Steven Yeun

Korean-born American actor
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Also known as: Yeun Sang-yeop
Quick Facts
Byname of:
Yeun Sang-Yeop
Born:
December 21, 1983, Seoul, South Korea (age 41)
Awards And Honors:
Emmy Award (2024)
Notable Family Members:
married to Joana Pak (2016–present)
Education:
Troy High School (Troy, Michigan)
Kalamazoo College (bachelor's degree, 2005)
Movies/Tv Shows (Acted In):
"Wizards" (2020)
"Minari" (2020)
"Final Space" (2018–2019)
"3Below: Tales of Arcadia" (2018–2019)
"Tuca & Bertie" (2019)
"I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson" (2019)
"The Twilight Zone" (2019)
"Weird City" (2019)
"Voltron: Legendary Defender" (2016–2018)
"Stretch Armstrong & the Flex Fighters" (2017–2018)
"Trollhunters: Tales of Arcadia" (2016–2018)
"Burning" (2018)
"Sorry to Bother You" (2018)
"The Star" (2017)
"Robot Chicken" (2017)
"Voltron Legendary Defender Motion Comic" (2017)
"Bajillion Dollar Propertie$" (2017)
"Okja" (2017)
"Mayhem" (2017)
"The Walking Dead" (2010–2016)
"American Dad!" (2014)
"Drunk History" (2014)
"The Soup" (2011–2014)
"I Origins" (2014)
"The Legend of Korra" (2013)
"Harder Than It Looks" (2012)
"NTSF:SD:SUV" (2012)
"Warehouse 13" (2011)
"Law & Order: LA" (2011)
"Lemons the Show" (2010)
"The Big Bang Theory" (2010)
"Jerry" (2009)

Steven Yeun (born December 21, 1983, Seoul, South Korea) is an actor whose empathetic slow-burn performances often explore deep feelings of shame, rage, and masculine pride. He rose to fame playing zombie apocalypse survivor Glenn Rhee in the popular horror television series The Walking Dead (2010–22). In 2020 he garnered an Academy Award nomination for his nuanced portrayal of struggling farmer and young father Jacob Yi in the family drama Minari. In 2024 he won an Emmy Award and a Golden Globe Award for best actor in a limited series for his explosive performance as revenge-driven contractor Danny Cho in the darkly comic drama Beef (2023).

Early life and education

Steven Yeun was born Yeun Sang-Yeop in Seoul, South Korea, to parents Yeun June and Yeun Je. The family left South Korea in 1988, when Yeun was four years old, spending one year in Saskatchewan, Canada, before relocating to Taylor, Michigan, in the United States. They eventually settled in Troy, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit. His parents owned a beauty-supply store in downtown Detroit, where Yeun worked as a youth. In a 2011 feature in Interview magazine, he remembered an altercation between his father and a would-be shoplifter.

One time a guy tried to steal something, and when my dad stopped him, the guy took a swing and they got into a fistfight. Midway through the fight, the guy pulled a pointy umbrella out of a bin of them we were selling and tried to stab my dad, and of course my dad picked one up and they ended up umbrella-fencing until the police got there and broke it up. Yep, it was an old-fashioned umbrella fight in downtown Detroit.

His family was active in a Korean Christian church, where he attended Sunday school, played music, and participated in sports. After graduating from Troy High School in 2001, Yeun attended Kalamazoo College, where he majored in psychology and was a premed student, with hopes of becoming a physician. At college he was introduced to the improv comedy team Monkapult by his friend Kasey Klepper, whose brother, actor Jordan Klepper, was a member. After watching Monkapult perform, Yeun was inspired to audition for the team. After failing to make the team in his initial audition, Yeun took an acting class and successfully auditioned. He graduated in 2005 with a bachelor’s degree in psychology and moved to Chicago, where he trained with the Second City improv theater troupe, eventually performing with its touring company.

Career and personal life

In 2009 Yeun moved to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career. He recalled that his parents were initially upset with his decision to forgo medical school, but they gave him two years to realize his acting ambitions. Within six months, Yeun was cast as supply runner Glenn Rhee in the postapocalyptic horror series The Walking Dead, based on the comic book series of the same name. He performed in the series from 2010 to 2016.

In his first notable film role, Yeun starred as Derek Cho, a betrayed office worker who goes on a rampage, in the action horror film Mayhem (2017). He went on to play an animal rights activist named K in director Bong Joon Ho’s sci-fi adventure film Okja (also 2017). In 2018 he appeared in the absurdist comedy Sorry to Bother You, written and directed by Boots Riley. Later that year he played a sociopathic playboy in director Lee Chang-Dong’s mystery thriller Burning, based on author Haruki Murakami’s short story “Barn Burning.”

In 2020 Yeun starred in director Lee Isaac Chung’s semi-autobiographical drama Minari. Yeun’s layered performance as Jacob Yi, a father who has moved his Korean American family from Los Angeles to a rural community in Arkansas with dreams of starting a farm, brims with quiet rage. Yeun was nominated for an Academy Award, making him the first Asian American performer to be nominated for best lead actor in the history of the Academy Awards. When Minari premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, Yeun sat next to his father during the film’s screening. In a 2021 interview with The New York Times Magazine, Yeun discussed how playing a struggling father of an immigrant family helped him better understand his father’s experience.

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I’m a father. And now I understand what [my father] had to go through….Every time I talk about it, I’m just, like, crying about it, you know? Because I think my dad felt seen.

In 2022 Yeun played Ricky (“Jupe”) Park, a former child actor turned theme park owner, in director Jordan Peele’s sci-fi horror film Nope.

Following a string of successful film roles, Yeun starred alongside comedian and actress Ali Wong in the miniseries Beef (2023), which follows the lives of two strangers (Yeun and Wong) involved in a road-rage incident that leads them into a bitter and escalating feud. Yeun and Wong also served as executive producers. In a 2023 interview with Vanity Fair, Yeun discussed how he and Wong approached their roles.

For me, I felt like we were playing with aspects of ourselves, not explicitly Ali and me, but more as human beings. Who are we and what are we on a daily basis?

In addition to Yeun’s Emmy Award for best actor in a limited series, Beef won an Emmy for outstanding limited series.

Yeun is also an accomplished voice actor. He voiced the role of Steve Palchuk, the leader of Team Creepslayerz, in the animated fantasy series Trollhunters: Tales of Arcadia (2016–18) and the animated film Trollhunters: Rise of the Titans (2021). He performed voice roles in the animated series Voltron: Legendary Defender (2016–18), Stretch Armstrong & the Flex Fighters (2017–18), Final Space (2018–21), and Tuca & Bertie (2019–22). Yeun also lent his voice to the role of Bo, a miniature donkey, in the animated biblical comedy film The Star (2017).

Yeun began dating photographer Joana Pak in 2009 while they were both were living in Chicago. The couple married in 2016 in Los Angeles and have two children.

Will McDonald