Park Ji-eun

This article is about the South Korean TV screenwriter. For the South Korean golfer, see Grace Park (golfer). For the Go player, see Pak Chi-eun.
This is a Korean name; the family name is Park.
Park Ji-eun
Born 1976 (age 3940)
South Korea
Education Chonnam National University - Bachelor's degree in Korean Language and Literature
Sejong University Graduate School - Master's degree in Film Arts
Occupation Screenwriter
Years active 1997-present
Korean name
Hangul 박지은
Revised Romanization Bak Ji-eun
McCune–Reischauer Pak Chi-ŭn

Park Ji-eun (born 1976) is a South Korean television screenwriter. She wrote the hit Korean dramas Queen of Housewives (2009), My Husband Got a Family (2012), My Love from the Star (2013-2014), "The producers" (2015) .[1]

Career

Early works

Park Ji-eun began her entertainment career in 1997, and spent the next decade writing for talk radio shows, variety shows and sitcoms.

In 2007, she wrote Love Isn't Stop, a TV movie with an omnibus format, which aired on cable channel KBS N. This led to her first drama miniseries Get Karl! Oh Soo-jung, which she co-wrote with Park Hye-ryun. Starring Uhm Jung-hwa and Oh Ji-ho, it was based on the real-life love story of Lee Ju-young, the CEO of a TV production company who reunited with her husband, pro-golfer Go Man-soo, ten years after breaking up with him.[2]

Queen of Housewives

For Park's first solo writing credit, she wrote Queen of Housewives (also known as My Wife Is a Superwoman) which aired in 2009. The comedy-drama series depicted naejo in a modern setting, traditional Korean housewives who devote their entire lives to their husbands' success.[3] It revolved around three couples entangled in love and rivalry as they work for the Queens Food corporation, played by Kim Nam-joo, Oh Ji-ho, Lee Hye-young, Choi Cheol-ho, Yoon Sang-hyun and Sunwoo Sun. The drama was notable for being Kim Nam-joo's comeback after an eight-year hiatus from acting, in the role of a former prom queen-turned-dowdy housewife struggling to help her socially inept husband rise up the corporate ranks, while contending with a clique of wives led by a frenemy who is now the wife of her husband's boss. Queen of Housewives topped the ratings chart during its run (with a peak of 31.7%), started new fashion and makeup trends among married women (or ajummas), and also served as Yoon Sang-hyun's breakout vehicle. Park won Writer of the Year at the MBC Drama Awards.[4]

Queen of Reversals

A year later, Park wrote Queen of Reversals, again casting Kim Nam-joo as the protagonist. Kim pointed to Park's ability to write realistic lines as one of the biggest reasons why she decided to sign on, while Park said that couples who straddle married life and the workplace would be able to easily relate to her drama.[5] Despite similar themes, Reversals is not a sequel or spin-off of Housewives, with a completely new cast (except for Kim) and characters. While her previous drama depicted the lives of Korean housewives and their under-appreciated efforts, Park's next series explored the hardships of working women who must also juggle being wives and mothers as soon as they get home.[6] Kim played a strong-willed, ruthless career woman who quits work after getting married, but a happy domestic life eludes her as her husband (Jung Joon-ho) struggles professionally. When he gets fired, she re-enters the workplace and takes problems into her own hands as the family's breadwinner, eventually catching the eye of her boss (Park Si-hoo).[7] Queen of Reversals was not as successful in the ratings as its predecessor, staying within the mid-10% range.[8][9][10]

My Husband Got a Family

In Park's third collaboration with Kim Nam-joo, they had an even bigger hit with My Husband Got a Family (also known as You Who Rolled in Unexpectedly and Unexpected You).[11] During its more than five-month run, it topped the weekly ratings chart for 25 consecutive weeks and received average ratings of 33.1% and a peak of 52.3%. The series ranked number one overall on the 2012 yearly TV ratings chart.[12] The plot centered on a successful TV director (Kim) who marries an orphaned doctor (Yoo Jun-sang), but her husband finds his biological parents and they happen to be her next-door neighbors with whom she bickers on a daily basis; she now faces the unexpected burden of having to build a relationship with her new-found in-laws and their sprawling extended family.[13][14] Producer Kim Sung-geun attributed its success to the increasing popularity of TV dramas that portray the lives of working women in their 30s and 40s, a genre in which Park is one of the most high-profile Korean screenwriters.[15] Kim Nam-joo described Park as being "able to take a double-edged approach to her subject matter. The tone is both comical and serious, without getting too skewed to one side." Though this was her first weekend family drama, Park was praised for being well-versed in dialogue that resonated with modern-day women, and developing multiple characters in the 19-member ensemble cast.[16] She won recognition for her writing from several organizations, including the Korea Drama Awards, the K-Drama Star Awards, and the KBS Drama Awards.[17]

My Love from the Star

In 2013, Park explored the fantasy/romantic comedy genre with My Love from the Star (also known as You Who Came from the Stars). She cast Jun Ji-hyun (in her first TV drama in 14 years) and Kim Soo-hyun in a tale about an alien who landed on Earth in the Joseon Dynasty, disguising his identity for over four centuries and becoming cynical about human beings, until he falls in love with a top actress in the modern era.[18] Not only was the series a hit with a peak viewership rating of 28.1%, it also had an impact on Korean fashion, with clothes, accessories and make-up products worn by Jun seeing an "unprecedented" surge in sales.[19]

It also became massively popular in China, where it became the most expensive Korean drama sold as of February 2014,[20] was viewed more than 2.5 billion times online on Chinese platform iqiyi, and sparked a craze for the snack chimaek (Korean fried chicken and beer).[21][22][23] In an op-ed piece published by the China Daily, writer Xiao Lixin attributed its success to "great innovations in South Korean TV productions in terms of themes and narrative patterns," praising the plot as "logical and fast-paced" interspersed with "whimsy and romantic punch lines."[24] The Washington Post reported in March 2014 that My Love from the Star was discussed at China's National People's Congress, particularly in a committee of political advisory body Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, where it reportedly topped the agenda among delegates from the culture and entertainment industry.[25]

But Park also became embroiled in a plagiarism suit when author Kang Kyung-ok alleged that the series' concept and characters shared too many similarities with her 2008 comic book Seol-hee. Park has denied the claims, posting on the website of production company HB Entertainment a detailed account of how she came up with the idea many years ago, and swore that she "had never heard of or read Seol-hee."[26]

The Producers

Park returned to her variety roots in 2015 with The Producers, using an experimental format that combined scripted and reality television. She collaborated with a crew largely composed of variety regulars led by Seo Soo-min, chief producer of the Happy Sunday programming block. The series reunited Park with My Love from the Star leading man Kim Soo-hyun, who starred alongside Cha Tae-hyun, Gong Hyo-jin and IU in a story set in real-life network KBS and focuses on fictional employees of its variety department. The Producers was the first ever Korean network drama to air in the Friday-Saturday time slot, which was usually reserved for late-night comedy shows; network dramas had previously been strictly divided into weekday and weekend programs.[27]

Filmography

Television drama

Sitcom

Variety show

Radio program

Music video

Awards

References

  1. Choi, Ji-eun (28 September 2012). 박지은 작가 "방귀남을 통해 결혼하고 싶은 남자를 그려보고 싶었다". TenAsia (in Korean). Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  2. "Get Karl! Oh Soo Jung (DVD)". YesAsia. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  3. Han, Sang-hee (10 March 2009). "New Types of Husbands to Sneak Onto TV Screen". The Korea Times. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  4. Park, So-yeon (31 December 2009). "Ko Hyun-joung wins grand prize at MBC Acting Awards". 10Asia. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  5. Oh, Jean (12 October 2010). "Kim Nam-joo back for second season". The Korea Herald. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  6. Lee, Seung-han (21 October 2010). "PREVIEW: MBC TV series Queen of Reversal". 10Asia. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  7. Han, Sang-hee (12 October 2010). "Superwoman returns to voice working mom woes". The Korea Times. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  8. "MBC drama Queen of Reversal on the rise". MBC Global Media. 24 November 2010. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  9. Kim, Jessica (20 December 2010). "MBC Queen of Reversals extended by 10 episodes". 10Asia. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  10. Lee, Seung-han (21 October 2010). "REVIEW: MBC TV series Queen of Reversal - 1st Episode". 10Asia. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  11. "Unexpected You Catch Writer Park Ji Eun! Drama Production War". KDramaStars. 12 July 2012. Retrieved 2014-03-30.
  12. Lee, Hye-ji (18 December 2012). "KBS Drama My Husband Wears Throne on 2012 TV Chart". 10Asia. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  13. "Kim Nam-joo tapped as leading lady in new KBS TV series". 10Asia. 3 January 2012. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  14. Sunwoo, Carla (3 January 2012). "Actress Kim Nam-ju to star in KBS 2TV's new weekend drama". Korea JoongAng Daily. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  15. Kim, Hyo-eun (18 April 2012). "In with the old, out with the new". Korea JoongAng Daily. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  16. Oh, Jean (22 February 2012). "Kim Nam-joo's new work promises to resonate with modern-day women". The Korea Herald. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  17. Lee, Seul (3 October 2012). "Kim Nam Joo wins the grand award at 2012 Korea Drama Awards". StarN News. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  18. Bae, Ji-sook (17 December 2013). "Gianna Jun proves aging is good". The Korea Herald. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  19. Chung, Ah-young (2 March 2014). "My Love sparks hallyu sensation". The Korea Times. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  20. Lee, Kyung-nam (27 December 2013). "You Who Came From the Stars Sold in China at Highest Price for K-Drama". enewsWorld. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  21. Lin, Lilian (26 February 2014). "Korean TV Show Sparks Chicken and Beer Craze in China". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  22. Wei, Xi (25 February 2014). "You who came from Korea". Global Times. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  23. Lee, Sun-young (10 March 2014). "My Love signals K-drama revival". The Korea Herald. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  24. "China media sees lessons in Korean TV dramas". The Korea Herald. 21 February 2014. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  25. Wan, William (7 March 2014). "Chinese officials debate why China can't make a soap opera as good as South Korea's". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  26. Yim, Seung-hye (3 February 2014). "A fine line: Inspiration or imitation?". Korea JoongAng Daily. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
  27. Doo, Rumy (10 March 2015). "Producer set with stellar cast, creative team". K-pop Herald. Retrieved 2015-06-02.

External links

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