SEOUL, South Korea — When actor Amy Baik was cast in a South Korean commercial last year, she thought she had landed a promising gig.
But after filming wrapped, she was shocked to learn that both the director and advertiser had cut her scenes — not because of her performance, but because she lacked a facial feature prized in South Korean beauty standards.
''The reason was that I don't have double eyelids,'' said Baik, 26.
''After receiving that feedback, I started to reconsider what kind of appearance Korea wants," she said, adding it "made me wonder how I can survive as an actor in South Korea.''
That experience pushed her toward a different market. The global success of ''Parasite,'' ''Minari'' and ''Squid Game'' has opened doors for South Korean performers in Hollywood — and spawned a cottage industry of consultants helping actors navigate American casting.
''Hollywood's the dream (...) the ultimate pinnacle of acting accolades,'' said Julia Kim, a Korean American casting director who worked on ''Minari,'' Amazon Prime's ''Butterfly'' and ''KPop Demon Hunters.''
While established stars like Park Hae-soo and Lee Byung-hun have both South Korean and American representation, most aspiring Korean actors lack such connections. That gap is what talent agencies like Los Angeles-based Upstage Entertainment are trying to bridge.
Alison Dumbell, a co-founder of Upstage with experience in Bollywood and Los Angeles, said she has noticed more demands for ''characters that are specifically Korean'' than generic ''East Asian'' ones from Western producers. She attributes that shift partly to the global popularity of South Korean entertainment.