*This content was translated by AI.
Actor Park Bo-kyung perfectly digested the affectionate character who has both desire and deficiency.
The original Netflix series "Lady Dua" is a story about Sarah Kim (played by Shin Hye-sun), a woman who wanted to become a luxury brand even if it was fake, and Mukyeong (played by Lee Joon-hyuk), who tracks her desires. Park Bo-kyung played Jeong Yeo-jin, the representative of the beauty brand "Nox," in the play, and played a character who chooses desire not to be pushed out of the threshold of high society.
Park Bo-kyung clearly imprinted Jung Yeo-jin's emotional line from the first inning. On the outside, he is a CEO with a perfect career, but his gaze on Sarah Kim contains longing, jealousy, and lack at the same time. The line "Sarah that day was perfectly perfect" is not just a flashback, but a confession of a complex desire for a world that one has not reached. Park Bo-kyung did not exaggerate this, but convincingly expressed it with his subtly shaky eyes and breathing that stopped one beat.
After that, Jeong Yu-jin's desire leads to more specific choices. At a VIP meeting, "Geul?" The scene where you ask back, "Is that all?" is a moment when the character's self-esteem and anger intersect. The expression of swallowing insults in front of the class and the attitude of saving face while suppressing anger clearly revealed Jeong Yeo-jin's inner self. Desire doesn't shout, but it's clearly alive and moving in the screen.
At the fifth inning, Jeong Yeo-jin stands in the middle of the incident. Amid the 15 billion investment dividend issue and Sarah Kim's survival, Jeong Yeo-jin chooses judgment, not emotion. The declaration that "I have no damage" was a decisive scene that reversed the premise of the investigation. The choice to stand as an investor instead of remaining a victim completely changed the direction of the character, and the flow of the narrative has also been reorganized.
Park Bo-kyung designed this transformation process without exaggeration. "I'd rather die! Immediately after the anger that explodes, "Why are you alive!" Park Bo-kyung completes the short gap from anger to resentment, calculation, and resignation with a fine shake of her eyes. Even if tears are formed, the gaze does not collapse, and the attitude does not become disturbed even if the emotions are shaken. The gap until the moment when emotions are achieved and the situation is calmly sorted out was completed with a change in the temperature of the eyes. Acting, which fills the inner side of the character with a small expression and silence instead of a big gesture, made the character Jung Yeo-jin more three-dimensional.
Throughout the episode, Park Bo-kyung elaborately moved up and down the top and bottom of her emotions and adjusted the temperature of the scene. The performance, which flexibly extends from bright high tones to restrained luxury and even instinctive emotions, clearly revealed the complexity of characters like variations across octaves.
Park Bo-kyung has built a wide spectrum of characters by continuing her steady work based on her solid acting skills. He demonstrated his presence by convincingly portraying different determined figures in various works such as "The Moon flows in the River," "Pine: Villagers," "Riding Life," and "My Perfect Secretary." Experiences gained regardless of genre and role lead to new variations in "Lady Dua" and add interest.
Since its release on the 13th, "Lady Dua" has ranked third in the global TOP 10 non-English show. In addition, it has been on the top 10 list in Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, and Malaysia, and 38 countries, including Bahrain, Peru, Colombia, Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan, and Kenya, realizing its popularity.
<© STARNEWS. All rights reserved. No reproduction or redistribution allowed.>
*This content was translated by AI.

