Andrew Koji Physique – Celebrity Body Type One (BT1), Male

Andrew Koji Physique - Celebrity Body Type One (BT1), Male

Celebrity Body Types: Andrew Koji (Andrew Julian Hiroaki Koji)

Biological Gender: Male/Man

The Four Body Types Scientific Identification: Standard Body Type One, BT1

Degree of Skinny Fat: None to Minimal

Date of Birth: November 10, 1987

Age: 38 (as of 2026)

Birth Place: Epsom, Surrey, England, United Kingdom

Philanthropy: Make Noise Today (empowering Asian American and Pacific Islander/AAPI youth)

Partner: Single

Previous Relationships: Unavailable

Net Worth (Estimated): $2 million

Social Media: None

Career: Hollywood actor

Unscientific Body Types Correlations: Somatotype/Mesomorph, Hormone/Adrenal



Skinny Fat Details:


Body Type One celebrity Andrew Koji is showing no obvious signs of skinny fat (lack of genetic muscle, IE cellulite, thin fat, normal weight obesity) anywhere on his body. The full development of his vertebrae (posture) and muscles/muscle mass is currently not in debate.

Science recognizes that one pound of muscle burns six calories per day, but one pound of regular fat (white fat/yellow fat/excess fat) and/or skinny fat only burns two to three calories. Which directly affects metabolism (the more skinny fat and/or regular fat, the slower the metabolism) as well as genetic body composition and shape. Having a strong metabolism because of all that muscle and muscle mass, no less, is an advantage that a fully developed BT1 typically offers, including aging gracefully.

Diet, exercise, lifestyle, metabolic rate (BMR), and BMI matter. But so do genes/genetics/DNA. It will be interesting to see how well Andrew Koji successfully maintains his body shape physique/figure as he continues to age. Is he perhaps a Body Type Two?

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Bio:


Hollywood actor, martial artist, and stunt double Andrew Koji began his entertainment career as a teenager, working as an extra in the film industry and making short films. While training in martial arts, at the age of 18, he moved to Thailand and continued to do small jobs in the film industry. A few years in Japan’s film industry led to his return to London to study at the Actors’ Temple Studio, which included initial stage performances in Richard III and A Streetcar Named Desire. Subsequently, he landed his first major motion picture part in the film FB: Fighting Beat (2007).

Expanding his martial arts training, he studied and competed in taekwondo as well as Shaolin kung fu at the Shaolin Temple UK. Paying his dues, diverse movie roles in 20th Century Boys 2: The Last Hope (2009), The Missing Day (2011), Fast & Furious 6 (2013, stunt double), Scrutiny (2013), A Situation (2013), #aiww: The Arrest of Ai Weiwei (2013), Luck (2015), Deep Pan Fury (2015), Trendy (2017), and Snake Eyes (2021) culminated with his breakout role in the film Bullet Train (2022) alongside Brad Pitt.

Broadening his horizons, he made his first television appearance in the BBC One medical drama Casualty (2010, 2015). Bit parts in the TV series Seconds from Disaster (2012, National Geographic), The Wrong Mans (2013, BBC Two/Hulu), Acquitted (2015, TV2), Call the Midwife (2016, BBC One/PBS), The Innocents (2018, Netflix), American Gods (2019, STARZ), and Peaky Blinders (2019, BBC One) nearly ended with him quitting acting due to too few opportunities.

Hollywood Actor Andrew Koji Body Type One Physique

 

Inspired by his agent and mother, he submitted an audition tape for the lead role of Ah Sahm in the Cinemax series Warrior (2019-23). He won the part, which launched him to fame. To date, he has performed in the movies Seneca – On the Creation of Earthquakes (2023), Boy Kills World (2024), Worth the Wait (2025), and Street Fighter (2026. His next project is High Stakes Holiday (TBD). Moreover, his television credits include Black Doves (2024, Netflix), Gangs of London (2025-Present, Sky Atlantic/AMC+), and Steal (2026, Amazon Prime Video).

As well, he has graced the stage with appearances in The Arrest of Ai Weiwei (2013, Hampstead Theatre), Hidden (Royal Court Theatre), In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel (2016, Charing Cross Theatre), and A Tale of Two Cities (2017, Regents Park Open Air Theatre), to name a few. He also featured in the video games Final Fantasy XIV and Black Myth: Wukong. Andrew Koji’s demanding acting and martial arts responsibilities, along with diet, exercise, and lifestyle choices, likely help increase his metabolic rate and encourage the burning of more calories, which assist with keeping any excess fat weight at bay, thus allowing him to maintain his body shape physique/figure.

Review the Body Type Science Data or take the Scientific Body Type Quiz/Test for women and men.


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