Now Reading
SR International: Steven Yeun, Marvel’s New Man Talks About His Rise, His New Beef, His Superpower + More

SR International: Steven Yeun, Marvel’s New Man Talks About His Rise, His New Beef, His Superpower + More

steven-yeun-net-worth-style-rave

Yeun broke big just over a decade ago, playing the heroic Glenn Rhee on “The Walking Dead,” the smash-hit postapocalyptic zombie-horror-action series that drew over 17 million viewers to a single episode at its peak. Playing one of the show’s best-loved roles, Yeun was a crucial part of its appeal. And yet the acting jobs he’s taken on since have tended toward the idiosyncratic, artistically ambitious, and, frequently, small. Steven Yeun Net Worth

steven-yeun-net-worth-style-rave

Whether he’s playing a charming, possibly sociopathic, playboy in the critically acclaimed Korean indie “Burning;” a first-generation immigrant ’80s-era dad in “Minari,” for which Steven Yeun—who reportedly has a net worth of $5 million, according to Celebrity Net Worth—was nominated for best actor at the 2021 Oscars, or a damaged former child actor–turned–theme park impresario in Jordan Peele’s “Nope,” Yeun’s choices have been consistently unpredictable. Rather than returning to the action-hero milieu and coasting on familiar waters, he’s set about establishing himself as an actor of extraordinary subtlety and depth.

Here are a few things Steve Yeun revealed to WSJ. Magazine…

Yeun on his life as a father:

steven-yeun-net-worth-style-rave

“My entire life is Peppa Pig and Pokémon,”

Yeun on how Lee Sung Jin pitched him the idea for Beef:

“He said, ‘I have this idea about a road-rage incident, where two people get into it, and it spirals, and they kind of destroy each other’s lives,’ ” Yeun recalls. “I was, like, ‘That one! What is that?!’ ”

Lee Sung Jin on Yeun’s character in Beef:

“He has to be this self-destructive, burdened guy with a huge chip on his shoulder—and you have to root for him, and he has to be funny.”

Yeun on the work he’s drawn to:

steven-yeun-net-worth-style-rave

“I love that feeling of, ‘Oh, I had no idea it was this until I got there. I’d hate to do a project where I have a road map for where it’s supposed to go. That doesn’t sound like fun.”

“I really don’t like feeling boxed in,” Yeun says now. “I don’t like feeling trapped.”

Yeun on Beef’s dark humor:

“I wasn’t aware until Ali told me, ‘I was laughing at that.’ I was, like, ‘You were laughing? It’s a deeply moving scene!’ ” Yeun smiles. “It’s inherently funny to watch someone try not to cry, then give into it, but it took me a second to step back and see the duality in it.”

Yeun on his cultural identity:

Yeun—describing himself “as a third-culture person,” feeling neither fully American nor fully Korean—says he found in Korean-American churches “a different kind of life that can be lived in that structure, where you’re not put upon by the outside, majority world.”

Yeun on his parent’s wish that he become a doctor:

“I was dog shit at science,” he says. “Horrible!” But he loved comedy. “I don’t know if I’d call myself a comedian, but I could tell a funny story, and I knew what was funny. I watched Pryor, Chris Rock, early Dave Chappelle, old Mitch Hedberg, Steve Martin, Adam Sandler, all the greats,” he says. One day on campus, “I saw an improv troupe and said, ‘That looks fun,’ so I jumped in.” Steven Yeun Net Worth

Yeun on his comedic skills:

“My skill was never wit,” he recalls. “I always envied those guys. There were a couple of heavies I remember, where they were always on. Bam- bam-bam, hitting the joke. I couldn’t do that. But what I could do was really commit to the scene, and play the part as real as possible. Nothing’s funnier than real life.” He grins. “Real life is f—ing hilarious.”

Yeun on his relationship with his Walking Dead co-stars:

steven-yeun-net-worth-style-rave

“I just saw Andy, I talk to Jon, I talk to Norman. Norman’s the shit.” But while making The Walking Dead, he began to chafe at what he sometimes saw as his character’s limited dimensionality. “I felt like I was servicing a concept of goodness,” he has said, “as opposed to engaging with Glenn’s humanity.”

Yeun on his spiritual quest:

“I didn’t like being ostracized or objectified or isolated in that way, in a place that’s not about being isolated.” What ensued was a program of personal searching that hasn’t stopped since. “I can touch parts of Christianity that make sense to me,” Yeun says. “I can touch parts of Buddhism, I can touch Nietzsche. I’m not looking for a defined space of spirituality. I’m just trying to make sense of it, however it makes sense.”

Yeun on his past drug use:

“I came to a lot of things late,” he explains, and as a result, “I went a little ham with that stuff, trying to make up for lost time.” That was before he had kids, but he remains curious about psychedelics: “It’s becoming standard to do DMT or lick a toad. I haven’t done that, but I’d like to, at some point.”

Yeun on using drugs to quiet his mind and his tendency to overthink, which he believes is both his curse and his superpower:

“For me, it was the slowing down of my mind that was really effective and necessary,”

“It’s the way I’ve been since I was 4, when I got dropped here and my brain went into a hyperdrive of self-defense,” Yeun says. “I can obsess over something. I can be taken down by thoughts.”

Yeun on his cultural identity:

“When I was growing up, I was more messed up by the thoughts of others,” he tells me. “ ‘What does that person think I am?’ Then the tension becomes, ‘I need to show people I’m not that,’ but then you’re working against an ideal you created yourself—it’s not a fun place to exist.” And yet, he says, “I was pretty clear about who I was, to myself, from a really early age, and so life had been me mostly trying to explain myself.” In those interviews, “I was trying to make it so that I could stop explaining myself.”

“Culture is great, it’s beautiful, but that’s not the depth of who we are,” Yeun says. His hope with the show is that no matter who you are, “You’re able to see it and say, ‘Oh, that’s me. I’m not part of that culture, but that’s me.’ ” He thinks about it for a second. “Isn’t that the ultimate goal for any outsider group? To say, ‘Oh, you relate to me; we’re the same.’ ”

Friend Conan O’Brian on Yeun:

“He’s a naturally superlative ‘yes and’ improviser, and so much fun to play around with,” says Conan O’Brien, who in 2015 took Yeun to a Korean spa in LA for a segment on O’Brien’s show that went viral. “He’s open for anything, which is unusual, because often if someone’s building an enormously successful acting career the way Steven was when I first met him, they might think twice before saying, ‘Yeah, I’ll go to Wi Spa with Conan and take off all my clothes!’ ” O’Brien adds, “I think he’s immune to taking himself too seriously.”

Co-star Ali Wong on Yeun:

“I was intimidated by Steven because he’s such an incredible actor,” she says. She communicated something of that anxiousness to him, “and he just shrugged, looked me in the eye and said, ‘I don’t know anything that you don’t know.’ That really set the tone for everything.” Steven Yeun Net Worth

Watch…

Read the full article here.

Images: Yoshiyuki Matsumura for WSJ. Magazine


For the latest in fashion, lifestyle, and culture, follow us on Instagram @StyleRave_


—Read Also

Subscribe

Never miss the latest. Subscribe Now

    Style Rave participates in various affiliate marketing programs, which means we may get paid commissions on editorially chosen products purchased through our links to retailer sites.

    All rights reserved. No digital content on this website may not be reproduced, published, broadcasted, cached, rewritten, or redistributed in whole or in part without prior
    express written permission from STYLE RAVE. Use of and/or registration on any portion of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

    Copyright © 2024 Style Rave NG LLC, dba STYLE RAVE

    Scroll To Top