Miho Miyazaki

Miho Miyazaki
宮崎 美穂
Miho in Produce 48
Background information
Also known asMyao
Born (1993-07-30) July 30, 1993 (age 31)
OriginTokyo, Japan
GenresPop (J-pop, K-pop)
Occupation(s)Singer, actress, idol
Years active2007–present

Miho Miyazaki (宮崎 美穂, Miyazaki Miho, born July 30, 1993) is a Japanese singer, actress and former member of the idol girl group AKB48 where she was active in Team A. She also participated in the Korean-Japanese show Produce 48.

Biography

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In 2007, Miyazaki passed an audition for AKB48 and became a kenkyūsei (trainee) for the group's 5th generation.[citation needed] On July 13, 2008, she was promoted to Team A[1] along with four other girls. On October 22, 2008, when AKB48 released the 10th single "Ōgoe Diamond", Miyazaki was listed among the performers on the A-side track for the first time.

In February 2009, Miyazaki changed her talent agency to Horipro.[citation needed] In the AKB48 general election for that year, she ranked 18th and was put on the A-side team for the group's 13th single.[2] She still have the record of being shortly senbatsu (1 year after she debuted in AKB...)[citation needed] On July 10, 2009, for an event dedicated to the Nattō Day, Miyazaki with Tomomi Itano and Tomomi Kasai formed a subunit called Nattō Angel. At the event, they sang the self-titled track.[3]

On January 22, 2010, in the TV series Majisuka Gakuen, Miyazaki debuted as an actress. On May 21, Miho Miyazaki was transferred from Team A to Team B. The transfer was announced on August 23 of the previous year. In the AKB48's 17th single selection Miyazaki placed 21st with 6,231 votes.[4][5] This result was enough to pass the selection for the title track, but left her out of the media senbatsu*, that she was part of for the previous, 16th, single "Ponytail to Shushu". In July, she again participated in the Nattō Day celebration. That time, her group was called Nattō Angel Z, and the other girls in the unit were Sumire Satō and Haruka Ishida, both from Team B.[citation needed] On November 20, Miyazaki performed in AKB48's concert at the J-pop Culture Festival in Moscow, Russia.[citation needed]

On May 14, 2011, Miyazaki joined AKB48 members Misaki Iwasa and Mika Komori to launch the first AKB48 concept store in Singapore. The event gathered hundreds of fans.[6] In the general election, Miyazaki placed 27th.[7][8]

In the 2012 general election, held on June 6 at Nippon Budokan,[9] Miho Miyazaki placed 38th.[10] Miyazaki was transferred from Team B to Team K as part of the teams' reshuffle announced during the Tokyo Dome concert on August 24, 2012.[11]

On April 6, 2016, Miyazaki acted on the radio "ON8+1" as a radio host for the first time and has worked on this radio show every Wednesday.[12]

In 2018, she participated in the South Korean television competition Produce 48 where she was eliminated in the final episode in 15th place.[13]

On December 12, 2021, Miyazaki announced her graduation from AKB48.[14] She officially graduated from the group on April 15, 2022.[15]

She plans to start a career in South Korea after graduation.[14]

Personal life

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Miyazaki played for a futsal team called Xanadu loves NHC.[citation needed]

Singles with AKB48

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Year No. Title Role[16] Notes
2008 10 "Ōgoe Diamond" A-side Also sang "109 (Marukyū)"
2009 11 "10nen Sakura" A-side
12 "Namida Surprise!" A-side
13 "Iiwake Maybe" A-side Ranked 18th in 2009 General Election
14 "River" A-side
2010 15 "Sakura no Shiori" A-side Also sang on "Enkyori Poster".
16 "Ponytail to Shushu" A-side Also sang on "Majijo Teppen Blues"
17 "Heavy Rotation" A-side Ranked 21st in 2010 General Election. Also sang on "Yasai Sisters" and "Lucky Seven".
18 "Beginner" Under Girls Sang "Boku Dake no Value"
19 "Chance no Junban" B-side Sang "Love Jump"
2011 20 "Sakura no Ki ni Narō" Under Girls Sang "Gūzen no Jūjiro"
21 "Everyday, Katyusha" A-side Also sang "Yankee Soul".
22 "Flying Get" B-side Ranked 27th in 2011 General Election. Sang "Dakishimecha Ikenai", "Seishun to Kizukanai Mama", "Yasai Uranai".
23 "Kaze wa Fuiteiru" B-side Sang "Kimi no Senaka"
24 "Ue kara Mariko" B-side Sang "Yobisute Fantasy"
2012 25 "Give Me Five!" B-side Sang "Yungu ya Furoito no Baai" as Special Girls C.
26 "Manatsu no Sounds Good!" B-side Sang "Mitsu no Namida".
27 "Gingham Check" Next Girls Ranked 38th in 2012 General Election. Sang on "Doremifa Onchi".
28 "Uza" B-side Sang "Scrap & Build" as New Team k.
29 "Eien Pressure" B-side Sang on "Watashitachi no Reason".
2013 30 "So Long!" B-side Sang "Yūhi Marie" as Team K.
31 "Sayonara Crawl" B-side Sang "How Come?" as Team K.
33 "Heart Electric" B-side Sang "Sasameyuki Regret" as Team K.
2014 35 "Mae Shika Mukanee" B-side Sang "Koi to ka...".
36 "Labrador Retriever" B-side Sang "Itoshiki Rival" as Team K.
37 Kokoro no Placard Upcoming Girls Ranked 78th in 2014 General Election. Sang "Chewing Gum no Aji ga Naku Naru Made"
38 "Kibouteki Refrain" B-side Sang "Utaitai" as Katareagumi (Cattleya Group), "Hajimete no Drive" as Team K
2015 42 "Kuchibiru ni Be My Baby" B-side Sang on "Yasashī Place" and "M.T. ni Sasagu" as Team A.
2016 44 "Tsubasa wa Iranai" A-side Also sang "Set me free" as Team A.
2018 54 "No Way Man" A-side
2021 58 "Nemohamo Rumor" B-side Sang on "Black Jaguar".

AKB48 stage units

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AKB48 Himawarigumi 2nd Stage "Yume o Shinaseru Wake ni Ikanai"
Team A 4th Stage "Tadaima Ren'aichū"
  • "Junai no Creshendo" (純愛のクレッシェンド)
    Minami Takahashi's stand-by
AKB48 Team A 5th Stage "Ren'ai Kinshi Jōrei"
THEATER G-ROSSO "Yume wo Shinaseru Wake ni Ikanai"
AKB48 Team B 5th Stage "Theater no Megami"
  • "Arashi no Yoru ni wa" (嵐の夜には)

Filmography

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TV series

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  • Majisuka Gakuen (マジすか学園) (January 22 - February 5, March 26, 2010, TV Tokyo), as Myao
  • Tōfu Shimai (豆腐姉妹) (July 31, 2010 - August 27, 2010, WOWOW)
  • Majisuka Gakuen 2 (マジすか学園2) (May 6 - July 1, 2011, TV Tokyo), Myao
  • AKB Horror Night: Adrenline's Night (AKBホラーナイト アドレナリンの夜) Ep.30 - Class Reunion (January 21, 2016, TV Asahi), Minori Shinozaki
  • AKB Love Night: Love Factory (AKBラブナイト 恋工場) Ep. 18 - Marriage Meeting (June 15, 2016, TV Asahi), Miki

References

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  1. ^ ホリプロオフィシャルサイト -宮崎美穂- (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 2012-07-12. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
  2. ^ ""AKB48選抜総選挙"開票! トップ当選の前田敦子「AKBに人生捧げる!」" (in Japanese). Oricon Inc. 2009-07-09. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
  3. ^ "Girls of Natto Angel express their love for natto". Japan Today. 2009-07-11. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
  4. ^ "「AKB48総選挙」で大波乱 大島優子が初戴冠で前田のV2阻止! ニュース-ダイエット・エステ・美容のオリコンランキング" (in Japanese). Oricon. 2010-06-09. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
  5. ^ "AKB48、女性グループ史上初の2作連続初週売上50万枚超え ニュース-ORICON STYLE" (in Japanese). oricon. 2010-08-24. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
  6. ^ "AKB48 to perform in Singapore monthly". AsiaOne (Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Co.). 2011-05-23. Archived from the original on May 27, 2011. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
  7. ^ "AKB48第3回総選挙、前田敦子がトップに返り咲き果たす" (in Japanese). Natalie. 2011-06-09. Retrieved 2012-08-03.
  8. ^ "前田敦子が雪辱果たし第1位、「AKBのこと嫌いにならないで」" (in Japanese). Eiga.com. 2011-06-09. Retrieved 2012-08-03.
  9. ^ Patrick St. Michel and Daisuke Kikuchi (2012-05-31). "AKB48 'election' shows marketing brilliance". Japan Times. Archived from the original on 2012-07-10. Retrieved 2012-08-03.
  10. ^ "AKB48第4回総選挙、大島優子が2年ぶり2回目のトップに" (in Japanese). Natalie. 2012-06-06. Retrieved 2012-08-03.
  11. ^ 組閣後新体制 (in Japanese). AKB48 official site. 2012-08-24. Retrieved 2012-08-24.
  12. ^ "bayfm | LOVE OUR BAY LOVE OUR FUTURE-千葉のFMラジオ局 bayfm。周波数はFM 78.0MHz。番組スケジュールやDJ紹介、インターネットストリーミング番組などを掲載" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2020-01-24.
  13. ^ E&M, CJ. "미야자키 미호 ( AKB48 ) | PRODUCE 48 [엠넷닷컴]" (in Korean). Retrieved 2018-05-14.
  14. ^ a b "AKB宮崎美穂卒業「あー!言えたー!」自身のYouTube生配信で発表". Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). 2021-12-12. Retrieved 2022-04-17.
  15. ^ "宮崎美穂 卒業公演の日程と各種サービスの終了について". AKB48 Official Blog (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-04-17.
  16. ^ Center and A-side lineup information provided by "AKB48 歴代シングル選抜メンバー(2008年~2013年)" [(2008-2013) AKB48 successive single member selection]. entamedata.web.fc2.com. Retrieved 2015-07-29.
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