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}} Park Jin-hee (born January 8, 1978) is a South Korean actress. She is best known for her leading roles in the television series ''Please Come Back, Soon-ae'', ''War of Money'', and ''Giant'', as well as for the film ''Shadows in the Palace''. ==Career== Park Jin-hee made her acting debut in 1996 teen drama ''Start'', and rose to stardom in the 1998 horror film ''Whispering Corridors''. She was praised for her emotional performance as a single mother in the KBS television series ''Stock Flower'' in 2001, but her other TV dramas were deemed forgettable. She starred in a string of commercial fare on the big screen, namely, ''Promenade'' with Kim Sang-joong, ''Just Do It!'' with Park Sang-myun, ''Star'' with Yoo Oh-sung, and ''Love in Magic'' with Yeon Jung-hoon, as well as the indie ''Love Talk'' with Bae Jong-ok and Park Hee-soon in 2005, but none of her films achieved critical or box office success. Park then stopped working for a year and a half, deciding to take some time off for a little introspection. The hiatus paid off in 2006 when she returned to the small screen in ''Please Come Back, Soon-ae'', playing a 40-something ajumma trapped in the body of a sexy young 20-something (with the reverse played by Shim Hye-jin). The body swap comedy was a hit, with average ratings of 25%. Her popularity continued in 2007 when her drama with Park Shin-yang, ''War of Money'' reached ratings of over 30%. As a righteous woman facing a slew of financial hardships,〔 Park's acting was recognized at the SBS Drama Awards. She then drew laughs as a narcissistic character in the film ''Underground Rendezvous'', a 1980s-set comedy about the North-South divide co-starring Im Chang-jung. But her next film would be even more high-profile: ''Shadows in the Palace'', a mystery thriller set during the reign of King Jeongjo (1752-1800). Playing a court medic who investigates a murder within the ranks of the royal harem and household (the film's Korean title translates to gungnyeo, or "palace women"), Park received critical acclaim for her performance, with one review calling it "the peak of her 10-year acting career." She won Best Actress at the Golden Cinematography Awards and the Fantasia Festival.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://fantasiafestival.com/2008/en/films/film_detail.php?id=74 )〕 Following the 2008 film ''Sweet Lie'' (also known as ''Lost and Found'') in which her character pretends to have amnesia to snag her dream guy, Park continued to explore the romantic comedy genre in ''The Woman Who Still Wants to Marry'' (also known as ''Still, Marry Me''). In the low-rated 2010 series, she played a career woman in her 30s who falls for a musician ten years her junior (played by Kim Bum). Park then joined the epic period drama ''Giant'', set during the economic boom of 1970-80s Korea, and co-starring Lee Beom-soo and Park Sang-min. The series was a hit with TV critics and audiences, with a ratings peak of 40%. And Park's portrayal of a vengeance-driven, ambitious woman who finds success as a loan shark was again lauded at the SBS Drama Awards. She and Kim Hae-sook played mother and daughter in the melodrama ''A Long Visit'' (also known as ''My Mom''),〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.arirang.co.kr/TV2/Star_Focus.asp?F_KEY=692&sys_lang=Eng )〕 followed by Park's cameo appearance in war film ''71: Into the Fire''. Park reunited with ''Stock Flower'' director Park Chan-hong and writer Kim Ji-woo in her next television series ''Fermentation Family'', which aired on cable channel jTBC in 2011. She played a woman who takes over her father's kimchi restaurant and rediscovers her love for cooking and family, as she fights with and falls for a gangster played by Song Il-gook. In 2012, she and John Park appeared in ''Music and Lyrics'', an MBC Music reality show in which an actress and a male singer are paired together as lyricist and composer, respectively, to create a song. The song they composed, ''Maybe, Maybe'', was recorded by Alex Chu and Horan of Clazziquai. Later that year, her arthouse film with Park Ji-yoon was released. Part-mystery, part-coming-of-age film, ''Grape Candy'' explored the nostalgia and tension at the reunion of two old high school friends who share a painful past. Park joined the cast of ''Hur Jun, the Original Story'' (in Korean, ''Gu-am Heo Jun''), about the Joseon-era royal physician Heo Jun (played by Kim Joo-hyuk). The historical drama aired daily on MBC in 2013. 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「Park Jin-hee」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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