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Im Ye jin

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Full Name
  
Im Ki-hee

Agent
  
YG Entertainment

Spouse
  
Choi Chang-wook (m. 1989)

Hangul
  
임예진

Parents
  
Han Jeong-woo

Occupation
  
Actress

Name
  
Im Ye-jin

Children
  
Choi Eun-bi

Years active
  
1974–present

Role
  
Actress


Im Ye-jin Im Ye Jin

Born
  
January 24, 1960 (age 64) (
1960-01-24
)

Alma mater
  
Dongguk University - Theater and Film

Awards
  
PaekSang Arts Award for Special Achievement in Film, Grand Bell Award Encouragement Award

Movies and TV shows
  
Princess Aurora, Rosy Lovers, Childless Comfort, Boys Over Flowers, I Am Really Sorry

Similar People
  
Kwak Jae‑yong, Ahn Suk‑hwan, Kim Ki‑young, Lee Chang‑Ho, Hyeong‑pyo Lee

Other names
  
Lim Ye-jinYim Ye-jin

6 Nation's FIRST LOVE IM YE JIN to SUZY


Im Ye-jin (born Im Ki-hee on January 24, 1960) is a South Korean actress. As a teenage actress, she reached the peak of her popularity in the 1970s with the "Really Really" film trilogy, which include Never Forget Me, I Am Really Sorry and I Really Really Like You. She is currently active in television.

Contents

Career

Im Ye-jin Im Yejin Korean actress HanCinema The

Im Ki-hee began modeling in popular teen magazines when she was in junior high school. Using the stage name Im Ye-jin, she made her acting debut in Kim Ki-young's Transgression in 1974.

Im Ye-jin Iron Lady Cha 83 Im Yejin suffer

In 1975, Im played a high schooler in love with her teacher in Graduating School Girls, for which she won Best New Actress at the Grand Bell Awards. But it was a year later when she would be catapulted to stardom. Im headlined Never Forget Me (also known as Really Really Don't Forget, 1976) and its sequels I Am Really Sorry (also known as I'm Really Really Sorry, 1976) and Crazy For You (also known as I Really Really Like You, 1977) -- movies about teenage friendship, romance and aspirations that became massive box office hits, screening to sold out theaters. In an era when Korean cinema was in a dark period resulting from severe censorship by an authoritarian government, this led to the emergence of the teenage demographic as a major consumer of pop culture. Im had an innocent, girlish image, whose acting was charming and sweet without being saccharine, and she became hugely popular among middle school and high school students; girls wanted to be like her, and boys had her picture in their pockets. The "Really Really" series established Im as the most popular young actress of that period, and for the next several years, youth melodramas starring her dominated the theaters in quick succession, often with Lee Deok-hwa as her leading man: Prayer of a Girl (1976), Ever So Much Good! (1976), I Really Have a Dream (1976), I've Never Felt Like This Before (1976), and Nobody Knows (1977).

Im Ye-jin Im Yejin Korean actress HanCinema The

Im entered college in 1979, studying Theater and Film at Dongguk University. By this time, she wanted to transition out of teen movies, and into more adult roles. She starred opposite Shin Seong-il in Love Song in a Peanut Shell, but it was poorly received, with audiences not prepared to see her break out of her "pure" image. Despite a supporting role in A Fine, Windy Day, Im's film career was in a slump, so she shifted her focus to television and radio in the 1980s.

After a few years of forgettable television dramas, Im's career was revitalized by Kim Soo-hyun, one of the most famous TV writers in Korea. Among Kim's dramas that Im starred in were 사랑합시다 (1981), Yesterday and Tomorrow (1982), Love and Truth (1984), Love and Ambition (1987), Farewell (1994), and Childless Comfort (2012). In Farewell, she shocked audiences by playing a Fatal Attraction-esque villain for the first time. Im also played the character Dal-soo in a series of one-act dramas for MBC Best Theater from 1995 to 2005.

As Im grew older, she remained active on television and the occasional film, in supporting roles as ajummas, aunts or mothers. As if coming full circle, she played one of the adult characters in a 2010 musical theatre adaptation of her early hit I Really Really Like You.

From 2008 to 2010, Im was a popular panelist on the variety show Quiz to Change the World, for which she was recognized at the MBC Entertainment Awards.

In 2014, Im signed with the talent agency YG Entertainment.

Personal life

In 1989, Im married Choi Chang-wook, a TV director and producer at MBC.

Variety show

  • Sunday Sunday Night Parody Theater "Temptation of the Legacy of the Queen of Housewives" (MBC, 2009)
  • Quiz to Change the World (MBC, 2008-2010) - panelist
  • Oasis (SBS, 2008) - MC
  • Truth Game (SBS, 2005-2007) - panelist
  • Vitamin (KBS2, 2006-2007) - panelist
  • Lee Jae-yong and Im Ye-jin's Good Day (MBC, 2006-2007) - MC
  • My Mom's the Best (GTV, 1995) - MC
  • 영11 (MBC, 1981-1982) - MC
  • MBC Campus Song Festival (1978, 1979, 1981) - MC
  • King of Mask Singer (MBC, 2017) – Contestant as "The Goal Is Marriage Report Juliet" (episode 99)
  • Music video

  • T-ara - "Roly-Poly" (2011)
  • Joo Hyun-mi and Seohyun - "Jjarajajja" (2009)
  • Psy feat. Snoop Dogg - "Hangover" (2014)
  • Theater

  • I Really Really Like You (2010)
  • Radio program

  • Hopeful Music at Noon (MBC Radio, 1980-1984)
  • Song Chang-ho and Im Ye-jin's Ode to Youth (MBC Radio, 1980-1981)
  • The Lee Deok-hwa and Im Ye-jin Show (TBC Radio, 1978-1979)
  • Awards

  • 2009 MBC Entertainment Awards: Female Excellence Award in Variety (Quiz to Change the World)
  • 2008 MBC Entertainment Awards: Best Entertainer Award (Quiz to Change the World)
  • 2007 MBC Drama Awards: Best TV Host (Good Day)
  • 1975 Grand Bell Awards: Best New Actress (Graduating School Girls)
  • References

    Im Ye-jin Wikipedia