Yunjin Kim | |||||||||||
Image Upright: | 1.15 | ||||||||||
Birth Name: | Kim Yun-jin | ||||||||||
Birth Date: | 7 November 1973 | ||||||||||
Birth Place: | Seoul, South Korea | ||||||||||
Education: | Boston University (BFA) | ||||||||||
Occupation: | Actress | ||||||||||
Years Active: | 1996–present | ||||||||||
Agent: | Zion Entertainment | ||||||||||
Citizenship: | [1] | ||||||||||
Module: |
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Yunjin Kim (born November 7, 1973) is an American actress.[2] [3] [4] She is best known for her role as North Korean spy Bang-Hee in the South Korean film Shiri (1999) and Sun-Hwa Kwon on the American television series Lost (2004–2010). Her other notable works include Seven Days (2007), Harmony (2010), The Neighbors (2012), and Ode to My Father (2014).
Kim was born in Seoul, South Korea. She emigrated to the United States with her family in 1983-1984.[5] They lived in Staten Island, New York. She joined the middle school drama club in the 7th grade and performed in the musical My Fair Lady.
Kim attended high school at the prestigious Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts, a public high school located in Manhattan. From there, she went on to study drama at the London Academy of Performing Arts and later earned her BFA degree in drama at Boston University. Kim has remarked that in her zeal to become Americanized quickly, she studied acting, academics and pronunciation with equal intensity. She is also a trained dancer and martial arts fighter.[6]
After graduation, Kim devoted herself full-time to acting. She garnered several minor parts on MTV, in soap opera-style dramas on ABC, and on the off-Broadway stage. In 1997, she starred in Splendid Holiday, a Korean TV drama shot on location in New York. Kim decided to return to Korea. She was cast in the TV drama Wedding Dress and was also invited to act in Lee Kwangmo's feature Spring in My Hometown, although she ended up not taking this role. Her breakthrough debut came in the 1999 film Shiri, South Korea's first blockbuster film. Shiri became the highest-grossing film in Korean history at the time. In November 2000, she continued her association with Kang Je-gyu in The Legend of Gingko.
After acting in a Japanese film and a feature set in Los Angeles, Kim appeared in the sci-fi feature Yesterday. Then in 2002, Kim took the lead role in Ardor, the feature film debut of documentarist Byun Young-ju. The film was invited to screen in a non-competitive section at the 2003 Berlin film festival.
In 2004, Kim started appearing in the U.S. television series Lost, which ran for six seasons.
In May 2006, Maxim named Kim number 98 on its annual Hot 100 List.[7] In October 2006 she was featured on the cover of Stuff, as well as an inside spread.
In 2013, she had a leading role in the ABC drama series Mistresses.[8]
In 2018, Kim returned to Korean television by headlining the series Ms. Ma, Nemesis.[9]
In 2022, she starred as Seon Woo-jin in the Korean remake of Money Heist, .
In 2023, she acted as Principal Jina Lim in revolutionary English-Korean Netflix TV Series, XO, Kitty.
Kim married her former manager Park Jeong-hyeok in March 2010 on the island of Oahu, after shooting her final scenes for Lost.[10]
Year | Title | Role | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1999 | Shiri | Lee Myung-hyun / Lee Bang-hee | |||
2000 | The Legend of Gingko | Yeon | |||
2001 | Rush! | Seo-yeong | |||
2002 | Iron Palm | Ji-ni | |||
Yesterday | Kim Hisu / No Hisu | ||||
Ardor | Mi-heun | ||||
2005 | Diary of June | Seo Yun-hee | |||
2007 | Mother | ||||
2008 | Seven Days | Yoo Ji-yeon | |||
2010 | Harmony | Jeong-hye | |||
2011 | Heartbeat | Chae Yeon-hee | |||
2012 | The Neighbors | Kyung-hee | |||
2014 | Ode to My Father | Young-ja | |||
2017 | House of the Disappeared | Kang Mi-hee | |||
2020 | Pawn | Myung-ja | Special appearance | ||
2022 | Confession | Yang Shin-ae | [11] | ||
2024 | Dog Days | Jeong-ah | [12] [13] |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1996 | Splendid Holiday | ||||
1997 | Foreboding | Jang Se-young | |||
1998 | Wedding Dress Drama | Gina | |||
1999 | Love in 3 Colors | Jang Hee-ju | |||
2004–2010 | Lost | Sun-Hwa Kwon | |||
2013–2016 | Mistresses | Karen Kim | |||
2018 | Ms. Ma, Nemesis | Ms. Ma / Ma Ji Won | |||
2022 | Seon Woo-jin | Part 1–2 | [14] [15] | ||
2023 | XO, Kitty | Principal Jina Lim | |||
2024 | Station 19 | Jeonghee Lee | Episode "Ushers of the New World" |
Year | Title | Voice role | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
2007 | Sun-Hwa Kwon | |||
2012 | Sleeping Dogs | Tiffany Kim |
Year | Listicle | Rank | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
The Screen | 2009 | 1984–2008 Top Box Office Powerhouse Actors in Korean Movies | [18] | |
2019 | 2009–2019 Top Box Office Powerhouse Actors in Korean Movies | [19] |