Jung Woo-sung
Jung Woo-sung | |
---|---|
Born | |
Occupations |
|
Years active | 1994–present |
Agent | Artist Company |
Children | 1 |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 정우성 |
Hanja | 鄭雨盛[2] |
Revised Romanization | Jeong Useong |
McCune–Reischauer | Chŏng Usŏng |
Jung Woo-sung (Korean: 정우성; born April 22, 1973) is a South Korean actor. Jung started his career as a fashion model, rising to stardom with the gangster film Beat (1997), for which he won Best New Actor at the 17th Korean Association of Film Critics Awards. He is a versatile actor known for playing leading roles in a wide spectrum of genres, including blockbusters The Good, the Bad, the Weird (2008), Cold Eyes (2013), The Divine Move (2014), The King (2017), Steel Rain (2017), Hunt (2022), 12.12: The Day (2023); dramas City of the Rising Sun (1999) and Mutt Boy (2003); historical epic Musa (2001); romance A Moment to Remember (2004); crime thrillers Asura: The City of Madness (2016) and Beasts Clawing at Straws (2020). He won Best Actor at the 55th Baeksang Arts Awards and the 40th Blue Dragon Film Awards for Innocent Witness (2019). His notable TV drama credits include Asphalt Man (1995), Padam Padam (2011) and Tell Me That You Love Me (2023–24).
Jung served as the first Korean UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador from 2014 until his resignation in 2024, citing backlash over his advocacy for refugees.[3]
Early life
[edit]Jung was raised in Sadang-dong, then one of the most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods in Seoul.[4] Notably tall from a young age, he often hunched to mitigate his height, which drew attention during his elementary school years.[5] He left high school after completing his first year to work and support his family.[4] When trying to break into the film industry, he was told he was too tall to become an actor, leading him to begin his career as a model.[6]
Career
[edit]Acting
[edit]Film
[edit]Jung was selected as an actor through street casting by former Sidus CEO Cha Seung-jae, who was the head of the production department at the film company Shin Cine at the time.[6] Jung made his film debut in a leading role in 1994's The Fox with Nine Tails, one of the first Korean fantasy movies and the first to use computer-generated imagery. He debuted with actress Ko So-young, who later co-starred with him twice including in his breakthrough 1997 film Beat.[7] Directed by Kim Sung-su, Beat is about a high school student forced into gang life. The movie brought Jung widespread fame and started his rise to Korea's A-list and made him one of the most sought-after commercial models.
In 1999, he starred in City of the Rising Sun, playing an unsuccessful boxer who befriends an unlucky swindler. His co-lead in the movie, actor Lee Jung-jae, became his lifelong friend. Jung later played a naval lieutenant in Phantom: The Submarine and a marathoner in Love.[7] 2001's Musa marked his third collaboration with director Kim Sung-su. In this epic blockbuster, Jung played opposite Chinese star Zhang Ziyi and received wide exposure in Korea and beyond.
After spending time in 2002 directing a series of music videos[8] and appearing in a large number of commercials, Jung took on the eccentric lead role in Mutt Boy, the fifth film by director Kwak Kyung-taek.[7] Jung's next roles were in highly romantic roles that used his established screen image. In the box office hit A Moment to Remember he played an architect whose wife (played by Son Ye-jin) is diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer's disease and in the Netherlands-set Daisy, he played a hired assassin who falls in love with a street artist played by Jun Ji-hyun.[7] He portrayed a happily committed fireman in Sad Movie,[9] and a demon hunter seeking his lost love (played by Kim Tae-hee) in The Restless.[10][11]
Kim Jee-woon's "kimchi western" The Good, the Bad, the Weird inspired by Sergio Leone's work, would become one of Jung's most iconic roles. He used his physicality to great effect as the Clint Eastwood counterpart in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly.[12] The film was screened out of competition at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival, which also marked its world premiere. Jung attended the festival with his co-stars. He won Best Supporting Actor at the 3rd Asian Film Awards and Outstanding Achievement in Acting at the 2008 Hawaii International Film Festival for his performance. Shortly afterwards, Jung worked again with Kim Jee-woon on a short film for W Korea.[13]
Jung then starred alongside Chinese actress Gao Yuanyuan in Hur Jin-ho's romance film A Season of Good Rain,[14][15][16] and Su Chao-pin's martial arts film Reign of Assassins with Michelle Yeoh.[17] In 2011, Jung was cast in the English-language 3D remake of John Woo's The Killer.[18] The film was to be shot in Los Angeles and reunite him with A Moment to Remember director John H. Lee and Reign of Assassins director John Woo acting also as producer.[19] The project was put on hold while John Woo worked on another film.[20] But the project never progressed.
Jung drew praise in his first villain role in Cold Eyes, an action thriller and box office hit in 2013.[21][22][23][24] He portrayed the ruthless head of a criminal organization specializing in bank robbery, eluding detectives chasing him with uncanny dexterity.[25]
Jung next played a baduk player seeking revenge in The Divine Move,[26][27][28] followed by an adulterous university professor gradually losing his eyesight in Scarlet Innocence.[29][30] Scarlet Innocence had its world premiere at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival, attracting positive reviews from critics.[31] He then took a leading role in the melodrama indie feature Don't Forget Me, also known as Remember You, a remake of the 2010 short film Remember O Goddess, both directed by Lee Yoon-jung. Jung also co-produced this movie, explaining that he wanted to protect the director's original ideas that other producers wanted to modify.[32]
In 2016, he starred in the noir crime thriller Asura: The City of Madness,[33] his fourth collaboration with director Kim Sung-su. Jung played a crooked detective who attempts to save his terminally ill wife while arresting a corrupt town mayor.[34] Asura premiered globally at the 41st Toronto Film Festival in September 2016, where it was shown in the Special Presentations section.[35] The actor's second movie shot in 2016 and released in 2017 was Han Jae-rim's political drama The King, whose plot revolves around a senior prosecutor being manipulated by an overambitious younger colleague connected to the mob.[36][37]
In 2017, Jung starred in Steel Rain as a former agent from North Korea's intelligence bureau.[38] In 2018, he played an officer of the elite police unit in the science fiction action thriller Illang: The Wolf Brigade. Based on the Japanese anime Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade, the work was his second collaboration with director Kim Jee-woon.[39][40]
In 2019, he starred in the dramatic film Innocent Witness as a lawyer.[41][42] His performance earned him the Grand Prize in film at the Baeksang Arts Awards.[43] The same year, he starred in the thriller Beasts that Cling to the Straw.[44]
In 2020, Jung starred in the sequel to Steel Rain, titled Steel Rain 2: Summit.[45] Jung starred alongside Lee Jung-jae in the latter's directorial debut, the spy action film Hunt, which premiered at 2022 Cannes Film Festival.[46]
Television
[edit]In 1995 Jung appeared in his first major television role in SBS drama series Asphalt Man, playing an aspiring race driver who leaves to United States to realize his dream. The part not only expanded his popularity but also brought him critical acclaim with Best New Actor award at 32nd Baeksang Arts Awards and SBS Drama Awards.
In 2010 Jung returned to the small screen after 15 years' absence in the big-budget spy series Athena: Goddess of War, playing an NTS (National Anti-Terror Service) agent. Athena was a spin-off to the 2009 highly successful KBS2 drama IRIS.[47] With a budget of ₩20 billion (US$17 million), the series was shot on location in Italy, New Zealand, Japan and the United States.[48] The aired in SBS channel, and its pilot episodes gathered 22.8% of the audience share.[49] Jung and another actor were injured during filming in January 2011, causing a week's postponement of one of Athena's episodes. The series was also edited into a two-hour movie version, and released in 2011 as Athena: The Movie.
Jung made his Japanese drama debut with a guest appearance in episodes 6 and 7 of Good Life ~Arigatou, Papa. Sayonara~.[50] He followed that with another TV series Padam Padam which marked the establishment of new cable broadcasting station JTBC. Jung said he "decided on this drama because (he) was drawn to the way Noh Hee-kyung writes 'family drama.' Whether mother-son or father-son, the love and pain experienced by families is something (he)'d like to try portraying in a realistic way."[51] He played a man who has recently been released from jail after serving a 16-year sentence for a crime he didn't commit.[52][53] The series premiered on December 5, 2011. In December 2020, he replaced Bae Seung-woo for SBS television series Delayed Justice as leading role.[54] Jung served as an executive producer for Netflix series The Silent Sea in 2021.[55] and in 2022 he will star remake of Japanese drama Say Me to Love Me [56]
Directing
[edit]In 2000 Jung had started to try his hand at directing. His first works were music videos for one of the top South Korean pop music group G.o.d. In 2012, he directed and starred in the promotional commercial for cable channel XTM.[57][58] And a year later, Jung was among four celebrities who directed a short film using smartphone Samsung Galaxy S4 with the theme "Meet a Life Companion." His short Love explored the feelings of first love, and recorded 1.8 million views on YouTube.[59] He then directed another short film for Samsung Galaxy S4, this time for the project "Story of Me and S4." In Jung's short Beginning of a Dream, Choi Jin-hyuk starred as an ordinary office worker who dreams of leaving his mundane existence and entering a world of fantasy; he is approached by a blue fish, rides a sports car at supersonic speed, sees a boy floating past holding a balloon, hangs out with a hippie band in their van, and meets himself as a young boy at a bus stop.[60][61]
In 2014, Jung along with actors Francis Ng and Chang Chen, directed three short films for Three Charmed Lives, an omnibus commissioned by the Hong Kong International Film Festival. Critics praised Jung's short The Killer Behind the Old Man as the strongest and most stylish entry. In it, a son hires an ultra-methodical hitman (played by Andy Choi) to assassinate his own father, but the killer however finds himself transfixed by the man's slow-moving and ordered life, and thus hesitates to carry through with his mission.[62][63] Jung was invited to present The Killer Behind the Old Man at the 9th London Korean Film Festival in November 2014.[64]
His feature directorial debut A Man of Reason, starring himself, Kim Nam-gil, Park Sung-woong, and Kim Jun-han was invited to the Special Presentations section at 2022 Toronto International Film Festival where it had its world premiere in September 2022.[65]
Talent management
[edit]In October 2012 Jung left Taurus Films, his agent since 2009, and established new talent agency Red Brick House appointing his manager of 10 years as CEO.[66] In May 2016, Jung and actor Lee Jung-jae co-founded and became CEOs of the talent management agency, Artist Company.[67][68] Apart from the owners, the company represents other artists, viz. Lee Si-a, Go Ara, Ha Jung-woo, Esom, Nam Ji-hyun and Yum Jung-ah.
Philanthropy
[edit]UNHCR
[edit]In May 2014, UNHCR Korea appointed Jung Woo-sung as its first celebrity supporter. He was officially nominated UNHCR National Goodwill Ambassador on June 17, 2015.[69][70] He went on his first UNHCR mission to Nepal in 2014.[71] He then donated ₩50 million (US$46,000) to help victims of the April 25 earthquake.[72] In 2015 he visited South Sudan and in March 2016 he met with Syrian refugees in Lebanon.[73][74] In June 2017 he went to Kurdistan Region of Iraq and visited Qushtapa camp for Syrian refugees and Hasansham U3 camp housing mainly Iraqis displaced from Mosul region.[75] In June 2018, he faced political backlash when he shared a post online to encourage wider acceptance of refugees amid social division over Yemeni refugees arriving at the resort island of Jeju. In 2019, he published an essay collection about his UNHCR activities.[3]
On July 15, 2024, Jung stated in an interview that he had concerns about being overly identified with the UNHCR Korea and the backlash against their humanitarian cause. He noted, “There have been accusations questioning whether my role as a goodwill ambassador was politically motivated, which have negatively impacted both me and the organization.” On July 22, Jung’s agency, Artist Company, announced that he had voluntarily resigned as a UNHCR goodwill ambassador on July 3 after nine years.[3]
Hope Bridge Disaster Relief Association
[edit]On March 8, 2022, Jung donated ₩100 million won to the Hope Bridge Disaster Relief Association along with Lee Jung-jae to help the victims of the massive wildfire that started in Uljin, Gyeongbuk and has spread to Samcheok, Gangwon.[76]On August 3, 2022, Hope Bridge Disaster Relief Association announced that Jung along with Lee Jung-jae had joined the Hope Bridge Honors Club, a group of major donors with more than ₩100 million donations.[77]
Film festival jury member
[edit]Jung has attended various international film festivals, not only as an actor or director, but has served on the following festivals' juries:
- 2012: 17th Busan International Film Festival, South Korea[78]
- 2013: 14th Jeonju International Film Festival, South Korea[79][80]
- 2014: 20th Gwangju Biennale, South Korea[81]
- 2015: SSFF & Asia (Short Shorts Film Festival & Asia), Japan[82]
- 2016: International Film Festival and Awards, Macao[83]
Personal life
[edit]Jung is best friends with fellow actor Lee Jung-jae, whom he met while filming City of the Rising Sun. They are co-owners and co-investors of several businesses, including management agency Artist Company.[58][84]
Jung is outspoken about his political views, including his longtime advocacy for refugees, which has often drawn backlash in South Korea. He made headlines in November 2016 during a screening of his film Asura: The City of Madness (2016) when he declared, "Park Geun-hye, step down," amid protests calling for the then-president’s impeachment. "All our citizens should be able to speak their minds politically without hesitation," said Jung in a 2017 interview. "Public engagement creates better nations and politicians."[85]
Jung is notably private about his romantic involvements. He briefly dated his Athena co-star Lee Ji-ah. After they were photographed on a date in Paris,[86] Jung confirmed their relationship in March 2011.[87][88][89] However, following the revelation of Lee’s past marriage to Korean singer-songwriter Seo Taiji in April, Jung and Lee broke up in May.[90][91] On November 24, 2024, Jung revealed that he has a son with model Moon Ga-bi. The couple first met in early 2022, and she gave birth to their son in March 2024.[92][93][94][95]
Filmography
[edit]Film
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1994 | The Fox with Nine Tails | Hyuk | ||
1996 | Born to Kill | Kil | ||
Shanghai Grand | Ryu So-hwang | Cameo | ||
1997 | Beat | Lee Min | ||
Motel Cactus | Lee Mi-ku | |||
1999 | City of the Rising Sun | Do-chul | ||
Phantom: The Submarine | Number 431 | |||
Love | Myung-soo | |||
2001 | Musa | Yeo-sol | ||
2003 | Mutt Boy | Cha Cheol-min | ||
2004 | A Moment to Remember | Cheol-su | ||
2005 | Sad Movie | Jin-woo | ||
2006 | Daisy | Park Yi | ||
The Restless | Yi-gwak | |||
2008 | The Good, the Bad, the Weird | Park Do-won, the Good | ||
2009 | Present | Min-woo | Short film | |
A Good Rain Knows | Park Dong-ha | Korean and Chinese co-production | ||
2010 | Reign of Assassins | Jiang Ah-sheng / Zhang Renfeng | Chinese production | |
2013 | Cold Eyes | James | ||
2014 | The Divine Move | Tae-seok | ||
Scarlet Innocence | Shim Hak-kyu | |||
2016 | Remember You | Seok-won | Also producer | |
Asura: The City of Madness | Han Do-kyung | |||
2017 | The King | Han Kang-sik | ||
Steel Rain | Eom Chul-woo | |||
2018 | Intention | Narrator | Documentary | [96] |
Illang: The Wolf Brigade | Jang Jin-tae | |||
2019 | Innocent Witness | Soon-ho | ||
Trade Your Love | Traffic cop | Cameo | ||
2020 | Beasts Clawing at Straws | Tae-young | ||
Steel Rain 2: Summit | Han Kyeong-Jae | |||
2022 | Hunt | Kim Jung-do | [97] | |
2023 | Woongnami | Wild boar man | Cameo | [98] |
A Man of Reason | Soo-hyuk | Directional debut | [99] | |
Honey Sweet | A landowner | Cameo | [100] | |
Cobweb | Shin Sang-ho / Director Shin | Cameo | [101] | |
12.12: The Day | Lee Tae-shin | [102] |
Television series
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Note | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
English | Korean | ||||
1995 | Asphalt Man | 아스팔트 사나이 | Kang Dong-suk | ||
1996 | Oxtail Soup | 곰탕 | Drama special | ||
1.5 | 1.5 | Lee Jang-wook | |||
2010 | Athena: Goddess of War | 아테나: 전쟁의 여신 | Lee Jung-woo | ||
2011 | Good Life ~Arigatou, Papa. Sayonara~ | 굿 라이프 | Dr. Lee | Cameo (Ep. 6–7) | |
Padam Padam | 빠담빠담.... 그와 그녀의 심장박동소리 | Yang Kang-chil | |||
2021 | Delayed Justice | 날아라 개천용 | Park Sam-soo[a] | Eps. 17–20 | [103] |
2023 | Tell Me That You Love Me | 사랑한다고 말해줘 | Cha Jin-woo | [104] | |
TBA | Made in Korea | 메이드 인 코리아 | Jang Geon-young | [105] |
Television shows
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Note | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
English | Korean | ||||
2021 | Stars of West Gando, 3500 | 서간도의 별들, 3500 | Narrator | [note 1] | [106] |
As director
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Starring | |
---|---|---|---|---|
English | Korean | |||
2000 | After You Left Me | 그대 날 떠난 후로 | g.o.d music video | Shin Min-ah, Kim Kwang-il |
2002 | You Just Don't Know | 모르죠 | Shin Min-ah, Jo In-sung | |
Sad Love | 슬픈 사랑 | |||
A Fool | 바보 | |||
2012 | EGO편 | EGO편 | XTM station ID | Himself |
2013 | Love (4랑) | 나와 S4 이야기 | short film | Seo Ye-ji, Jo Seung-hyun |
Beginning of a Dream | short film | Choi Jin-hyuk | ||
2014 | The Killer Behind the Old Man | 킬러 앞에 노인 | short film from Three Charmed Lives | Andy Choi, Woo Sang-jeon |
As producer
[edit]Year | Title | |
---|---|---|
English | Korean | |
2015 | Don't Forget Me | 나를 잊지 말아요 |
As executive producer
[edit]Year | Title | Starring | |
---|---|---|---|
English | Korean | ||
2021 | The Silent Sea | 고요의 바다 | Gong Yoo, Doona Bae |
Accolades
[edit]Award ceremony | Year | Category | Nominee / Work | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Asian Film Awards | 2009 | Best Supporting Actor | The Good, the Bad, the Weird | Won | |
2014 | Cold Eyes | Nominated | |||
Baeksang Arts Awards | 1996 | Best New Actor – Television | Asphalt Man | Won | |
1998 | Best Actor – Film | Beat | Nominated | ||
2014 | Cold Eyes | Nominated | |||
2018 | Steel Rain | Nominated | [107] | ||
2019 | Grand Prize – Film | Innocent Witness | Won | [108] | |
Best Actor – Film | Nominated | [109] | |||
2023 | Hunt | Nominated | [110] | ||
2024 | 12.12: The Day | Nominated | [111][112] | ||
Most Popular Actor | Jung Woo-sung | Nominated | |||
Beautiful Artist Awards | 2021 | Achievement Artist Award | Won | [113] | |
Blue Dragon Film Awards | 1997 | Best Actor | Beat | Nominated | |
1999 | Popular Star Award | Phantom: The Submarine | Won | ||
2001 | Musa | Won | |||
2003 | Best Actor | Mutt Boy | Nominated | ||
2008 | Popular Star Award | The Good, the Bad, the Weird | Won | ||
2013 | Best Supporting Actor | Cold Eyes | Nominated | ||
2014 | Best Actor | The Divine Move | Nominated | ||
2016 | Asura: The City of Madness | Nominated | |||
Popular Star Award | Won | [114] | |||
2019 | Best Actor | Innocent Witness | Won | [115] | |
2021 | Steel Rain 2: Summit | Nominated | [116] | ||
2022 | Hunt | Nominated | [117] | ||
Buil Film Awards | 2008 | Best Actor | The Good, the Bad, the Weird | Nominated | |
2017 | Asura: The City of Madness | Nominated | |||
2019 | Beasts Clawing at Straws | Nominated | |||
2022 | Hunt | Nominated | [118] | ||
2024 | 12.12: The Day | Won | [119] | ||
Busan Film Critics Awards | 2016 | Best Actor | Asura: The City of Madness | Won | |
Chunsa Film Art Awards | 2005 | A Moment to Remember | Nominated | ||
2018 | Steel Rain | Won | [120] | ||
Golden Cinema Film Festival | 2019 | Grand Prize (Daesang) | Innocent Witness | Won | [121] |
Grand Bell Awards | 1997 | Best Actor | Beat | Nominated | |
2002 | Musa | Nominated | |||
2014 | The Divine Move | Nominated | |||
2020 | Innocent Witness | Nominated | |||
2022 | Hunt | Nominated | [122] | ||
Hawaii International Film Festival | 2008 | Outstanding Achievement in Acting | Jung Woo-sung | Won | [123] |
2022 | Halekulani Career Achievement Award | A Man of Reason | Won | [124] | |
Korea Fashion & Design Awards | 2008 | Best Dressed of the Year | Jung Woo-sung | Won | |
Korea World Youth Film Festival | 2006 | Favourite Actor | Won | ||
2007 | Won | ||||
Korean Association of Film Critics Awards | 1997 | Best New Actor | Beat | Won | |
2021 | Rookie Critic Award | Jung Woo-sung | Won | [125] | |
2022 | Best Actor | Hunt | Won | [126] | |
Korean Film Producers Association Awards | 2019 | Best Actor | Innocent Witness | Won | [127] |
Korean Swan Best Dresser Awards | 2008 | Best Dresser Award (Actor) | Jung Woo-sung | Won | |
Marie Claire Film Awards | 2017 | Pioneer Award | Asura: The City of Madness | Won | |
Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism | 2011 | Distinguished Korean Wave Entertainer Award for Film | Jung Woo-sung | Won | [128] |
SBS Drama Awards | 1995 | Best New Actor | Asphalt Man | Won | |
2011 | Top Excellence Award, Actor in a Special Planning Drama | Athena: Goddess of War | Nominated | ||
Style Icon Asia | 2009 | Style Icon Actor | Jung Woo-sung | Won | [129] |
2013 | Top 10 Style Icon | Won | [130] | ||
The Seoul Awards | 2017 | Best Actor – Film | The King | Nominated |
State honors
[edit]Country | Year | Honor | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
South Korea[note 2] | 2021 | Presidential Commendation | [134] |
Listicles
[edit]Publisher | Year | Listicle | Placement | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Forbes | 2015 | Korea Power Celebrity 40 | 16th | [135] |
2017 | 21st | [136] | ||
2018 | 17th | [137] | ||
Moviewalker Press | 2024 | 10 Korean Actors that Movie Writers Recommended in 2024 | Top 10 | [138] |
Sisa Journal[note 3] | 2018 | Next Generation Leader in Society | 19th[note 4] | [139] |
Notes
[edit]- ^ On December 12, 2020, the director announced that actor Bae Seong-woo, acting as the role of Park Sam Soon in the drama, is to be cast out of "Delayed Justice" due to a recent driving under the influence of alcohol. Made Jung Woo Sung replaced of Bae Seong-woo.
- ^ A documentary produced to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Shinheung Military Academy.
- ^ Honors are given at the Korean Popular Culture and Arts Awards, arranged by the Korea Creative Content Agency and hosted by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.[131][132] They are awarded to those who have contributed to the arts and South Korea's pop culture.[133]
- ^ Sisa Journal Next Generation Leader-Society was founded by Sisa Journal in 2008.
- ^ Tied with BTS, Yoo Jae-suk, Sean, etc.
References
[edit]- ^ "정우성". Marie Claire Korea (in Korean). Archived from the original on December 18, 2022. Retrieved December 12, 2023.
- ^ "정우성". KMDb. Archived from the original on May 31, 2023. Retrieved August 3, 2023.
- ^ a b c "Jung Woo-sung leaves UNHCR role after 'online attacks'". koreatimes. July 22, 2024. Retrieved November 27, 2024.
- ^ a b Kang, Hye-in (November 30, 2012). "Jeong Woo Sung talks about his poor family background". StarN News. Archived from the original on February 3, 2013.
- ^ "'섹션' 정우성 "환갑때도 소개팅? 그 전에 결혼할것"". Joins (in Korean). September 18, 2016.
- ^ a b "정우성 "판자촌서 유년기"... 난민운동 나선 90년대 청춘 아이콘". Hankook Ilbo (in Korean). July 25, 2020. Archived from the original on February 26, 2024. Retrieved February 26, 2024.
- ^ a b c d "Actors and Actresses of Korean Cinema: Jung Woo-sung" Archived September 12, 2018, at the Wayback Machine. Koreanfilm.org. Retrieved August 13, 2012.
- ^ "정우성 연출 뮤비…개막작 선정". JoongAng Ilbo (in Korean). June 27, 2002. Archived from the original on November 16, 2017. Retrieved November 16, 2017.
- ^ "Star-studded 'Sad Movie' not so sad". The Korea Herald. April 6, 2010. Archived from the original on November 26, 2018. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
- ^ "Actor Labels Kim Tae-hee an 'Ostrich'". The Chosun Ilbo. December 13, 2006. Archived from the original on August 24, 2017. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
- ^ Lee, Ji-hye (October 25, 2010). "Actor Jung Woo-sung's Movie Picks". Asiae. Archived from the original on June 2, 2016. Retrieved March 6, 2017.
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- ^ Yi, Chang-ho (February 6, 2009). "JUNG Woo-sung and KIM A-jung join KIM Jee-woon". Korean Film Biz Zone. Archived from the original on October 26, 2013. Retrieved August 13, 2012.
- ^ "Jung, Gao show fine chemistry in new film". The Korea Herald. March 30, 2010. Archived from the original on August 24, 2017. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
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- ^ "Jung looks to China beyond Hollywood". The Korea Times. October 11, 2010. Archived from the original on August 24, 2017. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
- ^ McNary, Dave (January 31, 2011). "John Woo to remake his own Killer" . Variety.
- ^ Yoon, Hee-seong (July 11, 2011). "Jung Woo-sung nails Hong Kong pic The Killer remake" Archived March 3, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. 10Asia.
- ^ "John Woo keeps aim on 'The Killer' remake". Screen Daily. October 27, 2015. Archived from the original on October 27, 2015. Retrieved May 17, 2016.
- ^ Sunwoo, Carla (October 12, 2012). "Jung Woo-sung preps for bad guy role". Korea JoongAng Daily. Archived from the original on January 26, 2013.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ Lim, Ju-ri (June 28, 2013). "Jung Woo-sung turns bad". Korea JoongAng Daily. Archived from the original on June 29, 2013.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "Jung Woo-sung Turns His Back on Nice-Guy Image in New Film". The Chosun Ilbo. June 29, 2013. Archived from the original on July 8, 2013. Retrieved June 29, 2013.
- ^ Lee, Hye-ji (July 15, 2013). "INTERVIEW: Actor Jung Woo-sung: Confessions of a Top Star". 10Asia. Archived from the original on March 28, 2014.
- ^ Sunwoo, Carla (June 6, 2013). "Cold Eyes is a story of firsts for the cast". Korea JoongAng Daily. Archived from the original on June 25, 2013.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ Jin, Eun-soo (May 30, 2014). "The Divine Move an action twist on baduk". Korea JoongAng Daily. Archived from the original on May 29, 2014. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
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- ^ "[2018 차세대리더 사회⑥] 공동 19위 션·설민석·문명재·엄홍길·정우성 外" [[2018 Next Generation Leader Society⑥] Joint 19th place Sean, Seol Min-seok, civilisation, Um Hong-gil, Jung Woo-sung, etc.]. Sisa Journal (in Korean). October 22, 2018. Archived from the original on August 18, 2023. Retrieved August 18, 2023.
External links
[edit]- Best Actor Blue Dragon Film Awards winners
- Best New Actor for SBS Drama Awards winners
- South Korean male film actors
- South Korean male television actors
- South Korean male models
- 1973 births
- Living people
- IHQ (company) artists
- Male actors from Seoul
- People from Dongjak District
- 20th-century South Korean male actors
- 21st-century South Korean male actors
- United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Goodwill Ambassadors
- Best Supporting Actor Asian Film Award winners
- Grand Prize Paeksang Arts Award (Film) winners
- Best New Actor Paeksang Arts Award (television) winners