Reiko Chiba

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Reiko Chiba
千葉麗子
Born (1975-01-08) January 8, 1975 (age 49)
Osaka Prefecture, Japan
Spouse(s) Tetsuhito Kirihara (1998–present)

Reiko Chiba (千葉 麗子 Chiba Reiko?, born on January 8, 1975) is a Japanese actress, voice actress, gravure idol, and occasional J-Pop singer.

Biography

Reiko Chiba was born in Osaka Prefecture, and raised in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan. She started her career as a model in 1991 before making her acting debut in the 1992 Super Sentai series Kyōryū Sentai Zyuranger as Mei/Ptera Ranger. When the series was adapted into the US version Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, it aired in Japan where Chiba, herself, re-dubbed both Ptera Ranger and the US footage of actress Amy Jo Johnson who played her character, now known as Kimberly Hart/Pink Ranger. After the end of the series, Chiba made her J-Pop debut on April 7, 1993 as a member of Aurora Gonin Musume. She also did a cameo voice appearance as herself in the anime movie Fatal Fury: The Motion Picture, performed the voice of Cham Cham in the Samurai Shodown video game series, and had a spot in the nightly radio show Akihabara Young Denkikan. Chiba retired from the entertainment industry in 1995.

Personal life

When she married Tetsuhito Kirihara in 1998, her legal name became Reiko Kirihara (桐原 麗子 Kirihara Reiko?). However, she continues to be known by either her maiden name or "Chibarei" in business and other public contexts. Since her marriage and the birth of a son in 1999, Chiba has adopted a more mature public persona. She is now active as a certified yoga instructor, teaching yoga classes and issuing a series of instructional books and videos. She also continues to pose for publications such as Weekly Playboy. Chiba is also the public face of the corporation Cherrybabe, Inc.

In 2011, Chiba spoke out about enduring years of depression and has become an advocate of Kokoro no Mimi (こころの耳?), the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare's mental health portal website.[1]

Filmography

TV series

TV special

Film

Anime OVA

Video game

References

External links