1999–2002: Beginnings Ji Sung first auditioned for the 1999 campus drama
KAIST, where he met screenwriter
Song Ji-na. Song took an interest in the young upstart and wrote a new character for him, leading to his acting debut. as well as the
North-South
romantic comedy film
Whistling Princess (2002).
2003–2004: Breakthrough Ji was then cast in the 2003 gambling drama
All In. Producers were having difficulty casting the second male lead because most actors were afraid to be compared to lead actor
Lee Byung-hun. Ji Sung approached director Yoo Chul-yong, saying he wanted the role. Wanting to challenge himself, he next appeared in his first
period drama ''The King's Woman'', playing
Gwanghaegun of Joseon. In
Save the Last Dance for Me (2004), he played a rich
amnesiac businessman who falls in love with a girl running a
bed and breakfast who nurses him back to health (played by
Eugene). He then made a
guest appearance playing
Bae Jong-ok's college boyfriend in "Outing", a two-episode arc written by
Lee Kyung-hee for the
omnibus drama Beating Heart (2005), followed by a supporting role in
Kim Dae-seung's period thriller
Blood Rain (2005).
2005–2007: Enlistment Ji enlisted on 7 June 2005, for his
mandatory military service. Though he initially enlisted as an ordinary soldier, the Military Manpower Administration transferred him to the military promotion ("entertainers") unit in February 2006, for which he served as "public ambassador of military affairs". He was discharged on 6 June 2007.
2008–2014: Comeback and lead roles He made his comeback in the
medical drama New Heart (2007–08), playing a
cardiothoracic surgery resident. During a scene where his character cries after failing to save the life of a former
comfort woman, Ji said he thought of his maternal grandmother who'd recently died, remembering that she'd told him her only pleasure was watching him in
reruns of
All In. Contrary to his cheeky, playful character, Ji said that he's taciturn and shy in real life, but that the drama made him find a different side of himself. He then made an extended
cameo as the sophisticated right-hand man of the mob boss in
action noir Fate (2008). In 2009, Ji collaborated again with writer Choi Wan-kyu and director Yoo Chul-yong of
All In in the revenge drama
Swallow the Sun, adapted from the novel by Kang Chul-hwa, and shot on location in
Jeju Island,
Las Vegas and
South Africa. Ji trained hard to play the tough, strong-willed protagonist who goes to prison for his boss and later becomes involved in the city development of Jeju. In February 2010, he signed with a new management agency,
Namoo Actors. Several months later, he played another historical character in
Kim Su-ro, The Iron King, as the
titular founder of
Geumgwan Gaya. In 2011, Ji starred alongside
Yum Jung-ah in
Royal Family, about the power plays within a
chaebol family. Later that year, he was cast in the workplace romantic comedy
Protect the Boss. In a departure from his usual serious roles, Ji Sung played a dorky man-child with a
panic disorder, who matures and learns to run his father's business after meeting a feisty secretary (played by
Choi Kang-hee). From 2012 to 2013, Ji played a gifted seer/geomancer in
The Great Seer. His fictional character becomes a "kingmaker" to Yi Seong-gye (played by
Ji Jin-hee), the general who leads the overthrow of
Goryeo and establishes the
Joseon Dynasty, becoming its first king
Taejo. In late 2012, he starred in adult romantic comedy
My PS Partner, playing an aspiring singer-songwriter trying to get over a breakup, who becomes the wrong recipient of a
phone sex call from a woman (played by
Kim Ah-joong) trying to seduce her boyfriend into proposing. Ji said he found the script intriguing, despite the discomfort of appearing in bed scenes. And after he saw
Love & Other Drugs, he wanted to be in a movie that portrayed a romantic relationship in a realistic manner. In 2013, Ji starred in melodrama
Secret Love. He said he chose the drama because he found the script "fresh, honest, and sophisticated." He played a chaebol "bad boy" whose girlfriend is killed, then falls for the woman who went to prison for the crime. Ji next appeared in
Confession, a 2014
neo-noir film that brutally explores the aftermath of three men's friendship after the death of one's mother.
2015–present: Career resurgence In 2015, he reunited with
Secret Love co-star
Hwang Jung-eum in
Kill Me, Heal Me, in which he played a
chaebol millionaire with
dissociative identity disorder formerly known as Multiple Personality Disorder from DSMIV-TR who has seven different identities. The series was a hit and developed a cult following, winning Ji the "Daesang (Grand Prize)" at the
MBC Drama Awards. However, Ji's next work
Entertainer, where he played a cunning and self-centered manager of an entertainment company, failed to be successful. Ji bounced back in 2017 with legal thriller
Innocent Defendant, which was a hit and topped viewership ratings. Ji earned acclaim for playing the diverse emotions of the character, an amnesic prosecutor who finds himself on a death row. He received the Grand Prize award at the
SBS Drama Awards. The same year he starred in the period comedy film
Feng Shui. In 2019, Ji starred television series
Doctor John. It is his first medical drama in 11 years. In 2020, Ji appeared in
tvN's travel show
RUN alongside
Kang Ki-young,
Lee Tae-sun and
Hwang Hee. In 2021, Ji starred in the mystery legal drama
The Devil Judge with his previous co-star
Kim Min-jung who he worked together 13 years ago in the drama
New Heart. In August 2021,
Namoo Actors' contract expired and Ji decided not to renew it. In January 2022, Ji signed an exclusive contract with Surpass Entertainment. He starred in a mystery drama called
Adamas, which aired from 27 July to 15 September 2022. Ji played the roles of the twin brothers who pair up to uncover the mystery of a murder that occurred 22 years ago. ==Personal life==