The King and I (TV series)

The King and I
Promotional poster
GenreHistorical
Written byYoo Dong-yoon
Directed by
  • Kim Jae-hyung
  • Lee Jong-soo
  • Son Jae-sung
Starring
ComposerOh Joon-sung
Country of originSouth Korea
No. of episodes63
Production
ProducerYoon Young-mook (SBS)
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running timeMondays and Tuesdays at 21:55 (KST)
Production companiesOlive 9 Co. Ltd.
SBS PD
Original release
NetworkSBS TV
ReleaseAugust 27, 2007 (2007-08-27) –
April 1, 2008 (2008-04-01)
Korean name
Hangul
왕과 나
Hanja
과 나
Revised RomanizationWanggwa na
McCune–ReischauerWanggwa na

The King and I (Korean왕과 나) is a South Korean historical series that aired on SBS from August 27, 2007 to April 1, 2008 on Mondays and Tuesdays at 21:55.[1][2] Starring Oh Man-seok, Koo Hye-sun, and Go Joo-won, the series was moderately successful, with its ratings peak at 25%.

Plot

[edit]

The King and I revolves around the life of Kim Cheo-sun, considered the best eunuch attendant who lived during the Joseon Dynasty.[3]

Cheo-sun secretly loves his childhood friend So-hwa, but he cannot confess his love because of their difference in social class. Eventually, when So-hwa becomes betrothed to King Seongjong, he castrates himself and enters the palace as an eunuch, determined to watch over and protect her.

Initially the King's concubine, So-hwa is later elevated to the rank of Queen. But she becomes a pawn of the intense strife among warring political factions, and is stripped of her title and cast out of the palace in disgrace. Despite Cheo-sun's attempts to help her, she is sentenced to death. Cheo-sun carries out his orders by handing her the bowl of poison and he watches as the woman he loved all his life dies before his eyes.[4] After her death, he looks after her son, Prince Yeonsan.

Cast

[edit]

Main characters

[edit]

Supporting characters

[edit]

Extended cast

[edit]
  • Yang Jung-a as Lady Oh, Cheo-sun's mother
  • Lee Il-jae as Kim Ja-myung, Cheo-sun's father
  • Sunwoo Jae-duk as Yoon Ki-kyun, So-hwa's father
  • Choi Jung-won as Lady Shin, Ki-kyun's wife
  • Han Da-min as Queen Gonghye
  • Han So-jung as Court Lady Um
  • Yoon Hye-kyung as Royal Consort Eom Gwi-in
  • Ahn Gil-kang as Kae Do-chi
  • Kim Jung-min as Beo Deul-yi
  • Kim Da-hyun as Choi Ja-chi
  • Kang In-hyung as Moon So-woon
    • Jeon Ha-eun as young So-woon
  • Kim Ha-kyun as Jang Soon-moo
  • Kim Myung-soo as Yang Sung-yoon
  • Han Jung-soo as Do Geum-pyo
  • Kim So-hyun as Lady Jung, Ji-gyeom's wife
  • Kim Byung-se as King Sejo
  • Yoo Dong-hyuk as King Yejong
  • Kim Jong-gyul as Han Myung-hoe
  • Kim Young-joon as Hong Gwi-nam
    • Shin Tae-hoon as young Gwi-nam
  • Kang Jae as Kim Ja-won
    • Choi Soo-han as young Ja-won
  • Lee Gun-joo as Song Gye-nam
    • Maeung Chang-min as young Gye-nam
  • Lee Sang-won as Shim Ki-soo
  • Park Ha-sun as Queen Shin, Yeonsan's wife
  • Kim Hyuk as Park Deok-hu, So-hwa's first love
  • Jung Eun-chan as Yoon Ki-hyun, So-hwa's older brother
    • Ho Hyo-hoon as young Ki-hyun
  • Lee Young-eun as palace maid
  • Kim Yong-heon as Eom Nae-kwan
  • Kim Byung-choon as Yang Sung-yeon
  • Park Dong-bin as Goo Sung-gun
  • Choi Ha-na as Hong Bi
  • Lee Ji-oh as the Crown Prince, Yeonsan's son
  • Jun Hyun-ah as Court Lady Kam-chul
  • Oh Soo-min as Jang Nok-su
  • Nam Hyun-joo as Han-soo's mother
  • Lee Si-hoo as Eunuch
  • Jung Ki-sung as Jogeobi
  • Song Young-gyu as Lee Ki
  • Shin Soo-jung as Hoo Koong
  • Seol Ji-yoon as Court Lady Kim
  • Jung So-young
  • Kang Soo-han
  • Noh Young-hak as Grand Prince Jinseong
  • Jun Tae-soo as Han Chi-geun
  • Park Ji-hoon as eunuch[5]

Production

[edit]

Park Sang-min was originally cast as King Seongjong, but had to back out. He was replaced by Go Joo-won.

Yeo Woon-kye was supposed to portray So-gwi but had to quit for health reasons, even though she had already filmed a few episodes. Her replacement was Kim Soo-mi.

Reportedly enraged because the scripts were routinely turned in late, resulting in exhaustion for the actors in the cast, Jeon In-hwa's husband Yoo Dong-geun assaulted two producers on set on December 29, 2007. He later apologized for the incident.[6][7]

Episode ratings

[edit]

The King and I performed moderately well, getting ratings in the 20%–25% range and ranking in the top 10. However, in late January 2008, due to competition from MBC's Yi San, ratings fell to the mid-tens, barely cracking the Top 20 in Korea.[8]

SBS first extended the episodes from the originally planned 50 to 67, then back to 61 because of bad ratings, and finally to 63.[9]

Ratings

[edit]
Date Episode Nationwide Seoul
2007-08-27 1 14.4 (7th) 14.8 (6th)
2007-08-28 2 18.8 (3rd) 19.7 (3rd)
2007-09-03 3 22.9 (2nd) 24.9 (1st)
2007-09-04 4 25.8 (1st) 27.1 (1st)
2007-09-10 5 22.3 (2nd) 23.3 (2nd)
2007-09-11 6 21.0 (2nd) 22.0 (2nd)
2007-09-17 7 25.6 (2nd) 26.5 (1st)
2007-09-18 8 23.1 (2nd) 24.2 (2nd)
2007-09-24 9 12.9 (4th) 13.6 (4th)
2007-09-24 10 19.8 (1st) 20.1 (1st)
2007-10-01 11 23.3 (2nd) 23.4 (2nd)
2007-10-02 12 24.0 (2nd) 23.6 (2nd)
2007-10-08 13 22.0 (2nd) 22.7 (2nd)
2007-10-09 14 23.3 (2nd) 24.2 (2nd)
2007-10-15 15 22.4 (2nd) 23.4 (2nd)
2007-10-16 16 23.5 (2nd) 24.6 (2nd)
2007-10-22 17 23.1 (2nd) 24.5 (2nd)
2007-10-23 18 24.1 (3rd) 25.5 (3rd)
2007-10-29 19 26.0 (2nd) 26.5 (2nd)
2007-10-30 20 22.2 (2nd) 22.3 (3rd)
2007-11-05 21 21.8 (2nd) 23.1 (3rd)
2007-11-06 22 22.9 (2nd) 24.4 (2nd)
2007-11-12 23 20.5 (3rd) 21.4 (3rd)
2007-11-13 24 22.6 (3rd) 23.6 (3rd)
2007-11-19 25 19.7 (5th) 20.6 (4th)
2007-11-20 26 20.8 (4th) 21.5 (4th)
2007-11-26 27 21.3 (4th) 22.1 (3rd)
2007-11-27 28 21.0 (3rd) 21.1 (3rd)
2007-12-03 29 20.0 (3rd) 19.6 (4th)
2007-12-04 30 20.2 (5th) 19.9 (4th)
2007-12-10 31 19.2 (5th) 19.2 (5th)
2007-12-11 32 24.8 (1st) 25.4 (2nd)
2007-12-17 33 17.0 (6th) 17.4 (6th)
2007-12-18 34 16.1 (6th) 15.6 (6th)
2007-12-24 35 13.2 (8th) 12.7 (8th)
2007-12-25 36 16.0 (6th) 15.7 (6th)
2008-01-01 37 15.9 (7th) 15.6 (7th)
2008-01-07 38 15.1 (6th) 14.8 (6th)
2008-01-08 39 15.0 (7th) 15.1 (7th)
2008-01-14 40 15.0 (7th) 15.0 (8th)
2008-01-15 41 15.6 (6th) 15.6 (8th)
2008-01-21 42 14.5 (8th) 13.9 (8th)
2008-01-22 43 15.6 (8th) 15.5 (8th)
2008-01-28 44 14.5 (8th) 13.5 (9th)
2008-01-29 45 14.8 (8th) 14.5 (9th)
2008-02-04 46 12.9 (10th) 11.5 (11th)
2008-02-05 47 16.7 (6th) 16.1 (6th)
2008-02-11 48 15.0 (8th) 14.5 (9th)
2008-02-12 49 14.3 (8th) 14.0 (10th)
2008-02-18 50 13.6 (10th) 12.9 (11th)
2008-02-19 51 16.6 (7th) 15.9 (8th)
2008-02-25 52 14.7 (7th) 14.3 (8th)
2008-02-26 53 19.5 (5th) 19.2 (6th)
2008-03-03 54 17.0 (6th) 16.8 (6th)
2008-03-04 55 17.9 (6th) 17.5 (6th)
2008-03-10 56 15.5 (6th) 15.2 (6th)
2008-03-11 57 15.7 (6th) 15.6 (6th)
2008-03-17 58 14.9 (6th) 14.8 (6th)
2008-03-18 59 14.9 (6th) 14.0 (7th)
2008-03-24 60 13.9 (7th) 13.0 (9th)
2008-03-25 61 16.1 (6th) 15.7 (6th)
2008-03-31 62 17.2 (6th) 16.7 (7th)
2008-04-01 63 19.7 (5th) 18.9 (6th)
Average - -

Awards

[edit]
2007 SBS Drama Awards[10]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Lee, Hyo-won (September 18, 2007). "TV Falls in Love with Epic Dramas". The Korea Times. Archived from the original on March 24, 2014. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
  2. ^ Chun, Su-jin (September 19, 2007). "Eunuchs make me long to get my hands on father's remote". Korea JoongAng Daily. Archived from the original on October 14, 2023. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
  3. ^ "About The King and I". Arirang TV. Archived from the original on March 9, 2013. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
  4. ^ "Ingredients of poison used during the Joseon Dynasty to kill traitors". KBS World. February 23, 2008. Retrieved August 14, 2013.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ "Park Ji Hoon, the wink guy in Produce 101 was in drama 'King and I'". Kpople. April 16, 2017. Archived from the original on June 15, 2018. Retrieved June 15, 2018.
  6. ^ Lee, Eun-joo (January 1, 2008). "[Talk of town]Real life punch-up upstages SBS drama". Korea JoongAng Daily. Archived from the original on April 11, 2013. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
  7. ^ Chung, Sung-hee (December 31, 2007). "Page Scripts Symbolize Darker Side of Korean Drama Industry". The Dong-a Ilbo. Archived from the original on August 12, 2013. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
  8. ^ "TV Ratings for January" Archived February 6, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. Soompi. Retrieved 2008-02-08.
  9. ^ "2008 K-DRAMA: First Half Wrapup". Twitch Film. July 18, 2008. Archived from the original on September 30, 2012. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
  10. ^ "2007 Year-end Korean drama awards round-up". Hancinema. January 7, 2008. Archived from the original on January 16, 2008. Retrieved August 25, 2013.
[edit]