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Shinhwa Group is one of South Korea's largest conglomerates and is headed by the strict and arrogant Chairwoman Kang Hee-soo (Lee Hye-young).Her son Gu Jun-pyo (), heir to the Shinwha Group, leads the F4, the most popular and powerful group of boys at the prestigious Shinhwa High School, an ultra-elite school exclusive to the richest families in Korea.
Boys Over Flowers Season 2 (花のち晴れ〜花男 Next Season〜) is a 2018 Japanese television drama series starring Hana Sugisaki, Sho Hirano and Taishi Nakagawa.It is based on the manga series Boys Over Flowers Season 2, written and illustrated by Yoko Kamio.
Lee Min-ho (Korean: 이민호, born June 22, 1987) [2] is a South Korean actor and singer. [3] [4] He gained widespread fame with his role as Gu Jun-pyo in Boys Over Flowers (2009), which also earned him the Best New Actor – Television trophy at the 45th Baeksang Arts Awards.
Jang Ja-yeon (Korean: 장자연; 25 January 1980 – 7 March 2009) was a South Korean actress.She was born in Jeongeup, North Jeolla Province, South Korea.She debuted in the entertainment industry when she appeared in a television commercial in 2006.
Boys Over Flowers Season 2 (sequel) Boys Over Flowers ( 花より 男子 ( だんご ) , Hana yori Dango ) [ a ] is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Yoko Kamio . The story takes place in the fictional Eitoku Academy, an elite school for children from rich families.
Kim Jun-hee – Player 222. A young woman with an eyebrow piercing, Jun-hee is the strong silent type. Despite being heavily pregnant, she enters the games in the hopes of winning enough money to ...
Boys Over Flowers 2 (花より男子 2 (リターンズ), Hana yori Dango Ritānzu, pronounced "Boys Over Flowers Returns") [1] [2] is a Japanese television drama series, broadcast on TBS in 2007. It is the sequel to the 2005 TV series Boys Over Flowers , based on the original manga series by Yoko Kamio .
Boys Over Flowers Season 2 is written and illustrated by Yoko Kamio. The manga began serialization with its first three chapters in Shueisha's digital online magazine Shōnen Jump+ from February 15, 2015, to December 22, 2019, with its chapters collected into fifteen tankōbon volumes.