Le drama “I Miss You“, sorti en novembre 2012 a connu un franc succès au point d’être acheté outre atlantique et dans toute l’Asie. Le rôle principal fut incarné par Park Yoochun, membre des JYJ, un habitué des drama à succès depuis ses débuts d’acteur en 2010 dans le drama “Sungkyunkwan Scandal“.
Aujourd’hui, il a été annoncé que Yoochun fera bientôt son retour sur le petit écran dans un nouveau drama intitulé “Three Days“. Le chanteur incarnera le rôle du garde du corps du Président coréen. Alors que ce dernier se rendait à sa villa, il se fait kidnapper à la suite de trois coups de feu. L’unité de garde du corps d’élite, composée entre autres de Yoochun, n’a que trois jours pour retrouver le Président.
Il est précisé que le rôle de Yoochun est similaire à celui de Jack Bauer (24h chrono) et que le Président aura une importance particulière. Par ailleurs, ce drama commandé par la chaîne SBS, est l’oeuvre de la scénariste Kim Eun Hee (Sign, Phantom). Cette dernière à collaboré avec le producteur Shin Kyung Soo (Deeply Rooted Tree).
Il est dit que Yoochun n’a pas vraiment hésité à accepter le rôle. Et, suite à cette annonce, Shin Kyung Soo n’a pas tardé à recevoir des appels de productions internationales, telle que le Japon, pour acheter les droits de diffusion.
Peu d’éléments ont été dévoilés si ce n’est que Sohn Hyun Joo pourrait peut-être endosser le rôle du président enlevé. Cependant, l’acteur n’a pas encore pris sa décision. Jang Hyun Sung, également courtisé pour interpréter le rôle du chef de l’unité de garde du corps, est également indécis.
“Three Days” est attendu pour le mois de février sur la chaîne SBS.
lundi 4 novembre 2013
Trouble Maker dévoile une nouvelle version du MV de “Now”
duo Trouble Maker dévoile une nouvelle version de son clip vidéo pour “Now”.
Ce nouveau MV, qui dure 6 minutes et 30 secondes, a été mis en ligne le lundi 4 novembre à minuit (heure coréenne), sur la chaine Youtube officielle du groupe. Rappelons qu’il a été classé commeinterdit aux mineurs.
Le clip est donc constitué de nouvelles scènes inédites du couple formé par Hyunseung (BEAST) et Hyuna (4MINUTE). Aussi, la tonalité globale de la vidéo est plus dramatique que l’originale.
Le MV souligne ainsi plus en détails le titre coréen de la chanson (‘내일은 없어’), qui se traduirait en français par “Il n’y a pas de lendemain“…
Dante’s epic poem meets traditional Korean opera
A more-than-seven-century-old epic poem will be recreated as an opera with Korean touches.
The National Theater of Korea will cast an Eastern light onto “The Divine Comedy,” written by Italian poet and politician Dante Alighieri (1265-1321). It will present a stage version of Dante’s masterpiece, adding a very Korean element: pansori, a traditional Korean opera, music and story-telling style. The show will run from November 2 to 9, with no performance on November 4, at the National Theater near Namsan Mountain in Seoul.
The epic poem was written by Dante while he was in exile after losing political power. The masterpiece consists of 100 cantos, dissecting Dante’s one-week journey through the three realms of the dead: Hell, Purgatory and Paradise.
As the protagonist of his poem, Dante has only one reason to embark on such a long and tortuous journey: to see again his ideal woman, Beatrice, in his final destination, Paradise.
This great piece of literature will now be turned into a stage version combined with an orchestra, pansori, mime and classical music at the National Theater of Korea for its seven-day run.
“This production looks mainly at the life path of the protagonist, who at first insists he has never sinned, then admits his sins after soul-searching and undergoing a spiritual transformation as he traverses through his journey,” explained producer Han Tae-sook at a press conference.
“As it features performers from the National Changgeuk Company of Korea, actors and mime artists, as well as musical, pansori and opera performers, I am sure this rendition will maximize the drama displayed in Dante’s written work as it will be meshed with the unique sound of pansori, our traditional musical heritage and the artistic stage effects.”
The play begins on the night before Good Friday in 1300, when thirty-five year-old Dante, lost deep in a dark, shadowed wood, encounters the poet Virgil. He is led by the poet and they begin their journey through the underworld with the goal of finding Beatrice, for whom he has longed throughout his life.
They enter Hell on the first leg of the journey, where each and every sin is mercilessly punished. There, Dante, who claims he has never sinned, experiences fear and pity as he watches all the torments of Hell inflicted on sinful souls, such as a couple whose too-strong love and lust has swirled them down to self-destruction.
This great piece of literature will now be turned into a stage version combined with an orchestra, pansori, mime and classical music at the National Theater of Korea for its seven-day run.
“This production looks mainly at the life path of the protagonist, who at first insists he has never sinned, then admits his sins after soul-searching and undergoing a spiritual transformation as he traverses through his journey,” explained producer Han Tae-sook at a press conference.
“As it features performers from the National Changgeuk Company of Korea, actors and mime artists, as well as musical, pansori and opera performers, I am sure this rendition will maximize the drama displayed in Dante’s written work as it will be meshed with the unique sound of pansori, our traditional musical heritage and the artistic stage effects.”
The play begins on the night before Good Friday in 1300, when thirty-five year-old Dante, lost deep in a dark, shadowed wood, encounters the poet Virgil. He is led by the poet and they begin their journey through the underworld with the goal of finding Beatrice, for whom he has longed throughout his life.
They enter Hell on the first leg of the journey, where each and every sin is mercilessly punished. There, Dante, who claims he has never sinned, experiences fear and pity as he watches all the torments of Hell inflicted on sinful souls, such as a couple whose too-strong love and lust has swirled them down to self-destruction.
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