She holds the distinction of being the first female swimmer in Southeast Asia to break the five-
minute mark for the 400m individual medley and to break the 60-seconds mark for the 100m
freestyle. She further won seven gold and one silver medals in the 1985 SEA Games, and in the
process broke six SEA Games records.
The following year, she bagged two silvers and two bronzes in the Asian Games. Nurul Huda was
named Sportswoman of the Year in 1985 and 1986, and, in 1987, became the first Malaysian to win
an IOC Trophy. In 1989, she bested herself when she bagged eight golds at the SEA Games in
Kuala Lumpur, after which she retired.
DATUK OOI CHEAN SEE
AGE: 48
PENANGITE Ooi, who resides in Bonn, Germany, holds the distinction of being the first Malaysian
woman conductor. She was appointed to the post of resident conductor of the Malaysian
Philharmonic Orchestra (MPO) in 1997, which she continued to lead until 2005 when she returned to
Germany.
Currently, a guest conductor with German orchestras, Ooi was also appointed an ambassador of
Tourism Malaysia in 2009. A trained concert pianist who also plays the violin, harpsichord and
percussion, she won the first prize in the International Conductors Competition in the German cities
of Halle and Hamm in 1991, and held the position of First Conductor of the Classic Philharmonic
Orchestra, Bonn, from 1991 to 1994. Most notably, she was a guest conductor with the Bruckner
Orchestra in Linz, Austria, arguably the capital of classical music, in 2005. Ooi was conferred the
Federal Cross of Merit, a German national honour, in 2003.
NING BAIZURA
AGE: 35
With Ning, the words “strong, sexy, sultry” come to mind. With 10 albums to her name, she has
established herself as one of the country’s most accomplished pop and R&B singers. She started
recording radio and television jingles when she was just six. When she was nine, she began formal