Iconic S. Korean actress Yun Jung-hee dies in Paris at 79

SEOUL — Iconic South Korean actress Yun Jung-hee, who had long suffered Alzheimer’s disease, has died in France at the age of 79.

She died in Paris on Thursday (local time), a movie industry official said. Her family did not release an official statement.

Born in 1944 in the southeastern port city of Busan, Yun rose to stardom with her debut film, “Sorrowful Youth” (1967), which she was cast for through an audition while attending Chosun University.

Yun is considered a prominent figure in Korean cinema with a prolific, acclaimed career, named as one of a “troika” of actresses, along with Moon Hee and Nam Jeong-im, in the 1960s.

The actress captured the audience and critics alike with a wide range of acting, appearing in some 280 works and earning over 20 best actress awards at domestic ceremonies.

She starred in a number of movies from the 1960s to 1980s, and is best known for “Mist” (1967), “Longing in Every Heart” (1967), “An Old Potter” (1969) and “A Shaman’s Story” (1972).

She won the best actress prize from the Blue Dragon Film Awards, one of Korea’s major film honors, for “Oyster Village” (1972), which was nominated for a Golden Bear at the 22nd Berlin International Film Festival.

Her 1981 work “Liberal Wife ’81” was the most-watched movie of the year.

Leaving behind “Manmubang” in 1994, Yun disappeared from the public view as she moved to France with her husband, renowned pianist Paik Kun-woo, and a daughter.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

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