The long-lasting Hollywood signal is seen in Los Angeles on Jan. 9. AP-Yonhap
SEOUL — When actor Amy Baik was forged in a South Korean industrial final 12 months, she thought she had landed a promising gig.
However after filming wrapped, she was shocked to be taught that each the director and advertiser had reduce her scenes — not due to her efficiency, however as a result of she lacked a facial function prized in South Korean magnificence requirements.
“The explanation was that I don’t have double eyelids,” stated Baik, 26.
“After receiving that suggestions, I began to rethink what sort of look Korea desires,” she stated, including it “made me surprise how I can survive as an actor in South Korea.”
That have pushed her towards a special market. The worldwide success of “Parasite,” “Minari” and “Squid Recreation” has opened doorways for South Korean performers in Hollywood — and spawned a cottage business of consultants serving to actors navigate American casting.
“Hollywood’s the dream (…) the last word pinnacle of appearing accolades,” stated Julia Kim, a Korean American casting director who labored on “Minari,” Amazon Prime’s “Butterfly” and “KPop Demon Hunters.”
Whereas established stars like Park Hae-soo and Lee Byung-hun have each South Korean and American illustration, most aspiring Korean actors lack such connections. That hole is what expertise businesses like Los Angeles-based Upstage Leisure try to bridge.
Alison Dumbell, a co-founder of Upstage with expertise in Bollywood and Los Angeles, stated she has observed extra calls for for “characters which are particularly Korean” than generic “East Asian” ones from Western producers. She attributes that shift partly to the worldwide recognition of South Korean leisure.
Nonetheless, stereotypes persist. “The one which irritates me is the nerdy tech programmer,” Dumbell stated. “Typically I simply gained’t even submit my actor for that as a result of I do know that they’re rather more nuanced as actors.”
For many South Korean actors with out connections or know-how, Hollywood continues to be uncharted territory.
Kim, who usually casts high-profile stars and works with native casting administrators for co-productions, additionally finds actors through social media. “I often put out an open name on my Instagram,” she stated.
However for actors with out main company backing, the fitting contacts are laborious to search out. The American and Korean industries function in another way, and U.S. casting info not often reaches these exterior established networks.
Kim stated South Korean expertise faces a steep studying curve. “I’d get questions — ought to I modify my Korean identify to a Western identify? Do I pay to get an agent? Can I look into the digital camera once I’m doing an audition?” she stated. Even identify consistency is a matter: Kim recalled a Okay-pop artist turned actor whose identify appeared 5 other ways on-line.
Technical requirements additionally differ. Actor Misun Youm famous American audition tapes require clear white backgrounds, whereas “in Korea, it doesn’t matter.”
Headshots diverge too: South Korean profiles function modellike pictures, whereas American headshots match character sorts.
“In Korea, you shoot profile photographs like a trend journal mannequin,” stated veteran actor Shin Ju-hwan, who goes by Julian Shin. He performed a masked soldier in second and third seasons of “Squid Recreation,” and stars in “Taxi Driver” Season 3.
Shin discovered Upstage by likelihood — his spouse, a producer, found them on LinkedIn.
His Hollywood dream was partly motivated by colleagues at his former company — Han Yeri in “Minari” and Jung Ho-yeon in “Squid Recreation.”
“Although I wasn’t a foremost character — I used to be only a ‘soldier’ — individuals who noticed even that transient look began leaving feedback on my Instagram,” Shin stated. “The affect of that present was actually unparalleled.”
Shin took an intensive method to English, transcribing over 30,000 English phrases and expressions from the web, then utilizing AI to examine if any phrases had been outdated. “Idioms are actually enjoyable,” he stated. ”‘Break a leg’ or ‘maintain your horses’ — studying these makes you’re feeling nearer to being native.”
The accent query looms giant.
Devon Overman, one other co-founder of Upstage who coaches English line supply, stated “it’s completely wonderful, even preferable to have an accent as a result of the accent is a part of who you might be.”
She focuses on intonation. “When native Korean audio system try to learn English strains, it feels like they’re studying. That’s the toughest factor to interrupt,” she stated.
However consultants aren’t pushing actors to erase their id. Shin recalled Dumbell advising him to not sound too “American-ish.” “She stated individuals would favor my real pronunciation,” he stated.
For Shin, the pivot got here as alternatives in South Korea contracted.
“Beginning three years in the past, I spotted this business was getting more durable,” he stated. “Because the Korean market was struggling, I assumed I ought to broaden my horizons to worldwide markets.”
Age discrimination can also be driving some actors overseas. Youm, 29, stated in South Korea “30 isn’t thought-about younger.”
“There are some limitations in terms of discovering an company or auditioning for a task,” she stated.
Shin, in his 40s, was given an opportunity to audition for a 20-something character for a global manufacturing. “In Korean audition tapes, you often say your age,” he famous. “Within the U.S. (…) they don’t.”
Baik, who acquired a minor function within the Netflix teen romantic comedy “XO, Kitty,” now sees her options as belongings overseas.
After suggestions from American casting administrators, she stated she realized “I might do motion roles and break away from the ‘cute’ picture.”
She additionally discovered working with a global crew an eye-opening expertise, and got here to understand facets of the American work tradition. “In Korea, additional time was routine. Within the American market, you clock in and clock out like an workplace employee,” she stated. “It was extra environment friendly.”
She stated her ongoing journey to Hollywood has taught her to belief herself.
“At first, everybody stated it could be unimaginable (…) ‘Solely well-known Korean actors can do that,’” she recalled. “However after watching me fly abroad and make the whole lot occur with my very own fingers…I can say with certainty from my expertise that Hollywood is able to open its doorways to anybody.”
Shin, who hopes to play a villain in American productions, sees a shift.
“There was a time when it appeared such as you needed to roll your R’s and act like an American… However now it feels such as you may be your self — be Korean should you’re Korean,” Shin stated. “Stereotypes are step by step crumbling.”
