Han Hyo-joo

Actress

Birthday February 22, 1987

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Yullryang-dong, Cheongju, North Chungcheong Province, South Korea

Age 37 years old

Nationality North

Height 170 cm

#6446 Most Popular

1970

Famous for its live performances, C'est Si Bon was the name of a popular music lounge located in Mugyo-dong in the 1970s, where Twin Folio got its start; Han played the group's muse.

1987

Han Hyo-joo (born February 22, 1987) is a South Korean actress, model and singer.

2002

After graduating from Yullyang Middle School in 2002, she attended Cheongju Girls' High School until 2004.

In her sophomore year of high school, she moved to Seoul and transferred to Bulgok High School in Bundang-gu, Seongnam, despite the objections of her strict and conservative father.

2003

Han was first discovered in a teenage beauty pageant organized by food corporation Binggrae in 2003.

She began her acting career in the sitcom Nonstop 5 and the gangster comedy film My Boss, My Teacher.

Han later raised her profile by starring in Spring Waltz, the fourth and final installment of TV director Yoon Seok-ho's "season drama" series.

2005

After graduating in March 2005, she entered Dongguk University's College of Arts, where she joined the Theater and Film department, and eventually graduated in 2010.

2006

In 2006, director Lee Yoon-ki cast Han in the starring role in his low-budget independent film Ad-lib Night, which follows a young woman who rediscovers herself through an eerie overnight encounter with strangers.

She won the Best New Actress awards at the Korean Association of Film Critics Awards and Singapore International Film Festival for her performance.

2007

She is best known for her leading roles in television series such as Heaven & Earth (2007), Iljimae (2008), Brilliant Legacy (2009), Dong Yi (2010) for which she won the coveted Best Actress award at the 47th Baeksang Arts Awards, W (2016), Happiness (2021) and Moving (2023), as well as the films Masquerade (2012), which is one of the highest grossing Korean films of all-time, Cold Eyes (2013), for which she won Best Actress at the 34th Blue Dragon Film Awards, Love 911 (2012), The Beauty Inside (2015), and The Pirates: The Last Royal Treasure (2022).

Han Hyo-joo was born in Yullryang-dong, Cheongju, North Chungcheong Province.

Her mother was an elementary school teacher before becoming an inspector for public schools, and her father was an air force lieutenant colonel who served at a reserve.

At the time of her birth, Han was given the name Han Ji-yeong but when she entered the third grade, she changed it to her current name.

She also has a younger brother and attended Deokseong Elementary School.

As a child, she was good in sports, particularly track and field.

Han then starred in two highly successful TV projects and rose to fame - KBS daily drama Heaven & Earth with Park Hae-jin in 2007, and SBS masked-adventurer series Iljimae with Lee Joon-gi in 2008.

Both dramas drew solid viewership ratings nationwide throughout its run with high viewer ratings and launched Han into a household name.

2008

Afterwards, she was cast in another indie film, Ride Away, which debuted at the 2008 Jeonju International Film Festival.

Han then filmed the Korean-Japanese telecinema co-production Heaven's Postman, which also featured pop star Jaejoong from TVXQ (now JYJ).

2009

After several postponements, it was released in theaters in late 2009, and broadcast on TV in 2010.

Han's breakthrough came in Brilliant Legacy costarring Lee Seung-gi, which became a massive hit in 2009, reaching a peak viewership rating of 47.1%.

It catapulted Han to stardom, and after the drama's conclusion, she experienced a sharp rise in endorsement deals and media requests for interviews, as well as increased pan-Asian popularity.

Later that year Han wrapped up her starring role in the musical drama Soul Special, which aired on KBS Joy.

2010

In 2010, Han took on the titular character in MBC's 49th anniversary project Dong Yi.

The series became a hit during its run both domestically and across Asia.

Han won several acting awards for her portrayal of Choi Suk-bin, including the Daesang (Grand Prize) award at MBC Drama Awards and the coveted Best Actress award at Baeksang Arts Awards.

2011

In 2011, Han played a blind telemarketer opposite So Ji-sub's ex-boxer in the melodrama film Always.

Helmed by director Song Il-gon, it premiered as the opening film of the 2011 Busan International Film Festival.

Han later contributed voice narration to the "barrier-free" version of Japanese film My Back Page, which features descriptive audio and subtitles for people with hearing or visual impairments.

2012

Han then played the queen to Lee Byung-hun's Gwanghae in the 2012 blockbuster period film Masquerade, which became one of the highest-grossing Korean films of all time.

She followed that with Love 911, an unlikely romance between a doctor and a firefighter (Go Soo).

2013

In 2013, Han starred opposite Sol Kyung-gu and Jung Woo-sung in action thriller Cold Eyes, a remake of the 2007 Hong Kong film Eye in the Sky.

The film dominated the box office after its release and became one of the biggest domestic hits of 2013.

Han received acting recognition for her performance, winning Best Actress from the Blue Dragon Film Awards and Buil Film Awards.

2014

In 2014, Han and Love 911 costar Go Soo reunited in Myohyangsangwan ("View of Mount Myohyang"), which depicts the rendezvous of a South Korean painter and a North Korean waitress in a North Korean restaurant.

The short film is a collaboration by contemporary artists Moon Kyung-won and Jeon Joon-ho, and combined a theatrical plot, experimental imagery, dance and performance art.

She then ventured into the overseas market by starring in her first Japanese film, Isshin Inudo's Miracle: Debikuro-kun no Koi to Maho ("Miracle Devil Claus' Love and Magic").

Set during the Christmas season, the film is a love story about a kind bookstore employee (played by Masaki Aiba from J-pop boyband Arashi) who meets three women.

2015

In 2015, Han starred in the musical biopic C'est Si Bon, which depicted the ups and downs of the folk music group Twin Folio, which was active from the 1960s to 80s.