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Madeleine Lee is an award-winning investment manager and poet in Singapore.

Early life and education
Lee was schooled at Raffles Girls School and subsequently Hwa Chong Junior College.

Lee has written poetry since she was 13. She was mentored by novelist Suchen Christine Lim. Lee's writing is said to be greatly influenced by her maternal grandmother, who single-handedly ran the family's bumboat business and brought up her six children.

Lee graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Economics (Hons) and Accounting, a Master of Business Administration in Finance, and is a Chartered Financial Analyst. She was also selected as a fellow in the prestigious Eisenhower Fellowships in 2002.

Career
Lee has sat on the boards of public and private companies in Singapore and was the treasurer of the United Nations Development Fund for Women Singapore, president of the Raffles Girls School Alumni , and was active in the Yong Siew Toh Music Conservatory of the National University of Singapore, the Singapore Symphony Orchestra and the International Women's Forum. She was also the deputy chief investment officer of the Investment Office of the National University of Singapore. Currently, she runs her own hedge fund company.

As a writer, she has performed internationally at major literary festivals, including the Indonesia International Poetry Festival 2008, the Ubud Writers Festival 2009, the Melbourne Writers Festival 2010, and the Hanoi Poetry Festival 2013. She has also been consistently featured in the Singapore Writers Festival since 2003. Her collections have also been variously adapted, with y grec and one point six one eight being adapted for the stage by Cake Theatrical Productions in 2007 and 2013. In 2015, she was selected to represent Singapore writers in the Writing the City series of short films and interviews.

Lee’s work has also been adapted into other forms. The poem “blue” was interpreted into visual art/paint, while the poem “negative light” was interpreted in dance by the Montreal Dance Troupe in 2004. Other poems like “coffee,” “caesura,” and “ultraviolet” were also adapted into film by Arts Central (2005), the Paris Poetry Festival (2012) and by Writing the City (British Council, 2015) respectively. In 2005 she co-produced the play 2nd Link with W!LDRICE and in 2011 produced Moving Worlds, an anthology featuring Singapore poetry on the MRT.

Lee also collaborated with 2 other Singaporean writers in 2003 for the creation of the National Online Repository of the Arts (NORA) within the National Library Board. The project sought to build and develop a online platform to showcase digitised literary works by prominent SIngapore artists which were previously unpublished, out-of-print or inaccessible to the masses. NORA was launched in early 2009.