I-Fairy, a 4-foot-3 robot from Japanese company Kokoro, pronounced Tomohiro Shibata and Satoko Inoue husband and wife at a rooftop ceremony at a Tokyo hotel.
The white and grey plastic robot is human-shaped and performed the ceremony in Japanese in a soft female voice. The I-Fairy wore a wreath of white flowers on her head and her LED eyes flashed green, blue and purple as she spoke.
After the ceremony, the newlyweds posed for photographs with the I-Fairy, the bride and groom each holding a robotic hand.
The bride, Satoko Inoue, works at Kokoro. She told the Associated Press that being married by a robot was "a lot of fun."
"I think the Japanese have a strong sense that robots are our friends," she said. "Those in the robot industry mostly understand this, but people mainly want robots near them that serve some purpose." Her husband, Tomohiro Shibata, said it would have been nice if the robot was "a bit more clever." Kokoro (the name means "spirit" or "heart" in Japanese) began building large-scale moveable dinosaur robots in 1984, and has since moved on to develop humanoid robots.
The company's mission is to "build robots which can live and coexist with us human beings, entertaining and communicating with us."

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