Kwon Sang-Woo
Kwon Sang-Woo was born in Daejeon, South Korea on August 5th, 1976 and is the Movie Actor. At the age of 48, Kwon Sang-Woo biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 48 years old, Kwon Sang-Woo physical status not available right now. We will update Kwon Sang-Woo's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Kwon Sang-woo (born August 5, 1976) is a South Korean actor.
He came to fame in 2003 with the romantic comedy film My Tutor Friend and the melodrama series Stairway to Heaven.
Personal life
Unlike many Korean male actors who were forced to complete their compulsory military service at the time of their careers, Kwon served his military service long before becoming an actor.
Kwon's mother is a Roman Catholic, and he converted after watching Love, So Divine, in which he appeared as a seminarian. Francisco is his confirmation number.
Son Tae-young, a retired Kwon married actor and former Miss Korea, was born at the Shilla Hotel on September 28, 2008. His wife gave birth to a baby boy on February 6, 2009, christened Luke (nicknamed Rookie). On January 10, 2015, the couple's second child, a daughter, was born.
Career
Kwon Sang-woo, the most visible representative of the so-called mom-zzang (slang for "great body") movement, began his career as a fashion model in the late 1990s. His first acting work was in the TV drama Delicious Proposal, but he saw only minor roles on television for the first few years of his entertainment career before making his big-screen debut in the martial arts film Volcano High (2001). He appeared in Make It Big (2002) with his first lead role and real-life best friend Song Seung-heon.
Kwon's breakthrough came in 2003 with the hugely popular romantic comedy My Tutor Friend as a struggling high school student tutored by a college student of the same age (played by actress Kim Ha-neul). This was followed by appearances in My Good Partner, the world's first smartphone film made for cell phones, and Project X, the music video collection.
His new film, which was out in early 2004, was also a hit. Through a notorious high school, Once Upon a Time in High School portrayed the authoritarian society of the 1970s. Simultaneously, Kwon's television tearjerker Stairway to Heaven was receiving record-breaking high ratings over 40%. The drama developed to a great deal in Asia and helped turn him into a regional star.
However, Kwon's sequel to Love, So Divine, about a priest in training who falls in love, received poor feedback and did not receive much attention from viewers.
Kwon appeared in Running Wild, a big-budget action noir about a detective, a prosecutor, and a criminal who are all vicious. Running Wild received rave reviews, but Kwon's next film Almost Love, a romantic comedy reteaming him with Kim Ha-neul, has failed to replicate the success of their previous film.
Kwon's career began here, as the films Fate and More Than Blue failed in the box office, and his small-screen projects Sad Love Story, Bad Love, and Cinderella Man all received poor reviews.
With the success of Korean War film 71: Into the Fire, which Kwon did not hesitate to take on, but he also depicted a high school student. During its reign, Daemul's drama about Korea's first female president (played by Go Hyun-jung) was also very popular, spanning 11 weeks straight and ending with viewership numbers of around 26%.
Kwon played an analgesia, or inability to detect physical pain, who falls in love with a woman suffering from hemophilia. Pained was directed by Kwak Kyung-taek in a departure from his previous macho films based on an original story by webcomic artist Kang Full. "The production company told me Kwon Sang-woo was considering the role, but I said I would do it only if Kwon does." "There was no one else."
In 2012, Kwon appeared in movies with Chinese celebrities Cecilia Cheung (romantic comedy Shadows of Love, previously known as Repeat, I Love You) and Jackie Chan (action film CZ12), in an attempt to broaden his acting career to a wider audience in Asia. In addition, he made his singing debut in a DVD released in Japan in 2010. In a Chinese television series named Feng Hue Yue (Wind Flower Snow Moon), Kwon's role as an Asian-American Broadway producer returns to China to stage a musical performance in Yunnan Province and falls in love with the leading lady of his stage musical.
He starred in Yawang (also known as Queen of Ambition), which was based on the third installment of manhwa artist Park In-Kwon's 21-part saga Daemul (the joke's second book) and was adapted from the comic's second book.
In 2013, Kwon appeared in his first medical drama. The Moon Embracing the Sun and the author of Brain were both portrayed. He was a simple yet warm-hearted genius surgeon. In Temptation, he reunited with Stairway to Heaven, about a married, debt-ridden businessman who agrees to a joint venture with a female CEO in exchange for her "ownership" of his body.
He then played the owner of an internet startup company in Honey Enemy, a 2015 Chinese romance film directed by Zhang Yuqi that was shot in Jeju Island and Shanghai. Kwon appeared in the comedy film The Accidental Detective, which revolves around a misfit comic book rental store owner who becomes involved in a murder investigation.
Kwon appeared in the crime drama "Quester of Mystery" in 2016. In the second season of the show, which premiered in 2018, Kwon reprised his role.
Kwon appeared in The Accidental Detective 2: In Action in 2018. He was also cast in the romantic comedy film Shall We Do It Again.
"I hope I'm remembered as an actor whose work the audience looks forward to rather than an actor who does well," Kwon said in an interview.