lee seo jin singer

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South Korean actor and television host

Lee Seo-jin

190812 이서진.jpg

Lee Seo-jin in August 2019

Born
(1971-01-30)
January 30, 1971
(age 52)

South Korea

Other names Lee Suh-jin
Alma mater New York University
Occupation Actor
Years active 1999–present
Agent Hook Entertainment
Korean name
Hangul


이서진

Revised Romanization
I Seo-jin
McCune–Reischauer
I Sŏchin
Website www.seojinlee.com

Lee Seo-jin
(born January 30, 1971) is a South Korean actor. He is best known for the reality shows
Three Meals a Day
and
Grandpa Over Flowers. As an actor, he came to prominence with his leading roles in television series
Damo
(2003),
Phoenix
(2004),
Lovers
(2006),
Yi San
(2007) and
Marriage Contract
(2016).

Career

[edit]

Lee Seo-jin made his acting debut in 1999 in the television series
House Above the Waves. After several supporting roles on TV, he rose to fame in the 2003 hit period sandiwara boneka
Damo, followed by the also popular contemporary drama
Phoenix
in 2004.[1]
[2]
Lee then landed his first big screen leading role in the 2005 action blockbuster
Shadowless Sword.[3]

Lee played a vampire in the cable series
Freeze
(2006), a gangster in
Lovers
(2006),[2]
and a criminal profiler in
Soul
(2009).[4]
[5]
However, he became well-known for his portrayals of Korean historical characters King Jeongjo of Joseon in
Yi San
(2007),[6]
and General Gyebaek of Baekje in
Gyebaek
(2011).[7]
[8]

Other activities

[edit]

Lee comes from a family with strong ties in the financial sector, and believed to be involved in the banking, transportation and tourism industries, among others. He has a Business Management degree from the New York University Stern School of Business. In 2011, Lee joined the company Ask Veritas Assets Management, which specializes in intellectual property and real estate investment. He was appointed as managing director for the firm’s second global contents division.[9]
[10]
[11]

A regular volunteer of Habitat for Humanity since 2006, he was appointed its Goodwill Ambassador for Korea in 2008.[12]
[13]
Together with the Nippon Foundation and South Korean food franchise Genesis, Lee established the “Let’s Tree Fund” in 2010 to conduct reforestation activities.[14]
In 2011, Lee joined relief efforts for victims of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami.[15]
Like many celebrities, Lee also publicly protested the forced repatriation of North Korean defectors.[
citation needed
]

Filmography

[edit]

Gambar hidup

[edit]

Television series

[edit]

Web series

[edit]

Television show

[edit]

Music video

[edit]

  • Forever
    (SKY, 1999)
  • Lieblich
    (Boohwal, 2000)
  • Goodbye
    (Jung Jae-wook, 2001)
  • Where Are You?
    (Yim Jae-beom for
    Ditto 3
    compilation album, 2004)

Theater

[edit]

  • Shakespearean Love Method
    (2000)

Awards and nominations

[edit]

State honors

[edit]

Listicles

[edit]

Notes

[edit]


  1. ^

    Honors are given at the Taxpayers’ Day ceremony.[27]

References

[edit]


  1. ^


    “Actor Lee Seo-jin to Hold First Fan Meeting in Japan”.
    KBS Global. June 5, 2006. Archived from the original on July 2, 2013. Retrieved
    May 28,
    2013
    .


  2. ^


    a




    b




    Cho, Chung-un (December 11, 2006). “HERALD INTERVIEW: Actor Lee Seo-jin seeks versatility”.
    The Korea Herald via Hancinema
    . Retrieved
    April 27,
    2013
    .



  3. ^


    “무영검 (Shadowless Sword) Production Meeting Report”.
    Twitch Film. September 27, 2005. Archived from the original on October 10, 2012. Retrieved
    April 2,
    2013
    .



  4. ^


    Lee Hyo-won, Han Si-hee (August 4, 2009). “Let Horror Take Control of Summer Heat”.
    The Korea Times
    . Retrieved
    April 2,
    2013
    .



  5. ^


    Oh, Jean (August 5, 2009). “New horror special to chill summer nights”.
    The Korea Herald
    . Retrieved
    April 2,
    2013
    .



  6. ^


    Lee, Hyo-won (September 18, 2007). “TV Falls in Love with Epic Dramas”.
    The Korea Times
    . Retrieved
    April 2,
    2013
    .



  7. ^


    Kim, Heidi (May 2, 2011). “Actor Lee Seo-jin cast in new historical drama”.
    10Asia
    . Retrieved
    April 2,
    2013
    .



  8. ^


    Ko, Min-seok (October 13, 2011). “Actors raise money for preservation”.
    Korea JoongAng Daily. Archived from the original on April 11, 2013. Retrieved
    April 2,
    2013
    .



    {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)


  9. ^


    Kim, Da-ye (January 31, 2011). “Actor tries lot as financier”.
    The Korea Times
    . Retrieved
    April 2,
    2013
    .



  10. ^


    “Actor Lee Seo-jin Turns Hand to Finance”.
    The Chosun Ilbo. January 31, 2011. Retrieved
    April 2,
    2013
    .



  11. ^


    “Actor Lee to direct asset management firm”.
    The Korea Herald. February 6, 2011. Retrieved
    August 24,
    2010
    .



  12. ^


    “South Korean actor Lee Seo-Jin helps build homes and awareness with Habitat for Humanity during the annual Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Work Project”.
    Habitat.org. November 16, 2009. Archived from the original on November 17, 2012. Retrieved
    August 24,
    2010
    .



  13. ^


    Kang, Seung-hun (October 14, 2009). “Actor Lee to build houses with Jimmy Carter”.
    10Asia
    . Retrieved
    April 2,
    2013
    .



  14. ^


    “Lets Tree Fund will Plant Trees, Educate Kids”.
    Nippon Foundation. January 15, 2010. Archived from the original on December 24, 2013. Retrieved
    August 24,
    2010
    .



  15. ^


    Hong, Lucia (May 18, 2011). “Actor Lee Seo-jin makes donation for Japan earthquake relief”.
    10Asia
    . Retrieved
    April 2,
    2013
    .



  16. ^


    “Lee Seo-jin, the reluctant heartthrob: Playing a womanizer in ‘Intimate Strangers’ was no easy task for the actor”.
    Korea JoongAng Daily. October 27, 2018.



  17. ^


    Lee Hyo-won (September 18, 2007). “TV Falls in Love with Epic Dramas”. The Korea Times. Retrieved
    June 26,
    2021
    .



  18. ^


    an0ya (February 24, 2014). “Kim Hee Sun and Lee Seo Jin’s “Wonderful Days” Off to a Successful Tiba with Ratings Over 30%”. Soompi. Retrieved
    June 26,
    2021
    .



  19. ^


    Bahk Eun-ji (December 28, 2015). “Lee Seo-jin returns to small screen”. The Korea Times. Retrieved
    June 26,
    2021
    .



  20. ^


    Park Hyun-taek (May 11, 2016). “Triumphant return to the drama scene”. Korea JoongAng Daily. Retrieved
    June 26,
    2021
    .



  21. ^


    “OCN, 영화X드라마 컬래버 프로젝트…이서진·성동일 주연 ‘트랩’“.
    Ilgan Sports
    (in Korean). September 14, 2018.



  22. ^


    Lee Gyu-lee (February 17, 2021). “Lee Seo-jin returns with another OCN mystery series ‘Times’“. The Korea Times. Retrieved
    June 26,
    2021
    .



  23. ^


    Moon Ji-yeon (June 8, 2022). “[공식] 이서진·곽선영·서현우·주현영, ‘연예인 매니저로 살아남기’ 촬영 돌입” [[Official] Seo-Jin Lee, Seon-Young Kwak, Hyeon-Woo Seo, and Hyun-Young Joo Begin Filming for ‘Surviving as a Celebrity Manager’] (in Korean). Sports Chosun. Retrieved
    June 8,
    2022

    – via Naver.



  24. ^


    Lee Da-won (August 13, 2021). “내과 박원장’ 이서진·라미란, 조합이 ‘코믹” [Director of Kerumahtanggaan Medicine Park Lee Seo-jin and Ra Mi-ran, the union is ‘comic].
    Sports Kyunghyang
    (in Korean). Retrieved
    August 13,
    2021

    – via Naver.



  25. ^


    Park Jeong-seon (March 2, 2022). “[단독] 나영석·윤여정·이서진 LA 간다…새 예능서 재회” [[Exclusive] Na Young-seok, Yoon Yeo-jeong, Lee Seo-jin go to LA… Reunion in a new entertainment book] (in Korean). JTBC. Retrieved
    March 2,
    2022

    – via Naver.



  26. ^


    Kim Min-ji (January 27, 2023). “서진이네’, 이서진·정유미·박서준·최우식·김태형 드림팀 완성…2월24일 오픈” [‘Seojin’, Lee Seojin, Jung Yumi, Park Seojun, Choi Wooshik, Kim Taehyung’s dream team complete… Open on February 24th] (in Korean). News1. Retrieved
    January 27,
    2023

    – via Naver.



  27. ^


    Sullivan, Martin (July 8, 2020). “K-Pop Stars Promote South Korean Tax Compliance”.
    Forbes. Archived from the original on July 8, 2020. Retrieved
    May 20,
    2021
    .



  28. ^


    “Singer IU, Actor Lee Seo-jin Honored as Faithful Taxpayers”.
    Chosun. March 4, 2020.



  29. ^


    Choi, Eun-kyung; Lim, Chae-yeon (February 23, 2015).
    2015 KOREA POWER CELEBRITY 40 – 엑소, 한국 최고의 파워 셀러브리티
    [2015 KOREA POWER CELEBRITY 40 – EXO, Korea’s best power celebrity].
    JoongAng Ilbo
    (in Korean). Archived from the original on March 5, 2015. Retrieved
    May 22,
    2021

    – via Joins.


External links

[edit]


Kendaraan related to Lee Seo-jin at Wikimedia Commons

  • Lee Seo-jin official Korean website
    (in Korean)
  • Lee Seo-jin official Japanese website
    (in Japanese)
  • Lee Seo-jin at HanCinema
    Edit this at Wikidata
  • Lee Seo-jin at the Korean Movie Database
  • Lee Seo-jin at IMDb



Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Seo-jin