Spring Waltz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Spring Waltz
Spring-waltz-poster.jpg
Promotional poster
Also known asEndless Love: Spring Waltz
Hangul봄의 왈츠
Revised RomanizationBomui Walcheu
McCune–ReischauerPomŭi Walch'ŭ
GenreRomance
Melodrama
Created byKBS Drama Production
Written byKim Ji-yeon
Hwang Da-eun
Gu Ji-won
Ha Mi-seon
Directed byYoon Seok-ho
StarringSeo Do-young
Han Hyo-joo
Daniel Henney
Lee So-yeon
Country of originSouth Korea
Original languagesKorean
German and English (in addition to Korean itself)
No. of episodes20
Production
Executive producersJung Sung-ho
Kim Jong-shik
Park In-taek
Moon Bo-hyun
ProducerLee Jae-sang
Production locationsAustria
Seoul
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time70 minutes
Mondays and Tuesdays at 21:55 (KST)
Production companyYoon's Color
Release
Original networkKBS2
Picture format1080i (HDTV)
Audio formatStereo (Analog TV)
Dolby Digital (Digital TV)
Original releaseMarch 6 (2006-03-06) –
May 16, 2006 (2006-05-16)
Chronology
Related showsAutumn in My Heart (2000)
Winter Sonata (2002)
Summer Scent (2003)
External links
Website

Spring Waltz (Korean봄의 왈츠; RRBomui Walcheu; MRPomŭi Walch'ŭ) is a 2006 South Korean television series starring Seo Do-young, Han Hyo-joo, Daniel Henney and Lee So-yeon. It is the fourth and final installment of season-themed tetralogy Endless Love series directed by Yoon Seok-ho, following Autumn in My Heart, Winter Sonata and Summer Scent.[1][2] It aired on KBS2 from March 6 to May 16, 2006, on Mondays and Tuesdays at 21:55 (KST) for 20 episodes.

Synopsis[]

Yoon Jae-ha (Seo Do-young) is a wealthy young man who lives an honorable life as a gifted pianist. As a child, however, Jae-ha lived with his father who was a conman and endured a miserable childhood.

Seo Eun-young (Han Hyo-joo) lived on the island of Chungsan with her mom happily. Darkness came when Lee Jong-tae (Lee Han-wi) and his son Soo-ho (Jae-ha's real name) appeared. The man stole money from Eun-young's mother, which was set aside for Eun-young's surgery. When Eun-young's mother travels to Seoul to look for Jong-tae, she dies in an accident.

At the hospital where Eun-young is hospitalized, Jae-ha's foster mother Hyun Ji-sook (Geum Bo-ra) was also there due to her son's death. Her diplomat husband Yoon Myung-hoon (Jung Dong-hwan) asks Soo-ho to become their son, and they would in return pay for Eun-young's surgery. Soo-ho now adopts the identity of Yoon Jae-ha (the name of their deceased son) and leaves for Austria. Meanwhile, Eun-young successfully receives her surgery. She grows up with a new family, and now makes accessories and sells them on the streets.

One day, Eun-young wins an exhibition contest and, as a prize, travels to Austria. There she meets Jae-ha and his friends Phillip (Daniel Henney) and Lee Yi-na (Lee So-yeon). When Jae-ha and Eun-young first met, they were at odds, but slowly they began to feel attracted to each other. Jae-ha then makes the shocking discovery that Eun-young is the girl he met in the past. Jae-ha tries to hide this from Eun-Young, but she eventually finds out, and left.

As Eun-young tries to forget Jae-ha, she returns to Korea and there, Jae-ha appears again...

Cast[]

Main[]

A talented classical pianist. Even though he was brought up in a rich and enviable family, Jae-ha is a lonely person due to his eccentric and particular personality. He shows his true feelings only to his best friend and manager, Phillip. At first, Jae-ha is interested in Eun-young when he meets her in Austria because she is similar to his childhood sweetheart. As he sees her with the playboy Phillip, he begins to form a wrong impression of her.
  • Han Hyo-joo as Seo Eun-young/Park Eun-young
    • Han So-yi as young Seo Eun-young
A hardworking and optimistic woman who works at her adoptive mother's kimbap (Korean rolled rice) restaurant in the daytime and sells homemade accessories and clothes at her street stand at night. She gets the opportunity to visit Austria, and there meets Phillip and Jae-ha by fate. Eun-young, who does not know of this, deeply misses Soo-ho from her childhood.
The only friend as well as the manager of Yoon Jae-ha. He was born to an Austrian father and a Korean mother and was expected to become a promising musician during his childhood. Instead, he decides to pursue his dream by becoming the manager of Jae-ha, whom Phillip acknowledges as being a true musical genius. He has playboy tendencies.
A capable career woman who started her career from the bottom and became the director of the planning department in a leading classical record and concert company. Having liked Jae-ha since childhood, she recklessly gave up playing the piano and left for Canada to find Jae-ha after he left Korea.

Supporting[]

Production[]

Spring Waltz was the final feature of the season-themed drama series directed by Yoon Seok-ho. Although the story shares the similar format of genuine love and childhood memories, Yoon adds several fresh twists and turns. In this miniseries, the drama's message is conveyed more actively through the season "spring". Love is compared to the way spring blossoms into lives, bringing a sense of hope. Love is also depicted as gently embracing the protagonists' lonely hearts, which are chillingly numb in the midst of a long and harsh "winter". Another noticeable change is that this series is the only feature out of four season series to include overseas locations, namely Austria, where filming took place around well-known tourist spots such as Hallstatt and Salzburg. Moreover, most of its production money came from external sources and investments made by domestic and foreign interests. With news that the drama was sold to nine countries including Japan,[3] Taiwan, Thailand, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Macau, Brunei and the Philippines, the series garnered widespread attention from the media industry even before the series aired in March 2006.[4][5]

One of the most striking differences from previous installments, is the casting. All four main characters are relative newcomers, who were cast in the leading role for the first time. The casting of the two lead actors – Seo Do-young (a model-turned actor who previously appeared in small supporting roles in a few TV shows)[6][7] and Han Hyo-joo (a newbie actress best known for the teenage sitcom Nonstop 5) - brought a controversial yet refreshing spin into the drama's production. Sung Yu-ri was originally cast as Eun-young but when she backed out of the drama, Yoon unexpectedly chose Han, who had auditioned for a smaller role.[8] Model-turned-actor Daniel Henney was perhaps the most high-profile actor of the four, after his role in 2005 hit My Lovely Sam Soon.[9][10] Initially the character Philip character did not exist. However, after seeing Henney audition, Yoon was attracted to the actor's unique facial expressions and gestures, so the director decided to create a new role just for him.[11] Lee So-yeon, on the other hand, had more experience in TV and film, notably Untold Scandal in 2003.[12] In interviews, Yoon told the press that he deliberately chose to work with new actors rather than already-established actors, who tend to have chiseled images that do not have enough flexibility. Working with new faces, Yoon said, is "like working on a new painting on a new white canvas."[citation needed]

Renowned for his captivating ability to bring picturesque scenery and memorable music onto the screen, Yoon takes maximum advantage of the spectacular view of Hallstatt lake to convey Jae-ha's sorrow and his yearning for his lost identity and lost love.

One of Yoon's main motifs for this series is the "island" - Cheongsando - a place that is seemingly isolated from the rest of the world. He and his production crew reportedly hunted for the perfect island setting for months. They eventually decided on a few islands located in South Jeolla Province. Cheongsando was the site where the young Soo-ho and Eun-young meet and reunite again as adults, while heart-shaped Hanuneom Beach in Bigeumdo is the place where the children share their innocent feelings of affection and love towards each other.

An island as a place, Yoon says, tends to be a fantasy in everyone's mind. It brings out a sense of nostalgia which is quite distant from the reality of everyday life. Childhood love also is a fantasy in many a memory. Spring Waltz explores such fantasy of our first love – how the pure and genuine love for someone can face the reality of living with mental bruises and an identity crisis, and eventually heal the painful process of forgiveness and reconciliation, just like the way spring brings us a hope.

Soundtrack[]

Ratings[]

Date Episode Nationwide Seoul
2006-03-06 1 10.9 (12th) 10.9 (13th)
2006-03-07 2 11.5 (13th) 10.8 (15th)
2006-03-13 3 12.1 (14th) 13.6 (14th)
2006-03-14 4 14.7 (7th) 14.9 (5th)
2006-03-20 5 15.3 (4th) 16.8 (3rd)
2006-03-21 6 13.4 (3rd) 13.6 (2nd)
2006-03-27 7 15.8 (4th) 16.4 (3rd)
2006-03-28 8 14.6 (6th) 15.3 (5th)
2006-04-03 9 16.2 (5th) 16.8 (2nd)
2006-04-04 10 17.5 (3rd) 17.9 (3rd)
2006-04-10 11 18.9 (2nd) 19.6 (2nd)
2006-04-11 12 18.5 (2nd) 19.1 (2nd)
2006-04-24 13 19.7 (2nd) 20.4 (1st)
2006-04-25 14 20.8 (1st) 23.4 (1st)
2006-05-01 15 22.4 (1st) 25.6 (1st)
2006-05-02 16 20.6 (1st) 22.4 (1st)
2006-05-08 17 21.6 (1st) 22.3 (1st)
2006-05-09 18 22.2 (1st) 23.6 (1st)
2006-05-15 19 23.5 (1st) 24.6 (1st)
2006-05-16 20 25.8 (1st) 27.2 (1st)
Average 17.8% 18.7%

Awards and nominations[]

Year Award Category Recipient Result
2006 KBS Drama Awards Top Excellence Award, Actress Kim Hae-sook Nominated
Best Supporting Actor Lee Han-wi Won
Best New Actress Han Hyo-joo Nominated
Best Young Actor Eun Won-jae Nominated
Popularity Award, Actor Daniel Henney Nominated

DVD release[]

The director's cut DVD is shorter than the original broadcast version, with the scenes removed totaling close to 3 hours long. As of June 2010, there is no information as to whether the "uncut" original broadcast version will ever be authorized for release.

Noticeable edits (North American version)[]

  • Numbering of individual episodes are omitted
  • Due to the editing, some episodes ended at different times/scenes than the original broadcast.
  • Dramatic endings, which included episode credits and previews, were also removed.
  • The story arc involving Hong Mi-jung and Park Sang-woo was completely removed.
  • Episode 11 — During their first outing as a couple, Jae-ha leaves Eun-young in front of her mother's restaurant. Before leaving, he kisses her cheek. Her mother observes them through the restaurant window. (SCENE REMOVED)
  • Episode 18 — Phillip & Eun-young are at the museum. Jae-ha's mother and Yi-na appear. All four go out to lunch; Jae-ha joins them. Eun-young later leaves after Yi-na presents her and Jae-ha's wedding invitation. (SCENE REMOVED)
  • Episode 18 — Eun-young returns Jae-ha's jacket along with the rainbow shell. Jae-ha runs after her asking her not to leave. Eun-young answers, "...Why won't you allow me to hate you". (SCENE REMOVED)

Dubbed[]

A Tagalog-dubbed DVD was released in the Philippines through Star Records (now Star Music).

References[]

  1. ^ "Winter Sonata Producer Readies New Drama". The Korea Times via Hancinema. April 18, 2005. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  2. ^ "Yun Seok-ho Completes His Four Seasons of Love". The Chosun Ilbo. February 28, 2006. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  3. ^ "Spring Waltz to be Aired in Japan". KBS Global. July 6, 2006. Archived from the original on April 13, 2013. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  4. ^ "TV Drama Spring Waltz Sold in 8 Countries". KBS Global. February 21, 2006. Archived from the original on April 13, 2013. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  5. ^ Shin, Hae-in (February 22, 2006). "Spring Waltz sold to nine countries". The Korea Herald via Hancinema. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  6. ^ "Production of TV Drama Spring Waltz Hits Snag". KBS Global. April 12, 2006. Archived from the original on April 13, 2013. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  7. ^ Lee, Min-a (April 17, 2007). "Japanese Hallyu Fans Flock to See Seo Do-young". Korea JoongAng Daily. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  8. ^ Shin, Hae-in (January 30, 2006). "Han reserves seat as next 'Jiwoohime'". The Korea Herald via Hancinema. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  9. ^ "Actor Learning Korean On-the-Fly". The Dong-a Ilbo. February 23, 2006. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  10. ^ "Daniel Henney and the Women". The Chosun Ilbo. March 29, 2006. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  11. ^ Park, Chung-a (March 1, 2006). "Will Spring Waltz Deliver for Henney and Its Producer?". The Korea Times via Hancinema. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  12. ^ "Spring Waltz, the conclusion of the Four Seasons series, comes to life". KoreaContent.org via Hancinema. February 23, 2006. Retrieved March 19, 2013.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""