In that landscape, My Fair Lady was a rebellious outlier. It did not feature a crying, passive Cinderella. Instead, it gave us , a woman who is rich, ruthless, and proud—and the story never punishes her for it. The Plot: A Twist on Pygmalion Loosely inspired by George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion (and the My Fair Lady musical), the 2003 drama flips the script. Here, the "sculptor" is not a man trying to change a poor flower girl; it is a poor man trying to survive a wealthy woman’s wrath.
The 2003 version is often called the "dark chocolate" of the family—bitter, complex, and an acquired taste, but superior in quality. In an era of 16-episode cookie-cutter rom-coms with predictable beats, My Fair Lady (2003) feels anarchic. The pacing is slow (classic 20 episodes), but the dialogue is razor-sharp. Kim Hye-soo’s performance might be the single greatest "rich bitch" performance in K-drama history—even rivals Kim Ji-won in The Heirs or Lee Sung-kyung in The King of Dramas . my fair lady korean drama 2003
Enter Park Moo-hyul (Ryu Si-won), a struggling medical student with a gentle heart and a mountain of student debt. To pay off his loans, he takes a bizarre job: becoming Jae-hee’s "Louis Vuitton bag holder" and personal assistant. He must endure her verbal abuse, carry her shopping bags, and fetch her coffee—all while being paid a fortune. In that landscape, My Fair Lady was a rebellious outlier