Lee Na-young

Movie Actress

Lee Na-young was born in Seoul, South Korea on February 22nd, 1979 and is the Movie Actress. At the age of 45, Lee Na-young biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, TV shows, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
February 22, 1979
Nationality
South Korea
Place of Birth
Seoul, South Korea
Age
45 years old
Zodiac Sign
Pisces
Networth
$18 Million
Profession
Actor, Film Actor
Lee Na-young Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 45 years old, Lee Na-young has this physical status:

Height
173cm
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Lee Na-young Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Shingu University (Majoring in Business)
Lee Na-young Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Won Bin ​(m. 2015)​
Children
1
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Lee Na-young Life

Lee Na-young (born February 22, 1979) is a South Korean actress.

She is best known for her appearances in TV series Ruler of Your Own World (2002) and Ireland (2004), as well as film Someone Special (2004) and Maundy Thursday (2006).

Lee is best known for his appearances in a number of commercials in addition to acting.

Personal life

In a small, private ceremony in Won's hometown, Jeongseon County, South Korea, Lee married actor Won Bin on May 30, 2015. The couple, who work at Eden 9, reported dating in August 2012 (though Eden 9 only confirmed the marriage in July 2013). Lee had given birth to the couple's first child, a son, according to a press release from Eden 9.

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Lee Na-young Career

Career

Lee Na-young began her modeling career in 1998 in a Jambangee Jeans TV commercial, and later made her acting debut in the same year. Lee starred in the tepidly received 2001 Hong Kong sci-fi action film Dream of a Warrior, starring Leon Lai after supporting roles in 1999 television dramas Did We Really Love?, KAIST, and Queen. She appeared on "Catherine's Wheel," a British pop band Rialto's 2001 music video.

However, Lee came to fame in 2002 with the critically acclaimed series Ruler of Your Own World. Lee and her fellow cast members were praised for their realistic, nuanced acting. She played an indie rock musician who tragically died for a terminally ill grifter. In Jung-ok for Ireland, a 2004 drama about a Korean adoptee who migrates to her homeland, but its reception was less welcoming.

During this period, Lee had been one of the top-ranked and highest-paid commercial models, advertising various services such as cosmetics, electronics, clothing lines, beer, gaming, and construction companies. She is regarded as one of Korea's most beautiful and idealized faces. Lee later became the first Korean to feature on the front page of fashion magazine W Korea for its November 2009 issue.

But her graceful and glamorous public persona has been the opposite in film, with Lee choosing to depict women who are awkward and eccentric. Who R. U.? starred in the cyber romance Who R. U.? in 2002. In Ruler of Your Own Country, she plays an introverted character like her role in the Ruler of Your Own World. Lee later appeared in Kim Sung-su's comedy film Please Teach Me English (2003) and the harmless stalker of a struggling baseball player in Jang Jin's romantic comedy Someone Special (2004). She received several Best Actress awards for Someone Special, most notably from the prestigious Blue Dragon Film Awards.

Lee earned praise in 2006, this time for her dramatic chops in Maundy on Thursday, but Song Hae-sung's film version of Gong Ji-young's book Our Happy Times about a suicidal rape victim who forms a close friendship with a death row prisoner develops a strong bond. In Kim Ki-duk's Dream (2008), she appeared as a mentally troubled sleepwalker and almost died while filming a scene where her character hangs herself.

Lee wrote "Mad Daddy" in 2010, a trans woman photographer whose life is disrupted by the sudden arrival of a teenage boy who claims to be his biological father. She made a guest appearance on the sitcom High Kick Through the Roof to promote the film. Lee then returned to television with the big-budget action-mystery series The Fugitive: Plan B, in which she did her own stunt scenes without a stunt double, is back on television.

Lee's employment with KeyEast ended in 2011 (she had signed with KeyEast in 2006 and with the William Morris Agency in 2009), she joined Eden 9 Entertainment when Lee's deal with the talent company came to an end. She appeared in Yoo Ha's suspense thriller Howling, a female detective (played by Song Kang-ho) who teams up with a female rookie (Lee) in 2012 to solve a string of murders involving a mysterious wolfdog.

Lee appeared in a small role in the two-part Japanese film SPEC: Close. In Sad Scene, she played an actress in a clandestine relationship with a boom operator; it was one of three short films in the omnibus Woman, Man, Man, a collection of women commissioned by W Korea for its tenth anniversary in 2015.

Lee returned to the silver screen in 2018 with the North Korean refugee drama Beautiful Days, which premiered at the 23rd Busan International Film Festival.

Lee returned to the small screen in 2019 after nine years of appearing in Romance Is a Bonus Book alongside Lee Jong-suk. Kang Dan-yi, a new temporary employee of a book publishing company, was a central character in her story.

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