Choi Eun-hee

Actress

Birthday November 20, 1926

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Gwangju, Gyeonggi Province, Japanese Korea

DEATH DATE 2018-4-16, Gangseo District, Seoul, South Korea (91 years old)

Nationality Japan

#34151 Most Popular

1926

Choi Eun-hee (November 20, 1926 – April 16, 2018 ) was a South Korean actress, who was one of the country's most popular stars of the 1960s and 1970s.

Choi was born in Gwangju, Gyeonggi Province, in 1926.

1947

Her first acting role was in the 1947 film A New Oath.

1948

She rose to fame the following year after starring in the 1948 film The Sun of Night and soon became known as one of the "troika" of Korean film, alongside actresses Kim Ji-mee and Um Aing-ran.

1954

After marrying the director Shin Sang-ok in 1954, the two founded Shin Film.

1958

She starred in many of Shin's iconic films including 1958's A Flower in Hell and 1961's The Houseguest and My Mother.

After she was diagnosed with infertility, they adopted two children together, Jeong-kyun and Myung-kim.

1960

Choi went on to act in over 130 films and was considered one of the biggest stars of South Korean film in the 1960s and 1970s.

1976

In 1976, Choi divorced Shin after seeing news that he had fathered two children with the young actress Oh Su-mi.

1978

In 1978, Choi and her then ex-husband, movie director Shin Sang-ok, were abducted to North Korea, where they were forced to make films until they sought asylum at the U.S. embassy in Vienna in 1986.

Choi's career began to suffer after her divorce, and she traveled to Hong Kong in 1978 to meet with a person posing as a businessman who offered to set up a new film company with her.

In Hong Kong, Choi was abducted and taken to North Korea by the order of Kim Jong-il.

While searching for Choi after her abduction, Shin was also abducted and taken to North Korea soon after.

In North Korea, Choi and Shin were remarried, at Kim's recommendation.

1985

Kim had them make films together, including 1985's Salt, for which Choi won best actress at the 14th Moscow International Film Festival.

Choi later said that the couple was able to make "films with artistic values, instead of just propaganda films extolling the regime," but that she could not forgive Kim for kidnapping her.

While in North Korea, Choi converted to Roman Catholicism.

1986

The couple finally staged their escape in 1986 while on a trip to Vienna, where they fled to the U.S. embassy and requested political asylum.

1999

They returned to South Korea in 1999 after spending a decade in the United States.

They lived in Reston, Virginia, then Beverly Hills, California, before returning to South Korea in 1999.

2015

In 2015, film producer and writer Paul Fischer released an English-language biography of Choi's and Shin's lives titled A Kim Jong-Il Production: The Extraordinary True Story of a Kidnapped Filmmaker.

2016

In January 2016, at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival, in the World Cinema Documentary Competition, a documentary about the North Korean ordeal, entitled The Lovers and the Despot, directed by Robert Cannan and Ross Adam, was presented.

2018

On April 16, 2018, Choi died in hospital where she was due to have a kidney dialysis during the afternoon.

Her death resulted in widespread mourning across South Korea.