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・ Hiroo District, Hokkaido
・ Hiroo Ishii
・ Hiroo Kanamori
・ Hiroo Kawai
・ Hiroo Onoda
・ Hiroo Shima
・ Hiroo Station
・ Hiroo Unoura
・ Hiroo Yamagata
・ Hiroo Ōhara
・ Hiroo, Hokkaido
・ Hiroo, Shibuya
・ Hirooka Station
・ Hirooki Arai
・ Hirooki Goto
Hiromi Hayakawa
・ Hiromi Hirata
・ Hiromi Igarashi
・ Hiromi Ikeda
・ Hiromi Ishikawa
・ Hiromi Isozaki
・ Hiromi Isozaki (athlete)
・ Hiromi Itō
・ Hiromi Iwanaga
・ Hiromi Iwasaki
・ Hiromi Katsura
・ Hiromi Kawabata
・ Hiromi Kawakami
・ Hiromi Kobayashi
・ Hiromi Kobayashi (golfer)


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Hiromi Hayakawa : ウィキペディア英語版
Hiromi Hayakawa

Marla Hiromi Hayakawa Salas (born October 19, 1982), known professionally as Hiromi Hayakawa, is a Mexican singer and actress who began her music career as a contestant in the reality show ''La Academia''. She works primarily in musical theatre, however she has had television roles and occasionally works as a voice actress.
==Biography==
Hayakawa was born in Fukuoka to Alfonso Javier Hayakawa, who is of Japanese descent and a native of Torreón, Coahuila, and Lourdes Elsa Salas, from the city of Chihuahua. Her parents resided in Fukuoka for the reason being that her father studied Industrial Engineering there. They returned to Mexico when Hiromi was only two years old, and at the time, her mother was pregnant with her second child, Kaori, Japanese word for "perfume".
When she attended a casting call for ''La Academia'', Hayakawa scored 9.7 points out of a possible ten points. Though, before competing in ''La Academia'', Hayakawa studied Industrial Engineering and Systems at the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education in Coahuila. She decided to attend the casting for ''La Academia'' because, as with most people who attend the castings, she saw it as a chance of pursuing a musical career.
Hayakawa left ''La Academia'' after the thirteenth concert; though she was later re-cast and became the sixth runner-up as the winner. The last song she sang as an official contestant was "La Playa" by La Oreja de Van Gogh. Two weeks after her expulsion, Hayakawa was given the opportunity to return to La Academia and become a finalist. Hayakawa and two other ex-students (Ricardo Hernández Quiñones and Dulce Lopez Rodriguez) were given a song which they had to perform in the next concert. The public would then vote on who they wanted to return to the finale instead of voting on who was going to be expelled. In the end Dulce Lopez Rodriguez won and went to the finale where she won 2nd place. One of the judges, Lolita Cortez, was very disappointed in the results.
In 2012, she voiced Mérida, the protagonist of Pixar's ''Brave'', for the Latin American dub.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://es-us.omg.yahoo.com/noticias/hiromi-reto-voz-m%C3%A9rida-valiente-193800107.html )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Hiromi Hayakawa」の詳細全文を読む



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