Jang Young-chul | |
---|---|
Born | South Korea |
Education | Chungbuk National University - Korean Language and Literature |
Occupation | Screenwriter |
Years active | 1994-present |
Spouse(s) | Jung Kyung-soon (m. 2005) |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 장영철 |
Revised Romanization | Jang Yeong-cheol |
McCune–Reischauer | Chang Yŏngch'ŏl |
Jang Young-chul is a South Korean television screenwriter. He is best known for writing the hit dramas Giant and History of a Salaryman.
Jang Young-chul graduated from Chungbuk National University with a degree in Korean Language and Literature.
In 1994, he won at the KBS Drama Script Contest for Father's House (아버지의 집), followed by another win in 1995 at newspaper Seoul Shinmun's for his script A Room With a View (전망좋은 방). After winning at a 1996 contest, Jang's script Golden Garden (황금빛 정원) was produced as a Best Theater episode on MBC.
Jang was hired by SBS to write his first miniseries in 2002, Affection starring Kim Ji-ho and Yoo Jun-sang. He and Affection co-writer Jung Kyung-soon married in 2005.
He began to gain attention in the TV industry when he wrote the historical epic Dae Jo Yeong (2006-2007), which starred Choi Soo-jong as the titular founder of the state of Balhae. Jang received recognition as Best Writer at the KBS Drama Awards and the Korea PD Awards.
After Dae Jo Yeong, he and wife Jung Kyung-soon became writing partners again, and they would become best known for their collaborations with director Yoo In-shik—the hit dramas Giant and History of a Salaryman. Giant (2010), starring Lee Beom-soo, Park Jin-hee, Joo Sang-wook, Hwang Jung-eum, Park Sang-min and Jeong Bo-seok, is a period drama about three siblings' quest for revenge during the economic boom of 1970-80s Korea, as their fates play out against a larger tide of power, money, politics, and the growth of a city.History of a Salaryman (2011-2012), starring Lee Beom-soo, Jung Ryeo-won, Jung Gyu-woon, Hong Soo-hyun, Lee Deok-hwa and Kim Seo-hyung, is a quirky comedy and murder mystery about an ordinary salaryman who finds himself involved with corporate spies and rival pharmaceutical companies, and also a parody of modern office politics using the historical events during China's Chu–Han Contention as satire.