It looks like R&B singer Che’Nelle is getting a serious marketing push. Currently the poster girl for popular lingerie brand Peach John, she performed a mini concert in front of the 109 building in the middle of Shibuya yesterday. She and her back dancers wore Peach John as she performed “First Love,” the song that is currently used in the company’s TV commercials, and “I Fell in Love With the DJ” from a just released special edition of her album “Things Happen For a Reason”. It’s been a year since the album was a hit here, spending two weeks at the top of the Oricon foreign artist chart, and “…DJ” is described by EMI as a “mega hit” and a “girl’s anthem.” Yet the local media can’t seem to agree on Che’Nelle’s background, with some saying she’s from Australia, others calling her an American and none seem to have any idea of her age. She was actually born in 1983 in Malaysia to a Chinese Malaysian father and Indian-Dutch mother, and her real name is Cheryline Lim. She and her family moved to Perth, Australia when she was ten.
She certainly has her young female fans in Japan, where she is called the “R&B Diamond.” Many fans gathered yesterday in front of 109, the fashion mecca where Che’Nelle says she often shops, and no doubt they’ll be heading to Studio Alta in Shinjuku this afternoon, where she’s scheduled to make an appearance on the live “Waratte Iitomo” variety show.

V6 member Okada Junichi (27) and actress Aoi Yu (23) are the latest celebrity couple, according to today’s issue of weekly magazine “Friday.” The pair were recently spotted out shopping together and having dinner at Aoi’s apartment in Tokyo. They were photographed sharing an umbrella, which in Japan is considered the very symbol of a romantic relationship. Management for both stars have refused to comment on the story but Aoi’s agency said they have been friends since working together on the 2005 TBS drama series “Tiger & Dragon.” Sources say they have had an on-again, off-again relationship since then. One of the established
Canadian superstar Celine Dion (40) is to provide the Japanese language theme song for the upcoming movie “Maboroshi no Yamataikoku.” A bilingual version of the song “A World to Believe In,” a duet with local singer Ito Yuna (25), was released as a single by Ito in January. The original was included on Dion’s album “Taking Chances,” but she has recorded a new, totally Japanese version. Meeting with Japanese reporters this week in Montreal (photo), where she is currently on tour, she said she felt it was both an honor and a great responsibility for her to provide the “voice” of one of the most iconic of Japan’s historical figures. “Japanese is a beautiful language,” she said. “I learned the lyrics and their meaning in great detail. But the most important thing is how they sound.”
Actress Fukaura Kanako died of cancer at a Tokyo hospital on Monday night, it was revealed yesterday. She was 48. An established supporting actress, she had roles in a wide variety of TV dramas and movies. According to her father, she was diagnosed with sigmoid colon cancer about five years ago and had been in and out of hospital and underwent surgery several times. But had continued working right up until what was to be her final hospitalization at the beginning of this month, after it was found that the cancer had spread to her lungs. She went into a coma on August 24 and never awoke. Her final work had been the narration of the documentary about the atomic bombing of Hiroshima that was broadcast on August 6. She began her acting career on the stage while a student at Meiji University in 1980. She started working more on TV and in movies from 1989 and her career included roles in dramas such as “Ie Naki Ko,” “Nurse no Shigoto” and “Shomuni” and movies like “Tasogare Seibei” and “Battle Royale.”
As he departed Japan yesterday to attend the upcoming 65th Venice International Film Festival, 
Hollywood star Will Smith (39) was in Tokyo again yesterday, this time for the Japan premiere of his superhero movie “Hancock.” For the red carpet walk, producers had set up a mock up car that Smith was supposed to use his “super powers” to send flying into the air. But the car was blown over by a strong gust of wind and the helium gas balloon inside ended up in the nearby Suidobashi train station. Smith joked that indeed his super powers were to blame, but that’s not likely the story organizers told local police when they had to report the incident. before the screening at the JCB Hall next to Tokyo Dome, Smith was joined on stage by co-star Charlize Theron (33) and
Veteran actress Yoshinaga Sayuri (63) is to play the legendary and controversial shaman queen Himiko in the upcoming movie “Moboroshi no Yamataikoku.” According to ancient records, Yamataikoku was a country that existed within ancient Wa (Japan) in the third century AD and was ruled by Himiko. The controversy comes from the fact that nobody knows for sure where the land was or whether Himiko even really existed. She is mentioned by name in the Chinese “Records of Three Kingdoms” but not once in the oldest Japanese chronicles, the “Kojiki” (Records of Ancient Matters) and “Nihon Shoki” (Chronicles of Japan). There is speculation, for example, as to whether she and Empress Jingu are in fact one and the same. Though it has been described as “the greatest debate over the ancient history of Japan,” this hasn’t stopped Japanese scholars from establishing Himiko as a historical figure and her story is the most famous in the history textbooks of young school children.
The Louvre museum in Paris yesterday allowed the first ever PR event in front of the Mona Lisa for the Japanese movie “20-seiki Shonen” (20th Century Boys). The manga adaptation was also the first Japanese movie to have its world premiere in the French capital, screening at the Publicis Cinéma on the Champs Elysées. Star Karasawa Toshiaki (45) and actress Tokiwa Takako (36) had visited the Louvre before but never had the Mona Lisa to themselves. Well, apart from museum personnel and about 80 reporters. Security was tight and cameras were strictly prohibited from shooting any artwork other than the da Vinci masterpiece. Toikiwa was something of a work of art herself, wearing a bright purple kimono. “20th Century Boys” is a three-part adaptation of a hit manga series that sold over 20 million copies. There are already plans to screen the movie, which opens in Japan on August 30, in more than 20 countries.
Actress Hatano Hiroko (32) and J-League soccer player Suzuki Keita (27) are engaged to be married, it was revealed yesterday. The two started dating last year. Hatano was a top model with the popular fashion magazine JJ before entering showbiz, making her acting debut in the drama “Salaryman Kintaro” in 1999. The same year, she made a name for herself when she took over from