SWEETHEARTS
Jeon Do-yeon
Complete filmographySecret Sunshine (2006)
You're My Sunshine (2005)
My Mother, the Mermaid (2004)
Untold Scandal (2003)
No Blood No Tears (2002)
I Wish I Had a Wife (2001)
Happy End (1999)
Harmonium in My Memory (1999)
A Promise (1998)
The Contact (1997)
Jeon Do-yeon (b. February 11, 1973) spent five years starring in television dramas before achieving instant star status with her film debut opposite Han Seok-gyu in
The Contact. She has since gone on to establish a reputation as a "chameleon" who can take on a wide variety of roles, from her performance as a doctor in the hit melodrama A Promise, to that of a schoolgirl in Harmonium in My Memory to that of a wife having an adulterous affair in
Happy End. In 1999 and 2000 she received a Best Actress award from both the Blue Dragon and the Grand Bell awards for her role in
Harmonium in My Memory.
In 2001 she played a very ordinary bank teller with great skill in Park Heung-shik's debut
I Wish I Had a Wife. After starring as the tough-talking "Sunglasses" in Ryoo Seung-wan's
No Blood No Tears, Jeon spent time acting in a TV drama titled "
Shoot for the Stars." In 2003 she found box-office success in E J-yong's
Untold Scandal, based on the famous French novel
Dangerous Liasions. The following year she re-united with director Park Heung-shik in a dual role for the time-bending melodrama
My Mother, the Mermaid.
Currently Jeon is scheduled to play a prostitute who contracts AIDS in Park Jin-pyo's hard-hitting melodrama
You're My Sunshine. Although not as broadly popular with audiences as some other stars, Jeon is widely respected for her acting abilities, and many young actresses cite her as a role model.
Interview excerpts"I enjoy acting a great deal, so I feel no need or desire to be called a great actor. This is partly my personality, but also the fact that I get so absorbed in acting, to where I can't see or think of anything else. I can't tell you what great acting is, but for me, it is to give everything you have with honesty, sincerity and persistence." [
Kino, #56, October 1999]
Lee Byung-heon 
Complete filmography:
Once in a Summer (2006)
A Bittersweet Life (2005)
Everybody Has Secrets (2004)
Addicted (2002)
My Beautiful Girl, Mari (2002, voice)
Bungee Jumping of Their Own (2001)
Joint Security Area (2000)
Harmonium in My Memory (1999)
Elegy of the Earth (1997)
Kill the Love (1996)
Armageddon (1996) (voice)
Runaway (1995)
Who Drives Me Mad? (1995)
Lee Byung-heon (b. July 12, 1970) majored in French at Hanyang University before making his television debut on KBS in 1991. A fixture in TV dramas throughout the decade, Lee has continued to work in television even after becoming a major film star. His movie debut came in 1995 as the lead in
Who Drives Me Mad?, and he worked off and on in the film industry up until his breakthrough film in 2000, Joint Security Area.
For a long time thought of as just another pretty face, Lee eventually earned great praise for his acting, both for his turn in
JSA and especially in
Bungee Jumping of Their Own. He also starred in the popular television drama
Beautiful Days, which screened in spring 2002 on SBS and would later be exported across Asia.
In 2002, Lee starred with actress Lee Mi-yeon in
Addicted, a melodrama about two brothers who fall into a coma on the same day. The following spring he also took the lead role in the highly popular TV drama
All In, about a successful gambler.
In 2004, Lee appeared opposite actresses Choi Ji-woo, Choo Sang-mi and Kim Hyo-jin in
Everybody Has Secrets, a remake of the Irish comedy About Adam. Also that year, several of Lee's TV dramas began to screen in Japan, and his popularity there started to soar. He eventually became even more popular in Japan than he is in Korea.
Then in 2005, Lee appeared in Kim Jee-woon's highly anticipated action-noir
A Bittersweet Life. Although the film ended up performing below expectations in both Korea and Japan, it was selected to screen in the Official Selection (out of competition) at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival, giving Lee the opportunity to "walk the red carpet" for his biggest moment of fame.
Lee Mi-yeon
Complete filmography:
Typhoon (2005)
Addicted (2002)
Last Witness (2001)
Indian Summer (2001)
Pisces (2000)
Love Bakery (2000)
Harmonium in My Memory (1999)
Whispering Corridors (1998)
Motel Cactus (1997)
No. 3 (1997)
Go Alone Like a Rhino's Horn (1995)
I Will Survive (1993)
Snow Flower (1992)
An Afternoon Without Rain (1991)
An Autumn Journey (1991)
Happiness Has Nothing To Do With School Records (1989)
Lee Mi-yeon (b. September 23, 1971) debuted in 1989 in a production by Cinema Service founder Kang Woo-suk titled
Happiness Has Nothing To Do With School Records. Over the course of the 1990s she became quite famous, and after a short pause from filmmaking in 1995 she returned with a vengeance, taking on a role in the cult hit No. 3 and, in the following year, playing a schoolteacher in the second-biggest Korean film of 1998, horror film
Whispering Corridors.
The year 2001 proved to be a mixed blessing for Lee. The news that her husband, actor Kim Seung-woo, had divorced her ended up as one of the biggest entertainment-related stories of the year. Shortly thereafter, however, she won a Best Actress award from the 2000 Blue Dragon Awards ceremony for her role in the low-profile film
Pisces.
The award and all the press attention proved to be a boost to her career. In
Indian Summer she played a woman accused of killing her husband, and then in November she starred as a Communist sympathizer in the latest feature by veteran director Bae Chang-ho. The following year she starred opposite mega-star Lee Byung-heon in the melodrama
Addicted, as a woman who must cope with an unusual situation after her husband's death.
After several years away from the screen, Lee returns in 2005 in Kwak Kyung-taek's blockbuster
Typhoon, which ranks as the most expensive Korean film in history.
CREDIT
koreanfilm.org for the information & captures