LOS ANGELES, CA.- In Expats, actress Ji-young Yoo, a relative newcomer to Hollywood, shares the screen with Nicole Kidman, the Oscar- and Emmy-winning actress-producer. Yoo plays Mercy, a Columbia University graduate and would-be babysitter for the young son of Kidmans Margaret, a former landscape architect and a mother of three living, none too happily, in Hong Kong. When Mercy loses her charge in a moment of distraction (yes, she was texting), it sends Margaret into well, just imagine how Nicole Kidman might react if, say, you were texting and you lost her child.
Yoo, 24, and a film student only a few years ago I used to watch Moulin Rouge with my mom constantly, she said finds all of it difficult to believe even now, two years after shooting wrapped on the six-episode miniseries.
When I watch the scenes with me and Nicole, it still feels like I was Photoshopped in, she said in an interview last month.
Premiering Friday, the Amazon series tells the story of three women, all of them expatriates, living in Hong Kong amid the 2014 Umbrella Movement protests. It is Yoos first starring role in a series she is one of three leads, with Kidman and Sarayu Blue (To All the Boys) and also director Lulu Wangs first project since her critically acclaimed 2019 sleeper hit The Farewell.
Lulu was really particular about who she wanted, Kidman wrote in an email. The minute we saw Ji-youngs audition, it was just, Well, here she is. It was effortless.
In many ways, I think Ji-young is Mercy, Wang said.
Shes got the wit and the sarcasm of Mercy, Wang continued. And shes got that Mona Lisa smile, where youre not quite sure if shes smiling or frowning.
This year looks to be a breakout for Yoo, with three major projects screening or streaming in the coming months. Theres Expats, which is not only Yoos first starring role on a TV series, but her first TV series, period, outside of voice work. Also to come is the indie film Smoking Tigers, which is currently on the festival circuit after Yoos win last year at the Tribeca Film Festival for best performance in a U.S. narrative feature. And then theres the feature film Freaky Tales, with Yoo appearing alongside Pedro Pascal and Jay Ellis. Directed by the filmmaking duo Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck (Captain Marvel), the drama had its world premiere this month at Sundance.
Last month, Yoo sat in a coffee shop on Hollywood Boulevard near the citys Thai Town, talking about her life before and since Expats, including how the role of Mercy came her way. In person, shes much more carefree and open than the character she inhabits, with a wide smile not Mona Lisa-like at all and a way with a funny anecdote. Shes also quick to acknowledge her recent good fortune; in her account of the past few months, the words humbled and grateful come up a lot.
I had a really good year, she admitted.
Yoo was born and raised in the suburbs of Denver, the daughter of Korean immigrants. The area was predominantly white, very conservative, very religious, so I just didnt fit in, she said. Her parents didnt speak Korean in the home, so Yoo didnt learn the language until her junior year of high school.
I remember Gangnam Style came out when I was in middle school, and everyone was asking me to translate the lyrics, and I was like, I dont know, I dont speak Korean! she recalled. And they would look at me all confused and ask, Why not? Why dont you?
Yoo was inspired to pursue acting when, at 13, she landed a role in the play 99 Histories, by Korean American playwright-screenwriter Julia Cho (Turning Red). There were people who had lived in LA and were now living in Denver who were SAG-AFTRA members, and had real credits under their belt, she said. That was a really special experience to see that there were people who were actually doing this for a living.
In 2017, Yoo moved to Los Angeles to attend the University of Southern California. Up until then, Id been really struggling with that divide between being Asian or being American and feeling like I had to be one or the other, she said. In Southern California, people are coming from so many different cultures that no ones really worried about exact percentages of each. Theyre just Asian American.
As a cinema and media studies major at USC, Yoo learned about the history of actors of Asian descent in Hollywood: the unlikely early stars, including silent-film heartthrob Sessue Hayakawa, and the decades of stereotyping and discrimination. I think I went into the industry pretty eyes wide-open that there was a real possibility that I would lose out on work for no other reason than the fact that I was Asian, she said.
Even so, the work came: in small parts in dramatic shorts and animated series, followed by ensemble roles in feature films, including Amy Poehlers 2021 dramedy Moxie and the 2022 coming-of-age story The Sky Is Everywhere.
When she first auditioned for Expats, Yoo was 21, auditioning for the role of a 25-year-old. I was like, I look way too young for the role, so I put on a ton of makeup and tried to make myself look older, Yoo said.
For Wang, the effect was unconvincing: I just said, Hey, Im so sorry to ask you this if this is something youre not comfortable with, but I would love for you to do this without any makeup on.
Once she took the makeup off, she behaved differently, Wang continued. There was a nakedness and a vulnerability that was immediately present.
After Yoo had secured the role, Wang called her personally with the news. She said, Hey this is Lulu, Yoo recalled. I was so shocked that I didnt say anything at first. And there was this little pause, and then she said, Wang.
Based on The Expatriates, a bestselling novel by Korean American author Janice Y.K. Lee, the series is sprawling and cinematic, with a strong roster of American and international actors that includes Brian Tee (Chicago Med) as Kidmans husband, Filipina actress Ruby Ruiz (Iska), and British actor Jack Huston (Boardwalk Empire).
What was amazing about working on a show like this is I never worried about whether or not my scene partners were going to be good, Yoo said. I was just worried about whether I was going to be good for my scene partners.
Kidman never saw any evidence of such nervousness, she said. She had such a depth to her performance, it was exciting to watch her unfold over the course of the months of shooting.
Yoo said that working on Expats, with its slower, meditative pace, taught her how to modulate her emotions for the screen. I think I really learned how to trust that the camera was going to pick up everything, she said.
Others have noticed the progress. So Young Shelly Yo, the director of Smoking Tigers, first met Yoo in 2021, when the actress tried out, unsuccessfully, for a role in a short film. But the time Yoo spent working on Expats and appearing in the play Man of God at Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles was evident when she auditioned for Smoking Tigers, Yo said. She had a weight to her, a glow to her, she said. She had grown so much.
In the past few years, Yoo says, a number of Asian American actors have reached out to her with advice and help. Tamlyn Tomita and Ron Yuan have really taken me under their wing, she said. That was incredibly kind and generous, and something they totally didnt have to do.
Despite her recent successes, Yoo continues to see auditions as a way to meet people rather than strictly as a shot at a job. Im still introducing myself to people in the industry, she said.
Perhaps because of that outlook, winning awards and appearing opposite childhood heroes in prestige dramas have not changed Yoos immediate goals all that much. Honestly, my five-year plan had been to stay employed long enough to pay my rent, she said. And thats still pretty much the plan.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.