SINGER

Kati Wolf

1974 - Today

Photo of Kati Wolf

Icon of person Kati Wolf

Kati Wolf (born 24 September 1974) is a Hungarian singer. Wolf represented Hungary at the Eurovision Song Contest 2011 with the song "What About My Dreams?". At the age of seven, Wolf sang the title track for the popular Hungarian cartoon Vuk. Besides singing, she also took piano and jazz dance classes. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Kati Wolf is the 2,814th most popular singer (down from 2,696th in 2019), the 878th most popular biography from Hungary (down from 862nd in 2019) and the 8th most popular Hungarian Singer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Kati Wolf by language

Loading...

Among SINGERS

Among singers, Kati Wolf ranks 2,814 out of 4,381Before her are Inspectah Deck, Aynur Doğan, Vânia Fernandes, Mohsen Namjoo, Blackbear, and Lee Ryan. After her are Aisel, Maarja-Liis Ilus, Yugyeom, Koit Toome, Joey Badass, and Havana Brown.

Most Popular Singers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Kati Wolf ranks 567Before her are Niels Brinck, Indrek Zelinski, Bonnie Somerville, Taro Yamamoto, István Majoros, and Raveena Tandon. After her are Richard Coyle, Lasse Ottesen, Yuki Urushibara, Biz Stone, Lee Carsley, and Mehdi Ben Slimane.

Others Born in 1974

Go to all Rankings

In Hungary

Among people born in Hungary, Kati Wolf ranks 878 out of 1,077Before her are Károly Güttler (1968), Lívia Járóka (1974), Szabolcs Huszti (1983), Balázs Kiss (1972), Attila Ábrahám (1967), and István Majoros (1974). After her are András Sike (1965), Melinda Czink (1982), Bertalan Hajtós (1965), Bence Szabó (1962), Tímea Babos (1993), and Gábor Vona (1978).

Among SINGERS In Hungary

Among singers born in Hungary, Kati Wolf ranks 8Before her are Zsuzsa Koncz (1946), Kati Kovács (1944), Márta Sebestyén (1957), Zoli Ádok (1976), Attila Csihar (1971), and Joci Pápai (1981). After her are Friderika Bayer (1971), Boggie (1986), Freddie (1990), and Csézy (1979).