She topped the Oricon album chart for a 37 consecutive weeks, an incredible record in Japan's music history.
Their only child, Hikaru Utada, was born in 1983 in New York City (and later themselves became a record-setting pop star in Japan by their late teens).
[4] On 3 March 2006, U.S. DEA officials confiscated more than $420,000 in American, Canadian, and Australian currencies from Keiko Fuji's carry-on luggage at JFK Airport, New York, as she waited to board a flight to Las Vegas.
[5] On 27 January 2009, the Federal District Court in New York ordered the confiscated money returned to her, citing lack of evidence.
[6] Keiko Fuji died on 22 August 2013 after jumping from the thirteenth floor of a condominium building in Shinjuku, Tokyo.