After months of anticipation, photos of Taiwanese pop star Jay Chou's daughter are finally revealed.
The Taiwanese singer and his wife Hannah Quinlivan were married in 2015. Not long after, Quinlivan gave birth to a baby girl named "Little Chou Chou" in July, allowing the amusing couple entrance to the next stage of family life.
The couple deeply love each other as they are often seen accompanying one another at work, as reported by Asian E-New Portal. While they have always kept their daughter's appearance a secret, the couple would sometimes bring her along as well.
By the first week of 2016, Quinlivan finally showed her daughter's adorable face to the public. A photo of their beautiful baby girl was posted on Quinlivan's Weibo account.
The young girl is shown on the photo sleeping with her eyes closed. Despite so, it can be clearly seen that she inherited most of her mother's genes. With a cute round face and long eyelashes, the baby girl seemed to possess a hint of Quinlivan's mixed heritage.
Along with the photo, Quinlivan wrote: "2015 was a prosperous year, thank you everyone who made it happy for me, I wish everyone will still be healthy and happy in 2016!"
In November, Chou shared a photo of his daughter at a celebration to mark her 100th day since birth. The Taiwanese pop star's eager fans were ecstatic to see Baby Hathaway's face despite her left fist obscuring most her facial features in the photo.
The picture was shared on Chou's Weibo account as the proud daddy held little Hathaway posing together with his wife. Chou thanked friends and family for attending the party, as reported by Asia One Women.
Not long after the celebration, Quinlivan shared a short video clip of the baby girl playing on a virtual smartphone keyboard. Since the video was taken from a top down angle, it did not reveal the baby's face clearly. Caption on the video read: "Activating her potential.. Daddy better be careful".
While extremely busy for the year 2015 because of wedding plans, daddy Jay Chou was still able to earn a lot from his career. Reports show that he earned HK$120 million in Mainland China, allowing him to become Taiwan's highest earner.