Jang Dong-gun

Actor

Birthday March 7, 1972

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Geumcheon-gu, Seoul, South Korea

Age 52 years old

Nationality South Korea

Height 1.82 m

#26629 Most Popular

1930

Titled Anarchists, this tale of five young terrorists from 1930s China helped to elevate his status even further.

1972

Jang Dong-gun (born March 7, 1972) is a South Korean actor.

1990

By the late 1990s he had become quite popular in Korea, but he also became one of the first Korean stars to garner a fan following in other parts of Asia, after several of his TV dramas were screened there in the late nineties.

1992

Jang first entered the entertainment world in a talent contest in 1992.

He began by acting in TV dramas such as Iljimae, The Last Match, co-starring Shim Eun-ha,

1997

and he eventually made his film debut in Repechage (1997) together with Kim Hee-sun.

1999

In 1999, after acting in the critically acclaimed Nowhere to Hide as Park Joong-hoon's younger partner, Jang moved on to star in a feature that was filmed on location in Shanghai.

2001

He is best known for his leading roles in the films Friend (2001) and Taegukgi: The Brotherhood of War (2004).

Jang is one of the highest-paid actors and celebrity endorsers in Korea, consistently topping surveys by industry insiders of most bankable stars.

Jang Dong-gun spent his childhood in Yongsan District, Seoul, and later went on to study at the Korea National University of Arts School of Drama, though he dropped out before obtaining a degree.

Jang's breakout came in early 2001 in Friend, which smashed the box office record set by Shiri to become (at the time) the biggest Korean film of all time.

After playing the nice guy in almost all his previous roles, this portrayal of a tough-talking gangster from Busan led him to local stardom.

2004

In 2004, Jang took the lead role in Kang Je-gyu's Taegukgi, an epic film about two brothers set during the Korean War.

The film broke Friend's record with an astounding 11 million tickets sold.

By this time, Jang's name had become known widely throughout Asia.

Jang followed this up with The Promise, a $30 million pan-Asian production by Chinese director Chen Kaige in which he played opposite Hong Kong star Cecilia Cheung.

Meanwhile, he was cast in Typhoon as a modern-day pirate who has been betrayed by both North and South Korea.

2005

Directed by Friend's Kwak Kyung-taek, Typhoon set a new record in 2005 for the highest production budget in Korean film history at $15 million.

For the next four years, Jang kept a low profile in the Korean entertainment sphere as he worked on his Hollywood debut The Warrior's Way, also starring Kate Bosworth and Geoffrey Rush.

2009

The following year he starred in the popular action blockbuster 2009 Lost Memories set in a futuristic Great Japan, and appeared in the low-budget film The Coast Guard by controversial director Kim Ki-duk.

He returned to the silver screen in 2009 as the nation's youngest (and most eligible) head of state in Jang Jin's comedy Good Morning, President.

He reunited with director Kang Je-gyu in My Way, a film set during World War II based on the true story of a Korean soldier who is drafted by the Japanese army and eventually is present at the Battle of Normandy.

2010

The film encountered problems with post-production and distribution, and was only released in 2010.

2011

A large-scale, ambitious pan-Asian collaboration co-starring Japanese actor Joe Odagiri and Chinese actress Fan Bingbing, My Way was the most expensive Korean movie to date (with an estimated budget of ), But despite being simultaneously released in Korea and Japan in December 2011, the film flopped at the box office.

Jang made his highly anticipated return to television dramas in A Gentleman's Dignity, saying he was drawn to the romantic comedy tale of 40-something-year-old men struggling to grow up and mend and forge lasting relationships.

After the series ended, Jang and co-star Kim Min-jong visited refugees in the Republic of the Congo on a mission trip sponsored by UNICEF, UNHCR and World Food Programme.

It was televised on SBS documentary program Hope TV.

2012

His 2012 film Dangerous Liaisons was a Chinese adaptation of the French literature classic set in 1930s Shanghai, directed by Hur Jin-ho and co-starring Zhang Ziyi and Cecilia Cheung.

Jang next starred in No Tears for the Dead, an action thriller directed by Lee Jeong-beom.

He played a Korean-born American hitman who feels conflicted about killing his last target (played by Kim Min-hee).

2015

In 2015, Jang was cast in the film Seven Years of Night, a revenge thriller based on the novel of the same name by Jung Yoo-jung.

He plays a character who takes revenge on his daughter's murderer, by killing his son.

2016

In 2016, Jang was cast in his first Chinese drama, Once Loved You Distressed Forever alongside actress Tang Yixin.

2017

He was then cast in the espionage noir thriller VIP, which premiered in 2017.

2018

The film premiered in 2018.

Jang returned to the small screen after five years, starring in the Korean remake of the popular American legal drama series Suits (2018).

The same year, Jung starred in Kim Sung-hoon's period zombie action film Rampant alongside close friend Hyun Bin.

2019

In 2019, Jang starred in the fantasy historical drama Arthdal Chronicles.

Jang is a practicing Buddhist, having first explored Buddhist reading while hospitalized in high school, after undergoing chest surgery.

He enjoys playing baseball and is a member of the celebrity amateur baseball team "Playboys" with Lee Jong-hyuk, Hyun Bin, Kim Seung-woo, Hwang Jung-min, Ji Jin-hee, and other actors.