Fashion 70's

Fashion 70's
Genre Period drama
Romance
Family
Friendship
Written by Jung Sung-hee
Directed by Lee Jae-kyoo
Lee Jung-hyo
Starring Lee Yo-won
Kim Min-jung
Joo Jin-mo
Chun Jung-myung
Country of origin South Korea
No. of episodes 28
Production
Location(s) South Korea
Running time 60 minutes on Mondays and Tuesdays at 21:55
Release
Original network Seoul Broadcasting System
Original release May 23, 2005 (2005-05-23) – August 29, 2005 (2005-08-29)
Chronology
Preceded by Bad Housewife
Followed by Ballad of Seodong
External links
Website

Fashion 70's (Hangul: 패션 70's) is a 2005 South Korean television series starring Lee Yo-won, Kim Min-jung, Joo Jin-mo and Chun Jung-myung. It was the network's 60th Anniversary of Independence Great Project, and it aired on SBS from May 23 to August 29, 2005 on Mondays and Tuesdays at 21:55 for 28 episodes. An epic, sprawling drama, it focuses on the lives of four young people, from their childhood during the Korean War, to their careers and love lives as adults. It portrays the passion of female fashion designers who pioneered Korea's fashion industry in the 1970s.[1][2]

Plot

Young Joon-hee befriends little Kang-hee, but the two girls get into trouble because of Kang-hee's poor but greedy mother. Joon-hee also makes friends with two boys, Kim Dong-young, the son of a military general and Jang Bin, the son of a fashion designer.

But when North Korean forces invade their town, both girls are separated from their parents and Joon-hee's mother is killed in an explosion. Believing his daughter to have died, Joon-hee's father adopts Kang-hee and raises her as his own daughter. Joon-hee is discovered at an orphanage by Kang-hee's mother, and is also adopted. The trauma of the events causes Joon-hee to block out her childhood memories and she grows up on a small island as Deo-mi, unaware of her true identity.

Years pass and all four of their paths cross again, with complicated, destructive results. Deo-mi dreams of becoming a fashion designer, and petty criminal Jang Bin helps her move to Seoul to chase her dream. In the process he falls in love with her, but his feelings are unrequited. Deo-mi meets Dong-young, who has become an aide to the President, and although they do not recognize each other, there is an instant attraction between them. Kang-hee (now called Joon-hee) is also working in fashion, and already in love with Dong-young, but is heartbroken when she discovers he has fallen for Deo-mi.

Deo-mi and Joon-hee first become friends, then become each other's greatest rivals like Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiaparelli. They pursue both love and ambition with their lives against the backdrop of the fashion industry and the shifting social mores of 1970s Korea.[3]

Cast

Ratings

Fashion 70's was the 10th highest rated Korean drama of 2005 with an average viewership rating of 24+% and a peak of 29.1%.[5]

Episode # Original broadcast date
AGB Nielsen[6]
Nationwide Seoul National Capital Area
1 23 May 2005 15.1% 16.6%
2 24 May 2005 16.2% 18.6%
3 30 May 2005 17.1% 18.6%
4 31 May 2005 18.1% 19.1%
5 6 June 2005 21.3% 22.8%
6 7 June 2005 22.0% 23.8%
7 13 June 2005 20.4% 21.7%
8 14 June 2005 20.3% 21.7%
9 20 June 2005 NR 22.2%
10 21 June 2005 21.1% 22.2%
11 27 June 2005 21.7% 22.5%
12 28 June 2005 24.0% 24.8%
13 4 July 2005 24.3% 25.2%
14 5 July 2005 24.3% 25.3%
15 11 July 2005 24.4% 25.1%
16 12 July 2005 24.8% 25.5%
17 18 July 2005 25.5% 26.8%
18 19 July 2005 23.0% 23.7%
19 25 July 2005 23.9% 25.7%
20 26 July 2005 24.0% 24.8%
21 1 August 2005 20.4% 19.9%
22 2 August 2005 24.3% 25.0%
23 8 August 2005 26.8% 27.9%
24 9 August 2005 28.2% 30.1%
25 15 August 2005 27.4% 28.9%
26 16 August 2005 29.1% 31.3%
27 22 August 2005 26.2% 27.3%
28 29 August 2005 26.7% 29.9%

See also

References

  1. "KOREAN TV DRAMA REVIEWS: 패션 70s (Fashion Seventies)". Twitch Film. 25 November 2005. Archived from the original on February 4, 2007. Retrieved 2013-05-24.
  2. Park, Chung-a (22 June 2005). "Women in Dramas Go to Work". The Korea Times via Hancinema. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  3. "Fashion 70s: Korean TV Drama". DVDAsian.com. 3 August 2007. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  4. Suh, Jung-bo (12 May 2005). "Weekend Date: Lee Yo-won". The Dong-a Ilbo. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  5. "Top ten most popular dramas of 2005". Newsen (in Korean). 7 December 2005. Retrieved 2015-04-07.
  6. "AGB Daily Ratings: this links to current day-select the date from drop down menu". AGB Nielsen Media Research (in Korean). Retrieved 2015-04-06.

External links

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