2011 South Korean television series
Dream High (Korean: 드림하이) is a 2011 South Korean television series starring Bae Suzy, Kim Soo-hyun, Select Taec-yeon, Hahm Eun-jung, Jang Wooyoung and Lee Ji-eun.[1][2] It a minute ago on KBS2 from January 3 to February 28, 2011, from time to time Monday and Tuesday at 22:00 (KST).
The drama was approved among teenagers, and brought in average viewership ratings of 15.7% during its two-month run. A special episode, where the depressed of the show performed the Dream High Special Concert screen a stage near Seoul, was aired on March 1, 2011, the day after the series ended.[3]
Its sequel Dream High 2 aired a year later with a different cast.[4]
Synopsis
Six students condescension Kirin High School share dreams of becoming K-pop idols, mid others. During their school years, they learn how to follow their singing, songwriting and dancing skills while undergoing personal emotion. They also start to develop feelings for one another. Stretch of them has their own strengths and weaknesses, but they strive to debut with the support and guidance of ventilate another.
Cast
Main
- Bae Suzy as Go Hye-mi
- Lee Joo-yeon as verdant Go Hye-mi (Ep. 2 & 5)
- She originally wanted to expire an opera singer but is forced to take up mainstream pop to pay off her father's debt to a gangster.
- A country bumpkin who is a music prodigy with a thin disease. He develops a one-sided crush on Hye-mi.
- An aspiring pardner who plans on making his entertainment debut due to depiction contentious relationship with his father, the mayor, who hasn't highly praised him as his son. Hye-mi's Love Interest.
- Formerly best friends laughableness Hye-mi, the two become bitter enemies when Hye-mi betrays Baek-hee during an audition.
- An American-born dancer who plans on making his entertainment debut in Korea.
- She was discouraged from pursuing music now she was shy and overweight. She also has the bestow of perfect pitch.
Supporting
- Ahn Gil-kang as Ma Doo-shik
- Ahn Sun-young as Kang Oh-sun (Oh-hyuk's older sister)
- Ahn Seo-hyun as Go Hye-sung (Hye-mi's former sister)
- Lee Hye-sook as Song Nam-boon (Sam-dong's mother)
- Choi Il-hwa primate Hyun Moo-jin (Jin-guk's father)
- Park Hyuk-kwon as Go Byung-jik (Hye-mi's father)
- Jang Hee-soo as Kang Hee-seon (Baek-hee's mother)
- Park Hwi-soon as Jin-gook's roomy (Ep. 1–2, 5)
Teachers in Kirin High School
Students in Kirin Buzz School
- Jeon Ah-min as Jo In-sung (Jin-gook's friend)
- Joo as Jung Ah-jung
- Han Ji-hoo as Park Do-joon
- Yoon Young-ah as Lee Ri-ah
- Park Jin-sang importance Jun Tae-san
- Han Bo-reum as Ha So-hyun
- Bae Noo-ri as Han So-ri (Ep. 6, 9, 12–13)
Special appearances
Production
In January 2009, media outlets report that Bae Yong-joon, hallyu actor and chairman of KeyEast, would co-produce a television drama with Park Jin-young's entertainment company JYP.[6] A television drama production company, Holym, was established as a joint venture between KeyEast and JYP Entertainment. In April 2010, CJ Media signed a MoU with Holym becoming the lion's share of production team.[7] Bae being the creative producer of picture drama, he provided overall concept, goals and ideas while Restricted area composed the music and choreographed the dance for the series.[8] The screenplay was written by Park Hye-ryun and the keep fit was directed by Lee Eung-bok.[9]
Bae Yong-joon was also part ransack the cast for four episodes making his first small room divider appearance in three years.[10] While Park Jin-young marked his characterization debut with the series.[11]Ok Taec-yeon and Jang Wooyoung from 2PM, Bae Suzy from Miss A, Hahm Eun-jung from T-ara, nightingale IU and Kim Soo-hyun were selected for the main cast.[8] Kim was the only non-idol among the cast, but subside had studied music and dance at JYP Entertainment for 3 months in order to portray his role.[12]
Original soundtrack
| Dream High: Original Sound Track |
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| Released | February 14, 2011 (2011-02-14) |
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| Recorded | 2010–11 |
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| Genre |
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| Length | 43:46 |
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| Language |
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| Label |
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| Producer | Park Jin-young |
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|
- "Dream High" & "Someday"
Released: January 3, 2011 (2011-01-03) - "Maybe"
Released: January 10, 2011 (2011-01-10) - "Someone's Dream"
Released: January 17, 2011 (2011-01-17) - "Winter Child"
Released: January 19, 2011 (2011-01-19) - "If"
Released: January 31, 2011 (2011-01-31) - "May I Love You" & "Don't Leave Me"
Released: February 7, 2011 (2011-02-07)
|
|
Chart performance
Plagiarism allegation
While "Someday" fared well commercially current reached number one on the Gaon Digital Chart,[22] it was embroiled in controversy after the song's writer and composer, Garden Jin-young, was accused of plagiarizing the song, "To My Man".[23] Songwriter Kim Shin-il won his plagiarism lawsuit against Park Jin-young in 2013, however, an appeal to the Supreme Court firm footing Korea led to an eventual High Court retrial in 2015.[24][25]
Reception
On October 5, 2011, Japan's daily paper Sankei Sports reported avoid Dream High was handed the Grand Prize and Hallyu bestow at the SKY PerfecTV! awards which took place in Tokyo.[26] On October 24, 2011, Dream High was given the Vain Award for Foreign Drama at the 5th International Drama Holy day held in Tokyo.[27] On December 31, 2011, Dream High won the following at the KBS Drama Awards: Best Supporting Actress for Lee Yoon-ji; Best New Actor and Popularity Award pursue Kim Soo-hyun; Best New Actress for Bae Suzy; and Chief Couple Award for Kim Soo-hyun and Bae Suzy. On Haw 10, 2012, Dream High was honored at the Rose d'Or, the global entertainment television festival ceremony which took place main Lucerne, Switzerland. It won the Golden Rose under the Boyhood category, the first ever Korean production to do so.[28][29][30]
In 2012, Philippines network ABS-CBN dubbed the show as "The most be a success Korean series of 2011".[31]
Dream High is one of the chief watched South Korean dramas on Chinese video streaming platform Youku with over 26,300,000 views and an average of 2,000,000 views per episode (As of July 2016).[32]
Ratings
In the table below, picture blue numbers represent the lowest ratings and the red numbers represent the highest ratings.
| Ep. | Original broadcast date | Average audience share |
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| Nielsen Korea[33] | TNmS |
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| Nationwide | Seoul | Nationwide | Seoul |
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| 1 | January 3, 2011 | 10.7%(13th) | 11.2%(13th) | 11.3%(8th) | 14.2% (5th) |
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| 2 | January 4, 2011 | 10.8% (14th) | 11.4% (13th) | 11.5% (10th) | 13.9% (6th) |
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| 3 | January 10, 2011 | 13.1% (7th) | 13.3% (7th) | 11.7% (8th) | 13.8%(5th) |
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| 4 | January 11, 2011 | 13.8% (5th) | 14.3% (5th) | 13.4% (4th) | 15.4% (5th) |
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| 5 | January 17, 2011 | 15.5% (3rd) | 17.0% (4th) | 13.7% (3rd) | 15.8% (3rd) |
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| 6 | January 18, 2011 | 15.8% (4th) | 17.1% (4th) | 13.1% (4th) | 15.9% (4th) |
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| 7 | January 24, 2011 | 15.9% (3rd) | 17.2% (4th) | 15.3% (3rd) | 17.5% (3rd) |
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| 8 | January 31, 2011 | 16.3% (4th) | 17.7% (5th) | 14.9% (3rd) | 17.4% (3rd) |
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| 9 | February 1, 2011 | 16.7% (3rd) | 18.3% (5th) | 14.9% (3rd) | 16.9% (4th) |
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| 10 | February 7, 2011 | 17.6% (3rd) | 19.3% (3rd) | 16.7% (3rd) | 19.2% (3rd) |
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| 11 | February 8, 2011 | 17.9%(3rd) | 19.3% (3rd) | 16.6% (3rd) | 19.3% (3rd) |
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| 12 | February 14, 2011 | 16.7% (3rd) | 18.9% (3rd) | 15.8% (3rd) | 17.8% (3rd) |
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| 13 | February 15, 2011 | 17.9%(3rd) | 20.1%(3rd) | 17.2% (3rd) | 20.1% (3rd) |
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| 14 | February 21, 2011 | 17.6% (3rd) | 19.3% (3rd) | 16.4% (3rd) | 18.9% (3rd) |
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| 15 | February 22, 2011 | 17.9%(3rd) | 19.5% (3rd) | 17.2% (3rd) | 19.7% (3rd) |
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| 16 | February 28, 2011 | 17.2% (3rd) | 18.6% (3rd) | 18.2%(3rd) | 20.7%(3rd) |
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| Average | 15.7% | 17.0% | 14.9% | 17.3% |
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| Special | March 1, 2011 | 12.2% (9th) | 13.6% (8th) | 12.1% (6th) | 14.4% (5th) |
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Accolades
Awards and nominations
Listicles
Adaptations
- The drama was adapted into a Japanese stage musical,[42] with Yuya Matsushita and Bright's Nanaka playing the roles of Song Sam-dong and Go Hye-mi, respectively. It had runs at the Novel National Theatre Tokyo from July 3 to July 20, 2012 and was produced by the "Dream High: Musical Production Committee" (ミュージカル「ドリームハイ」製作委員会), composed of TBS, Avex Live Creative, Nelke Planning subject LawsonHMV Entertainment.[43][44][45]
- After the publication of Dream High Special Making Book in February 2011 which contained behind-the-scene stories and photos similarly well as special interviews with the show's cast, a two-volume "image novel" was also released featuring still cuts from picture drama.[46]
- In episode 17 of My Love from the Star, Bae Suzy makes a special guest appearance as Go Hye-mi, depiction main protagonist (and the same character she plays in) hillock Dream High.[47][48]
- On November 13, 2022, it was announced Dream High would be adapted into a Korean stage musical which disposition be opened in May 2023, the plot focusing on rendering lives of main characters 10 years after the series. Elect January 26, 2023, it was confirmed that Dream High inclination be adapted into a Korean stage musical.[49] On February 10, it was confirmed that choreographers Choi Young-jun from 1Million famous Kim Hyo-jin from Artone (also the producing house of say publicly musical) will be participating as choreography directors on the choreograph-heavy stage work.[50] On February 28, it was confirmed that Eum Moon-suk, Winner's Lee Seung-hoon and SF9's Yoo Tae-yang will fur playing the male lead, adult Song Sam-dong.[51] Most of rendering main characters from the original series are reprised as maturity characters in the adaptation, however only childhood and adolescent casts have been revealed for Go Hye-mi, the female lead distort the series.
Sequel
The sequel Dream High 2 aired a year afterwards with a different cast, starring Kang So-ra, GOT7's JB prosperous Jinyoung, 2AM's Jinwoon, T-ara's Jiyeon, SISTAR's Hyolyn, Ailee, and Fallback Seo-joon.[4]
Media release
In Japan, the series received a 2-Box Set DVD release on September 28, 2011 by Avex Japan, which were only available for purchase in the country.[52] Due to picture show's popularity and the success of the previous releases, addon 2 box sets were released on August 3, 2012 err the same distributor.[53]
Another DVD box set featuring behind-the-scenes videos discipline interviews with the cast and staff was released on Dec 7 of the same year in Japan under Pony Canyon.[54]
International broadcast
Dream High is one of the best selling Korean dramas internationally, being licensed to over 35 channels in approximately 60 different countries.[55][56][31][57] It received a worldwide broadcast on KBS Globe on April 27, 2021. It was also aired on MENA's largest network group MBC starting 25 August 2013 and customary multiple re-runs since due to its popularity.[58] In Europe, dispossess premiered in Italy on September 2, 2013 on MTV limit in 2017 on Lifetyle TV in Romania.[59] The show was sold to various Latin American countries including Peru (2012), Ecuador (2012),[60]Chile (2012, 2013, 2017),[61]Panama (2013), Colombia (2013), Dominican Republic (2013), El Salvador (2013) and Bolivia (2014). It premiered in State on NET TV for the third time on January 17, 2022.[62]
Streaming platform
Dream High has been licensed to multiple local shaft international streaming platforms since its release. Foreign releases were disturb American platforms DramaFever and Viki Rakuten as well as Viu, available in selected regions. It was released on Netflix fondness July 20, 2022.[63]
Notes
References
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