#alternate Edit this page Wikipedia (en) Dream High From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigation Jump to search South Korean television series Dream High DreamHigh PromotionalPoster.png Promotional poster for Dream High Genre Music Teen Romance Coming of age Written by Park Hye-ryun Directed by Lee Eung-bok Creative director(s) Bae Yong-joon J.Y. Park^[1] Starring Bae Suzy^[2]^[3] Kim Soo-hyun Ok Taec-yeon Ham Eun-jung Jang Woo-young IU Opening theme "Dream High" Country of origin South Korea Original language(s) Korean No. of seasons 2 No. of episodes 16 (1 special) Production Executive producer(s) Kwak Ki-yeon Yang Gun-hwan Jung Wook Choi Kwan-yong Producer(s) Baek Sang-hoon Production location(s) Seoul, South Korea Running time Mondays and Tuesdays at 21:55 Production company(s) Holym^[a]^[4]^[5] CJ Media Distributor Korean Broadcasting System Release Original network KBS2 Picture format 480i SDTV/1080i HDTV Audio format Dolby Digital DTS Digital Sound Sony Dynamic Digital Sound Original release January 3 (2011-01-03) - February 28, 2011 (2011-02-28) Chronology Preceded by Marry Me, Mary! Followed by Detectives in Trouble Related shows Dream High 2 External links Website Dream High (Korean: ¼´) is a 2011 South Korean television series broadcast starring miss A's Bae Suzy, Kim Soo-hyun, T-ara's Ham Eun-jung, IU, and 2PM's Ok Taec-yeon and Jang Woo-young.^[6]^[7]^[8] The drama was popular among teenagers, and brought in viewership ratings in the 18 to 20 percent range during its two-month run. A special episode, where the cast of the show performed the Dream High Special Concert on a stage near Seoul, was aired on March 1, 2011, the day after the series ended.^[9] Its sequel Dream High 2 aired a year later with a different cast.^[10] [ ] Contents * 1 Synopsis * 2 Cast + 2.1 Main + 2.2 Supporting + 2.3 Special appearances * 3 Soundtrack + 3.1 Track listing + 3.2 Plagiarism allegation * 4 Reception * 5 Ratings * 6 Awards and nominations * 7 International broadcast * 8 Adaptations * 9 Sequel * 10 Notes * 11 References * 12 External links Synopsis[edit] Six students at Kirin High School have a dream of becoming K-pop idols. During their school years, they learn how to develop their singing, songwriting and dancing skills while undergoing personal growth. They also start to develop feelings for each other. Each one of the students has his or her own strengths and weaknesses, but they strive to debut with the support and guidance of each other. Cast[edit] Main[edit] * Bae Suzy as Go Hye-mi + Lee Joo-yeon as young Go Hye-mi (ep 2, 5) She originally wanted to become an opera singer, but is forced to take up mainstream pop to pay off her father's debt to a gangster. * Kim Soo-hyun as Song Sam-dong A country bumpkin who is a music prodigy with a rare disease. * Ok Taec-yeon as Jin-guk/Hyun Shi-hyuk + Kang Yi-seok as young Jin-guk (ep 2, 5, 10) He has a contentious relationship with his father the Mayor who hasn't acknowledged him as his son. * Ham Eun-jung as Yoon Baek-hee Formerly best friends with Hye-mi, the two become bitter enemies when Hye-mi betrays Baek-hee during an audition. * Jang Woo-young as Jason An American-born dancer who plans on making his entertainment debut in Korea. * IU as Kim Pil-sook She was discouraged from pursuing music because she was shy and overweight. She also has the gift of perfect pitch Supporting[edit] * 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 younger sister) + Park Eun-bin as 16-year-old Hye-sung (ep 16) * Lee Hye-sook as Song Nam-boon (Sam-dong's mother) * Choi Il-hwa as 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 roommate (ep 1-2, 5) Kirin teachers * Um Ki-joon as Kang Oh-hyuk * Lee Yoon-ji as Shi Kyung-jin * Park Jin-young as Yang Jin-man * Lee Byung-joon as Principal Shi Bum-soo * Lee Yoon-mi as Maeng Seung-hee * Baek Won-kil as Gong Min-chul * Bae Yong-joon as President Jung Ha-myung (ep 1-4)^[11] * Joo Young-hoon as the composing teacher (ep 11) Kirin students * 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 as Jun Tae-san * Han Bo-reum as Ha So-hyun Special appearances[edit] * Sumi Jo as herself (ep 1) * Kim Hyun-joong as himself (ep 1) * Song Hae as variety show host (ep 2, 3) * Bae Noo-ri as Kirin student Han So-ri (ep 6, 9, 12-13) * Nichkhun as Lee Lia's CF partner (ep 8) * Koo Jun-yup as himself (ep 9, 10) * Chansung as Oh-sun's imaginary boyfriend (ep 12) * Leeteuk as himself (ep 13) * Eunhyuk as himself (ep 13) * miss A and 2AM as flash mob dancers (ep 16) * Dal Shabet as Baek-hee's Kirin students (ep 16) Soundtrack[edit] Track listing[edit] Dream High: Original Sound Track Soundtrack album by Various Artists Released February 14, 2011 (2011-02-14) Genre Soundtrack, R&B, teen pop Label JYP, LOEN Producer J.Y. Park "The Asiansoul" Singles from Dream High 1. "Dream High / Someday" Released: January 3, 2011 2. "Maybe" Released: January 10, 2011 3. "A Part of This Dream" Released: January 17, 2011 4. "Winter Child" Released: January 19, 2011 5. "Can't Forget (If)" Released: January 31, 2011 6. "Can't I Love You? / Don't Go" Released: February 7, 2011 No. Title Artist Length 1. "¼´" (Dream High) Ok Taec-yeon, Jang Woo-young, Bae Suzy, Kim Soo-hyun, JOO 3:47 2. "Someday" IU 3:38 3. "My Valentine" (feat. Park Jin-young) Taecyeon & Nichkhun 4:07 4. "» ° " (If) Park Jin-young 3:55 5. "Maybe" Sunye 3:01 6. "¬´  " (Can't I Love You) Changmin & Jinwoon 3:35 7. "" (Don't Go) Jun.K & Lim Jeong-hee 4:20 8. "´¤´ " (A Part of This Dream) San E (feat. So Hyang of POS) 3:16 9. "¨¸´" (Winter Child) Suzy 3:39 10. "Dreaming" Kim Soo-hyun 3:42 11. "» °  (Inst.)" (If) Park Jin-young 3:55 12. "Maybe (Inst.)" Sunye 3:01 Total length: 43:47 Plagiarism allegation[edit] While "Someday" fared well commercially and reached number one on the Gaon Digital Chart,^[12] it was embroiled in controversy after the song's writer and composer, Park Jin-young, was accused of plagiarizing the song, "To My Man".^[13] Songwriter Kim Shin-il won his plagiarism lawsuit against Park Jin-young in 2013, however, an appeal to the Supreme Court of South Korea led to an eventual High Court retrial in 2015.^[14]^[15] Reception[edit] On October 5, 2011, Japan's daily paper Sankei Sports reported that Dream High was handed the Grand Prize and 'Hallyu award at the SKY PerfecTV! awards which took place in Tokyo.^[16] On October 24, 2011, Dream High was given the Special Award for Foreign Drama at the 5th International Drama Festival held in Tokyo.^[17] 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 for Kim Soo-hyun; Best New Actress for Bae Suzy; and Best Couple Award for Kim Soo-hyun and Bae Suzy. On May 10, 2012, Dream High was honored at the Rose d'Or, the global entertainment television festival ceremony which took place at Lucerne, Switzerland. It won the Golden Rose under the Youth category, the first ever Korean production to do so.^[18]^[19]^[20] On March 7, 2013, Dream High was honored as the Best Foreign Soap Opera at the 2013 USTv Students Choice Award in the Philippines, it is an annual awarding ceremony that recognized excellence and Christian values in Philippine television programs and personalities. The awards were based on students' preferences survey that accounts for Roman Catholic values.^[21]^[22]^[23] Ratings[edit] In the tables below, the red numbers represent the lowest ratings and the blue numbers represent the highest ratings. Episode # Original broadcast date TNMS ratings^[24] AGB ratings^[25] Nationwide Seoul National Capital Area Nationwide Seoul National Capital Area 1 2011-01-03 11.3 (8th) 14.2 (5th) 10.7 (13th) 11.2 (13th) 2 2011-01-04 11.5 (10th) 13.9 (6th) 10.8 (14th) 11.4 (13th) 3 2011-01-10 11.7 (8th) 13.8 (5th) 13.1 (7th) 13.3 (7th) 4 2011-01-11 13.4 (4th) 15.4 (5th) 13.8 (5th) 14.3 (5th) 5 2011-01-17 13.7 (3rd) 15.8 (3rd) 15.5 (3rd) 17.0 (4th) 6 2011-01-18 13.1 (4th) 15.9 (4th) 15.8 (4th) 17.1 (4th) 7 2011-01-24 15.3 (3rd) 17.5 (3rd) 15.9 (3rd) 17.2 (4th) 8 2011-01-31 14.9 (3rd) 17.4 (3rd) 16.3 (4th) 17.7 (5th) 9 2011-02-01 14.9 (3rd) 16.9 (4th) 16.7 (3rd) 18.3 (5th) 10 2011-02-07 16.7 (3rd) 19.2 (3rd) 17.6 (3rd) 19.3 (3rd) 11 2011-02-08 16.6 (3rd) 19.3 (3rd) 17.9 (3rd) 19.3 (3rd) 12 2011-02-14 15.8 (3rd) 17.8 (3rd) 16.7 (3rd) 18.9 (3rd) 13 2011-02-15 17.2 (3rd) 20.1 (3rd) 17.9 (3rd) 20.1 (3rd) 14 2011-02-21 16.4 (3rd) 18.9 (3rd) 17.6 (3rd) 19.3 (3rd) 15 2011-02-22 17.2 (3rd) 19.7 (3rd) 17.9 (3rd) 19.5 (3rd) 16 2011-02-28 18.2 (3rd) 20.7 (3rd) 17.2 (3rd) 18.6 (3rd) Average 14.9% 17.3% 15.7% 17.0% Special 2011-03-01 12.1 (6th) 14.4 (5th) 12.2 (9th) 13.6 (8th) Awards and nominations[edit] Year Award Category Recipient Result 2011 47th Baeksang Arts Awards Best New Director (TV) Lee Eung-bok Nominated Best New Actor (TV) Kim Soo-hyun Nominated Park Jin-young Nominated Best New Actress (TV) Suzy Nominated Popularity Award, Actor (TV) Kim Soo-hyun Nominated Park Jin-young Nominated Popularity Award, Actress (TV) Suzy Nominated IU Nominated Eunjung Nominated 4th Korea Drama Awards Best Writer Park Hye-ryun Nominated Best Supporting Actor Um Ki-joon Nominated Best Supporting Actress Lee Yoon-ji Nominated Best New Actor Kim Soo-hyun Won Best New Actress Suzy Nominated Popularity Award Kim Soo-hyun Won 6th Seoul International Drama Awards Best Miniseries Dream High Nominated 13th Mnet Asian Music Awards Best OST "Someday" - IU Nominated SKY PerfecTV! Awards Grand Prize Dream High Won Hallyu Award Kim Soo-hyun Won 5th Tokyo International Drama Festival Special Award for Foreign Drama Dream High Won 3rd Bugs Music Awards OST of the Year "My Valentine" - Taecyeon & Nichkhun feat. Park Jin-young Won KBS Drama Awards Excellence Award, Actress in a Miniseries Suzy Nominated Best New Actor Kim Soo-hyun Won Park Jin-young Nominated Best New Actress Suzy Won IU Nominated Best Supporting Actress Lee Yoon-ji Won Best Young Actress Ahn Seo-hyun Nominated Popularity Award Kim Soo-hyun Won Suzy Nominated Best Couple Award Kim Soo-hyun and Suzy Won Taecyeon and Suzy Nominated Wooyoung and IU Nominated Cyworld Digital Music Awards Song of the Month (February) "Dreaming" - Kim Soo-hyun Won 2012 Rose d'Or Awards Golden Rose (Children & Youth) Award Dream High Won 7th Seoul International Drama Awards Outstanding Korean Drama Dream High Nominated Outstanding Korean Actress Suzy Nominated International broadcast[edit] * Japan: Tokyo Broadcasting System^[26] - 29 July 2011 * Vietnam: HTV2 * Malaysia: 8TV * Indonesia: Indosiar and RTV * Singapore: E City * Kazakhstan: El Arna/ Khabar * Chile: Etc...TV * Peru: Panamericana Televisión * Taiwan: ETTV Variety * Philippines: ABS-CBN * Turkey: TRT Okul - 14 January to 3 March 2012 * Thailand: CH7 * Romania: Euforia Lifestyle TV * Middle East: MBC 4 - 25 August 2013^[27] * Italy: Super! - 1 September to 16 October 2013^[28] Adaptations[edit] The drama was adapted into a Japanese stage musical,^[29] with Yuya Matsushita and Bright's Nanaka playing the roles of Song Sam-dong and Go Hye-mi, respectively. It had runs at the New National Theatre Tokyo from July 3 to 20, 2012, and was produced by the "Dream High: Musical Production Committee" (MiYU-6ZiKaRu<'DoRi-6MuHaI6>'½¡), composed of TBS, Avex Live Creative, Nelke Planning and Lawson HMV Entertainment.^[30]^[31]^[32] After the publication of Dream High Special Making Book in February 2011 which contained behind-the-scene stories and photos as well as special interviews with the show's cast, a two-volume "image novel" was also released featuring still cuts from the drama.^[33] Sequel[edit] The sequel Dream High 2 aired a year later with a different cast, starring Kang So-ra, GOT7's JB and Junior, 2AM's Jinwoon, T-ara's Jiyeon, SISTAR's Hyolyn, Ailee, and Park Seo-joon.^[10] Notes[edit] 1. ^ A JYP-KeyEast joint venture References[edit] 1. ^ Lee, Seung-han (28 December 2010). "Park Jin-young says "wants to make 'Dream High' a reality"". 10Asia. 2. ^ "Cast members pose at a press event for TV drama "Dream High" at KINTEX in Goyang, Gyeonggi Province". The Chosun Ilbo. 28 December 2010. 3. ^ "Cast members of TV drama "Dream High" pose on the set of the show in Goyang, Gyeonggi Province". The Chosun Ilbo. 28 January 2011. 4. ^ Hong, Lucia (14 April 2010). "KEYEAST, JYP, CJ Media team up for drama "Dream High"". 10Asia. Archived from the original on 2014-04-08. Retrieved 2012-06-21. 5. ^ Cho, Bum-ja (13 August 2010). "CJ-JYP-KEYEAST drama "Dream High" to air in January 2011". 10Asia. 6. ^ Kwon, Mee-yoo (28 December 2010). "Yonsama-JYP soap to reignite hallyu". The Korea Times. 7. ^ Lee, Seung-han (28 December 2010). "PREVIEW: KBS TV series "Dream High"". 10Asia. Archived from the original on 2012-04-26. Retrieved 2012-06-21. 8. ^ Sung, So-young (30 December 2010). "Networks announce new season of drama". Korea JoongAng Daily.^[permanent dead link] 9. ^ "'Dream High' Cast Set for Musical Reunion in Japan". The Chosun Ilbo. 17 June 2011. 10. ^ ^a ^b Kim, Myung-hun (30 January 2012). "PREVIEW: KBS TV series "Dream High 2"". 10Asia. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2012-06-21. 11. ^ Hong, Lucia (8 December 2010). "Bae Yong-joon takes part in shoot for "Dream High"". 10Asia. Archived from the original on 2010-12-13. Retrieved 2012-06-21. 12. ^ Hong, Dong-hui (5 January 2011). "´ , '¼´' OST ¡ '¸°´' '¸ ' ´´". The Korea Herald (in Korean). Seoul. Retrieved 28 November 2015. 13. ^ Jeong, Gang-hyeon (3 February 2011). "´ ¹ ?". Korea Daily (in Korean). Seoul. Retrieved 28 November 2015. 14. ^ Sunwoo, Carla (25 January 2013). "Park Jin-young loses plagiarism appeal". Korea JoongAng Daily. Retrieved 16 February 2014. 15. ^ Kang, Jin-ah (24 October 2015). "  ¼ '¸°´' µ©". The Korea Times (in Korean). Seoul. Retrieved 28 November 2015. 16. ^ Hong, Lucia (7 October 2011). "KBS "Dream High" wins two honors at TV awards ceremony in Japan". 10Asia. Archived from the original on 2014-09-12. Retrieved 2012-06-21. 17. ^ "Kim Soo Hyun Attends "Tokyo International Drama Festival Awards" for "Dream High"". Soompi.com. 26 October 2011. 18. ^ Cho, Chung-un (29 February 2012). "KBS drama 'Dream High' nominated for European award". The Korea Herald. 19. ^ Ho, Stewart (11 May 2012). "'Dream High' Wins Grand Prize at the 'Rose d'Or' Awards". enewsWorld. 20. ^ Hong, Lucia (11 May 2012). "KBS' "Dream High" honored with win at Rose d'Or Awards". 10Asia. Archived from the original on 2015-01-09. Retrieved 2012-06-21. 21. ^ "ABS-CBN dominates 9th USTv Awards". ABS-CBN News. 7 March 2013. Retrieved 24 October 2016. 22. ^ "9th USTv winners named; new categories presented". GMA News. 2 April 2013. Retrieved 24 October 2016. 23. ^ "Winners: 9th USTv Students' Choice Awards". Rappler. 9 March 2013. Retrieved 24 October 2016. 24. ^ TNmS Media Korea Archived November 28, 2013, at the Wayback Machine.(in Korean) 25. ^ AGB Neilson Media Archived June 19, 2014, at the Wayback Machine.(in Korean) 26. ^ Kim, Jessica (21 July 2011). ""Dream High" to show on TBS starting July 29". 10Asia. 27. ^ "a+l+d+r+a+m+a+ a+l+k+w+r+y+tm "hkl+m+ a+l+snb+a+b+" q+r+y+b+a+ e+l+j+ MBC4" [Korean drama "A Dream of Youth" soon on MBC4] (in Arabic). 20 August 2013. Retrieved 5 September 2013. 28. ^ "Dream High e Talent High School 2, le serie teen in onda su Super!" [Dream High and Talent High School 2, teen series on Super!] (in Italian). 2 September 2013. Retrieved 6 September 2013. 29. ^ "Dream High: Musical" (in Japanese). Dream High: Musical Production Committee. Retrieved November 28, 2012. 30. ^ Kamarudin, Syahida (22 March 2012). ""Dream High" adapted to Japanese musical". Yahoo!. 31. ^ "Yuya Matsushita and Cast of "Dream High Musical" Attends Press Conference". JPopAsia. 18 June 2012. 32. ^ "Interview with Yuya Matsushita and NANAKA for Dream High Musical". Oricon via JPopAsia. 17 May 2012. 33. ^ Kim, Heidi (30 March 2011). "KBS "Dream High" re-made into image novel". 10Asia. External links[edit] * Official website (in Korean) * Dream High at KBS World * Dream High at HanCinema * Dream High on IMDb * v * t * e KBS's Monday-Tuesday dramas 1990s * Salut D'Amour KBS 2 logo.svg 2000-2004 * Look Back in Anger * Autumn in My Heart * Mina * Winter Sonata * Summer Scent * Sang Doo! Let's Go to School * Sweet 18 * Forbidden Love * Oh Feel Young * I'm Sorry, I Love You 2005-2009 * Sassy Girl Chun-hyang * Eighteen, Twenty-Nine * Loveholic * Ice Girl * Wedding * A Love to Kill * Spring Waltz * The Vineyard Man * Cloud Stairs * The Snow Queen * Hello! 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