翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Kim Hyun-kwan
・ Kim Hyun-mee
・ Kim Hyun-ok
・ Kim Hyun-seok
・ Kim Hyun-seok (filmmaker)
・ Kim Hyun-seok (footballer)
・ Kim Hyun-seung
・ Kim Hee-ae
・ Kim Hee-chan
・ Kim Hee-jeong
・ Kim Hee-jeong (fencer)
・ Kim Hee-jin
・ Kim Hee-jung (actress born 1970)
・ Kim Hee-jung (actress born 1992)
・ Kim Hee-ra
Kim Hee-sun
・ Kim Hee-tae
・ Kim Hee-won
・ Kim Heechul
・ Kim Helton
・ Kim Hendren
・ Kim Henkel
・ Kim Henry
・ Kim Heonchang
・ Kim Herforth Nielsen
・ Kim Herold
・ Kim Herring
・ Kim Herzinger
・ Kim Heum-sun
・ Kim Heung-il


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Kim Hee-sun : ウィキペディア英語版
Kim Hee-sun

Kim Hee-sun (born June 11, 1977) is a South Korean actress. She rose to fame in the 1990s with leading roles in television series such as ''Men of the Bath House'' (1995), ''Propose'' (1997), ''Wedding Dress'' (1997), ''Forever Yours'' (1998), ''Mister Q'' (1998), ''Sunflower'' (1998), and ''Tomato'' (1999). Kim also starred in the martial arts films ''Bichunmoo'' (2000) and ''The Myth'' (2005).
==Career==
Kim Hee-sun won the Fair Face Beauty Contest in 1992 when she was a middle school student, and began modeling in teen magazines. In 1993, Kim (then a high school sophomore) appeared in a commercial for Lotte Samkang's crab chips, which led to her acting debut in ''Dinosaur Teacher'' and an MC gig for music show ''Live TV Music 20'' that same year.
She enjoyed peak popularity in the mid-to-late 1990s, starring in one hit Korean drama after another. These include ''Men of the Bath House'' (1995) written by Kim Soo-hyun, ''Propose'' (1997) and ''Forever Yours'' (1998) with Ryu Si-won, ''Wedding Dress'' (1997) with Lee Seung-yeon, ''Mister Q'' (1998) with Kim Min-jong and Song Yun-ah, ''Sunflower'' (1998) with Ahn Jae-wook, and ''Tomato'' (1999) with Kim Suk-hoon. Kim won the top prize at the 1998 SBS Drama Awards for ''Mister Q'', making her (at the time) the youngest ever Grand Prize (Daesang) winner at 21 years old. During this period, she also appeared in numerous advertisements and rose to fame both at home and abroad as one of Korea's most beautiful and trend-setting actresses.
But unlike her success in television, the big screen proved to be a bigger challenge for Kim's career. She made her film debut in 1997's ''Repechage'' opposite Jang Dong-gun, and its director Lee Kwang-hoon subsequently put her in his next film ''Ghost in Love'' (1999). In her most high-profile role to date, Kim played the daughter of a Mongolian general in the big-budget martial arts fantasy ''Bichunmoo'', shot in China and released in the summer of 2000. Although criticized for her acting in the film, it gave her more local and international exposure than any of her other films. Along with her popular TV dramas, it cemented her position as a Korean wave star in mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and throughout Southeast Asia.
In late 2001, Kim took on a completely different kind of role, cutting her hair short and starring as an animator in ''Wanee & Junah''. Although her acting in this film drew a favorable response from critics, the film itself was a commercial flop. Her career took a downturn in 2003, when the environmentally-themed melodrama ''A Man Who Went to Mars'' (also known as ''A Letter From Mars'') costarring Shin Ha-kyun became an utter bomb at the box office. She returned to television, but ''My Fair Lady'' (2003) which was adapted from the Japanese television drama ''Yamato Nadeshiko'', and ''Sad Love Story'' (2005) where she played a blind singer, both received low ratings.
But thanks to her popularity among Chinese viewers, Kim was then cast opposite Jackie Chan in ''The Myth'', for which she learned to speak Mandarin. Back in Korea, her career slump continued with ''Smile Again'' in 2006.
Kim married in 2007, and she left the entertainment scene to devote her time to being a wife and mother. During this five-year hiatus from acting, apart from appearing in magazines, Kim published a book in 2009 on childcare and how to lose post-pregnancy weight, titled ''Kim Hee-sun's Happy Mom Project''.
Though she had a minor role in the Chinese epic ''The Warring States'' (2011), Kim officially made her comeback in 2012 as a modern-day doctor who time-travels to Goryeo in the period romance ''Faith'', the last collaboration by screenwriter Song Ji-na and television director Kim Jong-hak.
In 2013, Kim became one of the hosts of the revamped second season of variety talk show ''Strong Heart'', titled ''Hwasin – Controller of the Heart''. After ''Hwasin'' was cancelled, she was cast in the Lee Kyung-hee-penned weekend family drama ''Wonderful Days'' (2014). This was followed by ''Angry Mom'' in 2015, and critics praised Kim's portrayal of the titular character who returns to high school when she learns that her teenage daughter is being bullied.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Kim Hee-sun」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.