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The long-established Mimi Variety store at 252 Queen Street East is used for exterior shots and as the model for the interior set built in the studio. While the signage has been adjusted, the "Kim's Convenience" sign uses the same red and green lettering as the original sign.
Kim's Convenience is a Canadian television sitcom that premiered on CBC Television in October 2016. The series depicts the Korean Canadian Kim family who run a convenience store in the Moss Park neighbourhood of Toronto: parents "Appa" (Paul Sun-Hyung Lee) and "Umma" – Korean for "dad" and "mum" – along with their daughter Janet (Andrea Bang) and estranged son Jung ().
Strays is a Canadian television sitcom, which aired on CBC Television for two seasons from 2021 to 2022. [1] A spin-off of Kim's Convenience, the series centres on Shannon Ross (Nicole Power) as she embarks on a new career in Hamilton as executive director of an animal shelter.
Phung (“Kim’s Convenience”), who co-created and executive produces the series with Scott Townend, stars as stay-at-home dad Andrew Pham. Rahkee Morzaria (“What We Do in the Shadows ...
Debuting in 2016 on the CBC network in Canada, Kim’s Convenience follows the Kims, a Korean-Canadian family that runs a convenience store in Toronto. The comedy has won numerous awards in its ...
Kim's Convenience (Korean: 김씨네 편의점; Hanja: 金氏네 便宜店; RR: Gimssine Pyeonuijeom), by Ins Choi, is a play about a family-run Korean-owned convenience store in Toronto's Regent Park neighbourhood. It debuted on July 6, 2011 at the Toronto Fringe Festival, having secured a slot by winning the Festival's New Play Contest.
Simu Liu is speaking out on the abrupt cancellation of “Kim’s Convenience.” The actor, who played Jung Kim on the sitcom, penned a lengthy Facebook post Wednesday that revealed many of the ...
Paul Sun-Hyung Lee (Korean: 이선형; born August 16, 1972) is a South Korean-Canadian actor and television host.He is best known for his roles as Randy Ko in the soap opera Train 48 (2003–2005) and as family patriarch Appa in the play Kim's Convenience (2011) and its television adaptation (2016–2021).