Hwang Jung-min | |
---|---|
Born | Masan, South Gyeongsang Province, South Korea | September 1, 1970
Education | Seoul Institute of the Arts – Theater |
Years active | 1994–present |
Agent | SEM Company |
Height | 182 cm (6 ft 0 in) |
Spouse | Kim Mi-hye (m. 2004) |
Children | 2 |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 황정민 |
Hanja | |
Revised Romanization | Hwang Jeong-min |
McCune–Reischauer | Hwang Ch'ŏngmin |
Hwang Jung-min (born September 1, 1970) is a South Korean actor. He established himself as a leading man in the romantic drama You Are My Sunshine (2005). One of the highest-grossing actors in South Korea, Hwang has starred in several box office hits such as The Unjust (2010), Dancing Queen (2012), New World (2013), Ode to My Father (2014), Veteran (2015), The Himalayas (2015), A Violent Prosecutor (2016), The Wailing (2016), The Spy Gone North (2018), Deliver Us from Evil (2020), 12.12: The Day (2023). [4] [5] His performance in the latter earned him Best Actor at the 60th Baeksang Arts Awards. [6]
Hwang is the second actor in South Korea to be part of the "100 Million Viewer Club" in Chungmuro. [7]
Hwang Jung-min began his career in musical theatre, making his acting debut in Line 1 in 1995. [8] [9] [10] He then starred in various musicals and plays in Daehangno such as Jesus Christ Superstar and Cats .
Despite a career on stage, Hwang had difficulty transitioning to film. He went through a long struggle for recognition, with people saying he "didn't have the right face for film." He even considered giving up his dream, but stuck to his conviction about walking the path of acting. Hwang said, "After becoming interested about the stage and how it feels to be that person on stage, I've never thought of anything else. That I never swayed -- that is one thing I can say with confidence." [11]
His big break came when he was cast in Waikiki Brothers , a 2001 film that was a sleeper hit in Korea. In his role as a hopeless drummer, Hwang left a strong impression and earned favorable reviews, with director Yim Soon-rye calling him "an uncut gemstone". Hwang went on to have prominent roles in Road Movie , A Good Lawyer's Wife , Heaven's Soldiers and A Bittersweet Life . [12]
But it was in 2005 that Hwang became a household name, portraying a naive farmer in love with an AIDS-stricken prostitute in the hit melodrama You Are My Sunshine . Hwang explains that he was "moved by the tale of the genuine love between two people. I agreed with the director's idea of showing it as pure love, like an uncut gem, without sloppily adding to it or embellishing it." [13]
When he accepted the best actor award at the Blue Dragon Film Awards for his performance in You Are My Sunshine , many were moved by his now-famous speech: "All I did was add a spoon to a dinner table that had already been prepared by others." [14] [15]
He received further acclaim for his roles as an insurance investigator in Black House , [16] a troubled club CEO who falls in love with a woman with a terminal illness in Happiness , [17] a superhero in A Man Who Was Superman [18] [19] and a private detective in Private Eye . [20]
Hwang has said that when choosing scripts, he looks at the overall storyline rather than the character itself. [21] He then exerts effort to continuously bring out the character's inner workings. Hwang said, "It is very important that you don't get too absorbed in yourself. You must always remember that there is another person watching the scene. Maintaining objectivity is important." Hwang emphasizes sincerity and empathy in his acting. [15] "The camera doesn't lie. You can never fool the viewer. You have to act with your heart, not your head." It is because of this commitment to emotional truth that Hwang can confidently tell interviewers that he is 100 percent satisfied with his work. During a crisis on set, or when he is either feeling too satisfied or caught up in mannerisms, he takes out notes he made when he first read the screenplay. He said, "I look at the screenplay again and again. That's where all the answers are." [13]
He made a triumphant return to the stage in the 2008 production of Nine . [22] [23] The theater producer said that it took three years to cast the leading role because in Hwang he had found the right actor to rival Antonio Banderas' Broadway performance. [24] [25] He has since starred in University of Laughs , [26] The Wedding Singer [27] and Man of La Mancha . [28] Hwang says, "A movie is the art of a director but the play is the art of an actor." [26]
2009's The Accidental Couple was particularly special to Hwang, as it was his first time starring in a television drama in his 14-year acting career. [29] [30]
For his role as a blind swordsman in the 2010 period film Blades of Blood , Hwang went to schools for the blind to observe their movements. [31] [32] He then starred in The Unjust , a highly acclaimed noir about corruption in the South Korean justice system; [33] [34] followed by conspiracy film Moby Dick as a reporter. [35] [36]
Hwang then reunited with actress Uhm Jung-hwa (whom he previously starred with in 2005 ensemble romantic comedy All for Love ) in the 2012 box office hit Dancing Queen . [37] He returned to TV in the 2012 cable drama Korean Peninsula , [38] but it was less successful. [39]
In late 2012, Hwang made his debut as a theatre director in Stephen Sondheim's musical Assassins , which he also starred in. [40]
Hwang returned his focus to films, starring in noir film New World (2013), where his performance was singled out by The New York Times . [41] He once again worked with Uhm Jung-hwa in the queer film In My End Is My Beginning (which was expanded from a short film in 2009's Five Senses of Eros ). Hwang then played a middle-aged fighter in the sports film Fists of Legend , performing all the stunts himself. [42]
In 2014, Hwang starred in romance drama Man in Love . He said that he chose to star in the film to support diversity in the Korean film industry, and because he wanted to show the human side of his character, a terminally ill gangster who falls in love for the first time. [43]
Then later in the year, Hwang headlined Ode to My Father , embodying the South Korean everyman against the backdrop of recent Korean and world history since the 1950s. The film depicted the Hungnam evacuation during the Korean War, coalmining gastarbeiters in Germany in the 1960s, and the Vietnam War. Ode to My Father became the second highest-grossing film in the history of Korean cinema, with 14.2 million tickets sold. [12] [44] [45]
He reunited with The Unjust director Ryoo Seung-wan in 2015 for Veteran , playing a hot-tempered police detective tracking an arrogant and heartless chaebol heir. [46] The film was another smash hit, and is currently the 3rd all-time highest-grossing film in Korean cinema history. [47] Hwang then starred in the budget mountaineering film The Himalayas , where he plays renowned Korean mountaineer Um Hong-gil, who became the first person to reach the 16 highest mountain peaks on Earth. [48]
In 2016, he starred alongside Kang Dong-won in the crime comedy A Violent Prosecutor , which became the second highest-grossing film of 2016. [49] This was followed by Na Hong-jin's critically acclaimed horror The Wailing , [50] and noir film Asura: The City of Madness , which premiered at the 41st Toronto Film Festival. [51] Hwang was named Gallup Korea's Films Actor of the Year for 2016. [52]
Hwang then starred in the war film The Battleship Island alongside So Ji-sub and Song Joong-ki. [53] The film marks his second collaboration with director Ryoo Seung-wan following Veteran. [54]
In 2018, he starred in The Spy Gone North , a spy film directed by Yoon Jong-bin. [55] [56] He was also cast in the science fiction film Return. [57]
Hwang married musical theatre actress Kim Mi-hye on September 6, 2004. [58] [59] They have a son named Hwang Sae-hyun. [60]
His younger brother is music director/composer Hwang Sang-jun. [61]
On average, Hwang stars in three to four films a year. To critics who say that he does too many, Hwang responded, "I believe it is the responsibility of actors to try their best at acting when they come across screenplays that suit them. [43] I breathe only when I act." [15]
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1990 | The General's Son | Bar waiter | Bit part | [62] |
1999 | Shiri | Special Investigation Team Agent | Bit part | |
2001 | Waikiki Brothers | Kang-soo | ||
2002 | YMCA Baseball Team | Ryu Kwang-tae | ||
Road Movie | Dae-shik | |||
2003 | A Good Lawyer's Wife | Ju Yeong-jak | ||
2004 | The Wolf Returns | Go Jeong-sik | ||
2005 | This Charming Girl | Writer | ||
A Bittersweet Life | Baek Dae-sik | Special appearance | ||
Heaven's Soldiers | Park Jung-woo | |||
You Are My Sunshine | Seok-joong | |||
All for Love | Na Do-chul | |||
2006 | Bloody Tie | Do Jin-kwang | ||
Over the Hedge | RJ (voice) | Korean dub | ||
2007 | Black House | Jeon Joon-oh | ||
Happiness | Young-su | |||
Eleventh Mom | Baek-jung | |||
2008 | A Man Who Was Superman | Lee Hyuk-suk | ||
2009 | Private Eye | Hong Jin-ho | ||
Five Senses of Eros | Min Jae-in | Segment: "In My End Is My Beginning" | ||
2010 | Blades of Blood | Hwang Jeong-hak | ||
The Unjust | Choi Cheol-gi | |||
2011 | Battlefield Heroes | Kim Beob-min | Cameo | |
Moby Dick | Lee Bang-woo | |||
2012 | Dancing Queen | Himself | ||
2013 | New World | Jung Chung | ||
In My End Is My Beginning | Min Jae-in | |||
Fists of Legend | Im Deok-kyu | |||
2014 | Man in Love | Han Tae-il | ||
Ode to My Father | Yoon Deok-soo | |||
2015 | Veteran | Seo Do-cheol | ||
The Himalayas | Um Hong-gil | |||
2016 | A Violent Prosecutor | Byun Jae-wook | ||
The Wailing | Il-gwang | |||
Asura: The City of Madness | Park Sung-bae | |||
2017 | The Battleship Island | Lee Kang-ok | ||
2018 | The Spy Gone North | Park Seok-young | ||
2019 | Money | Orderer's voice | Cameo | |
2020 | Deliver Us From Evil | Kim In Nam | [63] | |
2021 | Hostage: Missing Celebrity | Jeong-min | [64] | |
2022 | Hunt | Lieutenant Lee | Cameo | [65] |
2023 | The Point Men | Jung Jae-ho | [66] | |
Kill Boksoon | Shinichiro Oda / Kim Kwang-li | Special appearance | [67] | |
12.12: The Day | Chun Doo-gwang | [68] | ||
2024 | Mission: Cross | Kang Moo | Netflix film | [69] |
I, the Executioner | Seo Do-cheol | [70] | ||
TBA | Hope | Beom-seok | [71] |
Year | Title |
---|---|
2003 | The End of a Wicked Woman |
2010 | The Most Beautiful |
Year | Title | Role |
---|---|---|
2009 | The Accidental Couple | Gu Dong-baek |
2012 | Korean Peninsula | Seo Myung-joon |
2020 | Hush | Han Joon Hyuk |
Year | Title | Role | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
English | Korean | |||
2022 | Narco-Saints | 수리남 | Jeon Yo-hwan | [72] [73] [74] |
Year | Song Title | Artist | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
2005 | "On one's way back" (귀로) | Na Eol | |
2016 | "What a wonderful cane" (톡탁) | Lee Dong-woo | [75] |
2021 | "'Thank U" | Yunho | [76] |
"Noting special with the day" (별거 없던 그 하루로) | Im Chang-jung | [77] |
Year | Title | Role | Theater | Date | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
English | Korean | |||||
1995 | Subway Line 1 | 지하철 1호선 | Cheolsu, Washboard, Little Bastard, Minister's Widow | Hakjeon Blue Theater Small Theater | May 2 | [78] |
1995 | Dog Poop | 개똥이 | wheel, earthworm | Seoul Arts Center Towol Theater | October 17 to November 5 | [79] [80] |
1996 | Subway Line 1 | (제20회) 서울연극제 ; 지하철 1호선 | Cheolsu, Washboard, Little Bastard | Hakjeon Blue Theater Small Theater | September 10 | [81] |
1997 | Jesus Christ Superstar | 지저스 크라이스트 슈퍼스타 | Simone, a member of the ensor | Sejong Center for the Performing Arts Auditorium | December 24 to 28 | [82] [83] |
1998 | Blood Brothers | 의형제 | ugly, man 1, policeman 1, student | Pre-school Green Small Theater | September 1 | [84] |
1997 | Dog Poop | 개똥이 | wheel, earthworm | Cultural Center Grand Theater | March 29 to April 9 | [85] |
1999 | Moskito | 모스키토 | Baek Ga-ri | Hakjeon Blue Theater Small Theater | May 1 to August 15 | [86] |
Cats | 캣츠 | Rum tum tuger | ||||
2001 | Tommy | 토미 | Tommy | Sejong Center for the Performing Arts | November 4 to 11 | [87] [88] |
2001 | Line 1 | 지하철 1호선 | Mundi, Kim Byeong-jang, ppallaepan, Office Worker, Minister's Widow | Hakjeon Blue Theater Small Theater | March 15 to 18 | [89] |
April 27 to June 17 | [90] [91] | |||||
2004 | 42nd Street | 브로드웨이 42번가 | Billy Lorre | Popcorn House in Jeong-dong, Jung-gu, Seoul | May 15 to August 1 | [92] [93] |
2008 | Nine | 나인 | Guido Contini | LG Arts Center | January 22 | [94] |
2009-2010 | The Wedding Singer | 웨딩 싱어 | Robby Heart | Chungmu Art Hall grand theater | November 27 to January 31 | [95] |
2012 | Man of La Mancha | 맨 오브 라만차 | Miguel de Cervantes Don Quijote | Charlotte Theater | Juni 19 to December 31 | [96] |
2012-2013 | Assassins | 어쌔신 | Charlie Guiteau | Doosan Art Center Yeongang Hall | November 20 to February 3 | [97] |
2015–2016 | Okepi (Orchestra Pit) | 오케피 | Commander | LG Arts Center | December 18 to February 28 | [98] |
Year | Title | Role | Theater | Date | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
English | Korean | |||||
1991 | Hamlet | 햄릿 | Ozrik | |||
1993 | Rhinoceros | 코뿔소 | Waitress | Batangol Small Theater | January 30 to March 3 | [99] |
1993 | Birthday Party | 생일파티 | Stage Director | Dongsung Art Center Small Theater | August 8 to September 5 | [100] |
1993 | Male Impulse | 남자충동 | Mr. Park | Cultural Center grand theater | October 3 to 8 | [101] |
Hoam Art Hall | October 10 to November 2 | [102] | ||||
2008-2009 | University of Laughs | 웃음의 대학 | Writer | Dongsung Art Center Dongsung Hall | October 24 to November 30 | [103] |
2018 | Richard III | 리처드 3세 | Richard III | Seoul Arts Centre CJ Towol Theatre | February 6 to March 4 | [104] |
2019 | Oedipus | 오이디푸스 | Oedipus | Seoul Arts Centre CJ Towol Theatre | January 29 to February 24 | [105] |
Moakdang, Korea Sound Culture Center, Jeonju | March 8 to 9 | [106] | ||||
Guri Art Hall Cosmos Grand Theater | March 22 to 23 | [107] | ||||
GS Caltex Yeulmaru Grand Theater, Yeosu | March 29 to 31 | [108] | ||||
Ulsan Culture and Arts Center Main Performance Hall | April 5 to 6 | [109] | ||||
2021–2022 | Richard III | 리처드 3세 | Richard III | Seoul Arts Centre CJ Towol Theatre | January 11 to February 13 | [110] |
2024 | Macbeth | 맥베스 | Machbeth | National Theater's Haeoreum Theater | July 13th to August 18th | [111] |
Song name | Year | Album name | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
"너는 내 운명 Sun Together" You are my destiny (Sun Together) | 2005 | You Are My Sunshine OST | by Hwang Jung-min and Jeon Do-yeon |
"A Honeyed Question" | 2005 | A Bittersweet Life OST | by Hwang Jung-min |
"누구를 위한 삶인가" Who are you living for? | 2006 | Bloody Tie OST | by Leessang feat. Hwang Jung-min and Ryoo Seung-bum |
"We" | 2010 | single | by Jang Dong-gun, Kim Seung-woo, Hwang Jung-min, Gong Hyung-jin, Ji Jin-hee, Lee Ha-na - Actors Choice |
No regrets | 2013 | Legendary Fist Special OST | Jeong-min Hwang, Jun-sang Yoo , Do-hyeon Yoon |
"Beyond the window, you'll vaguely remember the old days" | 2015 | Himalaya Special Remake | YB , Hwang Jeong-min |
Year | Award-giving body | Category | Nominated work(s) | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | 39th Grand Bell Awards | Best New Actor | Waikiki Brothers | Nominated | |
1st Korean Film Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Won | |||
3rd Busan Film Critics Awards | Best New Actor | Road Movie | Won | ||
23rd Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best New Actor | Won | |||
22nd Korean Association of Film Critics Awards | Best New Actor | Won | |||
5th Director's Cut Awards | Best New Actor | Won | |||
2003 | 40th Grand Bell Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | ||
2nd Korean Film Awards | Best New Actor | Nominated | |||
Best Actor | Nominated | ||||
2005 | 42nd Grand Bell Awards | Best Supporting Actor | A Bittersweet Life | Won | |
4th Korean Film Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Won | [112] | ||
Best Actor | You Are My Sunshine | Won | [112] | ||
26th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Couple Award (with Jeon Do-yeon) | Won | |||
Best Supporting Actor | A Bittersweet Life | Nominated | |||
Best Actor | You Are My Sunshine | Won | [113] | ||
13th Chunsa Film Art Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | |||
2006 | 3rd Max Movie Awards | Best Actor | Won | ||
29th Golden Cinematography Awards | Best Actor | Won | |||
42nd Baeksang Arts Awards | Best Actor (Film) | Nominated | |||
43rd Grand Bell Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | |||
7th Busan Film Critics Awards | Best Actor | Bloody Tie | Won | ||
5th Korean Film Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | |||
2007 | 28th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Popular Star Award | Happiness | Won | [114] |
Best Actor | Nominated | ||||
2008 | 45th Grand Bell Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | ||
2nd The Musical Awards | Best Actor | Nine | Nominated | ||
2009 | 4th Golden Ticket Awards | Korea's Top Film Star | Won | ||
17th Chunsa Film Art Awards | Best Actor | Private Eye | Nominated | ||
KBS Drama Awards | Excellence Award, Actor in a Miniseries | The Accidental Couple | Nominated | ||
Top Excellence Award, Actor | Nominated | ||||
2011 | 15th Fantasia Festival | Best Actor (shared with Ryoo Seung-bum) | The Unjust | Won | [115] |
2012 | 49th Grand Bell Awards | Best Actor | Dancing Queen | Nominated | |
16th Korea Musical Awards | Best Actor | Man of La Mancha | Nominated | ||
2013 | Korea Film Actor's Association Awards | Top Star Award | New World | Won | [116] |
49th Baeksang Arts Awards | Best Actor (Film) | Nominated | |||
50th Grand Bell Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | |||
Fists of Legend | Nominated | ||||
34th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Actor | New World | Won | [117] | |
22nd Buil Film Awards | Best Actor | Won | [118] | ||
33rd Korean Association of Film Critics Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | |||
2014 | 9th Max Movie Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | ||
19th Chunsa Film Art Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | |||
2015 | 10th Max Movie Awards | Best Actor | Ode to My Father | Nominated | |
20th Chunsa Film Art Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | |||
Jecheon International Music & Film Festival | Best Actor | Won | [119] | ||
52nd Grand Bell Awards | Best Actor | Won | [120] | ||
8th Seoul Senior Citizen Movie Awards | Movie in couple Award (with Yunjin Kim) | Won | |||
35th Golden Cinema Festival | Grand Prize (Daesang) | Won | [121] | ||
15th Director's Cut Awards | Best Actor | Won | [122] | ||
2nd Korean Film Producers Association Awards | Best Actor | Won | [123] | ||
36th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Actor | Veteran | Nominated | ||
2016 | 11th Max Movie Awards | Best Actor | The Himalayas | Nominated | |
52nd Baeksang Arts Awards | Best Actor (Film) | Veteran | Nominated | ||
Grand Prize (Film) | Veteran , The Himalayas , A Violent Prosecutor | Nominated | |||
25th Buil Film Awards | Best Actor | Veteran | Nominated | ||
Best Supporting Actor | The Wailing | Nominated | |||
53rd Grand Bell Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Nominated | |||
2017 | 22nd Chunsa Film Art Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Nominated | ||
1st The Seoul Awards | Best Actor (Film) | The Battleship Island | Nominated | ||
2018 | 27th Buil Film Awards | Best Actor | The Spy Gone North | Nominated | [124] |
55th Grand Bell Awards | Won | [125] | |||
2019 | Seoul Institute of the Arts Alumni Association | Light of Life Award | Hwang Jung-min | Won | [126] |
2021 | 41st Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Actor | Deliver Us from Evil | Nominated | [127] [128] [129] |
2022 | 27th Chunsa Film Art Awards | Best Actor | Hostage: Missing Celebrity | Nominated | [130] |
2023 | Director's Cut Awards | Best Actor in Television | Narco-Saints | Nominated | [131] |
2024 | 60th Baeksang Arts Awards | Best Actor – Film | 12.12: The Day | Won | [132] [133] |
Most Popular Actor | Hwang Jung-min | Nominated | |||
2024 | Asian Film Awards | Best Actor | 12.12: The Day | Nominated | [134] |
2024 | Director's Cut Awards | Best Actor (Film) | Nominated | [135] |
Country | Ceremony | Year | Honor or Award | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
South Korea | Korean Popular Culture and Arts Awards [lower-alpha 1] | 2023 | Presidential Commendation | [139] |
45th Taxpayers' Day | 2011 | Presidential Commendation | [140] |
Publisher | Year | Listicle | Placement | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Forbes | 2014 | Korea Power Celebrity 40 | 25th | [143] |
2016 | 14th | [144] | ||
Gallup Korea | 2005 | Gallup Korea's Film Actor of the Year | 4th | [145] |
2014 | 19th | [146] | ||
2015 | 3rd | [147] | ||
2016 | 1st | [148] | ||
2017 | 4th | [149] | ||
2018 | 8th | [150] | ||
2019 | 9th | [151] | ||
2020 | 4th | [152] | ||
2021 | 6th | [153] | ||
2022 | 5th [lower-alpha 2] | [154] | ||
2023 | 4th [lower-alpha 3] | |||
The Screen | 2019 | 2009-2019 Top Box Office Powerhouse Actors in Korean Movies | 2nd | [155] |
Choi Min-sik is a South Korean actor. Best known for his role in Oldboy (2003), the performance was critically acclaimed and won him the Best Actor prize at the 40th Baeksang Art Awards, the 24th Blue Dragon Awards, and the 41st Grand Bell Awards. His other notable works include Shiri (1999), Lady Vengeance (2005), I Saw the Devil (2010), Nameless Gangster: Rules of the Time (2012), New World (2013) and The Admiral: Roaring Currents (2014), which became the highest-grossing film in South Korea. For his performance in the latter, he won the Grand Prize at the 51st Baeksang Arts Awards.
Song Kang-ho is a South Korean actor. Song made his film debut in The Day a Pig Fell into the Well (1996), and came to national prominence with a series of critically acclaimed performances, including No. 3 (1997), Joint Security Area (2000), Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance (2002), Memories of Murder (2003), The Host (2006), Snowpiercer (2013), The Attorney (2013), and A Taxi Driver (2017).
Han Suk-kyu is a South Korean actor. One of the leading actors of Korean cinema, Han's notable works include Green Fish (1997), No. 3 (1997), Christmas in August (1998), Shiri (1999), The Scarlet Letter (2004), and The President's Last Bang (2005), as well as the television series Dr. Romantic (2016–2023).
Yang Min-a, better known by the stage name Shin Min-a (신민아), is a South Korean model and actress best known for starring in television dramas A Love to Kill (2005), My Girlfriend Is a Gumiho (2010), Arang and the Magistrate (2012), Oh My Venus (2015), Tomorrow, With You (2017), Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha (2021), and Our Blues (2022).
Yum Jung-ah is a South Korean actress and beauty pageant titleholder. Her notable films include A Tale of Two Sisters (2003), The Big Swindle (2004), The Old Garden (2007), and Cart (2014), as well as the television series Royal Family (2011), and Sky Castle (2018). She was the first runner-up at Miss Korea 1991 and represented Korea in Miss International 1992 and finished as the second runner-up.
Jeon Do-yeon is a South Korean actress. She won Best Actress at the 60th Cannes Film Festival, making her the first Korean actress to win an acting award at Cannes, and Best Performance by an Actress at the 1st Asia Pacific Screen Awards for her performance in Lee Chang-dong's 2007 film Secret Sunshine. Many young actresses have cited Jeon as a role model.
Jeong Jae-yeong is a South Korean actor. He is known for starring in the films Guns & Talks (2001), Silmido (2003), Someone Special (2004), Welcome to Dongmakgol (2005), Public Enemy Returns (2008), Castaway on the Moon (2009), Moss (2010), Confession of Murder (2012), Noryang: Deadly Sea (2023), as well as the television series Partners for Justice (2018–19).
Youn Yuh-jung is a South Korean actress, whose career in film and television spans over five decades. Her accolades include an Academy Award, a Screen Actors Guild Award, a British Academy Film Award, two Independent Spirit Awards, and a nomination for a Critics' Choice Movie Award. She has starred in many South Korean television series and films.
Yoo Yeon-seok is a South Korean actor. After making his acting debut in 2003 with a small role in Oldboy, he resumed his acting career in 2008. His notable works include the films Re-encounter (2011), Architecture 101 (2012), A Werewolf Boy (2012), Whistle Blower (2014), Perfect Proposal (2015), Mood of the Day (2016) as well as the television series Reply 1994 (2013), Warm and Cozy (2015), Dr. Romantic (2016), Mr. Sunshine (2018), and Hospital Playlist (2020).
Lee Dong-seok, better known by the stage names Ma Dong-seok (Korean: 마동석) and Don Lee, is a South Korean–American actor and film producer based in South Korea. With his breakout performance in Train to Busan (2016) and subsequent leading roles, he has become one of the most successful actors from South Korea. He was Gallup Korea's Film Actor of the Year in 2018 and in 2023.
Kim Sung-kyun is a South Korean actor. He began his career in theatre, eventually making his on-screen debut as a gangster boss's faithful henchman, in Nameless Gangster: Rules of the Time (2012), followed by supporting roles in The Neighbor (2012), Reply 1994 (2013), Reply 1988 (2015–2016), Moon Lovers: Scarlet Heart Ryeo (2016), as well as leading role in series D.P. (2021–2023) and Divorce Attorney Shin (2023).
Kang Ha-neul (Korean: 강하늘; February 21, 1990), born Kim Ha-neul (김하늘), is a South Korean actor. He is best known for his roles in television dramas The Heirs (2013), Misaeng: Incomplete Life (2014), Moon Lovers: Scarlet Heart Ryeo (2016), When the Camellia Blooms (2019) and Insider (2022). Known as a prolific Chungmu-ro actor, he has also starred in the movies Twenty (2015), Dongju: The Portrait of a Poet (2016), New Trial (2017), Midnight Runners (2017), Forgotten (2017), The Pirates: The Last Royal Treasure (2022), and Love Reset (2023).
Moon Se-yoon, is a South Korean comedian and television personality. He made his debut in the entertainment industry as a comedian in SBS, starting from comedy Good Friends in 2002. He became popular by appearing on SBS's People Looking for a Laugh and cable channel tvN's Comedy Big League. Currently he is a fixed cast member of Comedy Big League,2 Days & 1 Night, Amazing Saturday and Delicious Guys, and managed by FNC Entertainment.
Yoo Jeong-yeon, known mononymously as Jeongyeon (Korean: 정연), is a South Korean singer. She is a member of Twice, a South Korean girl group formed by JYP Entertainment.
Jin Seon-kyu is a South Korean actor. He is best known for his roles on the big screen, such as The Outlaws (2017) and Extreme Job (2019). He won Best Supporting Actor award at the 38th Blue Dragon Film Awards in 2017 for his performance in the film The Outlaws.
The Point Men is a 2023 South Korean action thriller film directed by Yim Soon-rye and starring Hwang Jung-min and Hyun Bin. The film is based on the 2007 South Korean hostage crisis in Afghanistan and the subsequent rescue mission. It was released on January 18, 2023, in South Korea and screened in Dolby Atmos.
Gallup Korea's Film Actor of the Year and Gallup Korea's Television Actor of the Year are annually selected through a year-end public survey conducted across South Korea by Gallup Korea. It was first conducted in 2005 and only respondents above the age of 13 are interviewed.
Park Ho-san is a South Korean actor. He is best known for his performance in the stage play Suck (2008), In the Heights (2015), Chuncheon There, Waiting for Heroes (2013), Frozen (2015), and The Book of a Thief (2015). Park has also known for his appearances as a supporting actor in the television series Prison Playbook (2017–2018), My Mister (2018), Lawless Lawyer (2018), and The Penthouse: War in Life (2020–2021).
Mission: Cross (Korean: 크로스) is a 2024 South Korean spy action comedy film directed and written by Lee Myeong-hun, and starring Hwang Jung-min, Yum Jung-ah, and Jeon Hye-jin. It was released on Netflix on 9 August 2024.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link){{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)