1999–2004: Pop star beginnings In 1997 Yoon answered an advertisement for
Park Joon-hyung's project music group and had auditioned with aspirations of becoming a rock star. Along with
Danny Ahn,
Son Ho-young,
Kim Sun-a and producer and singer-songwriter
Park Jin-young, the group was initially called "GOT6". Kim Sun-a left to pursue acting and was replaced by
Kim Tae-woo. The group became a five-member boy band called
g.o.d, short for "Groove Over Dose", and debuted in January 1999. making his film debut in
Flying Boys, directed by
Byun Young-joo. He made his television debut that same year in
My 19 Year Old Sister-in-Law with
Jung Da-bin. The group would release their seventh and final album before going on indefinite hiatus in December 2005 and some of the group's fans called Yoon a "traitor" and blamed him for "breaking up the group". Various media outlets speculated that there was a rift amongst the members and that he had turned his back on them in favor of acting, rumors that Yoon and the other four members chose not to publicly confirm or deny. He has since clarified in his 2012 cooking show ''Yoon Kye-sang's One Table'' that he left the group with the intention of leaving the entertainment industry altogether as he had begun to detest the spotlight, but stumbled upon an opportunity to try acting and enjoyed it.
Military service Having just departed from g.o.d, Yoon was at the height of his popularity, but had to interrupt his nascent acting career due to
mandatory military service. After completing basic training and serving there for some time, Yoon was reassigned in 2006 to duties as an "entertainment soldier" in the newly formed group Korean Forces Network, which provides television and radio broadcasts to soldiers, and also allows celebrities to maintain a public profile while completing their
military service. He was discharged from the army on December 6, 2006. In an interview that day, he said that he had not slept the night before and was very tired, but looked forward to seeing his fans; he further stated that he planned to resume his career in 2007. As late as June 2011, his military service still earned him public attention, when a round-cheeked photo of him in uniform "went
viral" among South Korean internet users. The photos received many amused comments for his then-fat cheeks, forming a sharp contrast with his more recent appearance.
2004 – Present: Acting career In January 2007, Yoon returned to show business in the television drama
Crazy in Love (also known as
Crazy for You); he portrayed a gangster who falls in love with the widow (
Lee Mi-yeon) of a man he'd accidentally killed. The following year, he and
Kim Ha-neul were cast in
Lovers of Six Years, playing a couple in a six-year relationship. According to Kim, her initial perception of Yoon was that he was very shy, whereas Yoon perceived Kim as snobby, so it took them some time to break the ice and establish a good working relationship. At the same time he took a starring role opposite
Ha Jung-woo in
Beastie Boys (also known as
The Moonlight of Seoul), portraying a worker in a
host club;
The Korea Times movie review praised him for his "gripping performance." In 2009, he left his agency
SidusHQ and joined My Name Is Entertainment. After doing a lighter role in the slice-of-life drama
Triple, Yoon starred in the movie
The Executioner, which examined
capital punishment in South Korea; it debuted at the 14th
Busan International Film Festival. Yoon played the role of a junior prison guard who takes up his post after failing an examination, and unluckily finds himself assigned to carry out executions after the only other guard in the prison with such experience quits. Just before the movie came out, he made controversial remarks in an interview with
GQ Korea stating that the South Korean movie industry was dominated by leftists. As controversy rose among internet users over his remarks, he quickly made an apology for what he described as his "ignorance." After his highly anticipated big-budget
Korean War drama
Road No. 1, tanked in the ratings, Yoon said he wanted to play a character "who gets loved by the public" and took on a supporting role as a sweet, kind doctor in romantic comedy
The Greatest Love. The drama's success and Yoon's popularity in it helped bring attention to his next project, the low-budget, gritty
indie Poongsan. Director
Juhn Jai-hong fought to cast Yoon against type as the titular taciturn messenger, saying that he'd been impressed by the piercing gaze Yoon had shown in previous films. Calling it "a meaningful project," Yoon enjoyed the difficult acting challenge of telling the story only through his eyes, facial expressions and body movements. He was recognized with Best Actor nominations from the 2011
Grand Bell Awards and
Blue Dragon Film Awards. After starring in the third season of popular sitcom
High Kick!, he was cast in the action thriller
The Suspect, but withdrew when co-star
Choi Min-sik backed out. He also pulled out from
Acting Class when the big-screen comedy encountered pre-production delays. In May 2012, he transferred to a new agency, A List Entertainment. Then Yoon and close friend, actor Kwon Se-in (who uses the stage name
Kwon Yul) filmed the reality/travelogue program
Real Mate in Sydney for seven days and six nights. Kwon also appeared on ''Yoon Kye-sang's One Table'', a reality show on cable channel O'live that helped fulfill Yoon's dream of owning a restaurant. After honing his cooking skills and learning culinary secrets, Yoon prepared a feast for his former band members
g.o.d on the show's season finale; it was also the first time in eight years all five members of g.o.d appeared on television together. Yoon then appeared in
Kim Jee-woon's short film
One Perfect Day in 2013. He also starred in a Chinese film titled
Hello My Love, which premiered online and garnered over 100 million hits. Yoon then signed with a new talent agency, Saram Entertainment.
2014–present: Reunion with g.o.d and later projects In early 2014 it was announced that
g.o.d's original five members would be reuniting to celebrate the band's 15th anniversary. It also marked Yoon's return to the music industry after a decade. They released their
eighth album in July and afterwards embarked on a successful nationwide concert tour. Yoon wrote the lyrics for the song "Wind" (), which was released after the conclusion of their nationwide tour as a gesture of gratitude to fans. In 2014, Yoon starred in the melodrama series
The Full Sun, in which he played a con man who enters a complicated romance with a jewelry heiress. This was followed by the
romantic comedy film
Red Carpet, in the role of an
adult film director who dreams of making his first commercial feature.
Minority Opinion (also known as
The Unfair), Yoon's film where he played a
public defender whose client is accused of killing a riot policeman during a forced demolition, which had wrapped filming in 2013, finally received a theatrical release in 2015. He next starred in
Last, a cable series based on Kang Hyung-kyu's
webtoon about a fund manager whose financial ruin leads to life among the homeless living underground at
Seoul Station, followed by
Love Guide for Dumpees (titled
A Dramatic Night in Korean), a play-turned-movie about a man and woman who agree to be casual lovers but end up finding something more. In 2016, Yoon was cast in the
Korean remake of American television series
The Good Wife. Yoon then played a disabled man in the film
The Bacchus Lady, a bittersweet drama about an elderly prostitute helmed by
E J-yong. Yoon played a villain role in crime noir
The Outlaws, which premiered in late 2017. He next starred in the thriller
Golden Slumber, playing a friend of the protagonist tasked to chase him down. In 2019, Yoon starred in
Mal-Mo-E: The Secret Mission, which depicts two men who travel the country to collect Korean words in secret in 1910. The same year, he was cast in the fantasy action film
Fluid Renegade. ==Personal life==