Lee Young-ae (born January 31, 1971)[2] is a South Korean actress. She is known for her appearances in the Korean historical drama Dae Jang Geum (2003), and as a revenge seeking single mother in Park Chan-wook's crime thriller film Sympathy for Lady Vengeance (2005). For her performance in the film, she received Best Actress awards at the 38th Sitges Film Festival,[3] 26th Blue Dragon Film Awards and 42nd Baeksang Arts Awards.
Lee Young-ae | |
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![]() At the press conference of Saimdang, Memoir of Colors, January 2017 | |
Born | (1971-01-31) January 31, 1971 (age 51) Seoul, South Korea |
Alma mater | Hanyang University (B.A. German Language and Literature) Chung Ang University (M.A. Theater and Film)[1] |
Occupation | Actress, model |
Years active | 1993–2005 2017–present |
Agent(s) | Good People Entertainment (subsidiary of Creative Leaders Group Eight) |
Height | 165 cm (5 ft 5 in)[2] |
Spouse | Jeong Ho-yeong (m. 2009) |
Children | 2 |
Korean name | |
Hangul | |
Hanja | |
Revised Romanization | I Yeong-ae |
McCune–Reischauer | Yi Yŏng-ae |
Lee made her debut as a model in 1991. After appearing in television commercials, she debuted as an actress in the 1993 drama How's Your Husband?, which won her Best New Actress at the SBS Drama Awards.
In 2000, she starred in the mystery thriller film Joint Security Area, which became the highest-grossing Korean film at that time. She followed this with melodrama Last Present, where she received acclaim for her performance as a young woman facing the realities of an early death.[4] Lee reunited with director Hur Jin-ho to star in his next film One Fine Spring Day, which won her Best Actress at the Busan Film Critics Awards. She also starred in the TV series Fireworks, which introduced Lee to Taiwan audiences.[5]
Lee came to prominence in South Korea after starring in the historical drama Dae Jang Geum. It first aired from September 15, 2003 to March 23, 2004 on MBC, where it was the top program with an average viewership rating of 46.3% and a peak of 57.8% (making it the 10th highest rated Korean drama of all time.[6] Lee won the Daesang (Grand Prize) award at the MBC Drama Awards, as well as the Top Excellence award. The show was then aired overseas in 91 countries and became exceptionally popular in Asia.[7][8] The fame of Dae Jang Geum launched Lee into pan-Asia stardom as one of the biggest Hallyu stars.[9][10] She has been invited to visit mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore and Japan.[11][12] In 2006, for the first time in 12 years, NHK had to use the NHK Hall to host the NHK show due to her popularity; and stamps featuring Lee was also released in Japan.[13] She was also invited to the 2007 Harbin International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival in China.[14]
Lee then starred in the third installment in Park Chan-wook's The Vengeance Trilogy, titled Sympathy For Lady Vengeance.[15] She was awarded Best Actress at the 2005 Blue Dragon Film Awards and 2006 Baeksang Art Awards for her performance in the film.[16][17]
In 2006, Lee was invited sit on the jury bench of the 56th Berlin International Film Festival, becoming the first Korean actress to be selected as a jury member of the international film festival.[18]
In 2007, she received the Medal of Culture Merit for her contribution to the Korean Wave from the South Korean government.[19]
In 2015, it was announced that Lee would be making her comeback to television in SBS historical series Saimdang, Memoir of Colors. She would be playing dual roles as Shin Saimdang, a famed Joseon-era artist and calligrapher as well as a modern-day Korean history lecturer.[20] The drama premiered in January 2017.[21]
In 2018, Lee was cast in the film Bring Me Home, returning to the big screen after 13 years.[22]
In 2022, Lee was invited to be the jury member of the 27th Busan International Film Festival's "Actor of the Year Award".[23]
Besides her acting career, Lee has been involved with several charities. In 1997, she went to Ethiopia as a NGO Goodwill Ambassador. She went to Thar Desert in 1999 to do a TV show about people in India's lowest social caste. Later in 2001, she described these experiences in her autobiography “A Most Special Love”[24] with partial English and donated the income from the sale of the book to charity.
She was appointed a goodwill ambassador in 2004 by UNICEF and has since held several charity posts. She has made many donations to schools and hospitals, including Chosun First Middle School in Harbin[25] and an elementary school in China that was later renamed Lee Young-Ae Elementary School.[26] In 2012, she served as the celebrity spokesperson for the "Love Donation" project, hosted by the magazine Woman Chosun. She made a donation to build a school in Myanmar.[27][28]
In 2012, Lee launched a business for organic and eco-friendly products for children in Seoul.[29]
In July 2014, Taiwanese media reported that Lee had privately assisted a pregnant Taiwanese woman vacationing with her husband in Seoul. The woman gave birth to a girl prematurely and the infant had several complications. Lee found out about the couple through her friend and decided to pay their medical bills of NT$4 million (US$134,000) because the infant required two surgeries and constant medical care after she was born.[30] Lee was subsequently given an award by Taiwan's Chou Ta-Kuan Cultural and Educational Foundation.[31] In 2016, she helped a Vietnamese girl who went to Korea to treat her brain tumor by donating 37 million won for the operation and other medical bills.[32]
In Sri Lanka, she is known as "Changumi" (Sinhala: චංගුමී), and her popularity there led to the creation of the Sujatha Diyani Scholarship Fund in 2014, when she donated US$100,000. The fund aims at providing financial assistance to female students from low-income families.[33] Lee also became the first actress to join the "Chime for Change" campaign of Gucci to "raise funds and awareness for projects promoting education, health, and justice for girls and women" around the world.[34]
In 2015, Lee was appointed special envoy by the UNESCO Korean Commission.[35] She promotes the commission's activities such as fundraising and a campaign to render educational support to underdeveloped countries.[36]
In March 2022, Lee donated 100 million won to Ukraine, which was damaged by the Russian invasion, along with a letter of consolation to the people of Ukraine.[37]
On May 1, 2022, Lee donated 100 million won to the Sowon Foundation Office in Yangpyeong City Gyeonggi-do Province to assist patients who have difficulty getting out of the house due to childhood cancer or rare diseases.[38]
On August 19, 2022, Lee donated ₩100 million to help those affected by the 2022 South Korean floods through the Korea Foundation for the Disabled.[39]
On November 3, 2022, Lee made a donation to help the victims of the Seoul Halloween crowd crush through donations, Korea Welfare Foundation for the Disabled.[40]On November 4, the Korea Foundation for the Disabled announced that after the memorial service for the deceased, the only daughter of Third generation Koryo-saram people, the 10 million won donation Lee donated amounted to 10 million won, and a letter was sent to the father of the deceased.[41]
In 1991, Lee made her debut as a rookie model, became known through a TV commercial for Pacific Chemical's (now Amore Pacific) cosmetics brand Mamonde. Her urban image with her raised hair and trench coat collar left a strong impression on viewers, and Lee Young-ae, who was studying "German Language and Literature" at Hanyang University at that moment, rose to stardom with the modifier Oxygen Lady. At that time, Mamonde became the most successful brand in the history of Pacific Chemical. The product Tropic Orange Makeup, which was released in March 1994, achieved a record of selling 1.5 million units in two months. Due to the popularity of Mamonde and Lee Young-ae, competitors also poured out advertisements with a similar concept in 1997. She had been the face of Mamonde for 10 years.[42]
Since 2007, Lee became the global ambassador of LG Household & Health Care’s super-premium beauty brand The History of Whoo until now.[43][44]
In 2020, Lee had been selected as Korean ambassador for Ferragamo Eyewear.[45]
In July 2022, she was selected as the model for the new product "Lifening Beauty Collagen Ampoule" of the inner beauty brand Lifening.[46]
In 2009, Lee married Jeong Ho-young, a Korean-American businessman who was twenty years older than her.[47] On February 20, 2011, she gave birth to twins, a boy and a girl.[48]
Year | Title | Role | |
---|---|---|---|
English | Korean | ||
1996 | Insyalla | 인샬라 | Lee Hyang |
1998 | First Kiss | 키스할까요 | Min-joo (cameo) |
2000 | Joint Security Area | 공동경비구역 JSA | Maj. Sophie E. Jean |
2001 | Last Present | 선물 | Park Jung-yeon |
One Fine Spring Day | 봄날은 간다 | Han Eun-soo | |
2005 | Lady Vengeance | 친절한 금자씨 | Lee Geum-ja |
2019 | Bring Me Home | 나를 찾아줘 | Seo Jung-yeon |
Year | Title | Role | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
English | Korean | |||
1993 | How's Your Husband? | 댁의 남편은 어떠십니까? | Do Do-hee | |
1994 | Dash | 질주 | ||
1995 | Love and Marriage | 사랑과 결혼 | Oh Eun-ji | |
West Palace | 서궁 | Kim Gae-shi / Gae-Ttong | ||
Asphalt Man | 아스팔트 사나이 | Dong-hee | ||
1996 | Papa | 파파 | Han Sae-young | |
Their Embrace | 그들의 포옹 | Kim Seung-hye | ||
Sibling Relations | 동기간 | |||
1997 | Medical Brothers | 의가형제 | Cha Min-ju | |
The Reason I Live | 내가 사는 이유 | Ae-suk | ||
Because I Love You | 사랑하니까 | Eo Yu-na | ||
1998 | Romance | 로맨스 | ||
Advocate | 애드버킷 | |||
1999 | Enbireyong | 은비령 | ||
Invitation | 초대 | Choi Young-joo | ||
The Wave | 파도 | |||
2000 | Fireworks | 불꽃 | Kim Ji-hyun | |
2003 | Jewel in the Palace | 대장금 | Seo Jang-geum | |
2017 | Saimdang, Memoir of Colors | 사임당, 빛의 일기 | Shin Saimdang / Seo Ji-yoon | |
2018 | Gangnam Beauty | 내 아이디는 강남미인 | Herself (Cameo, Ep.1) | [49] |
2021 | Taxi Driver | 모범택시 | Cameo | [50] |
Inspector Koo | 구경이 | Koo Kyung-yi | [51][52] | |
2023 | Maestra | 마에스트라 | Cha Se-eum | [53] |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | Docu Prime - Children's Rights | Narrator | children's human rights documentary narration | [54] |
Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1994 | SBS Drama Awards | Best New Actress | How's Your Husband? | Won | |
1995 | KBS Drama Awards | Popularity Award | West Palace | Won | |
1996 | MBC Drama Awards | Excellence Award, Actress | Their Embrace, Sibling Relations | Nominated | |
1997 | The Reason I Live | Won | |||
1998 | SBS Drama Awards | Top Excellence Award, Actress | Romance | Won | |
1999 | KBS Drama Awards | Excellence Award, Actress | Invitation | Nominated | |
Popularity Award | Won | ||||
2000 | SBS Drama Awards | Big Star Awards | Fireworks | Won | |
Top Excellence Award, Actress | Nominated | ||||
21st Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Leading Actress | Joint Security Area | Nominated | ||
2001 | 37th Baeksang Arts Awards | Best Actress (Film) | Nominated | ||
2nd Korea Movie & Music Awards | Photogenic Prize for Actress | Won | |||
38th Grand Bell Awards | Best Actress | Last Present | Nominated | ||
Cine 21 Movie Awards | One Fine Spring Day , Last Present | Won | |||
2nd Busan Film Critics Awards | One Fine Spring Day | Won | |||
22nd Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Leading Actress | Nominated | |||
2002 | 38th Baeksang Arts Awards | Best Actress (Film) | Nominated | ||
39th Grand Bell Awards | Best Actress | Nominated | |||
25th Golden Cinema Film Festival | Most Popular Actress | Last Present | Won | ||
2003 | MBC Drama Awards | Grand Prize (Daesang) | Dae Jang Geum | Won | |
Top Excellence Award, Actress | Nominated | ||||
2004 | 40th Baeksang Arts Awards | Best Actress (TV) | Nominated | ||
2nd Andre Kim Best Star Awards | Female Star Award | — | Won | [55] | |
2005 | Hong Kong Government Broadcasting Award | Hong Kong People's Choice | Won | ||
China Synsis Bao | Most Influential Foreign Star | 3rd place | |||
26th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Leading Actress | Lady Vengeance | Won | [17] | |
4th Korean Film Awards | Best Actress | Nominated | |||
8th Director's Cut Awards | Won | [56] | |||
38th Sitges Film Festival | Won | [3] | |||
13th Chunsa Film Art Awards | Nominated | ||||
2006 | 38th Cinemanila International Film Festival | Won | [57] | ||
43rd Grand Bell Awards | Nominated | [58] | |||
Korean Wave Popularity Award | Won | ||||
42nd Baeksang Arts Awards | Best Actress (Film) | Won | |||
2007 | 15th Chunsa Film Festival | Korean Wave Contribution Award | — | Won | |
3rd Andre Kim Best Star Awards | Grand Prize | Won | [59] | ||
1st Hallyu Awards | Star (Drama) Award | Won | [60] | ||
44th Korean Broadcasters Association Day | Actor Award | Won | [61] | ||
Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism | Medal of Cultural Merit | Won | [19] | ||
2009 | 5th Andre Kim Best Star Awards | Female Star Award | Won | ||
2015 | 10th Seoul International Drama Awards | 10th Anniversary Hallyu Achievement Award | Won | [62] | |
2017 | 22nd Consumers Day | Cultural Person Award | Saimdang, Memoir of Colors | Won | |
2017 SBS Drama Awards | Top Excellence Award, Actress in a Wed-Thurs Drama | Nominated | [63] | ||
2020 | 25th Chunsa Film Art Awards | Best Actress | Bring Me Home | Won | [64] |
29th Buil Film Awards | Nominated | ||||
2021 | Cine 21 Awards | Best Actress of the Year | Inspector Koo | Won | [65] |
2022 | Bechdel Day 2022 | Best Actress | Won | [66] | |
National Brand Awards 2022 | Hallyu Achievement Award | — | Won | [67] | |
General | |
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National libraries | |
Other |
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