The Star Malaysia - Star2

Bromance cemented by PJS

- By JAN LEE

LANGUAGE barriers and cultural difference­s matter little in the strong bromance between South Korean singer-actor Lee Seung-gi and Taiwanese heartthrob Jasper Liu.

The stars of the new unscripted travelogue series Twogether (available on Netflix)– which follows the duo as they travel across Asia – have become fast friends over the course of filming the programme last year.

In a virtual press conference to promote the show, Lee, 33, says in Korean: “My first impression of Jasper was that we’re very similar. We’re both energetic and very positive and, like myself, Jasper tends to really go for it when he’s given a mission and a challenge.”

Liu, also 33, certainly has a competitiv­e streak.

He says in Mandarin with a laugh: “Seung-gi is really smart, he picks up languages really quickly. I felt like I had to be very careful of how smart he is when we’re competing against each other on the show, and I even went back to watch his old variety show Strong Heart (2009 to 2013) to see what tactics he used to trick people.”

The two stars can speak a little of each other’s native language, but mainly communicat­ed in English while filming the series.

What cemented their crosscultu­ral bromance was a set of brightly coloured sleepwear.

Lee says: “On unscripted shows in Korea, we usually don’t change into proper pyjamas when we go to bed. But Jasper changed into pyjamas that looked fit for a prince.”

Liu later gifted him the exact same pair of pyjamas in a different colour – champagne gold – to match his own understate­d navyblue pair.

Lee says: “That’s when I felt like, ‘We’re close friends now’.”

Showrunner Ko Min-seok says that casting Lee was “a no-brainer” due to his experience in variety programmes. But the team, he added, found a hidden gem in casting Liu, a perfect partner for Lee.

Ko says: “We loved his bright, positive energy and he has a smile that resembles Seung-gi’s so much. We thought they’d have great synergy.”

The show is also a game show – Liu and Lee have to complete challenges so that they can meet their loyal fans living in different cities.

In one memorable mission which Lee described as “the variety show’s Mission Impossible”, he had to decipher words Liu wrote on the sand at the beach while paraglidin­g.

Variety show novice Liu, who is best known for the hit 2018 Taiwanese movie More Than Blue, was surprised at how real unscripted series are.

He says: “It’s really very unscripted. The showrunner­s kept telling us, ‘We don’t know whether you can meet your fans successful­ly if you don’t complete the mission.’ So we really tried very hard.”

Lee, an actor known for series such as Gu Family Book (2013) and A Korean Odyssey (2017), is no stranger to variety programmes.

He is in the main cast of ensemble variety show Master In The House (2017 to now) and was part of last year’s Busted! and 2013’s Sisters Over Flowers.

“I was worried at first that if it’s just the two of us, would we be able to make the show fun and entertaini­ng? Would Netflix even want to air our show?

“But I think it’s a new, never-before-seen sort of entertainm­ent to see two people overcome their difference­s in background to form a true friendship,” says Lee.

While the two friends currently cannot meet in real life because the Covid-19 pandemic has disrupted travel plans, Liu hopes the show connects both stars and fans.

He says: “Hopefully, we can all be together through Twogether .”– The Straits Times/asia News Network

 ?? — Handout ?? In Twogether, Lee (left) and Liu travel across asia to complete challenges.
— Handout In Twogether, Lee (left) and Liu travel across asia to complete challenges.

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