2001–2002: Beginnings In 2000, an advertising executive saw Kim riding the subway, and offered her a
modeling job. Kim appeared in television commercials and print ads, before making her acting debut with a small role in the 2001 melodrama
Last Present. In 2002, she starred in the
short film Living in New Town and the
sitcom ''Let's Go
, followed by Screen
and A Problem at My Younger Brother's House'' in 2003.
2003–2006: Rising popularity and film debut Kim rose to stardom in 2003 via her portrayal of the evil stepsister in the popular
SBS TV series
Stairway to Heaven. Starting 2004, Kim was cast in leading roles in her succeeding projects, including the supernatural
KBS series
Forbidden Love and the SBS campus romance
Love Story in Harvard. The latter drew solid viewership ratings nationwide throughout its run with a peak viewer rating of 20 percent and won Kim the Most Popular Actress award in TV category at the
Baeksang Arts Awards.
Love Story in Harvard was also reportedly well-received by Japanese viewers and contributed to Kim's popularity in the country. Riding the big success of
Stairway to Heaven and
Love Story in Harvard, Kim became one of the most sought-after faces in the TV commercial industry. She was picked by Korea Broadcast Advertising Corporation as the top advertising model of the year in 2008, earning her title of "CF Queen". However, Kim expressed her desire to be valued properly as an actor, preferring to succeed based on her acting skills rather than her image. Kim then turned to film, starring in action fantasy epic
The Restless (2006), and the romantic comedy
Venus and Mars (2007). However, both were unsuccessful at the box office.
2009–2014: Iris and rising overseas popularity Back on the small screen in 2009, Kim played an
NIS profiler in the spy action thriller
Iris. It was one of the most expensive Korean dramas ever produced and was a critical and commercial success with an average viewership rating of 30%. Kim shed tears at the
KBS Drama Awards when she won an Excellence Award in a Mid-length Drama; which was her first acting award, excluding newcomer and popularity awards. in January 2010 to join Lua Entertainment, which was founded by her brother-in-law. That year, she also played a horse jockey who dreams of winning the championship in the sports film
Grand Prix. After the success of
Iris, she again drew positive reviews in the romantic comedy series
My Princess (2011); Kim played an ordinary college student who discovers that she is Korean royalty. Later that year, she starred in her first
Japanese television drama Boku to Star no 99 Nichi, where her character is a
Korean Wave star who meets an ordinary Japanese bodyguard and he somehow makes her fall head over heels in love with him. The Fuji TV drama, which aired in Japan from October to December 2011, raked in 9 to 10 percent of viewers' ratings on average, launching Kim as a household name in Japan. Kim later encountered backlash from some Japanese netizens for allegedly promoting South Korea's claim in the
Liancourt Rocks dispute during her 2005 trip to Switzerland as a
goodwill ambassador. In 2013, Kim starred in her first
historical drama Jang Ok-jung, Living by Love as the infamous royal concubine
Hui-bin Jang. This was followed by another period role, as the wife of famed Chinese calligrapher
Wang Xizhi in the
Chinese television drama Saint Wang Xizhi.
2015–present: Career resurgence Kim returned to Korean television in 2015, playing an heiress who recovers from a coma with the help of a doctor-for-hire, the titular
Yong-pal. The show garnered strong ratings and Kim won a Top Excellence Acting award from the
Korea Drama Awards. In 2020, Kim returned to television in the family drama series
Hi Bye, Mama!. == Other activities ==