young. In 2003, she performed with Shaggy at the MTV Asia Awards in Singapore and also hosted 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 at the 2005 Beverly Hills Film Festival.

Second English album and Warner Music: 2005–2011

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2b/Coco_Lee_interviewed_in_2006_02.jpg" caption="Coco Lee interviewed in 2006"] ::

In 2005, Sony BMG released Lee's second English album, Exposed. It was banned in mainland China for "sexy" lyrics in a few songs, such as "Touch" and "So Good". Lee's next Mandarin album, **, came out on 22 September 2006. In 2008, she was chosen to sing one of the Summer Olympics songs, "Forever Friends", alongside Sun Nan.

As the first Asian singer to perform at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, Lee had a solo concert there in July 2009, singing some of Michael Jackson's songs in homage to her idol. On 14 August 2009, she released a new Mandarin album, **, with Warner Music Group. It includes the song "Turn" (流轉), which was on the soundtrack to the film The Legend of Silk Boy. Lee also recorded the song "Smile Shanghai" (微笑上海), with artists including JJ Lin, Andy Lau, Jam Hsiao, and Jane Zhang, for the Shanghai World Expo 2010. On 27 March 2010, she began her East2West World Tour at Taipei Arena, in Taiwan. She performed at the Encore Theatre in Wynn Casino in Las Vegas on 3 and 4 July, then at the Singapore Indoor Stadium on 2 October and in Nanning on 16 December. In March 2011, Lee was one of many artists who participated in the recording of the Artistes 311 Love Beyond Borders official theme song, "Succumb Not to Sorrow" (不要輸給心痛), on the 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, which took place in Shanghai on 16 July.

New album and final projects before death: 2011–2023

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b1/076_Coco_street_concert_mod.jpg" caption="Sing! China season 7#Coco Lee's alleged mistreatment}}"] ::

On 8 June 2011, Lee announced that she had set up her own recording studio. On 25 June, her song "Four Seas Alliance" (四海盟約), the theme for the 2011 China television drama All Men are Brothers, was broadcast. On 17 December, she performed at the Booey Lehoo Concert in Beijing with will.i.am and apl.de.ap from the Black Eyed Peas as well as with John Legend and Shunza. On 9 February 2012, she performed at the TRANS4M Boyle Heights benefit at Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles, with will.i.am, apl.de.ap, and Taboo.

Her next album, **, was released on 31 May 2013 by Universal Music. She was a judge on the 2015 version of Dancing with the Stars in China.

In 2016, Lee competed in the fourth season of the Chinese reality show I Am a Singer, where she admitted that losing her voice to bronchitis in 2014 had affected her singing ability. Regardless, she went on to win the competition, making her the first non-mainland Chinese singer to do so. She later returned as a guest singer for two more seasons: in the fifth season, during the biennial concert, and in the sixth as a guest performer for Jessie J, the eventual winner of that season. In 2020, she announced that she was going to re-record the Mandarin end-credits version of the song "Reflection" for the live adaptation of Mulan, as she had already done in 1998.

In September 2022, Lee was a coach during season 7 of the show Sing! China. She had a dispute with the management, questioning the fairness of the judges during the competition. In an audio recording that was leaked only after her death, she commented that the production team retaliated against her during the show's final episode. Lee, who was about to undergo surgery on her left leg, alleged that a sudden placement change caused her to stand alone in her heels and later fall during a duet. She described the experience as "humiliating", since her health issues had been largely concealed from the public. She also said that the production team refused to give her mentee Feige a chance to return to the stage unless Lee wrote a Weibo post, to which she complied so that Feige could showcase his talent again.

In 2023, Lee was digitally animated using motion capture for the virtual reality interactive concert Millennium Realm (千禧之境) on the Pico VR video platform.

Philanthropy

Lee was actively involved in the work of UNICEF as a youth ambassador, promoting children's rights and their well-being. She supported the Make-A-Wish Foundation, which grants children with critical illness their wishes. She was also an ambassador for the Organisation for World Peace in China, Cancer Fund's Pink Ambassador at Hong Kong's first breast cancer survivors' fashion show in 2016, and Youth AIDS ambassador at a global AIDS conference in Bangkok, Thailand, in 2004.

Personal life

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/67/2000s_Coco_Lee_and_Bruce_Rockowitz.jpg" caption="Coco Lee and Bruce Rockowitz"] ::

Lee married Hong Kong-based Canadian businessman Bruce Rockowitz on 27 October 2011 in a Jewish ceremony. The wedding included performances by Bruno Mars, Alicia Keys, and Ne-Yo. For her occasion, Lee recorded the song "I Just Wanna Marry U" (in both Chinese and English versions), which was released on 24 October 2011. In March 2018, she mentioned in a brand event that she was undergoing IVF in New York. She had no biological children but had two stepdaughters from her husband's previous marriage. Rockowitz is alleged to have cheated on Lee. Reports stated the couple had separated before Lee died and were due to sign divorce papers in July 2023.

Health issues

Lee was born with an abnormality in her left leg. At the age of two, she underwent surgery, which failed to correct the problem, causing her to rely more heavily on her right leg for most of her life.

Lee received a diagnosis of depression in 2019. Her sister stated that the condition had deteriorated drastically in the few months before Lee's death, though she had sought professional help.

Lee was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2022 and had a tumor removed. In December, the singer reported her weight as 42 kg (92 lbs), sparking concerns for her health. On 8 March 2023, she disclosed on social media that she had had surgery on her pelvis and thigh in Hong Kong the previous month, after triggering an old leg injury during a dance rehearsal in October 2022. She shared videos of herself learning to walk again with the aid of a walker as well as a nurse. Lee had to take muscle relaxant medication after the surgery, an insider said.

Death

Lee attempted suicide on 29 June 2023. She spent one night in a private hospital, before moving to her sisters' house at the Peak. She made another suicide attempt on 2 July and was taken to the hospital, where she died three days later, on 5 July, at the age of 48. News of her death received significant attention in China, getting almost 1.4 billion views on Weibo in one day.

Lee's family asked Hong Kong authorities to investigate her death, and an autopsy was requested to determine the cause.

Services and tributes

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3c/Coco_Lee’s_funeral_02.jpg" caption="Fans queuing to enter a funeral hall to pay respects to the star, 31 July 2023"] ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8b/Hearse_of_Coco_Lee_leaving_Hong_Kong_Funeral_Home_02.jpg" caption="Hearse carrying Lee leaving Hong Kong Funeral Home, North Point, 1 August 2023"] ::

Lee's sister Nancy has urged the government of Hong Kong to officially recognize the star's contributions. A vigil for Lee was held on 31 July at Hong Kong Funeral Home in North Point, with a public memorial service. There were eight pallbearers at the funeral, including Lee's brother-in-law, singer Jenny Tseng, and lyricist and music producer Chien Yao. A private funeral service was held on 1 August.

Rockowitz's name was missing from multiple announcements made by Lee's sisters. It was reported that towards the end of the 31 July service, Nancy became emotional when hugging a friend and was heard shouting repeatedly in Cantonese: "He took my sister away!" Carol, the eldest sister, was also heard shouting: "She's saying he caused my sister to die!" Their cries did not name any person and lasted for some time, before the audio was muted. On 1 August, when asked to say something to Lee outside the crematorium, Rockowitz, who was being mobbed by the star's angry fans, said, "I love her. My whole life". Rockowitz came under criticism after Lee's death, and he has sought to dispel various allegations against him.

On 21 October 2023, Lee's ashes were buried at the Shimen Peak Memorial Park in Wuhan, China. According to one of her sisters, it was their mother's wish that the ashes of Lee, who had not met her father when she was little, be placed next to his.

Artistry and legacy

::quote

::

|width = 18em |bgcolor = #E0B0FF |quote = CoCo is ... known to have worked tirelessly to open up a new world for Chinese singers in the international music scene, and she went all out to shine for the Chinese. We are proud of her!

We hope that everyone will not only miss Coco, but also share her bright smile, treat people with sincerity, convey kindness and love to everyone around us, and continue Coco's wish to let everyone around feel her love and happiness. Her rays of light will last forever. |author = – Lee's sisters, when announcing the news of her death on Facebook and Instagram |source = USA Today, SCMP

Lee was inspired by musicians such as Whitney Houston, Madonna, Michael Jackson, and Mariah Carey. Since techniques employed by R&B singers in English would change the pitch and meaning of words in Cantonese, she taught herself Mandarin, which allows for more tonal flexibility.

She was remembered by The New York Times as "a Chinese American singer and songwriter best known for performing an Oscar-nominated song in the hit film Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon". She is remembered by millennials who grew up during a time when Mandopop boomed and who enjoyed listening to her songs in English and Mandarin. She has been called the "Asian Mariah Carey" due to her impressive voice and dancing skills. She has also been credited for breaking down international barriers and bridging the gap between East Asia and the West.

Awards and nominations

::data[format=table title="{{Sronly|Name of the award ceremony, year presented, award category, nominee, and the result of the nomination}}"]

Award ceremonyYearCategoryNominee / workResultRef.Asian Pop Music AwardsBeijing Pop Music AwardsCCTV-MTV Music AwardsChangchun Film FestivalChina Music AwardsChinese Film Media AwardsGlobal Chinese Music AwardsGolden Melody AwardsLycra Style AwardsMTV Video Music AwardsNew Talent Singing AwardsTencent Music Entertainment AwardsTop Chinese Music AwardsTop Ten Chinese Gold Songs Award
2023Top 20 Songs of the Year – Chinese"Battle Song"
2009Best Female Singer – Hong Kong and TaiwanCoco Lee
1999Best Female Singer in TaiwanCoco Lee
Breakthrough Innovation Award
2000Best International Female Vocalist
2002Asia's Most Outstanding Female Artist
2005Best NewcomerMaster of Everythingdate=6 July 2023title=网友为李玟唯一主演电影重新打分: 当年看着就笑, 可再也笑不出来了trans-title=Netizens reevaluate the only movie starring Coco Lee: I laughed when I watched it, but I can't laugh anymoreurl=https://www.thepaper.cn/newsDetail_forward_23751762url-status=livearchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240619001027/https://www.thepaper.cn/newsDetail_forward_23751762archive-date=19 June 2024access-date=29 March 2025website=The Paperlanguage=zh }}
2014Most Stylish Singer in AsiaCoco Lee
Most Popular International Chinese Singer
2019Most Influential Female Singer in Asia
Most Popular International Chinese Singer
2005Best New ActorMaster of Everything
2001Chinese Pop Hits of 2000"True Lover"
Media Recommendation Award"A Love Before Time"
Best Stage PerformanceCoco Lee
1997Best Female World SingerCoCo Lee
1998Best Female Mandarin SingerEach Time I Think of You
2004Asian Style ArtistCoco Lee
1998International Viewer's Choice: MTV Mandarin"Di Da Di"
1993Coco Lee
2024Best Animation Theme Song"Battle Song"
2001Female Pop Vocalist of the Year – Hong Kong and TaiwanCoco Lee
2000Top Ten Outstanding Artists
2001
::

Discography

Studio albums

::data[format=table]

TitleRelease dateLabelLanguageTrack listing
Love from Now On (愛就要趁現在)15 June 1994Fancy Pie RecordsMandarin
Promise Me (答應我)23 December 1994
Brave Enough to Love (勇敢去愛)12 June 1995English
Woman in Love (被愛的女人)3 September 1995Mandarin
CoCo Lee (CoCo 李玟同名专辑)14 June 1996Sony Music Taiwan
CoCo's Party25 November 1996English
Each Time I Think of You (每一次想你)14 May 1997Mandarin/Cantonese
Be Careful Next Time (CoCo Lee 首張廣東專輯)10 November 1997Cantonese
Di Da Di Hints (Di Da Di 暗示)13 January 1998Mandarin
Sunny Day Feelin' Good (Sunny Day 好心情)30 June 1998
From Today Till Forever (今天到永遠)27 May 1999
Just No Other Way2 November 1999550 Music/Epic RecordsEnglish
True Lover You & Me (真情人 You & Me)24 August 2000Sony Music TaiwanMandarin
Promise12 October 2001Mandarin/Cantonese
Exposed25 March 2005Sony BMGEnglish
Just Want You (要定你)22 September 2006Sony Music TaiwanMandarin
East to West (CoCo 的東西)14 August 2009Warner Music Taiwan/Music Nation Ursa Major Limited
Illuminate (盛開)31 May 2013Universal Music Taiwan/CL ProductionMandarin/English
::

Live albums

::data[format=table]

TitleRelease dateLabelLanguageTrack listing
You Are in My Heart Concert (你在我心上演唱会全纪录)December 1995Fancy Pie RecordsMandarin/English/French/Spanish
Million Fans Concert (萬人迷演唱会精彩实录)17 December 1998Sony Music TaiwanMandarin/English/French/Spanish
::

Compilations

::data[format=table]

TitleRelease dateLabelLanguageTrack listing
Beloved Collection (情人被愛精选集)2 August 1996Fancy Pie RecordsMandarin
* The Best of My Love*28 January 2000Sony Music TaiwanMandarin/Cantonese
1994–2008 Best Collection16 May 2008Mandarin/English
Ultimate Coco (最完美影音典藏精选)2 March 2012Mandarin
「You & I」25th Anniversary Collection (You & I 经典全纪录)21 June 2019CL Production/Sony Music Taiwan/Universal Music Taiwan
Battle Song CoCo Collection (戰歌李玟精選)6 July 2023Warner Music Group
::

Remix albums

::data[format=table]

TitleRelease dateLabelLanguageTrack listing
Dance with the Wind (玟風起舞)May 1997Fancy Pie RecordsMandarin/English
D.IS. CoCo (愛琴海新歌 + 電音精選)18 June 2002Sony Music TaiwanMandarin/Cantonese
::

EPs

::data[format=table]

TitleRelease dateLabelLanguageTrack listing
Take a Chance on Love (碰碰看愛情)14 August 1998Sony Music TaiwanMandarin/English
::

Maxi-singles

::data[format=table]

TitleRelease dateLabelLanguageTrack listing
"Di Da Di Color Remix" (5顔6色 Di Da Di)2 April 1998Sony Music TaiwanMandarin
"Do You Want My Love"7 February 2000550 Music/Epic RecordsEnglish
"Wherever You Go"21 September 2000
::

Digital singles

::data[format=table]

TitleRelease dateLabelLanguageTrack listing
"I Have a Dream"1 May 2008Music Nation Ursa Major Ltd.Mandarin
"I Love Watching Movies" (我愛看電影)18 September 2008
"BYOB" (Bring Your Own Bag)17 April 2009
"Four Seas" (四海)27 December 2010Universal Music Taiwan/CL Production
"I Just Wanna Marry U"24 October 2011Mandarin/English
"18"17 January 2017Mandarin
"Reflection/ Myself 自已 (2020)"29 August 2020Walt Disney Pictures
"Paradise Wonder"17 June 2022Warner Music Group
"The Love You Left Behind"24 July 2022
"Miss Dizzy"16 August 2022
"Legend of the East"9 September 2022
"Playboy"25 November 2022
"Candy (feat. MaSiWei)"5 January 2023
"Tragic"14 February 2023
"Battle Song"28 May 2023
::

Compilation appearances

::data[format=table]

TitleRelease dateLabelLanguageTrack listing
Red Hot Hits 93' Autumn Edition (火熱動感93'勁秋版)October 1993Capital Artists/Fancy Pie RecordsCantonese
Red Hot Hits 94' Love Party (火熱動感94'戀愛Party)September 1994
Statement of Love, Duet Songs (愛情宣言, 情歌對唱)November 1994
Merry Christmas (聖誕禮讚)December 1994
::

Videography

::data[format=table]

TitleRelease dateLabelLanguageTrack listing
Foot print (足跡)1995Fancy Pie RecordsMandarin/English
You're in My Heart Concert1995Mandarin/English/French/Spanish
Coco's Workout Camp1996Sony Music TaiwanMandarin/English
CoCo in Italy1998
Di Da DiMandarin
Sunny Day
Million Fans Concert1999Mandarin/English/Cantonese/Spanish
The Video Collection2000Mandarin/English/Cantonese
CoCo So Crazy2002Mandarin/Cantonese
All my CocoMandarin/Cantonese/English
::

Filmography

Film

::data[format=table]

TitleYearDirectorRoleNotesRef.
Mulan1998Barry Cook and Tony BancroftFa MulanVoice in the Mandarin version
No Tobacco (无烟草)2002Stanley Kwan
Master of Everything (自娱自乐)2004Lee XinLu Hua
Forever Young (栀子花开)2015He JiongTeacher HanCameo
::

Television

::data[format=table]

TitleYearOriginal networkRoleNotesRef.
Kangsi Coming (康熙來了)2005, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2013CTi VarietyGuest5 episodes
Chinese Idol (season 1) (中国梦之声第一季)19 May – 25 August 2013DragonTVJudge16 episodesurl=https://informationwapi.com/9-years-ago-coco-lee-graced-the-stage-at-the-chinese-idol-finale/
Hi 2014 (嗨!2014)9 May 2014CCTV 1GuestEpisode 5
Dancing with the Stars China (与星共舞)1 February 2015DragonTVJudgeEpisode 7
Super Idol (season 1) (星动亚洲第一季)17 July 2015Anhui TV/MBC TVJudge/coachEpisodes 2, 5, 9
7 August 2015
11 September 2015
Talented Singer (season 1) (隐藏的歌手第一季)25 October 2015City TV/BTV/iQIYIGuest performerEpisode 2
I Am a Singer (Chinese season 4) (我是歌手第四季)15 January – 15 April 2016Hunan TVContestant/winner13 episodestitle=我是歌手4 李玟 Coco 单曲合集 I Am a Singer 4 【我是歌手官方频道】
Come Sing with Me (season 1) (我想和你唱第一季)7 May 2016Hunan TVGuest performerEpisode 1last=Shackleton
The Jin Xing Show (金星秀)26 April 2017DragonTVGuestEpisode 114
Come Sing with Me (season 2) (我想和你唱第二季)8 June 2017Hunan TVGuest performerEpisode 8
Sing Out! (这!就是歌唱 对唱季)21 September 2018YoukuAdvisorEpisode 9
World's Got Talent (巅峰之夜)19 April – 12 July 2019Hunan TVJudge13 episodes
Jungle Voice (season 2) (声林之王第二季)27 September 2019ETtodayAdvisorEpisodes 6, 7
4 October 2019
Infinity and Beyond (season 1) (聲生不息)2022Mango TV/TVBPerformer12 episodes
Sing! China (season 7) (中國好聲音)2022Zhejiang TVMentorEpisodes 9–13
::

Tours

::data[format=table]

DateCountry/territoryCityVenueGuestSetlistMillion Fans TourTrue Lover You & Me Asia TourSo Crazy China TourEast to West World TourCoCo Lee 18 World Tour"You & I" 25 Anniversary World Tour
2 August 1998TaiwanTaipeiMunicipal StadiumHuman Nature
15 August 1998Kaohsiung CityChung Shan StadiumNone
17 September 2000Mainland ChinaShenzhenShenzhen GymnasiumNone
25 September 2000WuhanXinhualu Stadium
29 September 2000ShanghaiShanghai Stadium
15 December 2000SingaporeSuntec City Concert Hall
19 September 2001Mainland ChinaChengduChengdu Sports Center
23 September 2001JinanShandong Provincial Sports Centre Stadium
27 September 2001HangzhouYellow Dragon Sports Center
29 September 2001NanjingNanjing Wutaishan Jinbang Gymnasium
6 October 2003Mainland ChinaBeijingWorkers' StadiumNone
31 October 2003ChongqingBanan Stadium
27 March 2010TaiwanTaipeiTaipei ArenaNone
3 July 2010United StatesLas VegasEncore Las Vegas
4 July 2010
2 October 2010SingaporeSingapore Indoor Stadium
16 December 2010Mainland ChinaNanningGuangxi Stadium
6 May 2017Mainland ChinaShenzhenShenzhen Bay Sports CenterJam Hsiao
24 June 2017ShanghaiMercedes-Benz ArenaG.E.M.
8 July 2017BeijingLeSports CenterJJ Lin
22 July 2017GuangzhouGuangzhou GymnasiumNone
12 August 2017Xi'anQuJiang International Conference Exhibition CenterJason Zhang
9 September 2017WuhanWuhan Sports Centre StadiumStefanie Sun
23 September 2017HangzhouYellow Dragon Sports CenterDimash Kudaibergen
18 November 2017NanjingWutaishan Sports CenterYoga Lin
9 December 2017ChangshaHunan International Convention & Exhibition CenterMC Jin
24 March 2018ChongqingChongqing International Expo Center Multi-Purpose HallNone
21 June 2019TaiwanTaipeiTaipei ArenaJolin Tsai
27 July 2019Mainland ChinaChengduSichuan Provincial GymnasiumNone
17 August 2019FoshanFoshan International Sports Cultural Performing Center
26 October 2019MacaoCotai Arena
14 December 2019NanjingNanjing Youth Olympic Games Sports Park
22 December 2019United StatesUncasvilleMohegan Sun Arena
28 December 2019Las VegasMGM Grand Garden Arena
::

References

References

  1. (6 July 2023). "Coco Lee: The pioneering singer who charmed the world{{pipe}}BBC News".
  2. (20 October 2023). "李玟21日安葬長眠武漢 現場粉紫色紀念{{pipe}}TVBS新聞 @TVBSNEWS01".
  3. (21 October 2023). "永別天后李玟!天使紀念雕像曝光 86歲高齡母無法參與安葬儀式".
  4. Sun, Celine. (2 April 2005). "Coco Lee exposed to US market".
  5. (1 July 2017). "Pop diva Coco Lee savors new tour in China".
  6. Frater, Patrick. (5 July 2023). "Coco Lee, Hong Kong-Born Singer-Songwriter, Dies at 48".
  7. "Hong Kong-American Pop Singer Coco Lee Dies Aged 48".
  8. Bashforth, Emily. (5 July 2023). "Coco Lee dead: Singer-songwriter dies by suicide aged 48".
  9. Berry Wang, Nectar Gan. (25 August 2023). "Coco Lee: 'Sing! China' suspended after uproar over treatment of late pop star".
  10. Borelli, M.B.. (2014). "The Oxford Handbook of Dance and the Popular Screen". Oxford University Press.
  11. (2000). "CoCo Lee – Just No Other Way Released Countries".
  12. (23 July 2023). "How late singer Coco Lee crossed cultural divides to bring together Chinese communities around the world".
  13. "CoCo Lee {{!}} Biography, Music & News".
  14. "australian-charts.com , CoCo Lee – Do You Want My Love".
  15. EFE, Agencia. (6 July 2023). "Coco Lee, China's only Oscars performer, dies at 48".
  16. (5 July 2023). "Hong Kong-born singer Coco Lee dies by suicide aged 48, siblings confirm". The Guardian.
  17. "登奧斯卡首位華人歌手 李玟獻唱英版月光愛人{{pipe}}三立娛樂星聞 – YouTube".
  18. Travis, Emlyn. (5 July 2023). "Coco Lee, beloved Hong Kong singer-songwriter, dies at 48".
  19. (21 June 2009). "為 Coco者". [[Apple Daily]].
  20. Vlessing, Etan. (5 July 2023). "Coco Lee, Disney 'Mulan' Star, Dies at 48".
  21. (21 October 2023). "樂壇天后李玟今午正式長眠武漢 現場率先曝光遍佈粉紫色海報".
  22. (25 October 2023). "李玟生前想葬馬爾地夫!媽超心疼反對...改長眠武漢「原因藏洋蔥」".
  23. (6 July 2023). "母含淚帶大! 李玟是遺腹子「沒見過爸爸」".
  24. Magazine, HK. (19 October 2016). "Coco Lee".
  25. (5 July 2023). "Coco Lee, Hong Kong-born singer-songwriter, dead at 48".
  26. (6 July 2023). "Coco Lee: The pioneering singer who charmed the world". BBC News.
  27. Vaziri, Aidin. "CoCo Lee, the Hong Kong-born singer famous for 'Crouching Tiger' song, dies at 48".
  28. "天后李玟享年 48 歲 舊金山華人追憶親民暖舉".
  29. McCarthy, Lauren. (5 July 2023). "Coco Lee, 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' and 'Mulan' Singer, Dies at 48". The New York Times.
  30. (4 September 2012). "CoCo李玟 – 三立 封面人物 (2006)".
  31. (17 February 2000). "Coco Lee Hits the Ground Running". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  32. Yung, Vanessa. (26 September 2013). "Loco for Coco: Singer reveals the rocker inside". [[South China Morning Post]].
  33. (7 July 2023). "Coco Lee never wanted to be a star, 'I was shy' — from the archive".
  34. St. Martin, Emily. (6 July 2023). "CoCo Lee, Hong Kong-born 'Mulan' singer, dies at 48".
  35. (21 October 2023). "李玟家姐李思林念悼詞哽咽失聲 讚CoCo如天使: 望不再有人傷害你".
  36. (5 July 2023). "Beloved singer's final post before tragic death".
  37. Everington, Keoni. (5 July 2023). "Hong Kong-American pop diva Coco Lee dies from suicide at 48 {{!}} Taiwan News {{!}} 5 July 2023 23:23:00".
  38. (6 July 2023). "致永遠的月光愛人{{pipe}}樂壇巨星 李玟CoCo{{pipe}}出道至今經典舞台合集 通過歌聲懷念一代唱跳天后{{pipe}}Run to You{{pipe}}月光愛人{{pipe}}Fly Me to the Moon{{pipe}}刀馬旦{{pipe}}明星 – YouTube".
  39. (12 July 2023). "【李玟骤逝】李玟原英文名不叫CoCo!艺名竟是这样来的 {{!}} 娱乐". 東方網 馬來西亞東方日報.
  40. (12 July 2023). "原本不叫CoCo! 李玟艺名乱取一炮而红 – 娱乐 – 国外娱乐 – 中港台". 星洲网 Sin Chew Daily Malaysia Latest News and Headlines.
  41. (6 July 2023). "The sudden death of Chinese-American singer Coco Lee at 48".
  42. (7 February 2017). "Coco Lee to sing greatest hits". Shenzhen Daily.
  43. Soo, Zen. (5 July 2023). "Coco Lee dies by suicide at age 48, her siblings say".
  44. (2018). "IBMYP國際文憑中學項目語言與文學課本一(繁體版)". 三聯書店(香港)有限公司.
  45. Xu, Amber. (2 January 2018). " Lotus Lantern and the Making of the First Commercial Animated Feature Film in Mainland China – An Interview with Animator Chang Guangxi".
  46. Taib, Shuib. (5 December 2000). "Coco Lee to perform here". [[New Straits Times]].
  47. (11 April 2019). "「當年進軍歐美, 我只是想證明華人也是很會唱歌的!」出道25週年始終正面陽光女神Coco李玟歌單大回顧".
  48. (5 July 2023). ""Michael Jackson & Friends"'s Hong Kong Singer Coco Lee died".
  49. "今天到永遠(平裝)From Today Till Forever".
  50. (18 December 1999). "Hot Dance Breakouts: Club Play".
  51. "Coco Lee, Hong Kong singer and songwriter who had international success, dies at 48".
  52. (5 July 2023). "Coco Lee: Disney star and pop singer dies at 48". BBC News.
  53. Valdes-Rodriguez, Alisa. (17 February 2000). "Coco Lee Hits the Ground Running". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  54. "CoCo Lee Bao Bei Dui Bu Qi (Baby I'm Sorry)".
  55. [https://www.discogs.com/CoCo-Lee-Promise/master/1256825 Discogs: Coco* – Promise]
  56. [https://mojim.com/twy100042x29x4.htm 魔鏡歌詞網 > 女生歌手 > 李玟 > So Crazy[影音光碟] > BABY對不起]
  57. "台灣年度百大歌曲". HitFM.
  58. (6 July 2023). "Coco Lee: Hong Kong pop singer's star moments, from singing at the Oscars to US$20 million wedding, as fans mourn her death at age 48".
  59. McClure, Steve. (24 May 2003). "MTV Asia Taps Multiple Media to Connect with Its Audiences". Nielsen Business Media, Inc..
  60. "Biography of CoCo Lee: The Wharton Global Alumni Forum-Hong Kong". whartonhongkong07.com.
  61. Ho, David. (6 July 2023). "The impact of Coco Lee's legacy".
  62. (30 November 2007). "Sun Nan and Coco Lee film 'Forever Friends' music video". The Beijing Organizing Committee for the Games of the XXIX Olympiad.
  63. (July 2009). "Coco Lee fondly recalls meeting Jacko and family and touring Neverland".
  64. "CoCo Lee East2West World Tour Live in Singapore 2010". [[Singapore Indoor Stadium]].
  65. "The theme song for the 14th FINA world championship". FINA World Championships Shanghai 2011 Organising Committee.
  66. (1 August 2011). "14th FINA World Championships – Shanghai 2011". [[FINA]].
  67. (18 December 2011). "Coco Lee performs on stage during Booey Lehoo Beijing Concert at...".
  68. (10 February 2012). "Backbeat: Stevie Wonder Brings the House Down @ Will.I.Am's Grammy Charity Concert".
  69. "《我是歌手4》李玟夺歌王 结束后李玟想吃冰淇淋(图)".
  70. (10 April 2016). "CoCo Lee wins I Am a Singer 4, Joey Yung is booted off amid cries of ballot rigging". The Straits Times.
  71. (17 April 2018). "Jessie J wins China's equivalent of The X Factor". The Telegraph.
  72. 迪士尼影業. (20 August 2020). "《花木蘭》經典主題曲〈自己〉配唱花絮".
  73. "YESASIA: Mulan Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (OST) (Taiwan Bonus Track Version) CD – Movie Soundtrack, Coco Lee, Universal Music Taiwan – Western / World Music – Free Shipping".
  74. Lim, Ruey Yan. (18 August 2023). "Late singer Coco Lee claimed she was mistreated on Sing! China: New video". The Straits Times.
  75. Ip, Cyril. (23 August 2023). "'Humiliation' claims by late music icon Coco Lee rock top China TV talent show".
  76. (18 August 2023). "'I was humiliated on stage': Late Coco Lee's rant about unfair treatment on Sing! China leaked, Entertainment News".
  77. (3 January 2023). "李玟PICO VR演唱会再唱《宝莲灯》主题曲, 重现千禧年"回忆杀"!". [[Toutiao]].
  78. "Remembering Coco Lee: 5 reasons the Mandopop icon will never be forgotten – the Hong Kong-born star made history as the first Chinese singer to break the US, supported Unicef and voiced Disney's Mulan".
  79. Kiew, Chelsea. (14 July 2020). "Singer Coco Lee's Weibo post talks about 'a broken heart'". [[The Straits Times]].
  80. (31 October 2011). "CoCo Lee weds wealthy Canadian fiance, throws glitzy wedding bash". [[Channel NewsAsia]].
  81. Yun, Tan Kee. (31 October 2011). "Coco, you deserve only the best". [[The New Paper]].
  82. (16 June 2016). "李玟掀胖妹心酸史 「還可以」拚自然生".
  83. (27 March 2018). "43歲李玟人工受孕 捱針抽卵子嗌好恐怖".
  84. (3 November 2023). "「我的妹妹李玟」: 得知老公出軌後馬上立遺囑, 二姐稱不善待李玟的人會有報應". [[Phoenix TV]].
  85. MGTV Music Channel. (23 February 2016). "我是歌手第4季抢鲜版 — 李玟金发碧眼俩女儿曝光 I AM A SINGER 4 【我是歌手官方频道】".
  86. (6 July 2023). "李玟離世{{pipe}}3度慘遭富商夫背叛 情人節曾暗示: 離開才是最好安排{{pipe}}壹蘋新聞網".
  87. (7 January 2023). "李玟11年婚姻觸礁胞姐不滿有人放料 拒公開有原因: 善良的人都容易受到欺負".
  88. (7 July 2023). "Coco Lee's estranged husband Bruce Rockowitz breaks his silence, calls her his 'beloved wife'". The Straits Times.
  89. "Coco Lee's estranged husband faced insults from her fans at late singer's cremation service".
  90. (6 July 2023). "李玟老公偷腥!原定七月離婚 友人: 疑似愛到極點才選擇輕生".
  91. "Coco Lee's estranged husband Bruce Rockowitz attends memorial service with daughters".
  92. Lim, Ruey Yan. (9 March 2023). "Singer Coco Lee shares video of her learning to walk again after surgery". [[The Straits Times]].
  93. (6 July 2023). "李玟輕生離世 終年48歲 胞姊李思林: 她不再受抑鬱症煎熬 – 20230706SHOWBIZ".
  94. Hoi-ying, Lo. (6 July 2023). "Singer Coco Lee deserves official recognition in Hong Kong, sister says".
  95. (6 July 2023). "李玟爆生前罹癌!好友哀悼心疼揭「默默抗癌內幕」二姊回應了".
  96. (13 July 2023). "【李玟逝世】生前與母合照曝光 密友公開李玟遺作錄音過程".
  97. Mok, Danny. (5 July 2023). "Hong Kong diva Coco Lee dies; 'her rays of light will last forever,' sisters say".
  98. Tsang, Denise. (1 August 2023). "Exclusive: Husband of late Hong Kong star Coco Lee speaks out after singer's fans confront him".
  99. (3 November 2023). "李玟生前「不只輕生過1次」 醒來第1句話嚇壞家人...Bruce沒探望".
  100. (9 August 2023). "(獨家)李玟6月酒店輕生未遂 腥夫漠不關心「隔天飛夏威夷度假」".
  101. (9 August 2023). "李玟6月曾在酒店輕生未遂 Bruce照赴夏威夷原來有重大苦衷".
  102. (31 August 2023). "Coco Lee Had Attempted Suicide More Than Once – JayneStars.com".
  103. Yeo, Shu Hui. (6 July 2023). "'Please give her a chance': Coco Lee's sister said mum refused to remove life support in hospital".
  104. Guzman, Chad de. (6 July 2023). "CoCo Lee's Death Spotlights Mental Health Struggles in Hong Kong".
  105. (5 July 2023). "Pop diva Coco Lee, who has been battling depression, dies at age 48". [[The Straits Times]].
  106. "快訊/李玟驚傳過世!享年48歲 親姊姊發文證實噩耗 TVBS新聞網".
  107. (6 July 2023). "【李玟離世】李玟二姊親述妹妹生死一刻 李思林為年邁母親感心痛【有片】 — 香港經濟日報 — 娛樂 — D230706".
  108. (5 July 2023). "CoCo Lee, iconic Hong Kong singer and 'Mulan' voice actress, dies at 48".
  109. "李玟長眠武漢 天使雕像遺愛人間 李媽媽心如刀絞 指CoCo生前好痛苦 – 20231022 – 娛樂".
  110. 中時新聞網. (6 July 2023). "李玟追思會時間曝光 親姊: 要先等解剖官驗屍 – 娛樂".
  111. 寧于晨. (7 July 2023). "不是輕生! 李玟被爆「嘔吐物嗆入肺」窒息身亡 二姊再次回應了".
  112. Lo, Hoi-ying. (6 July 2023). "Singer Coco Lee deserves official recognition in Hong Kong, sister says".
  113. (21 July 2023). "Family of late Hong Kong singer Coco Lee appeals to fans and friends to donate to 2 charities instead of sending flowers to vigil".
  114. "李玟Coco逝世 追思會731全球直播 李思林盼fans陪妹妹走最後一後路".
  115. (27 July 2023). "Pallbearers for Coco Lee's funeral do not include her estranged husband".
  116. (1 August 2023). "Weeping family, friends and fans send Coco Lee off to crematorium after last rites, Entertainment News".
  117. "Coco Lee's sisters break down at memorial service, shouting someone 'caused my sister to die'".
  118. "李玟設靈 李思林激動爆喊: 佢害死咗我個妹".
  119. (August 2023). "東張西望{{pipe}}華語樂壇「天后」李玟出殯, 親友隨靈柩送逝者最後一程, TVBUSA, 民生".
  120. "李玟老公Bruce險被圍毆!吐這句粉絲全怒暴動 哭喊攔車敲窗不讓走".
  121. "Late singer Coco Lee's estranged husband says at crematorium he loved her".
  122. Lim, Ruey Yan. (15 August 2023). "Coco Lee's husband refutes talk that he did not care for her". The Straits Times.
  123. Chan, Minnie. (21 October 2023). "Hong Kong pop star Coco Lee laid to rest in central China's Wuhan".
  124. 娛樂星聞. (22 October 2023). "李玟下葬武漢原因曝!「以另一種方式與父親相聚」 家屬將調查死因 {{!}} 娛樂星聞".
  125. (5 Jul 2023). "CoCo Lee dead by suicide: 'Mulan' singer in Mandarin version was 48".
  126. McCarthy, Lauren. (5 July 2023). "Coco Lee, 'Crouching Tiger' and 'Mulan' Singer, Dies at 48". The New York Times.
  127. (27 December 2023). "【APMA 2023】亚洲流行音乐大奖2023年度获奖名单(完整版)".
  128. (6 February 2010). "北京流行音乐典礼举行 李玟张靓颖获最佳女歌手".
  129. (6 July 2023). "网友为李玟唯一主演电影重新打分: 当年看着就笑, 可再也笑不出来了".
  130. Coonan, Clifford. (28 April 2014). "Ricky Martin, David Beckham, CoCo Lee Shine at China Music Awards".
  131. (4 January 1997). "第八屆金曲獎入圍名單".
  132. (3 January 1998). "第九屆金曲獎入圍名單".
  133. (27 November 2004). "Lycra Style Awards 2004".
  134. Everington, Keoni. (5 July 2023). "Hong Kong-American pop diva Coco Lee dies from suicide at 48".
  135. (5 July 2023). "李玟生前5度上《康熙》 小S悲痛「最謙虛的天才」!1.8萬名網友看哭".
  136. (17 June 2014). "2005.04.05康熙來了完整版(第五季第59集) 性感天后 coco-李玟".
  137. (16 May 2015). "2006.10.02康熙來了完整版 跳舞吧!李玟".
  138. (12 July 2021). "2009.08.05康熙來了完整版 好久不見COCO李玟".
  139. (26 February 2022). "2010-02-22 新世代宅男女神舞蹈大賽!(上)".
  140. (17 June 2013). "2013.06.17康熙來了完整版 當歌手和製作人跨界當評審?".
  141. (5 July 2023). "9 years ago, Coco Lee graced the stage at the Chinese Idol Finale".
  142. "我是歌手4 李玟 Coco 单曲合集 I Am a Singer 4 【我是歌手官方频道】".
  143. Shackleton, Liz. (5 July 2023). "Coco Lee Dies: 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' & 'Mulan' Singer Was 48".
  144. Cohen, Rebecca. "Coco Lee, pop singer and star of Mandarin version of Disney's 'Mulan,' dead at 48".
  145. (28 April 2022). "Cantopop Show 'Infinity and Beyond' Proves Nostalgia Is the New Cool — RADII".
  146. "[FULL] "Infinity and Beyond 声生不息丨MangoTV Eng Sub".
  147. "聲生不息 (TVB)".
  148. (29 September 2022). "Coco Lee Yells at Sing! China Director on Set, Calls Competition Unfair".
  149. "Multi-sub正片【2022中国好声音】十年有一 破晓新"声"!丨刘德华 李荣浩 许茹芸 李克勤 廖昌永 黄霄雲 希林娜依高 Sing! China 2022".
  150. (17 August 2023). "李玟生前控訴《中國好聲音》黑幕音檔流出 「當歌手28年第一次被這樣對待」{{pipe}}壹蘋新聞網".

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

1975-births2023-deaths2023-suicides20th-century-american-singers20th-century-american-women-singers20th-century-hong-kong-women-singers21st-century-american-actresses21st-century-american-singers21st-century-american-women-singers550-music-artistsactresses-from-the-san-francisco-bay-area20th-century-american-buddhistsamerican-contemporary-r&b-singersamerican-dance-musiciansamerican-dancers-of-asian-descentamerican-female-dancersamerican-film-actressesamerican-hip-hop-singersamerican-musicians-of-chinese-descentamerican-musicians-of-hong-kong-descentamerican-soul-singersamerican-women-hip-hop-musiciansamerican-women-record-producerscantopop-singersdancers-from-californiaenglish-language-hong-kong-singersepic-records-artistsfemale-suicideshong-kong-buddhistshong-kong-emigrants-to-the-united-stateshong-kong-film-actresseshong-kong-hip-hop-musicianshong-kong-mandopop-singershong-kong-record-producershong-kong-women-songwritershong-kong-television-actressesmusicians-from-the-san-francisco-bay-areanew-talent-singing-awards-contestantsrecord-producers-from-californiasony-bmg-artistssongwriters-from-californiasuicides-in-hong-konguniversity-of-california,-irvine-alumniwarner-music-group-artists21st-century-american-buddhists