Kimberley Chen
Kimberley Chen (Chinese: 陳芳語; born 23 May 1994) is an Australian singer-songwriter, actress, and model of Malaysian-Chinese heritage, raised in Melbourne and currently based in Taiwan.[1][2] She debuted as a solo artist in 2012 and has released Mandopop albums, including the 2024 release kiki, which emphasizes themes of sustainability and coexistence.[3] Chen first gained acting experience portraying Young Nala in a production of Disney's The Lion King and has since appeared in Taiwanese dramas and modeled.[2] Her career faced a major turning point in October 2021 with the release of the satirical song "Fragile" (玻璃心), a collaboration with Malaysian rapper Namewee that parodied Chinese nationalism, referenced COVID-19 origins, Uyghur labor issues, and mocked Xi Jinping, resulting in widespread censorship across Chinese platforms, deletion of her online presence, and exclusion from the mainland market.[1][4][5] Despite the backlash, Chen expressed no regrets, stating pride in aligning with historical truth and freedom of expression, and performed portions of the banned track at events like the 2022 Copenhagen Democracy Summit.[4][6]Early life
Upbringing and family influences
Kimberley Chen was born on 23 May 1994 in Melbourne, Australia, to Malaysian-Chinese immigrant parents originally from Sarawak, Malaysia.[1] [7] Growing up in Melbourne's multicultural environment, she developed an early interest in music within a supportive family setting that valued performance and public expression.[8] Her father, a wedding singer, played a key role in nurturing her talent, coaching her from a young age and facilitating initial performances.[9] By age four, Chen was singing covers of Johnny Cash and Frank Sinatra classics at the Camberwell Market, marking the start of her exposure to live audiences.[8] She also participated in charity concerts and club appearances, often with her father's guidance, which built her foundational skills in Mandarin and English-language music.[4] Chen has a younger brother, with family photos depicting shared childhood outings to amusement parks alongside their parents, highlighting a close-knit household dynamic.[10] In 2009, at age 15, her family relocated from Melbourne to Taipei, Taiwan, to pursue professional opportunities in the Mandarin pop industry, reflecting their commitment to her career aspirations over established roots in Australia.[7] This move, supported by her parents' immigrant adaptability, instilled in her a resilience and value system shaped by Australian upbringing, including a strong sense of individual conviction.[4]Musical beginnings and training
Chen demonstrated an early aptitude for music, beginning vocal training under her father's guidance at the age of four and performing regularly at charity concerts and local clubs in Melbourne. She also pursued piano studies during childhood, though she later expressed regret over discontinuing lessons after initial struggles with technique due to small hand size, which hindered her performance in early exams.[11] Her formal education included attendance at Tintern Grammar School and the Victorian College of the Arts in Melbourne, where she developed foundational skills in performing arts.[12] Between November 2008 and June 2009, at age 14, Chen underwent independent training in New York City focused on singing, dancing, acting, and recording, mentored by instructor Yolanda Wyns.[13] This period preceded her relocation to Taiwan in 2009, where she signed her first recording contract with Sony Music at age 15 and began formal Mandarin-language musical development.[9]Professional career
Debut and initial success (2012–2013)
Chen's professional music career began with the release of her self-titled debut album Kimberley on April 27, 2012, distributed by Sony Music Taiwan.[14] The album comprised 11 tracks, blending Mandarin pop with English-language songs, and featured the lead single "Ai Ni" (Love You), a ballad that highlighted her vocal range and emotional delivery.[15] "Ai Ni" marked her breakthrough hit, gaining traction in Taiwan's Mandopop scene through radio airplay and digital platforms. The debut album received positive reception for its mix of youthful energy and mature songwriting, contributing to Chen's early visibility in the Taiwanese market.[16] Commercially, Kimberley performed solidly, ranking 20th among Chinese music bestsellers on YesAsia for 2012, reflecting demand from international buyers of Taiwanese releases.[17] This initial output established Chen as an emerging bilingual artist capable of appealing to both local and overseas audiences. Building on this momentum, Chen issued her second studio album Kimbonomics (金式代) on December 25, 2013, again via Sony Music.[18] The 10-track set included singles like "Fen Shou Shuo Ai Ni" (Breaking Up To Show I Love You), fusing rock elements with ballad structures to showcase her evolving style.[19] Critics noted the album's catchy melodies and Chen's improved production polish, aiding her consolidation as a rising Mandopop figure during this period.[20]Reality competition and setbacks (2017–2018)
In late 2017, Chen released her third studio album, #Tag Me, comprising eight tracks blending Mandopop, synth-pop, and trap elements, under Sharp Music and distributed by Universal Music Taiwan.[21] The album featured singles such as "我不浪漫" and "Tag Me," reflecting her evolving style but yielding limited commercial impact compared to her earlier hits.[22] To revitalize her career amid stagnant momentum, Chen's management entered her into the 2018 Tencent Video survival program Produce 101 China (also known as Chuang 101), a competitive reality series selecting 101 female trainees to form a temporary 11-member girl group through public voting and performances.[23] Broadcast from April to June 2018, the show demanded rigorous training in vocals, dance, and stage presence, with weekly eliminations based on rankings. Chen advanced through initial rounds, showcasing her vocal abilities in group stages, but faced challenges including reported interpersonal tensions and unequal resource allocation among contestants.[1][23] Chen was eliminated in episode 9 on May 26, 2018, finishing in 26th place out of 101 participants, thus missing the debut lineup of Rocket Girls 101, which formed on June 23, 2018.[23] This early exit marked a significant professional setback, as the program's high visibility offered a potential pathway to mainland Chinese markets, yet her non-debut amplified prior struggles with inconsistent bookings and market penetration beyond Taiwan.[7] Despite gaining some fan recognition during the show, the outcome underscored ongoing hurdles in scaling her independent artist profile in a competitive industry dominated by agency-backed idols.[1]Independent releases and market challenges (2019–2020)
In 2019, Chen severed ties with Sharp Music after the label breached their contract, transitioning to independent music production and distribution.[24] This shift enabled her to release targeted singles outside major label constraints, including the Mandarin ballad "我可以不在乎的你" (I Could Care Less About You) on July 19, which served as an insert track for the popular Chinese drama Go Go Squid!. Later that year, on November 8, she collaborated with fellow artist Jason Chen on an acoustic cover of "10,000 Hours," originally by Dan + Shay and Justin Bieber, distributed as a single that highlighted her vocal versatility in a stripped-down format. The independent phase brought promotional hurdles, as Sharp Music continued defamatory campaigns against Chen via media outlets despite her decision to withdraw legal action in favor of reconciliation.[24] This ongoing conflict undermined her visibility and credibility in the competitive Mandopop market, where label-backed artists typically dominate airplay and endorsements. Chen's self-managed efforts focused on digital platforms and drama tie-ins, yet lacked the institutional support for widespread touring or advertising, restricting commercial reach amid a saturated industry reliant on established networks. By early 2020, these challenges persisted into the global COVID-19 outbreak, which halted live events and physical releases across the music sector, further constraining independent artists' revenue streams from performances and merchandise. Chen navigated this by signing with Chynahouse, a subsidiary of Taiwan's KKBOX, later that year, marking the end of her brief independent stint and paving the way for her fourth studio album 公主病 (Princess Tendencies).[25]Recent projects and international expansion (2021–present)
In September 2021, Chen released her fifth studio album wfh, featuring seven tracks including collaborations such as "no biggie" with EggPlantEgg's 阿斌, emphasizing themes of resilience amid personal and professional challenges.[26][27] This followed her signing with ChynaHouse under KKBOX in 2020, though subsequent mainland China restrictions limited distribution there.[28] In 2022, she issued her sixth album Up on the Roof on September 2, comprising seven songs like "By My Side" and "(Still) Love You," produced under ChynaHouse and distributed via Sony Music Taiwan.[28][29] Chen's international presence grew through performances beyond Taiwan, highlighted by her debut at Thailand's Big Mountain Music Festival on December 10, 2023, where she became the first Taiwanese solo female artist to perform, drawing crowds with Mandopop sets amid the event's regional draw.[30] This appearance signaled expansion into Southeast Asian markets, leveraging festival circuits less constrained by geopolitical tensions affecting her China access. In June 2024, she launched her seventh album kiki on June 25, a 10-track Contemporary R&B project exploring sustainability and coexistence, with singles like "Younger" and "自己愛情自己愛" released via official channels.[31][3][32] By 2025, Chen announced the gemini tour, a bilingual concert series starting November 2 in Taipei at Legacy TERA, aimed at bilingual audiences and potentially extending regionally to capitalize on her Australian-Taiwanese heritage and English-Mandarin versatility.[33] She also released the album 我們的愛 (Our Love) and single "Toxic Love" in July, continuing her output of crossover pop with thematic depth.[34] These efforts reflect a pivot toward independent Taiwanese production and selective international engagements, sustaining her career amid prior mainland market exclusion.Controversies and public disputes
"Fragile" collaboration and censorship backlash (2021)
In October 2021, Kimberley Chen collaborated with Malaysian rapper Namewee (real name Wee Meng Chee) on the satirical song "Fragile" (Chinese: 玻璃心, Bōlì xīn), released on October 15 via YouTube. The track, which amassed over 30 million views within weeks, uses pop melodies and playful lyrics to critique Chinese nationalism, censorship, and government policies, including references to Taiwan's de facto independence ("inseparable but not lacking one bit"), forced labor in Xinjiang cotton fields ("picking cotton for 1,000 RMB a month"), COVID-19 origins involving bats and wet markets, and a veiled jab at Xi Jinping via Winnie the Pooh imagery.[35][36][37] The song's content provoked swift backlash from Chinese authorities, who deemed it an insult to national dignity and banned it across mainland platforms shortly after release, alongside deleting Chen's and Namewee's Weibo accounts. State media and online nationalists, often termed "Little Pinks," mobilized against the artists, with some accusing them of separatism and anti-China sentiment, though the track's overt political mockery—such as portraying fragile egos unable to tolerate dissent—highlighted sensitivities around enforced narratives on Taiwan, Uyghur issues, and pandemic accountability. Chen, who had built a career in the Chinese market through shows like Produce 101 China, faced professional isolation in China but gained support from Taiwanese audiences and international observers critical of Beijing's content controls.[1][36][38] Chen publicly stated she had "no regrets" about participating, emphasizing free expression in interviews and on social media, where she parodied the ban by adapting the song's lyrics to mock her Weibo deletion ("I'm so fragile, Weibo banned me"). The incident underscored the risks for ethnic Chinese artists navigating Beijing's censorship regime, which prioritizes ideological conformity over artistic output, leading to Chen's pivot toward Taiwan-based activities, including performing excerpts of "Fragile" at events like the 2022 Taiwan International Hot Air Balloon Festival.[2][6][1]Experiences on Produce 101 China
Kimberley Chen participated in the 2018 season of Tencent's Produce 101 China, a survival competition aimed at forming a temporary girl group, at the recommendation of her management company to broaden her appeal in the mainland Chinese market. Representing Universal Music Taiwan, she showcased vocal and performance skills from her prior solo career but was eliminated in episode 9, finishing in 26th place overall.[23][39] Chen later detailed several instances of alleged mistreatment by production staff. Trainees' phones were reportedly confiscated for four months, with any calls requiring staff permission, and rooms were under constant surveillance, leading to reprimands for covering cameras; in one case, footage of a trainee changing clothes was broadcast despite objections. Dietary accommodations for her vegetarian preferences were not honored, resulting in anemia that necessitated hospitalization. She also claimed staff pressured trainees to sign blank documents and to misrepresent their nationalities in interviews.[23] Production practices reportedly included deliberate sleep deprivation to capture fatigued appearances on camera, such as waking trainees at 4 a.m. and forcing them to wait idly for three hours, combined with late-night interviews extending until 3-4 a.m., after which younger participants were instructed to forgo rest for makeup retouches; energy drinks like Red Bull became a common reliance. Chen and her roommates resisted by locking doors and using headphones to sleep, prompting unsuccessful attempts by staff to involve hotel management in removing the locks, though this defiance correlated with reduced screen time in subsequent episodes. She stated that noncompliance with production directives resulted in edited-out footage: "If you don’t listen to the production team, they cut all your scenes."[39][23] A notable incident involved an altercation with fellow trainee Re Yina (also known as Ye Rina), reportedly from Xinjiang, over access to showers; according to Chen, the trainee cursed at her and threatened her with a chair, an event she described as one of several staged conflicts encouraged by production to generate drama. This clash, along with her perceived rebelliousness, contributed to limited airtime and her eventual exit from the program, after which she expressed relief. These accounts, shared by Chen in post-show interviews years later, highlight tensions between trainee welfare and the show's competitive format, though production has not publicly responded.[23][40]Responses to personal criticisms
In 2019, Kimberley Chen shared social media photographs of herself in a bikini while walking her dogs near a train station, which drew criticism from some netizens who viewed the attire as inappropriate for the location.[41] During a September 23, 2020, interview while promoting her singles "9 Million" and "4am Calls," Chen defended her choice by explaining the context, stating she was en route to swim with her pets and questioning the backlash: "I was bringing my dogs to go swimming, so I was wearing swimwear... do you mean I can't wear a bikini to go swimming?" She also criticized the focus on her body as "disgraceful" and asserted, "Is there a problem with the clothes I wear? Why should I pay attention to what I wear?"[41] Amid the 2021 "Fragile" controversy, online detractors revisited her 2018 decision to withdraw from a Taiwanese concert with only four days' notice to join Produce 101 China, labeling it unprofessional and suggesting she leveraged subsequent controversies for relevance after underperforming on the program.[42] Chen addressed such attacks indirectly via Instagram, posting a message emphasizing compassion: "I hope that everyone can have empathy. Don’t hurt or attack others deliberately."[42]Political and social views
Stance on free speech and Taiwan identity
Kimberley Chen, an Australian-born singer who has resided in Taiwan since her youth, has consistently affirmed her Taiwanese identity amid tensions with Chinese authorities and nationalists. In responses to backlash following her 2021 collaboration on the song "Fragile" (玻璃心), which satirized Chinese online nationalists and referenced Taiwan's sovereignty, Chen emphasized her pride in her Taiwanese roots, rejecting demands to disavow them.[1][4] Chinese censors banned the track within days of its October 15 release, citing its perceived challenges to Beijing's claims over Taiwan, leading to the removal of Chen's music catalog from platforms like Tencent Music.[6] Chen has faced prior accusations of pro-Taiwan independence sentiments, including from 2019 incidents where she supported Taiwanese sports teams, which nationalists interpreted as separatist.[43] Chen's advocacy for free speech emerged prominently through her involvement in "Fragile," which she described as a stand against censorship and nationalist intolerance, stating she has "no regrets" about the parody despite the professional fallout in China.[2][1] She has been vocal on the issue since her teenage years, participating in events like the 2022 Copenhagen Democracy Summit, where she performed excerpts of the banned song to highlight suppression of expression.[1][6] In a November 2021 interview, Chen expressed pride in aligning with democratic values, declaring herself "proud to be on the right side of history" for resisting Beijing's content controls, which extended to suspending her Weibo account and erasing her prior hits from Chinese streaming services.[4] Her appearances at forums such as the Oslo Freedom Forum further underscore her commitment to artistic autonomy and opposition to authoritarian censorship in the Mandopop industry.[44]Advocacy for animal rights and sustainability
Kimberley Chen adopted a vegan diet approximately 14 years prior to 2024, having initially been vegetarian before learning about the cruelty in egg and dairy production, which prompted her full transition to veganism to minimize harm to animals.[45][46] She has consistently promoted vegan living as a means to advance animal welfare, emphasizing personal responsibility in reducing animal exploitation through dietary choices.[47] In recognition of her promotional efforts for veganism and animal rights, including public campaigns and social media advocacy, PETA Asia named Chen its 2024 Person of the Year on December 11, 2024.[48][49] Chen collaborated with PETA Asia on a campaign launched August 27, 2024, opposing the captivity of marine animals in entertainment parks, where she urged avoidance of facilities confining dolphins, whales, and other species in concrete tanks, arguing that such environments deny them natural freedoms compared to ocean habitats.[47][50] In July 2024, her music video for "Love Me More" from the album kiki incorporated PETA footage of animal exploitation to highlight abuse in industries, integrating advocacy into her artistic output.[3] Her advocacy extends to sustainability, framed through veganism's environmental benefits and broader coexistence themes in kiki, which promotes reduced ecological impact via ethical consumption and care for planetary resources alongside animal welfare.[3][51] Chen links these efforts to long-term planetary health, viewing animal rights as interconnected with sustainable living practices that mitigate environmental degradation from animal agriculture.[52]Personal life
Residences and relationships
Chen was born on May 23, 1994, in Melbourne, Australia, to a Malaysian-Chinese family, where she grew up and began performing publicly as a child at local markets.[9] Her family relocated to Taiwan in 2009 to support her emerging music career, and she has resided there continuously since, establishing herself as a Taiwan-based artist.[2] In her personal relationships, Chen publicly confirmed dating Taiwanese singer Albert Lin (林利豪) in May 2020 after initially being spotted together.[53] The couple separated in December 2021 due to differing views and future goals, as verified by her label ChynaHouse to Taiwanese media; the breakup was formally announced in April 2022.[53] No subsequent romantic partnerships have been reported.[54]Health and lifestyle
Chen has followed a vegan diet since approximately 2010, motivated by concerns over animal cruelty in the egg and dairy industries.[3][45] She has publicly shared this transition as part of her broader commitment to animal welfare, including campaigns against captive marine animals and promotion of plant-based living.[55] In recognition of these efforts, she was named PETA Asia's 2024 Person of the Year.[55] Beyond diet, Chen engages in wakesurfing as a key aspect of her lifestyle, describing it as a pursuit that helped her rediscover passion amid professional pressures.[56][57] She promotes the sport to empower women, viewing it as a means to build resilience and self-improvement through physical activity on water.[56] Her advocacy extends to sustainability practices integrated into daily life, aligning with themes in her 2024 album kiki.[3]Discography
Studio albums
Chen's debut studio album, Kimberley (also known as 首張同名專輯), was released on April 27, 2012, by Sony Music Taiwan, featuring a mix of English and Mandarin tracks produced shortly before her 18th birthday.[58] Her second album, Kimbonomics (金式代), followed on December 13, 2013, incorporating pop and R&B elements with 10 tracks.[59] After a period of reduced output, she independently released #Tag Me in 2017, marking a shift toward digital distribution.[60] Subsequent albums include Princess Tendencies (公主病) in 2020, wfh in 2021, and Up on the Roof in 2022, reflecting personal themes amid her evolving career post-reality television appearances.[61] More recent releases are kiki in 2024 and 我們的愛 (Our Love) in 2025, available primarily through streaming platforms.[61]| Title | Release date | Label/Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Kimberley | April 27, 2012 | Sony Music Taiwan [58] |
| Kimbonomics | December 13, 2013 | Sony Music Taiwan [59] |
| #Tag Me | 2017 | Independent/digital [60] |
| Princess Tendencies | 2020 | Independent [61] |
| wfh | 2021 | Independent [61] |
| Up on the Roof | 2022 | Independent [61] |
| kiki | 2024 | Independent [61] |
| 我們的愛 | 2025 | Independent [61] |
Singles and EPs
Chen debuted as a solo artist with the single "愛你" (Ai Ni) on April 23, 2012, which served as the lead track from her self-titled debut album and accumulated over 155 million plays on YouTube Music.[62][63] In 2017, she issued "管你的擁抱 fyf" (Whatever Your Hug), a single tied to the KKTV original series Re: Never Been, marking a shift toward more mature themes in her output.[64] A pivotal release came in 2021 with "玻璃心" (Fragile), a collaboration with rapper Namewee criticizing superficial celebrity culture, which amassed 87 million plays on YouTube Music and earned a nomination for Song of the Year at the 33rd Golden Melody Awards.[62] Post her 2018 stint on Produce 101 China, Chen leaned into independent releases, including the 2020 mixtape Princess Tendencies (公主病), a self-produced collection of 31 hip-hop and R&B tracks exploring personal reinvention, released digitally on December 4, 2020, via platforms like Spotify.[65][66] In 2022, she dropped the live EP After Hours, comprising four acoustic performances such as "in my toes" and "after the rain," captured in intimate post-show settings and issued on July 19 via ChynaHouse.[67] Subsequent singles included "Good on You" and "Younger" in 2024, followed by "黎明" (Dawn) later that year.[61] Into 2025, releases accelerated with "花季" (Flower Season), "我討厭你的味道" (I Hate Your Scent), "侵愛的" (Invasive Love), and "Toxic Love," the latter emphasizing themes of tumultuous relationships.[61][34]| Title | Release Year | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 愛你 (Ai Ni) | 2012 | Lead debut single; 155M+ YouTube Music plays.[62] |
| 管你的擁抱 fyf (Whatever Your Hug) | 2017 | Tied to TV series theme.[64] |
| 玻璃心 (Fragile) (with Namewee) | 2021 | Viral hit; Golden Melody Award nominee.[62] |
| Good on You | 2024 | Independent single.[61] |
| Younger | 2024 | English-language track.[61] |
| 黎明 (Dawn) | 2024 | Mandarin single.[61] |
| 花季 (Flower Season) | 2025 | Recent release.[61] |
| 我討厭你的味道 (I Hate Your Scent) | 2025 | Explores relational tension.[61] |
| 侵愛的 (Invasive Love) | 2025 | Co-composed with Tao Shan; lyrics by Li Jieming. |
| Toxic Love | 2025 | Focuses on addictive dynamics.[34] |
| Title | Release Year | Track Count | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Princess Tendencies (公主病) | 2020 | 31 | Self-written mixtape in hip-hop/R&B style.[65] |
| After Hours (live) | 2022 | 4 | Acoustic live recordings post-performances. |