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Park Hye-ryeong

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Park Hye-ryeong
박혜령
Born1974 (age 49–50)
Occupations
  • Television Director
  • Filmmaker
Years active2002 to present
Employers
  • Hublist (1999-2002)
  • Leespro (2002-2008)
  • Hayanso Entertainment (2008 to present)
OrganizationKorea Broadcasting Video Producers Association
SpouseMarried (undisclosed)
Children2
Korean name
Hangul
박혜령
Hanja
朴惠領
Revised RomanizationBak Hyeryeong
McCune–ReischauerPak Hyeryŏng

Park Hye-ryeong (Korean박혜령; born in Seoul, 1974) is a South Korean documentary film director, producer and entertainment executive. She currently serves as the CEO of Hayanso Entertainment, a company she established in 2008.

Park Hye-ryeong has produced over 40 documentaries on terrestrial broadcasting for 18 years.[1] Her notable works include collaborations with culinary researcher Lim Ji-ho [ko] on projects such as "Human Theater" (KBS 2006), "Wandering Gourmet" (SBS 2008, 2009, 2012, 2013), and "How to Eat Well and Live Well" (SBS 2014–2016), as well as the feature-length documentary film "The Wandering Chef" (2020).[2]

Career

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Television documentary director

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Park Hye-ryeong started her directing career at Hubnet. She directed "VJ Commando" and the pilot program "Youth" for KBS2.[3] Later, she was recruited by CEO Lee Dong-seok to work as a director at his production company called Leespro, which provided outsourced production services for KBS2.[4] At Leespro, she served as one of the directors for the popular KBS show called "KBS Field Report Zone 3," and later for "Human Theater."[5] It was during the filming of an episode titled "Breaking the Chef's Poison" for "Human Theater" that Park first met culinary researcher Lim Ji-ho [ko].[4]

After Leespro closed down in 2008, Park decided to become an independent. Instead of working for another company, she desired the freedom to produce her own work. In that same year, she established Hayanso Entertainment. The name was given to her by her acquaintance, Pianist Lim Dong-chang, and it signifies living with sincerity and integrity, like a white cow.[4]

Hayanso Entertainment's debut project was "SBS Special - Wandering Gourmet." The show features culinary researcher Lim Ji-ho [ko], embarking on another culinary journey across the country in search of the finest ingredients. In 2008, Park proposed the idea to SBS. Initially, it was planned as a two-part series. However, due to the positive response received after the first episode, it was extended into a full series consisting of a total of 7 episodes, with 2 to 3 episodes airing each year.[4] The first SBS special Wandering Gourmet premiered in spring 2009,[6] and achieved a viewership rating of 9.1% (TNS Media Korea).[7] The second episode aired in August of the same year takes place in Jeju,[8] followed by the third episode in Baekdu Mountain.[9] The journey continues to Kyoto in subsequent episodes.[10]

Park, along with Min In-sik, the CP (Chief Producer) of SBS's Culture Bureau, created SBS's "How to Eat Well and Live Well." They were joined by Kwon Hyeon-jeong, the writer of "Human Theater." Kim Hye-soo and Lee Hwi-jae hosted the program as a Lunar New Year special pilot in February 2012. It became a regular program in 2014, as a replacement of "How to Eat Well and Live Well as a Star," and was hosted by culinary researcher Lim Ji-ho [ko] and comedian Lee Young-ja. The show aired on Sunday morning and offers a unique concept, featuring top actors such as Kim Hye-soo, Hwang Jung-min, Lee Sun-kyun, and Song Yoon-ah embarking on a healing trip.[11][12]

The filming process for the show lasts for two days and one night, but the overall production takes two weeks. After the meeting, the team visits the chosen travel destination in advance to make preparations. If the items for the trip are different from what they expected, they don't change the destination but make adjustments to the available choices. Once filming is complete, the process of reviewing the footage, adding subtitles, and incorporating music begins. Around 35 to 40 people are involved in the production, and the busy process continues without a break every week. The show's 75-minute broadcast is successful because it provides a sense of "healing" to viewers. Park acknowledges that the process can be tiring and challenging, but the cast members, including Lim Ji-ho, find solace by spending time with the production team and enjoying food on set. The support and gratitude from viewers also serve as a source of strength for the team. Park emphasizes that the main driving force behind the production is the hope that the show brings joy to its audience.[12][13]

Park received critical acclaim for her work and was awarded the Excellence Prize at the 8th Korea Independent PD Awards ceremony, organized by the Korea Independent PD Association. The ceremony was held in Yeouido, Seoul.[11]

"Kim Hye-soo's Refugee Diary" was a documentary that aired on KBS1 in September 2017. Directed by Park Hye-ryeong, Jang Hyun-ho, and Lee Byung-han, with the script written by Kwon Hyeon-jeong. The documentary followed Kim Hye-soo's visits to refugees who had survived near-death experiences in the Mediterranean. During her travels in June 2017 to Serbia, Italy, and Greece, which were major refugee destinations, she witnessed the challenges faced by refugees. Despite restrictions, the number of refugees, especially children, continued to rise. Kim Hye-soo shared vivid stories of their journeys and expressed admiration for their resilience, particularly among children living alone without family or guardians.[14]

Film documentary director

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In early 2009, Lim Ji-ho [ko] ventured to Jiri Mountain to cook persimmons for Kim Soon-gyu, a grandmother from Jirisan Dancheon Village, whom Lim Ji-ho considered to be the third mother he shared his heart with. Park Hye-ryeong, who had been documenting his life for three years, joined him on this journey. Initially, Park had no intention of making a film, but she was captivated by Lim's unique personality and continued to film his daily life even outside their television program. Over the course of about 10 years, Park accumulated footage, and during that time, she learned about a personal revelation regarding Lim's mothers: the one who gave birth to him, the adopted one, and the one he met in the mountain, Kim Soon-gyu. This revelation sparked the director's interest in exploring the chef's hidden loneliness, leading her to make a movie based on his story.[15]

Kim Soon-gyu's motion sickness prevented her from leaving the neighborhood, making it difficult for her to travel by car. Lim wanted to prepare a special 90th birthday meal for Kim Soon-gyu, sourcing ingredients from all over the country. However, unexpected news was delivered: Kim Soon-gyu had died. Devastated after visiting the house in person, Chef Lim told Park a few days later that he wanted to cook a dinner for the three mothers. He performed his own ritual, cooking 108 plates of ancestral rite food over three days, to express his longing for his three mothers.[16]

In 2016, Park submitted her debut feature-length documentary titled "108 Plates" to compete in the 'Incheon Documentary Report 2016'. The documentary was among 47 projects vying for recognition in the 'Korean Documentary Pitching (K-Pitch)' category, which specifically focuses on Korean documentary projects intended for theatrical release and television broadcast. "108 Plates" was selected as one of the prominent works in the competition.[17]

The documentary "108 Plates" underwent a name change and was rebranded as "Bapjeong" (Korean밥정; Hanja; lit. The Meal) with its English title being "The Wandering Chef." The duration of "The Wandering Chef" is 87 minutes. The film follows the journey of culinary researcher Lim Ji-ho [ko], a wandering chef who cooks dishes using everything from nature. It also captures chef Lim Ji-ho's personal history, cooking life, and philosophy through his table setting.[18] On March 19, 2019, it was reported that "The Wandering Chef" premiered worldwide as part of the World Showcase program at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, which is recognized as one of the world's top three documentary film festivals.[19] The festival took place from April 25 to May 5.[20]

After its initial premiere, "The Wandering Chef" was featured at the 66th Sydney Film Festival, which took place in Sydney, Australia, from June 5 to June 16, 2019. The film had scheduled screenings on June 15, Saturday, at Event Cinemas George St 9, at 4:30 pm, and on June 16, Sunday, at the same venue, at 6:30 pm.[21]

The U.S. premiere of "The Wandering Chef" took place at the Margaret Mead Film Festival, held at the American Museum of Natural History, New York, on October 20, 2019, in collaboration with The Korea Society.[22]

Following these screenings, "The Wandering Chef" was invited to several other film festivals including the Galway Film Fleadh, San Sebastian International Film Festival, DMZ International Documentary Film Festival, Warsaw International Film Festival, Haifa International Film Festival, Devour! The Food Film Fest, Oslo Films from the South, Hawaii International Film Festival, Minsk International Film Festival in Belarus, Rastapad film festival, Santa Barbara International Film Festival, and the Colorado Dragon Boat Film Festival.[23]

Originally scheduled for release in spring 2020 in South Korea, "The Wandering Chef" had to be postponed due to COVID-19. The press screening of the film took place at At Nine in Dongjak-gu, Seoul on September 28. The film was chosen as the opening film for the 6th Seoul International Food Film Festival, a six-day event held from October 6 to October 11, 2020. The film had its premiere on October 7, 2020.[24] In November, the film was also screened at The 2nd Agricultural Film Festival. The festival took place at the Wanju-gun Media Center in Jeollabuk-do on November 27 and 28, 2020.[25]

In 2021, "The Wandering Chef" was screened at the food culture film screening Korea-ASEAN Gourmet Dinner, hosted by The ASEAN Cultural Center. This screening provided a glimpse into Korean and ASEAN food culture and was scheduled every weekend from January to February 2021. A total of 10 films from Korea, ASEAN, and other Asian countries were presented under four themes: 'Hororok', 'Chop Chop', 'Omul Omul', and 'Korea-ASEAN Table'.[26][27]

In 2023, Park reunited with Song Yoon-ah, with whom she had previously worked on SBS's "How to Eat Well and Live Well." They collaborated to create a web talk show called "Song Yoon-ah" on the YouTube channel by PDC.[28][29]

Other activity

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In 2017, Park on behalf of Hayanso Entertainment, joined the Special Emergency Countermeasures Committee for the Elimination of Unfair Broadcasting Practices. This committee operates under the Korea Broadcasting Video Producers Association and was established on August 4, with the participation of 209 outsourced production companies primarily involved in producing current affairs and culture programs. The Special Countermeasures Committee identified issues within the outsourcing production industry and specifically mentioned Directors Park Hwan-seong and Kim Gwang-il, who died on September 14 while working on an EBS program.[30]

Filmography

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Film

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Film credit
Year Title Director Company Distributor Ref.
English Korean
2006 The Wandering Chef 밥정 Park Hye-ryeong Hayanso Entertainment Co. , Ltd. At9 Film Co., Ltd. [31]

Television show

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Film credit[31]
Year Title Broadcaster Production house Credited as Ref.
English Korean Co-director Director
2000 VJ Commando VJ 특공대 KBS Hubnet Yes NA [31]
2002 Youth 청춘 [3]
2002 KBS On-site Report Zone 3 KBS 현장르포 제3지대 Leespro [31]
2002 Wednesday Planning 수요기획 [31]
2006 Human Theater 인간극장 [4]
2013 KBS Documentary Empathy: By itself KBS다큐공감: 절로절로 저절로 Hayanso Entertainment Co. , Ltd [32]
2013 SBS Special - Wandering Gourmet SBS 스페셜-방랑 식객 SBS NA Yes [31]
2014–2016 How to Eat and Live Well 잘 먹고 잘 사는 법, 식사하셨어요? [31]
2017 KBS Documentary Empathy "Kim Hye-soo's Refugee Diary" KBS다큐공감: 김혜수의 난민일기 KBS1 Yes[a] [33]

Web series

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Web series credit
Year Title Director OTT Company Ref.
English Korean
2023 Song Yoon-ah by PDC 송윤아 by PDC Park Hye-ryeong by PDC Hayanso Entertainment Co. , Ltd. [28][29]
2023–2024 Way Back Home by PDC 퇴근길 by PDC [34]

Accolades

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Award and nomination
Award Year Category Recipient Result Ref.
8th Korea Independent PD Awards 2012 Excellence Award How to Eat and Live Well Won [11][35]

Notes

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  1. ^ with Jang Hyun-ho and Lee Byung-han

References

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  1. ^ "「인천다큐멘터리포트2016」 , 최종 본선 진출 프로젝트 25편 선정, 공개" [「Incheon Documentary Report 2016」, 25 finalists selected and released]. Aju Business Daily (in Korean). 2016-09-13. Retrieved 2024-02-14.
  2. ^ Park, Mi-hyang (2020-04-02). "[ESC] 방랑식객 임지호가 차린 108가지 음식…'밥정'으로 돌아온 요리사" [[ESC] 108 kinds of food prepared by wandering eater Lim Ji-ho... The chef who returned to 'meal']. The Hankyoreh (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-02-14.
  3. ^ a b "[방송]'VJ 특공대' '청춘' 제작 '허브넷' 성공비결" [[Broadcast] The secret to the success of 'VJ Commando' and 'Youth' production 'Hubnet']. The Dong-a Ilbo (in Korean). 2002-07-28. Retrieved 2024-02-14.
  4. ^ a b c d e "[사람이야기] "가슴 따뜻해지는 프로그램 만들게요"" [[People's Story] "I'll make a heartwarming program"]. 메트로신문. Retrieved 2024-02-14.
  5. ^ "충무로 소재 공장 [2] - 인간극장 제작기". Cine21 (in Korean). 2005-11-30. Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  6. ^ "[오늘의 추천방송] SBS '방랑식객'" [[Today's Recommended Broadcast] SBS 'The Wandererer']. PD저널 (in Korean). 2009-04-19. Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  7. ^ "이끼, 풀도 요리로… '방랑식객' 관심". Segye Ilbo (in Korean). 2009-04-20. Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  8. ^ "제주도만의 귀한 식재료들을 찾아…" [Find precious ingredients unique to Jeju Island...]. Segye Ilbo (in Korean). 2009-08-28. Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  9. ^ "SBS 스페셜 '방랑식객' 시리즈, 백두산 먹거리 찾아 나섰다" [SBS special 'Wanderer' series, looking for food for Mt. Baekdu]. No Cut News. 2010-02-05. Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  10. ^ Yoon, Go-eun. "SBS 스페셜, '방랑식객5-일본을 가다'" [SBS Special, 'The Wanderer 5-Going to Japan']. entertain.naver.com (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  11. ^ a b c "한국독립PD상 대상에 KBS '백년해로, 참 고마운 당신'" [KBS 'Thank you so much for the 100 years' won the Korea Independent PD Award]. PD저널 (in Korean). 2015-02-06. Retrieved 2024-02-14.
  12. ^ a b Lee, Da-won (2014-12-30). "[M+기획…잘 먹고 잘사는 법①] 영화제보다 화려한, 영화보다 따뜻한" [[M+Planning…How to eat well and live well①] More colourful than a film festival, warmer than a movie]. Maeil Broadcasting Network (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-02-22.
  13. ^ "[M+기획…잘 먹고 잘사는 법②] 박혜령 PD "'인간극장'에 예능을 덧입혔죠" - 열린세상 열린방송 MBN" [[M+Planning…How to eat well and live well②] Park Hye-ryeong PD "I added entertainment to 'Human Theatre'" - Open World Open Broadcast MBN]. star.mbn.co.kr (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-02-22.
  14. ^ POP (2017-08-31). "김혜수, 난민 어린이 만났다 "빛나는 아이들 잊을 수 없을 것"" [Kim Hye-soo, I met a refugee child "I will never forget the shining children"]. 헤럴드팝 (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-02-25.
  15. ^ Choi, Won-kyun (2020-10-19). "[시네프리뷰]밥정(情)-자연과 음식으로 치유되는 성찰의 사모곡" [[Cine Review] Rice (情) - A sentimental song of reflection that is healed by nature and food]. m.weekly.khan.co.kr (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-02-22.
  16. ^ 이, 지혜 (2020-10-05). "[e영화] "유명 셰프도…평범한 밥 한끼로 피어나는 밥정"". 이뉴스투데이 (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-02-22.
  17. ^ "'인천다큐멘터리포트2016' 최종 프로젝트 25편 선정". Incheon Ilbo (in Korean). 2016-09-19. Retrieved 2024-02-17.
  18. ^ "영화 '밥정', '방랑식객'의 절절한 사모곡" [The desperate song of the movie 'Bapjeong' and 'The Wandererer']. PD저널 (in Korean). 2020-10-09. Retrieved 2024-02-14.
  19. ^ "'Wandering Chef' brings people together through food". The Korea Times. 2020-02-21. Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  20. ^ "Tasha Hubbard's "We Will Stand Up" to launch Hot Docs '19". Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  21. ^ Festival, Asian Film (2019-05-30). "Asian presence at the 66th Sydney Film Festival (Part 2)". Asian Film Festivals. Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  22. ^ "The Wandering Chef". www.koreasociety.org. Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  23. ^ Kwak, Myung-dong (2020-01-22). "세계 14개 영화제 초청 화제작 '밥정', 3월 전격 개봉" [14 film festivals around the world, ‘Bapjeong’, released in March]. 마이데일리 (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-02-14.
  24. ^ "영화 '밥정' 박혜령 감독" [Director Park Hye-ryeong of the movie 'Bapjeong']. 서울경제 (in Korean). 2020-09-28. Retrieved 2024-02-14.
  25. ^ Hong, In-cheol (2020-11-24). "'농사 끝나면 영화 시작'…완주서 27∼28일 농한기 영화제" ['When farming is over, the movie starts'... Nonghangi Film Festival on the 27th and 28th]. Yonhap News Agency (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  26. ^ "한·아세안 미식만찬 2021" [Korea-ASEAN Gourmet Dinner 2021]. 여기유 (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-02-17.
  27. ^ "한국국제교류재단 KF" [Korea International Foundation KF]. Korea Foundation (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-02-17.
  28. ^ a b "송윤아 by PDC - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  29. ^ a b Jo, Yoon-seon (February 23, 2023). "설경구♥' 송윤아 "사람들이 나에 대해 오해하는 게 있다" ('by PDC')" ['Sol Gyeong-gu♥' Song Yoon-ah "There are things people misunderstand about me" ('by PDC')] (in Korean). Sports Chosun. Retrieved February 26, 2023 – via Naver.
  30. ^ Noh, Jin-ho (2017-08-16). ""방송사 착취 그만두라"…'을(乙)' 외주 제작사, 첫 집단 목소리" ["Stop Exploiting Broadcasters"...'Eul(乙)' Outsourced Production Company, First Group Voice]. JoongAng Ilbo (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g "그리움으로 짓고, 진심으로 눌러 담은.. [밥정]". www.koreafilm.co.kr. Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  32. ^ "방송콘텐츠진흥재단 | 지원작소개 - 역대작소개" [Broadcasting Contents Promotion Foundation | Introduction of applications - Introduction of past works]. bcpf.or.kr. Retrieved 2024-02-25.
  33. ^ "KBS1 '다큐 공감-김혜수의 난민일기' 9월 2일 방송" [KBS1 'Documentary Empathy - Kim Hye-soo's Refugee Diary' broadcast on September 2nd]. 서울경제 (in Korean). 2017-08-31. Retrieved 2024-02-25.
  34. ^ "퇴근길 by PDC - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  35. ^ "이 달의 독립PD상 1 페이지 | 한국독립PD협회" [Independent PD of the Month Page 1 | Korea Independent PD Association]. indiepd.org. Retrieved 2024-02-22.
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