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Yoon Jeong-hee

South Korean actress (1944–2023) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yoon Jeong-hee
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Yoon Jeong-hee (Korean: 윤정희; July 30, 1944 – January 19, 2023) was a South Korean actress and beauty pageant titleholder who competed at Miss Korea 1964. She debuted in 1967 in Theatre of Youth. She appeared in about 330 films, and her better known works are New Place [ko] (1979), Woman in Crisis [ko] (1987) and Manmubang (1994). Her last performance was in 2010, in director Lee Chang-dong's film Poetry, for which she won 7 best actress awards including Asia Pacific Screen Award for Best Actress at 4th Asia Pacific Screen Awards,[1] the Grand Bell Award at 47th Grand Bell Awards,[2][3] and Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award at 2011 Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards.[4]

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Career

Yoon was born in Busan, Korea, Empire of Japan and debuted as an actress in 1967 by starring in Cheongchun Geukjang directed by Gang Dae-jin after being chosen in a recruit held by Hapdong Film. Yoon was commonly referred to as one of the "Troika" (three) of the 1960s, along with her rival actresses, Moon Hee and Nam Jeong-im.[5]

She came out of retirement in 2010 to star in Lee Chang-dong's film, Poetry, which won her the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress and the Asia Pacific Screen Award for Best Performance by an Actress.

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Personal life and death

Yoon married noted pianist Kun-Woo Paik in 1974. The couple had a daughter who is a violinist.[6] Yoon resided in Paris, France with her family since her retirement in the mid-1990s,[5] until making her comeback in Lee Chang-dong's Poetry.[7]

Throughout her life, Yoon was a devout Roman Catholic, having been baptized in her junior high school years.[8]

Yoon, who suffered from Alzheimer's disease, died on January 19, 2023, in Paris. She was 78.[2]

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Filmography

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*Note; the whole list is referenced.[9]

More information English title, Korean title ...
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Awards

  • 1967, the 6th Grand Bell Awards : New Actress (청춘극장)[5]
  • 1967, the 5th Blue Dragon Film Awards : Favorite Actress
  • 1968, the 4th Baeksang Arts Awards : Film part, New Actress (안개)
  • 1969, the 6th Blue Dragon Film Awards : Favorite Actress
  • 1970, the 6th Baeksang Arts Awards : Film part, Favorite Actress selected by readers
  • 1970, the 6th Baeksang Arts Awards : Film part, Best Acting Award (독짓는 늙은이)
  • 1970, the 7th Blue Dragon Film Awards : Favorite Actress
  • 1971, the 10th Grand Bell Awards : Best Actress (분례기)
  • 1971, the 7th Baeksang Arts Awards : Film part, Best Acting Award (해변의 정사)
  • 1971, the 7th Baeksang Arts Awards : Film part, Favorite Actress selected by readers
  • 1971, the 8th Blue Dragon Film Awards : Favorite Actress
  • 1972, the 8th Baeksang Arts Awards : Film part, Favorite Actress selected by readers
  • 1972, the 9th Blue Dragon Film Awards : Best Actress (석화촌)
  • 1972, the 9th Blue Dragon Film Awards : Favorite Actress
  • 1973, the 9th Baeksang Arts Awards : Film part, Best Acting Award (석화촌)
  • 1973, the 9th Baeksang Arts Awards : Film part, Favorite Actress selected by readers
  • 1973, the 10th Blue Dragon Film Awards : Best Actress (효녀심청)
  • 1973, the 10th Blue Dragon Film Awards : Favorite Actress
  • 1974, the 10th Baeksang Arts Awards : Film part, Favorite Actress selected by readers
  • 1975, the 11th Baeksang Arts Awards : Film part, Favorite Actress selected by readers
  • 1992, the 12th Korean Association of Film Critics Awards : Best Acting Award(여자) (눈꽃)
  • 1994, the 32nd Grand Bell Awards : Best Actress (만무방)
  • 2010, the 47th Grand Bell Awards : Best Actress (Poetry)
  • 2010, the 31st Blue Dragon Film Awards : Best Actress (Poetry)
  • 2010, the 4th Asia Pacific Screen Awards: Best Performance by an Actress (Poetry)
  • 2010, the 2010 Women in Film Korea Festival: Woman in Film of the Year (Poetry)
  • 2011, the 13th Cinemanila International Film Festival : Best Actress (Poetry)
  • 2011, the 37th Los Angeles Film Critics Association : Best Actress (Poetry)
  • 2018, the 38th Korean Association of Film Critics Awards: Lifetime Award[10]
  • 2023, the Korean Film Achievement Award at the 28th Busan International Film Festival (posthumous).[11]
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References

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