Kim Jung-hwa (born September , )is a South Korean actress. She rose to
fame in the sitcom Nonstop , and has since played leading roles in
the television series Something About % () and Snow White: Taste Sweet
Love (), as well as the films Spy Girl () and The Elephant on the Bike
().Kim Jung-hwa made her acting debut in when she appeared in Lee
Seung-hwan's music video "You to You." She rose to fame in with the
sitcom Nonstop , and was soon cast in supporting roles in the
television dramas Glass Slippers () and Into the Sun ().Kim starred as
the leading actress in the romantic comedies Something About % () in
which she played a middle school teacher who enters a contract
marriage with a tycoon's grandson, and Snow White: Taste Sweet Love ()
where her homely character is unexpectedly caught in a love triangle
between two brothers. This was followed by her first film Spy Girl (),
a comedy about a North Korean agent who goes undercover in the South
as a Burger King employee, but to her dismay finds herself becoming
popular with the male student customers.Kim made her stage debut in ,
in the Russian plays Uncle Vanya by Anton Chekhov and The Lower Depths
by Maxim Gorky. She later starred in the homegrown musical Audition
(), Sam Shepard's Fool for Love (), and the Kim Kwang-seok jukebox
musical The Days ().
fame in the sitcom Nonstop , and has since played leading roles in
the television series Something About % () and Snow White: Taste Sweet
Love (), as well as the films Spy Girl () and The Elephant on the Bike
().Kim Jung-hwa made her acting debut in when she appeared in Lee
Seung-hwan's music video "You to You." She rose to fame in with the
sitcom Nonstop , and was soon cast in supporting roles in the
television dramas Glass Slippers () and Into the Sun ().Kim starred as
the leading actress in the romantic comedies Something About % () in
which she played a middle school teacher who enters a contract
marriage with a tycoon's grandson, and Snow White: Taste Sweet Love ()
where her homely character is unexpectedly caught in a love triangle
between two brothers. This was followed by her first film Spy Girl (),
a comedy about a North Korean agent who goes undercover in the South
as a Burger King employee, but to her dismay finds herself becoming
popular with the male student customers.Kim made her stage debut in ,
in the Russian plays Uncle Vanya by Anton Chekhov and The Lower Depths
by Maxim Gorky. She later starred in the homegrown musical Audition
(), Sam Shepard's Fool for Love (), and the Kim Kwang-seok jukebox
musical The Days ().
Share this

SUBSCRIBE OUR NEWSLETTER
SUBSCRIBE OUR NEWSLETTER
Join us for free and get valuable content delivered right through your inbox.