The box office isn't something I consider. If I do, I can't really work.
I'd like the audience to see different sides of me.
I was never a good student. But I wrote acting notes every day and prepared for my next shoots diligently.
I usually get out of my roles easily when dramas end.
I'm able to look the person acting across from me and respond to that. There are times when it becomes so lonely and painful, but I think I'm able to overcome them because I realize that the more fiercely you prepare for a role, the more the audience can feel it.
I think part of maturity as an actress comes from their experience in getting married and having children.
Why is it so difficult to have films seeing the world from women's perspective like 'Thelma and Louise?'
I used to be very shy. I hated going to a new classroom and having to make new friends, meet new teachers, and adjust to a new environment.
I think it's important to widen my artistic repertoire.
When I got the script for 'The Art of Seduction,' I realised I'd never been in a comedy, so I decided to experiment. What the character went through could never happen in my own life.
I've starred in many melodramas, but the reason 'Something in the Rain' is so special to me is that I feel like I'm living in reality.
I didn't understand at first why I couldn't meet a guy for so long. But as time goes by, I understood why actresses usually get married late. I think their hearts for work become bigger and happiness from the work takes the most space in their hearts.