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Details
* Title: ?? ???? / My Princess
* Genre: Romance
* Episodes: 16
* Broadcast network: MBC
* Broadcast period: 2011-Jan-05 to 2011-Feb-??
* Air time: Wednesday & Thursday 21:55
Synopsis
An ordinary college student, Lee Seol, finds out she's a princess. The grandson of Daehan Group, Park Hae Young, is put in charge of educating Seol on proper etiquette.
Cast
* Song Seung Hun as Park Hae Young
* Kim Tae Hee as Lee Seol
* Park Ye Jin as Oh Yoon Joo
* Ryu Soo Young as Nam Jung Woo
* Lee Soon Jae as President Park Dong Jae
* Maeng Sang Hoon as Oh Ki Taek
* Kang Ye Sol as Lee Dan
* Im Ye Jin as Kim Da Bok
* Lee Ki Kwang as Choi Joon Woo
* Son Sung Yoon as Attendant Shin
* Lee Sung Min as Lee Young Chan
* Lee Dae Yeon as So Sun Woo
* Choi Yoo Hwa (???) as Kang Sun Ah
* Heo Tae Hee as Bo Jwa Gwan
* Chu Hun Yub as Yoo Ki Kwang
* Min Joon Hyun as Ki Ja
* Ahn Nae Sang as Emperor Sunjong
Production Credits
* Director: Kwon Suk Jang
* Screenwriter: Kim Eun Sook, Jang Young Shil (???)
* Producer:
source: http://wiki.d-addicts.com/
My Princess Episode 15 synopsis/summary/recap
After their temporary separation, Hae-young shows up at the palace, catching Seol just as sheâs engaged in her victory dance over his text message.
He tells her he missed her, but sheâs miffed over his two-month silence. Heâs been in New York, and she asks if heâs left behind his perception â" in moments like these, heâs supposed to take some kind of action. He replies that in New York, they react like this â" this being a kiss on the lips, which he follows up with a few more.
Well, thatâs a pretty effective way to get her back on your side. Seol is adequately appeased and jumps into his arms, and he twirls her around.
He explains that he was in New York to âtake care of something,â and while that term can apply to anything, both business affairs and personal, itâs also used to refer to ending a romantic relationship (as in, tying up loose ends). Seol assumes the latter and asks how many women he had that he took so long to break up with them all, and tells him to put them in the past now.
The plant he gave her has sprouted, and the meaning behind their flowers is âBe happy.â She pouts a little that his flower message was unromantic, but he corrects her: âHow can you be happy without me? It means that Iâll stick by your side every day.â She holds him to it, and wants him to make up for lost time by sticking within 50 centimeters of her, starting tomorrow. And whatâs wrong with today?
Hae-young has brought back his fatherâs written statement that he wonât claim his legal portion of the inheritance, making Hae-young the primary heir to his grandfatherâs fortune, of which he is entitled to half. The next step is to give up his portion to the monarchyâ¦only he doesnât intend to do that anymore. Say wut?
Hae-young meets with Yoon-ju, who is still bitter over her fate, not that she earned it or anything, of course, according to the story in her mind. Sheâd been given a job after being fired from the museum, but quit on her first day.
He tells her that his father was happy to see him, but also that heâd asked after Yoon-ju â" a reference to the fact that sheâd contacted him trying to thwart the monarchy. Even here she has been outmaneuvered, because his father has decided not to return to Korea. Heâd rather accept his fatherâs punishment than to circumvent it (as Yoon-ju offered).
Hae-young adds that heâs not going to see her anymore, either. She calls him âextremely cruel, sometimes,â which is like the pot calling the kettle a little bit dirty.
Yoon-ju meets her father for lunch, only to find herself ambushed by a blind date. She sits uncomfortably while the man chats with her about her work, though that gets cut short by the appearance of Jung-woo (arrrgh), here to rescue her from this embarrassing date. He pulls her out of the restaurant, and says he missed her (double arrrrgh). She tells him stiffly that sheâs the woman who dumped him, then got dumped by her fiancé, but he still wants to start over with her. (ARRRRRRGHHHHHHHHHH.)
She tells him heâs crazy (for once, no disagreement here), but he just smiles and says sheâs at her coolest when sheâs with him.
Seol meets with Secretary Oh to offer him the job Yoon-ju just vacated, to his great shock. He protests that his daughterâs misconduct got her fired, but Seol says that he served the chairman his whole life and will be of great help to her.
The news breaks that Hae-youngâs father has given up his claim to the chairmanâs inheritance, and now all eyes turn to Hae-young, speculating over whether he will keep it for himself or turn it over. Seol overhears the court ladies gossiping, and is alarmed by the story.
This means Hae-young is now courted by the opposition assemblyman, who is thrilled at the development. Considering Hae-youngâs past comments about blocking the princessâ progress, he assumes Hae-young will be on his side now and urges him to trust in him.
Jung-woo makes the opposing assumption, that Hae-young will naturally turn over the wealth, and asks what heâs going to do to quell the speculation. Hae-young replies that heâs human, that the decision isnât an easy one, and that heâs currently thinking it over. He adds, âWhy are people more interested in other peopleâs inheritances than their own?â Touché.
But then he assures Jung-woo that he has no intention of keeping the money â" this is his strategy to get the citizenry worked up. The knowledge that theyâre taking money away from a chaebol will stir them to vote â" much more than, say, if he eagerly handed it over without a fight. âAll things need villains.â Ooh, crafty. Jung-woo is rather impressed and laughs to himself.
He works this angle in the interview he gives to a reporter, who asks if heâs thinking to support or oppose the restoration vote. He gives noncommittal answers (âPerhapsâ and âI suppose you could say soâ) designed to make it look like heâs diminishing the importance of the vote, casually saying that he doesnât suppose the vote will amount to much. At the key question of whether heâd hand over his inheritance were the restoration plans cancelled, he asks, âWould you hand it over easily?â
The reporter is even hesitant to publish the story, acknowledging that it may cause public scorn for Hae-young. But Hae-young encourages him to publish whatever he feels is right, as it doesnât matter to him.
Seol, unaware of his master plan, reads the articles to great dismay. Jung-woo isnât about to blab, so he takes in Seolâs reaction with amusement, particularly when she orders Hae-youngâs bodyguard/aide to put him on the no-fly list, given his odd behavior of late. The aide mumbles that heâs not authorized to do that so she orders him to keep tabs on him, report back about his doings, and even tape him.
When she confronts Hae-young, he enjoys teasing her, saying that sheâd better start sucking up to him now, since heâs vacillating on the inheritance issue.
She canât believe his inexplicable change of heart, not amused at his suggestion that they take his riches and live abroad together. He tells her itâs in her best interest to keep him happy â" and then tells her to start by wearing that scandalously short skirt sheâd threatened him with in a previous text message. Hee.
Then he takes issue with the way she addresses him (âPark Hae-young-sshiâ) and she retorts, âWhat should I call you, then, Hae-young-ah?â He angles for an oppa, which she refuses. So he feigns being annoyed and stalks out in a huff, so Seol chases after him and concedes, âFine, Iâll do it. Oppa â" happy?â He pretends he didnât hear, so she yells it in his ear.
He grabs her phone to reprogram her Mr. P label to âour oppa,â which he erases for âour honey,â and then finally: âWarm and youthful Hae-young oppa.â (The âwarm and youthfulâ part refers to her description of her other oppa â" Joo Sang-wookâs cameo â" in a prior episode.)
He looks so proud of himself, itâs hilarious. She grumbles that itâs so smarmy, and again he feigns feeling insulted, sending Seol after him apologizing. That settled, he instructs her that until he signs the papers, he wants her to wink at him every time they meet eyes. Puahaha. Seol obliges reluctantly, only sheâs unable to wink with one eye, so she blinks at him instead. So cute.
She calls him stingy and childish for withholding his inheritance to order her around, and he agrees that it is, âBut itâs so fun.â
She finally gets him back a little by telling him that sheâs had numerous offers for marriage blind dates, and goes off to prepare for one. Two can play this game, Mister P.
Seol introduces Secretary Oh to the staff as the new boss, and announces her intention to remain in this position even if the vote doesnât go through. Sheâs dedicated to her role, though the problem then becomes their lack of funding. So she asks her staff to look into ways of maintaining a foundation without money, and offers to ride her current popularity into landing CFs for princess-related wares.
Hae-young video-calls her, trying to contain his worry that sheâs actually out on a date like she threatened. She hangs up on him, and he calls back to instruct her to meet him. The meeting place turns out to be a car dealership, where he grills her on her date and prods for details â" what does the guy do for a living? Did she smile at him? Look into his eyes? Seol tells him that sheâs thinking of going out on another date with the guy.
Heâs here to buy a car, her and their promised driving lessons. Only, the lesson goes about as well as you might expect, which totally takes me back to those teenage years when I thought Iâd never be able to drive without fear. Sheâs plastered to the wheel like an old lady, going all of 20 kmh (which she calls speedy), while Hae-young beats his chest in frustration at her inability to drive straight.
Finally he orders her out and calls her a dummy in frustration, which especially peeves her and makes her retort that maybe he didnât consider that the car was the problem, or his awful teaching. He contritely takes back the âdummyâ and offers to accept his punishment â" and leans in for a kiss.
Seol hardly thinks thatâs a suitable punishment, so he says heâll âtake that backâ â" and leans in to ârescindâ his kiss (with another one). Ha! Thatâs pretty smooth, actually. *Files away for future use.*
Hae-young then goes to the president to ask for his help, and though the latter is surprised, he agrees to let the vote decide the monarchyâs fate. He comments on Hae-youngâs âfoolishness and courageâ at putting up his enormous inheritance, which makes him wish he were on his side. In fact, the president makes the offer for Hae-young to come work for him in the Blue House.
The days go by and two days before the vote, Seol gives an interview with Reporter Yoon. Asked what sheâd like to do first if the vote passes, she answers that sheâd like âsomebodyâsâ congratulations, skillfully evading his prodding for a name.
Afterward, sheâs ushered into the conference room, where Hae-young signs the papers giving up his inheritance to the monarchy. Itâs not until afterward that Seol clues into his motivation, as he asks Jung-woo not to make this public until after the vote, because if it were to become news now, people would not be motivated to cast their ballots.
She thanks him, and he says thereâs nothing to thank â" the money was never his to begin with, and heâd just been greedy for it before. To assure her that heâll be fine, he reminds her that his diplomatâs pay is pretty good, and heâs got property in his name, âSo donât go running away saying Iâm poor now.â
He asks for a prize to reward his nice gesture, and they go out walking the streets together. Seol comments that itâs a pretty weak request â" an ordinary streetside date â" and he quips, âAnd what sweeter prize were you thinking to give me, Your Highness Ero-Seol?â HAHA. If only we could see inside her mindâ¦
She asks if heâll still stick with her if the vote fails, and he teases, âNope. That princess of Monacoâs really pretty.â Put out, Seol suggests he sets his sights on Princess Fiona instead, green skin and all, who is at least pretty by day. He says heâd rather have Seol, then, since sheâs pretty at night too.
Seol corrects him: Sheâs even prettier at night. He retorts that sheâs prettiest when sheâs not talking, and Seol tags along after him like a muppet, chirping, âTalk. Talk talk talk talk talk talk talkâ¦â So cute.
They walk along, eating street food, browsing the stands, and playing games. They have to make a break for it when a few bystanders recognize Seol and chase them, clamoring for photos, and manage to escape safely.
However, news footage on a large outdoor screen catches their eye, with the caption indicating that one last scandal has broken out about Seol. This one was spurred by her evasive comments at her recent interview, and has dredged up old footage of Hae-young and Seol together, linking them romantically. The reporter has taken her rather innocent comments and twisted it into a Big Story, on the eve of the vote.
Hae-youngâs plan is to use a televised denial of the rumors to do some damage control, but Jung-woo warns that that could have unforeseen detrimental effects. Seol says that sheâll take care of it herself, and films a video message.
Seol: âHello, citizens, this is Lee Seol. You must have been surprised at the news. To start with the conclusion, I love Park Hae-young. Regarding the doubt about the monarchy, there will be people who believe me and those who do not. However, the truth that does not change is that I love Park Hae-young.â
The video is released, and voting day comes. Some mock it, like the assemblyman and the president, who pose for the cameras as they cast their votes and scoff at her love declaration. An indifferent Yoon-ju sits at home, while her father tells her that he trusts she will make it out to the polls.
At the palace, everyone gathers to watch the news report once the counting begins. Seol sits worriedly, so Hae-young pries her away from the TV and takes to her room, where he leads her in breathing exercises to relax. She catches him sneaking a look at the news on his phone, and eagerly asks for the restuls. With a grim face, he tells her, âItâs over.â
Before she can press him on what that means, Jung-woo enters with the staff on his heels, facing her with an equally solemn face, and tells her to confirm the truth for herself by watching the broadcast. Itâs clearly not good news.
We fade out, and then we come backâ¦
TWO YEARS LATER...
At a school campus, Seol rides by on her bike, dressed like a normal girl, and mobbed by a group of excited students.
Credits to and special thanks from http://surattresna.blogspot.com/ to http://www.dramabeans.com/ for the synopsis/recap/summary of My Princess Episode 1 - 15
source: (Thank you and credits to
http://wiki.d-addicts.com/
http://www.dramabeans.com/
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