Insub "Ins" Choi (Korean: 최인섭; RR: Choe Inseob) is a Korean Canadian actor and playwright best known for his Dora Mavor Moore Award-nominated 2011 play Kim's Convenience[1][2] and its subsequent TV adaptation.
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Ins Choi | |
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Born | 1974 (age 47–48) South Korea |
Education | York University (BFA) University of Toronto (MTS) |
Occupation | Playwright, Screenwriter, Actor |
Choi was born in South Korea and raised in Toronto, Ontario. He is a graduate of the theatre program at York University.[1]
Born Insub Choi in South Korea in 1974, Choi moved to Canada at the age of one and grew up in Scarborough, Ontario, which is now part of Toronto.[3] His father was born in North Korea and "walked south" with his family as a child. Choi's mother grew up in South Korea, where she met and married her husband before emigrating to Canada with Choi and his two older sisters in 1975.[4] His father worked as a pastor of an immigrant church in downtown Toronto that he owned and founded.[5]
An immigration officer misspelled his name as "Insurp" and in Grade 9 Choi began using the name "Danny", inspired by John Travolta's character in Grease.[6] When he attended the acting program at York University, he met other struggling Asian immigrants and began going by Ins, as a shortened form of his birth name.[citation needed]
In high school, Choi played various sports and performed in a school play.[7] After school he worked at convenience stores owned by friends of his parents.[8]
Choi attended North Toronto Collegiate Institute in the early 1990s.[9] He graduated from York University's theatre program in 1998.[3] His first application to the fine arts program at York was rejected.[7] He completed a Master of Theological Studies at Wycliffe College, University of Toronto, graduating in 2002.[3] He credits his success to his studies at Wycliffe, which he believes made him a better writer.[10]
Following his graduation from York University, Choi worked with fu-GEN, a Toronto-based Asian Canadian theatre company, which helped him figure out what he wanted to portray to an audience through his work. He stated that working with fu-GEN showed him "who [he] really was and what [he] really wanted to say mattered in the world of art," and it was there that he first envisioned Kim's Convenience, a play that eventually became a successful television series.[7] He is credited as a co-creator, producer, and main screenwriter on the series, which ended after its fifth season.[11]
Choi's 2013 one-man show, The Subway Stations of the Cross, was inspired by the homeless and mentally ill men he met in parks and public spaces across Toronto.[12] He has also created the show, The Beats and the Breaks, about hip-hop, as well as The KJV: The Bible Show.[13] In 2018 and 2019 Choi toured with his stage show Ins Choi: Songs, Stories and Spoken Word.[14]
In March 2005, Choi married Mari, with whom he has two children. They reside in Toronto.[15] He is a Christian.[16]
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