ACTOR

Yuki Furukawa

1987 - Today

Photo of Yuki Furukawa

Icon of person Yuki Furukawa

Yuki Furukawa (古川 雄輝, Furukawa Yūki; born 18 December 1987) is a Japanese actor. He gained popularity as Naoki Irie in the 2013 television series Mischievous Kiss: Love in Tokyo and its sequel, Mischievous Kiss 2: Love in Okinawa. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Yuki Furukawa is the 11,525th most popular actor (down from 10,505th in 2019), the 3,211th most popular biography from Japan (down from 2,265th in 2019) and the 324th most popular Japanese Actor.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Yuki Furukawa by language

Loading...

Among ACTORS

Among actors, Yuki Furukawa ranks 11,525 out of 13,578Before him are Jason Hervey, LeToya Luckett, Marta Gastini, Ariel Winter, Teresa Ruiz, and Michael Zegen. After him are Park Jin-joo, Christina Moore, Jim Gaffigan, Rick Gonzalez, Eden Sher, and Hollie Stevens.

Most Popular Actors in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1987, Yuki Furukawa ranks 645Before him are Santiago Giraldo, Fabian Hambüchen, Rebecca Sugar, Sinem Kobal, Edgar Manucharyan, and Alexander Baumjohann. After him are Fyodor Kudryashov, Tiki Gelana, Dmitri Kombarov, Edgar Bruno da Silva, Dani Abalo, and Ekpe Udoh.

Others Born in 1987

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Yuki Furukawa ranks 3,218 out of 6,245Before him are Kenichi Sugano (1971), Tatsuya Morishige (1971), Yoshinori Abe (1972), Susumu Oki (1976), Sotaro Yasunaga (1976), and Jungo Fujimoto (1984). After him are Hideki Yoshioka (1972), Yasuhiko Niimura (1970), Yoshinobu Yamamoto (1998), Ryuji Kato (1969), Ayumi Kaihori (1986), and Junji Sato (1975).

Among ACTORS In Japan

Among actors born in Japan, Yuki Furukawa ranks 324Before him are Keita Machida (1990), Meisa Kuroki (1988), Ai Kago (1988), Inori Minase (1995), Nana Komatsu (1996), and Sota Fukushi (1993). After him are Glenn Howerton (1976), Eita Nagayama (1982), Kensho Ono (1989), Mika Kikuchi (1983), Aoi Koga (1993), and Ami Suzuki (1982).