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John Cho Biography

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Biography

A lanky, affable presence in features and television from the late 1990s onward, actor John Cho delivered sharp-witted, often manic comedy in such popular titles as American Pie (1999) and Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle (2004) before shifting gears to play the determined Mr. Sulu in J.J. Abrams Star Trek (2009). A former literature student and English teacher, he fell in love with acting in college, and worked his way up from bit player in films and television to featured support as high-energy young men in Pie and its first two sequels (2001, 2003). Cho became a go-to for laughs in movies and TV, enjoying both top billing and considerable fan praise as one half of the hapless stoner duo in Harold and Kumar and its 2008 sequel. In 2009, he once again found himself the center of attention by assuming one of science fictions most celebrated roles in Star Trek, which attempted to provide an origin story for the legendary franchise. His ability to shift between broad comedy and high drama made Cho one of the more adaptable and likeable performers in screen entertainment.

The son of a Christian minister, he was born Cho Yo Han in Seoul, South Korea on June 16, 1972. The family moved to the United States in 1978, and settled in Los Angeles, where Cho attended high school before enrolling at the University of California at Berkeley. Though he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English literature, he developed a passion for acting after appearing in the play, Warrior Woman. He was particularly inspired by the fact that many of his cast mates still displayed such dedication to their craft, despite being well into their fifth decades.

After graduation, he returned to Los Angeles, where he worked as an English teacher at Pacific Hills School in West Hollywood while making his first inroads towards a professional acting career. Appearances in print advertising led to bit parts in features like his screen debut, Wag the Dog (1997), and television series like Felicity (The WB, 1998-2002) and Charmed (The WB, 1998-2006). In the meantime, he began performing with the acclaimed Asian-American theater group, East West Players, in Los Angeles.

Chos knack for dry comic delivery was soon tapped for more substantial supporting roles in features like American Beauty (1999) and the underrated Bowfinger (1999). His big-screen breakthrough, however, was as the manic high schooler John, whose hormonal response to Stiflers zaftig mom (Jennifer Coolidge) helped to coin the pop culture catchphrase MILF, a somewhat rude acronym for a sexual response generated by attractive older women. His performance was well received by the films audience of teen males, and he reprised the role twice in the original films sequels, American Pie 2 (2001) and American Wedding (2003).

American Pie creators Chris and Paul Weitz reunited Cho with his co-star Eddie Kaye Thomas for the short-lived sitcom Off Centre (The WB, 2001-02), about four single men on the make in New York. Chos performance as an accident-prone, socially unbridled Vietnamese restaurant owner was largely regarded as the shows sole saving grace. After the shows demise, he teamed once again with the Weitz Brothers in Down to Earth (2001), a limp remake of Heaven Can Wait (1978) with Chris Rock.

In 2002, Cho shifted gears to play a casually cruel young man who becomes involved with bored students on a crime spree in the dark comedy Better Luck Tomorrow (2002). The film, helmed by future Fast and Furious (2009) director Justin Lim, featured an all-Asian cast and received critical praise, as well as an Independent Spirit Award nomination in 2004. But Cho was soon back to lighter material like Big Fat Liar (2002) and the aforementioned American Wedding (2003).

Chos biggest film success after American Pie was Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle (2004), a sly send-up of racial stereotypes disguised as a slaphappy boys comedy. Cho shone as Harold Lee, an overworked Korean banker whose craving for the title restaurant spurred by a late night marijuana smoke-out with friend Kumar Patel (Kal Penn) leads to a string of surreal events that include rabid raccoons, berserk extreme sports fans, and a debauched Neil Patrick Harris, played to the hilt by the actor himself. The film was a mild box office success but proved exceptionally popular on DVD, which in turn inspired an even more popular and crass sequel, Harold and Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay in 2008.

The exposure afforded by the Harold and Kumar films helped to make Cho a popular fixture in film and television comedies, with occasional forays into dramas. A brief stint on the sitcom Kitchen Confidential (Fox, 2005), based on the book by chef Anthony Bourdin, preceded guest shots on Greys Anatomy (ABC, 2005- ) and How I Met Your Mother (CBS, 2005- ) opposite his Harold and Kumar co-star, Neil Patrick Harris. Cho also enjoyed a recurring role on Ugly Betty (ABC, 2006- ) as the best friend of Christopher Gorhams nebbish accountant, Henry Grubstick.

Cho found himself at the center of considerable Internet and press buzz when he was cast as Hikaru Sulu, helmsman of the U.S.S. Enterprise in J.J. Abrams Star Trek. Initially, Abrams was concerned about casting the Korean-born Cho in a role made iconic by Japanese actor George Takei, but the original Sulu appeased his concerns by stating that both he and Star Trek (NBC, 1966-68) creator George Roddenberry envisioned Sulu as a symbol for all Asian people. In interviews, Cho cited how pleased he was to play a role that afforded an Asian actor the chance to play a sort of cowboy, and how much he enjoyed the physicality of the part, which required him to undergo weeks of fight training.

Copyright © Baseline 2009.



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