Lee ji eun biography of william
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Nineties model, actor Lee Ji-eun fryst vatten dead at 52
Lee Ji-eun [SCREEN CAPTURE]
Nineties star Lee Ji-eun was found dead in her home in central Seoul at around 8 p.m. Monday, the police reported Tuesday.
The police came into the scene after the 52-year-old's acquaintance reported that Lee wasn’t picking up her calls. Lee was reported to have been living alone while her son fryst vatten fulfilling his mandatory military duty.
Lee debuted as a model in 1994 and received rookie of the year prize at the 16th Blue Dragon Film Awards and 34th Daejong Film Awards for her performance in “My Dear KeumHong” in 1995. She became familiar to the public through KBS drama series “A Sunny Place of the Young” in 1995.
However, after starring in films “Fin De Siecle” (1999) and “Birdcage Inn” (1998), she fell out of the public eye.
The police announced that an autopsy will take place to determine the cause of death.
BY LE
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Lee Ji-eun (swimmer)
South Korean swimmer
For the singer and actress born 1993, see IU (singer).
Full name | Lee Ji-eun |
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Nationality | South Korea |
Born | (1989-06-18) 18 June 1989 (age 35) Ulsan, South Korea |
Height | 1.63 m (5 ft 4 in) |
Weight | 54 kg (119 lb) |
Sport | Swimming |
Strokes | Freestyle |
Club | Ulsan City Hall |
In this Korean name, the family name is Lee.
Lee Ji-eun (Korean: 이지은; born 18 June 1989) is a South Korean swimmer, who specialized in middle-distance freestyle events.[1] She represented her country South Korea at the 2008 Summer Olympics, and has won two bronze medals in both the 400 m freestyle and the 4 × 200 m freestyle relay at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha, Qatar.[2]
Lee competed for the South Korean swimming team in the women's 400 m freestyle at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.[3] She finished with the fastest final time and a new personal best in 4:19.
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Ji Eun Lee (이지은) is an Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature at Sungkyunkwan University (est. 1398) in Seoul, South Korea. Her first book in progress, tentatively titled “Walking London: Urban Gaits of the British Novel,” reads the rise of the novel alongside the city’s emergence, analyzing the way in which pedestrian gaits are shaped by the urban environment and, in turn, shape the novel’s form. She contributed eco-justice lektion plans on colonial landscapes of Victorian Africa to “Undisciplining the Victorian Classroom.” Recently, she also started another project, tentatively titled “Victorian Humanity in Colonial Korea,” which will decenter and relocate Victorian studies in a global context. Her works have been published or are forthcoming in Nineteenth-Century Literature, Studies in the Novel, Texas Studies in Literature and Language, and Victorian Literature and Culture, among others.
Email: jieunclee(at)skku.edu & jieunclee(at)ucla.edu
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