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}} Kim Soo-hyun (born Kim Soon-ok on January 27, 1943) is a South Korean screenwriter and novelist. ==Career== Kim Soon-ok graduated from Korea University in 1965 with a degree in Korean Language and Literature. She was hired at MBC after winning in their radio drama competition in 1968 with her radio play 그 해 겨울의 우화 ("The Fable of That Year's Winter"). Using the pen name Kim Soo-hyun, the first television drama she wrote, ''Rainbow'', went on air in 1972. Over four decades, Kim became one of the most renowned screenwriters in Korea. Her body of work includes some of the most watched shows in Korean television history, including ''What is Love'' (1992), ''Men of the Bath House'' (1996), and ''Trap of Youth'' (1999). In his book ''Korea Through TV Drama'', author Kim Hwan-pyo describes how the streets became quiet at around the airing time of Kim Soo-hyun's ''Love and Ambition'' (1987) as "practically everyone in the country" was at home in front of the TV. Kim specializes in stories about Korean family life ― how traditional values conflict with the new and how women struggle to adjust to or resist the cultural suppression at home and work. Her work tends to target an older audience, and she is also known for putting a spotlight on social issues rarely discussed by the public, making some of her work controversial. 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 Soo-hyun (writer)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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