Lee Sung-jae

Lee Sung-jae (Korean이성재; born August 23, 1970) is a South Korean actor. Among his notable works include the films Art Museum by the Zoo (1998), Attack the Gas Station (1999), Kick the Moon (2001), and Public Enemy (2002), as well as the television series Gu Family Book (2013).

Lee Sung-jae
Born (1970-08-23) August 23, 1970 (age 53)
EducationDongguk University - Theater and Film
OccupationActor
Years active1995–present
AgentIOK Company
Spouse
Kim Jin-sook
(m. 1996)
Children2
Korean name
Hangul
이성재
Hanja
Revised RomanizationI Seong-jae
McCune–ReischauerI Sŏngjae

Career

Lee Sung-jae in a short period rose to become one of the more versatile and popular actors in Korean cinema. After working for a time on TV (his debut was the MBC drama The Love of Two Women), he launched his film career with the romantic comedy Art Museum by the Zoo opposite superstar Shim Eun-ha. The success of this movie gave him considerable attention and led to him being offered many more roles.[2]

After starring in Ghost in Love opposite Kim Hee-sun, Lee rose to prominence as the leader of a small group of thugs in one of the biggest box-office hits of the late 1990s, Kim Sang-jin's smash comedy Attack the Gas Station. Shortly thereafter he took a role in a very different kind of film, the accomplished black comedy Barking Dogs Never Bite, and his portrayal of a dog-hating lecturer who desperately wants to become a professor received good reviews.[2]

In 2001, Lee acted opposite Ko So-young in A Day, a drama about a young married couple who wish to have a baby; he then appeared alongside Cha Seung-won and Kim Hye-soo[3] in Kick the Moon, another wildly popular comedy by Kim Sang-jin. Lee also had a memorable turn as the villain in Public Enemy, a hugely successful film by hit director and Cinema Service founder Kang Woo-suk.[2]

In 2004 Lee portrayed a mountain climber in the big-budget adventure/melodrama Ice Rain, which was shot in the Canadian Rockies, then played a ballroom dancer in Dance with the Wind, Park Jung-woo's directorial debut (Park wrote the screenplay for many of Kim Sang-jin's films).[2] Other notable roles include real-life fugitive Ji Kang-hun in 2006's Holiday,[4] and a sculptor in 2010 3D erotic film Natalie.[5]

Among the television series he's starred in include 2008 romantic comedy Lawyers of the Great Republic of Korea,[6][7] and 2012 hit cable drama How Long I've Kissed.[8]

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotesRef.
1998Art Museum by the ZooChul-su
1999Ghost in LoveKantorates
Attack the Gas StationNo Mark
2000Barking Dogs Never BiteGo Yoon-joo
2001A DaySeok-yoon
Kick the MoonPark Young-jun
2002Public EnemyJo Kyu-hwan
2004Ice RainKang Joong-hyun
Dance with the WindPark Pung-shik
Shinsukki BluesShin Suk-ki
2005HolidayJi Kang-heon
2006DaisyJeong Woo
2007The Mafia, The SalesmanGye Doo-Sik
2010Dreams Come True1st Squad Leader
NatalieHwang Jun-Hyuk
2011Song of DreamsU-Reuk
2018Human, Space, Time and HumanPolitician
2022CarterKim Jong-hyukNetflix Film[9]

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1995The Love of Two Women
1997YesterdayYoon Min-soo
1998Beyond the Horizon
LieSuh Joon-hee
2006Stranger than ParadiseNo Yoon-jae
2008Lawyers of the Great Republic of KoreaHan Min Gook
2011PoseidonKwon Jung-ryool
2012How Long I've KissedKim Tae-oh
The SonsYoo Hyun-ki
2013Gu Family BookJo Gwan-woong
The Suspicious HousekeeperEun Sang-chul
2014The King's FaceKing Seonjo
2015Warm and CozySong Jung-geun
2016Mirror of the WitchChoi Hyun-seo
2016Don't Dare to DreamKim Rak
2018Goodbye to GoodbyeHan Sang-jin[10]
2019AbyssOh Yeong-cheol
Prosecutor Civil WarJo Min-ho
2021–2022Show Window: The Queen's HouseShin Myung-seob[11]
2022–2023Red BalloonJi Nam-cheol[12]

Variety show

YearTitleRoleNotes
2013I Live AloneCast memberEp. 1-37
2015Law of the Jungle in Indochina
2016Flower Crew

Awards

YearAward ceremonyCategoryNominee(s) / Work(s)Result
199935th Baeksang Arts AwardBest New ActorArt Museum by the ZooWon
19th Korean Association of Film Critics AwardWon
7th Chunsa Film Art AwardsWon
36th Grand Bell AwardsWon
20th Blue Dragon Film AwardsWon
200036th Baeksang Arts AwardsPopularity AwardAttack the Gas StationWon

References