Lee Jung-jae
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Lee Jung-jae | |
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File:Lee Jung-Jae.jpg | |
Born | Icheon, Gyeonggi Province, South Korea |
15 March 1973
Nationality | South Korean |
Education | Dongguk University Master's degree in Theater and Film |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1993–present |
Agent | C-JeS Entertainment (2013-2016) Artist Company (2016-present) |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 이정재 |
Hanja | 李政宰 |
Revised Romanization | I Jeong-jae |
McCune–Reischauer | I Chŏng-jae |
Lee Jung-jae (born 15 March 1973) is a South Korean actor. He debuted as a fashion model, then began his acting career on television, notably in the campus series Feelings (1994) and the iconic drama Sandglass (1995). After his acting breakthrough in An Affair (1998), Lee's film career took off. He has starred in a variety of film genres, among them romantic films such as Il Mare (2000) and Over the Rainbow (2002), melodrama Last Present (2001), comedy Oh! Brothers (2003), action films The Last Witness (2001) and Typhoon (2005), heist film The Thieves (2012), film noir New World (2013), and period film The Face Reader (2013). He won Best Actor awards at the Blue Dragon Film Awards for City of the Rising Sun (1999), and at the Fantasporto Director's Week for The Housemaid (2010).
Contents
Career
Lee Jung-jae was discovered by designer Ha Yong-soo while he was working at a café in Apgujeong, then worked as a fashion model for a number of years. Upon making his acting debut with the 1993 TV drama Dinosaur Teacher, Lee became a star practically overnight, and was almost always cast in lead roles thereafter. A year later, he received favorable reviews for his first big screen role in Bae Chang-ho's The Young Man, but it was the 1994 hit campus drama Feelings that made him a household name.[1]
In 1995 what was supposed to be a small supporting role as the heroine's silent, devoted bodyguard in ratings behemoth Sandglass turned Lee into a national heartthrob, such that his screen time was increased throughout the series' run.[2] His acting breakthrough would come in late 1998 in the award-winning film An Affair by E J-yong. This was followed up by another success, City of the Rising Sun, for which he won Best Actor at the Blue Dragon Film Awards and the Korean Association of Film Critics Awards.[3]
Though his time-travel romance Il Mare was not a popular success in 2000, since then it has developed a loyal fan base a la Somewhere in Time and attained the status of a minor classic among Korean cinema fans (Keanu Reeves played Lee's role in the 2006 Hollywood remake The Lake House).[4]
After starring in the Korean-Japanese coproduction Asako in Ruby Shoes, released in December 2000, Lee found considerable popular success in 2001, with the melodrama Last Present,[5] where he was cast opposite Lee Young-ae, and in action/mystery/drama The Last Witness directed by Bae Chang-ho. In 2002 he starred in the romance Over the Rainbow with Jang Jin-young.[3]
In 2003 he starred opposite Lee Beom-soo in Oh! Brothers, a comic drama about two brothers, one of whom has an unusual disease. The film was one of Lee's biggest hits ever, topping three million admissions at the local box office. Nonetheless he remained out of the limelight for the next couple years. Finally at the end of 2005 he returned in Typhoon, a big-budget action blockbuster by Kwak Kyung-taek, the director of Friend.[3]
Lee's much-anticipated return to television a decade after his memorable turn in Sandglass was not successful ratings-wise; Air City (2007) and Triple (2009) both flopped.[6]
With the period action comedy The Accidental Gangster and the Mistaken Courtesan, Lee said he wanted to try his hand at playing a different kind of role, a comical loose cannon type of character.[7] Though it was not successful at the box office, he still considers it one of his most memorable films.[8]
In August 2008 Lee was awarded his master's degree from Dongguk University's Department of Theater & Film Art in the Graduate School of Cultural Arts.[9] He made his first foray into theater in December of that same year, taking on the titular role in Hamlet in Water. The play ran for four days at his alma mater's Lee Hae-rang Theater.[10][11]
He then starred in the high-profile 2010 erotic thriller The Housemaid, which screened at the Cannes Film Festival,[12] and Toronto International Film Festival.[13] Lee nabbed a Best Actor award at the Fantasporto Director's Week.[14] As his next project, he joined the star-studded ensemble cast of The Thieves, a 2012 heist film that became the second all-time highest grossing movie in Korean cinema history.[8][15][16][17][18][19]
El Fin del Mundo ("The End of the World") is a 13-minute split screen film made by visual artists Moon Kyung-won and Jeon Joon-ho, which depicts the destructive environmental changes the world faces in the future and the subsequent end of art and birth of new art based on dialogue between two artists in different times and space, played by Lee and Im Soo-jung.[20] The film was screened at dOCUMENTA in 2012, considered the world's most prestigious and innovative contemporary art platform.[21][22][23] A longtime art collector and honorary ambassador for the National Museum of Contemporary Art in 2011-2012, Lee also narrated the 2013 TV documentary Contemporary Art, Bury the Boundary which highlighted homegrown Korean artists.[24]
In the noir thriller New World (2013), he played a police officer who goes undercover in a crime organization.[25][26][27][28] Lee said he was grateful to co-star Choi Min-sik, who suggested casting him to the director.[29] He later signed on to be exclusively managed by C-JeS Entertainment, reportedly choosing the agency after he worked with Song Ji-hyo in New World.[30]
Lee then portrayed Prince Suyang opposite Song Kang-ho in the period film The Face Reader (2013), for which he won Best Supporting Actor at the Blue Dragon Film Awards and the Baeksang Arts Awards.[31] This was followed by action-comedy Big Match in 2014, where he played a mixed martial arts fighter trying to save his brother by winning an elaborate high-stakes game.[32][33][34]
In 2015, he reunited with The Thieves director Choi Dong-hoon in Assassination, set in 1930s Korea and Shanghai during the Japanese occupation.[35] Lee is set to begin shooting his first Chinese film, mystery action movie Tik Tok (titled The Day of Reversal in Chinese).[36][37] He has also been cast in the film titled Operation Chromite, a code name for the Battle of Inchon, a United Nations military operation planned and executed by Douglas MacArthur that resulted in a decisive victory in favor of the UN forces; Liam Neeson plays MacArthur while Lee plays a South Korean lieutenant in the navy, the man responsible for reversing the tide of the Korean War.[38][39]
In May 2016, Lee and actor Jung Woo-sung established and became CEOs of their entertainment label called the 'Artist Company'.[40]
Personal life
Lee dated actress Kim Min-hee for three years; the couple broke up in late 2006.[1][41] He previously denied rumors romantically linking him with Lim Se-ryong, eldest daughter of Daesang Group chairman Lim Chang-wook and ex-wife of Samsung Group heir apparent Lee Jae-yong,[42][43][44] then confirmed in January 2015 that he was dating Lim.[45][46]
Apart from his acting, Lee is known for launching a chain of upscale Italian restaurants in Seoul named after his movie Il Mare. Having studied interior design, he himself took responsibility for designing the interiors of his restaurants.[3][47] Lee also founded the real estate development company Seorim C&D in 2008,[44] and owns several businesses with actor Jung Woo-sung, his best friend since they starred together in City of the Rising Sun.[48]
Filmography
Film
Year | Title | Role |
---|---|---|
1993 | Love Is Oh Yeah! | |
1994 | The Young Man | Lee Han |
1996 | Albatross | Pyeong-san |
1997 | Firebird | Young-hoo |
Father vs. Son | Park Su-seok | |
1998 | An Affair | Woo-in |
1999 | City of the Rising Sun | Hong-ki |
The Uprising | Lee Jae-su | |
2000 | Interview | Eun-seok |
Il Mare | Han Sung-hyun | |
Asako in Ruby Shoes | Woo-in | |
2001 | Last Present | Jung Yong-ki |
MOB 2025 (short film) | Dust | |
The Last Witness | Detective Oh | |
2002 | Over the Rainbow | Lee Jin-su |
2003 | Oh! Brothers | Oh Sang-woo |
2005 | Typhoon | Kang Se-jong |
2008 | The Accidental Gangster and the Mistaken Courtesan | Cheon-doong |
2010 | The Housemaid | Hoon |
2012 | El Fin del Mundo (short film) | |
The Thieves | Popie | |
2013 | New World | Lee Ja-sung |
The Face Reader | Prince Suyang | |
2014 | Big Match | Choi Ik-ho |
2015 | Assassination | Yeom Seok-jin |
2016 | Tik Tok | |
Operation Chromite | Jang Hak-soo | |
2017 | With God | Good of Death (King Yeomra) |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Network |
---|---|---|---|
1993 | Dinosaur Teacher | SBS | |
Survivor's Grief | KBS2 | ||
1994 | The Lonely Man | Jae-jung | KBS2 |
Feelings | Han Joon | KBS2 | |
Love Is Blue | SBS | ||
1995 | Sandglass | Baek Jae-hee | SBS |
1997 | Snail | Dong-cheol | SBS |
1998 | White Nights 3.98 | Lee Young-jun | SBS |
2007 | Air City | Kim Ji-sung | MBC |
2009 | Triple | Shin Hwal | MBC |
Awards and nominations
Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1995 | 31st Baeksang Arts Awards | Best New Actor (TV) | Sandglass | Won |
Best New Actor (Film) | The Young Man | Won | ||
33rd Grand Bell Awards | Best New Actor | Won | ||
16th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best New Actor | Won | ||
15th Korean Association of Film Critics Awards | Best New Actor | Won | ||
SBS Drama Awards | Best New Actor | Sandglass | Won | |
1997 | 33rd Baeksang Arts Awards | Most Popular Actor (Film) | Firebird | Won |
1998 | 19th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Actor | An Affair | Nominated |
1999 | 35th Baeksang Arts Awards | Best Actor (Film) | City of the Rising Sun | Nominated |
Most Popular Actor (Film) | Won | |||
36th Grand Bell Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | ||
20th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Actor | Won | ||
19th Korean Association of Film Critics Awards | Best Actor | Won | ||
2001 | 38th Savings Day | Prime Minister's Commendation | N/A | Won |
38th Grand Bell Awards | Best Actor | Last Present | Nominated | |
2006 | 43rd Grand Bell Awards | Best Actor | Typhoon | Nominated |
29th Golden Cinematography Awards | Best Actor | Won | ||
2008 | 1st Style Icon Awards | Style Icon Actor | N/A | Won |
2010 | 4th Mnet 20's Choice Awards | Most Influential Star | N/A | Won |
2011 | 31st Fantasporto Director's Week | Best Actor | The Housemaid | Won |
2013 | 50th Grand Bell Awards | Best Actor | The Face Reader | Nominated |
Popularity Award | Won | |||
34th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Won | ||
33rd Korean Association of Film Critics Awards | CJ CGV Star Award | New World, The Face Reader | Won | |
2014 | 5th KOFRA Film Awards | Best Supporting Actor | The Face Reader | Won |
9th Max Movie Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Nominated | ||
19th Chunsa Film Art Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | ||
50th Baeksang Arts Awards | Best Supporting Actor (Film) | Won | ||
23rd Buil Film Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Nominated | ||
2015 | 51st Baeksang Arts Awards | InStyle Fashionista Award[49] | N/A | Won |
24th Buil Film Awards | Best Actor | Assassination | Won | |
3rd Marie Claire Asia Star Awards | Actor of the Year[50] | Won | ||
36th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Actor | Nominated |
References
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lee Jung-jae. |
- Lee Jung-jae on FacebookLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- Lee Jung-jae at C-JeS Entertainment
- Lee Jung-jae at the Internet Movie Database
- Lee Jung-jae at the Korean Movie Database
- Lee Jung-jae at HanCinema
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- Pages with reference errors
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- South Korean male film actors
- South Korean male television actors
- South Korean male models
- 1973 births
- Living people
- Dongguk University alumni