Saimdang, Light's Diary

Saimdang, Light's Diary
Genre Historical
Romance
Written by Park Eun-ryung
Directed by Yoon Sang-ho
Starring Lee Young-ae
Song Seung-heon
Country of origin South Korea
Original language(s) Korean
No. of episodes 30
Production company(s) Creative Leaders Group8 Inc. (ko)
Emperor Entertainment Korea Ltd.
Distributor SBS
Release
Original network SBS
Picture format 1080i (HDTV)
Original release January 2017 (2017-01)

Saimdang: Light's Diary (Hangul: 사임당, 빛의 일기 ) is an upcoming South Korean television series starring Lee Young-ae and Song Seung-heon. The biographical series will chronicle the life and career of Shin Saimdang, a famed Joseon-era artist and calligrapher who lived in the early 16th century. It will begin airing on SBS on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 22:00 (KST) in January 2017.

Synopsis

A Korean art history lecturer (Lee Young-ae) discovers the diary of historical figure Shin Saimdang, and unravels the secret of a mysterious portrait. There, she discovers the extraordinary life of Saimdang, who became a renowned poet-artist in the Joseon era.

Cast

Main Cast
A renowned artist, calligrapher and philosopher. Lee simultaneously plays a modern-day historian, who teaches Korean art at a university.
Saimdang's lover; an aristocrat and painter with a carefree spirit.
Saimdang's biggest rival.
Others

Production

The drama was first announced in March 2015 with Lee Young-ae cast in the titular role of Saimdang. It marks her comeback to acting after a 10-year hiatus since the 2005 film Sympathy for Lady Vengeance, and her first drama since the 2003 hit drama Jewel in the Palace.[1] Song Seung-heon was cast as the male lead in July 2015,[2] and would star as Saimdang's fictional love interest in the drama.

First script reading took place August 4, 2015 at SBS Ilsan Production Center in Tanhyun, South Korea. Lee Young-ae, Oh Yoon-ah, Yun Da-hun, Kim Hae-sook and other cast members attended except for lead actor Song Seung-heon. Filming began August 10, 2015 and finished June 4, 2016.

Broadcasting rights have already sold to China, Japan, Thailand, Singapore, and Indonesia.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.