Lee Da-hae

Actress

Birthday April 19, 1984

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Seoul, South Korea

Age 39 years old

Nationality Australia

#22541 Most Popular

1941

She won Best New Actress at the 41st Baeksang Arts Awards for her performance.

1960

Later that year, Lee was originally cast as the heroine in the inter-generational epic East of Eden, set against the backdrop of a coal mining town in Taebaek through the 1960s until the present.

In this series, Lee reunited with her Sweet 18 co-star Han Ji-hye.

Though the drama was a hit, as it went on, Lee's screen time became drastically reduced in favor of other storylines, such that she decided to leave the show in episode 40.

1984

Lee Da-hae, or Lee Da-hey (born Byun Da-hye on April 19, 1984) is a Korean Australian actress.

Lee Da-hae, or known by her birth name as Byun Da-hye, was born in Seoul, South Korea on April 19, 1984.

When she was in the fifth grade, Lee and her family moved to Sydney, Australia.

Throughout her adolescence, she performed traditional Korean dance in various festivals, and was known as the "Korean Dancer Girl" at school.

Her years of living abroad and studying in Australia made her become fluent in English and Chinese.

In her junior year at Burwood Girls High School, Lee and her mother moved back to Seoul to pursue an acting career after winning a pageant while on leave of school.

She now lives with her mother in Seoul while her father and her older brother still reside in Sydney.

2001

Byun made her entertainment debut when she won the 71st Miss Chunhyang Pageant in 2001.

Using the stage name Lee Da-hae, she began to appear in minor and supporting roles in television dramas.

2004

She is best known for her roles in Korean dramas such as Heaven's Fate (2004), My Girl (2005), Green Rose (2005), The Slave Hunters (2010), Miss Ripley (2011), and Hotel King (2014), as well as the Chinese dramas Love Actually (2012) and Best Couple (2016).

Lee Da-hae is well known for being fluent in Korean, Japanese, English and Chinese, earning her huge popularity in China.

She is the first Korean actress to speak her lines in Mandarin, displaying her linguistic skills in Chinese dramas.

In 2004, Lee was cast in her first leading role in the Im Sung-han drama Lotus Flower Fairy (also known internationally as Heaven's Fate ), in which she played the pure-hearted daughter of a shaman who becomes alienated by her family and society after her identity is revealed.

2005

But 2005 would become Lee's breakout year.

She showcased her versatility in two successful, but very different series.

In Green Rose, her character falls in love with a man who gets framed for the attempted murder of her father; years later, she becomes slowly convinced that a doppelgänger is in fact, her boyfriend whom everybody had assumed was dead.

Green Rose is her first TV series produced by SBS, Lee reunited with her Lotus Flower Fairy co-stars Jung Hye-sun and Han Jin-hee in Green Rose.

In My Girl, she played a lovable con artist who agrees to act as a hotelier's long-lost cousin in order to fulfill his grandfather's last wishes.

My Girl, in particular, shot Lee to domestic and Korean Wave stardom.

2007

She returned to the romantic comedy genre in 2007 with Hello! Miss.

Lee played the last living daughter of a once-respected clan in the countryside whose traditional feminine virtues is put to the test when the son of a rich investor demands that she sell her ancestral house to him.

2008

In 2008, she starred in Robber, in the role of a young widowed single mother who is targeted by a con man for her savings, but he falls in love with her for real.

2009

Lee joined Rain's agency J. Tune Entertainment in 2009, then appeared in the music video for "Pas de Deux" with Taiwanese singer/actor Will Pan.

She was also admitted to Konkuk University, where she majored in Theater and Film.

2010

In 2010, Lee starred in the hit Joseon period/fusion drama The Slave Hunters, in which she played Un-nyun, who is torn between her past love, a yangban-turned-slave hunter, and her present companion, a general-turned-slave.

Lee reunited with her Green Rose co-stars Lee Jong-hyuk and Sung Dong-il.

Early in the series, some viewers criticized her for having pristine makeup and manicured nails despite portraying a slave on the run, for allegedly wearing a wrist watch onscreen, and her supposedly "inappropriate and gratuitous" cleavage exposure when her hanbok top was removed in an attempted rape scene.

Lee opined that those issues weren't a big deal, and had only been magnified by the show's popularity.

Her character also received criticism for being an overly passive damsel in distress, and a "Public Menace Un-nyun" (민폐언년) meme circulated, to the extent that writer Chun Sung-il issued a public defense and apology towards Lee.

In what would have been her big screen debut, she was cast in Song of Springs, a 3D film adaptation of the novel by Kim Hoon about the creator of the gayageum.

But funding fell through and the film was never made.

She was then cast in the leading role of Korea's first female royal barista who plots to assassinate King Gojong through poisoned coffee in Gabi, adapted from the historical fiction novel Russian Coffee by Kim Tak-hwan.

Lee agreed to star in the film via verbal agreement, but when she dropped out of the project ten days before filming began, production company Ocean Film sued her for breach of contract.

2011

In 2011, Lee played an antiheroine with a traumatic past who lies and manipulates her way up the hotel executive ladder and into the hearts of two powerful men in Miss Ripley.

2012

In September 2012, the court ruled in favor of the plaintiff, ordering Lee to pay (US$19,000) in damages, or 40% liability.

Lee was replaced by Kim So-yeon.