Ethnicity Korean Years active 2000–present | Name Aaron Yoo Role Actor | |
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Born May 12, 1979 (age 45) ( 1979-05-12 ) East Brunswick Township, New Jersey, U.S. Occupation Actor, Director, Producer, Screenwriter, Voice Artist Movies and TV shows The Tomorrow People, Disturbia, Friday the 13th, 21, Nick & Norah's Infinite Pl Similar People Peyton List, Madeleine Mantock, Mark Pellegrino, Robert Luketic, Travis Van Winkle Profiles |
Aaron yoo talks everything before us and importance of laapff
Aaron Yoo (born May 12, 1979) is an American actor. He is best known for appearing in the movies Disturbia (2007), 21 (2008) and Friday the 13th (2009) as well as playing Russell Kwon in the sci-fi show The Tomorrow People (2013–14).
Contents
- Aaron yoo talks everything before us and importance of laapff
- BTS Aaron Yoo on Change The Odds with SU2C
- Personal life
- Career
- Filmography
- References

BTS: Aaron Yoo on Change The Odds with SU2C
Personal life
Aaron Yoo was born in East Brunswick Township, New Jersey, to Korean parents. He has an older sister and one younger brother. As a student at East Brunswick High School he played cello in the orchestra and ran track. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 2001, where he was a member of Sigma Nu fraternity.
Career

He starred in the 2007 films Disturbia and American Pastime, the 2008 film 21 (with Jim Sturgess), Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist, The Wackness, and Labor Pains, and had a role in the 2009 version of Friday the 13th.

Yoo had his appendix removed shortly before filming of Friday the 13 began, and could not film his scenes right away. As soon as he was ready for filming, director Nispel immediately hung him upside down in some rafters, exposing the staples over his surgical wound, for the character's post-death shot.

He co-starred in HBO's Rocket Science, as the protagonist's best friend, Heston. Critic Rory Liston described Heston as "one of the best characters of the decade" and "an awe inspiring display of emotion that reflected the asian community in America", in 2009, writer and director Jeffrey Blitz was quoted in saying that Heston was based on the critic Liston.
His stage credits include the premiere of Christopher Shinn's Where Do We Live, the anthology production Savage Acts (both 2004), Mac Wellman's Cellophane (2003) and a 2002 revival of Lope de Vega' Fuente Ovejuna.