Youn Yuh-jung

Actress

Birthday June 19, 1947

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Kaesong, Gyeonggi Province, Korea (present-day Kaesong, North Hwanghae Province, North Korea)

Age 76 years old

Nationality North Korea

#18658 Most Popular

1947

Youn Yuh-jung (, ; born June 19, 1947) is a South Korean actress, whose career in film and television spans over five decades.

Her accolades include an Academy Award, a Screen Actors Guild Award, a British Academy Film Award, two Independent Spirit Awards, and a nomination for a Critics' Choice Movie Award.

She has starred in many South Korean television series and films.

Youn Yuh-jung was born on June 19, 1947, in Kaesong, Gyeonggi Province, North Korea.

She is the eldest daughter of a family with three daughters.

Her father died when she was young.

The family fled the city during the first and fourth retreat of the Korean War.

She attended Changsin Elementary School and later Ewha Girls' High School in Seoul, South Korea.

1960

By the late 1960s, Youn was a rising star in South Korea and won several awards for her role in Woman of Fire (1971).

1966

She graduated from high school in 1966.

Afterwards, she enrolled at Hanyang University, with a major in Korean Language and Literature.

When she passed open acting auditions held by TBC in 1966, she dropped out of college.

1967

After dropping out of college, Youn made her acting debut in the television drama Mister Gom in 1967.

1971

Youn shot to stardom in 1971 with two memorable portrayals of femme fatales.

Her first film, Kim Ki-young's Woman of Fire, became a critical and commercial hit, for which she won Best Actress at the Sitges Film Festival.

This was followed by the MBC historical drama Jang Hui-bin where she played the titular infamous royal concubine.

1972

Kim was considered Korea's first style-conscious, experimental director, and Youn did not balk in playing risque, provocative characters that explore the grotesque in the female psyche in collaborations with him such as The Insect Woman (1972) and Be a Wicked Woman (1990).

Audiences found Youn's fast way of speaking and atypical appearance refreshing and she frequently took roles in TV dramas depicting a modern woman of the new generation, notably in Stepmother (1972) written by Kim Soo-hyun.

1973

In December 1973, she followed her fiancée, singer Jo Young-nam, to the United States.

She worked at a supermarket for $2.75 an hour to raise her two sons in St. Petersburg, Florida.

1974

At the peak of her career, Youn retired after she married singer Jo Young-nam in 1974, then immigrated to the United States.

1980

She retired from the spotlight for several years before returning to acting in the late 1980s.

1984

She returned to Korea in 1984 and divorced her husband three years afterwards.

Youn has two sons, both of whom are Korean Americans.

Her sister Youn Yeo-soon is a former executive at LG Group.

In 1984, she returned to Korea and permanently resumed her acting career.

1987

She and Jo divorced in 1987 and struggled to resume her acting career due to the stigma of divorce in South Korea.

Making a comeback after taking a long break was an unusual feat for a Korean middle-aged actress.

Although most actresses her age played clichéd self-sacrificing mothers or coarse ajummas, Youn's acting range led to her being cast in more complex, stylish, and independent roles.

1995

She is also known for her matriarch roles in the South Korean family drama series Men of the Bath House (1995), Be Strong, Geum-soon! (2005), Daughters-in-Law (2007), My Husband Got a Family (2012), and Dear My Friends (2016).

In 2022, she appeared in the period drama Pachinko on Apple TV+.

2003

In A Good Lawyer's Wife (2003), she drew critical acclaim for her Nonchalant acting as a mother-in-law who neglected her husband dying of liver cancer and enjoyed extramarital affairs.

2009

Her frank and confident persona again manifested itself in E J-yong's mockumentary Actresses (2009).

2010

Besides Woman of Fire and Minari, Youn is known for her work in the South Korean films The Housemaid (2010), The Taste of Money (2012), The Bacchus Lady (2016), and Canola (2016).

Youn continued playing supporting roles in film and television, such as in The Housemaid (2010).

2012

She reunited with director Im Sang-soo for the fourth time in The Taste of Money (2012), as a cruel chaebol heiress at the center of the drama that unfolds and touches upon the themes of corruption, greed and sex.

Youn said "I don't mind being called an old actress, but I do worry about how to carry on my acting career without looking like an old fool."

2013

In 2013, she was cast as a loving mother to three loser children in Song Hae-sung's Boomerang Family.

2020

She gained international recognition for her role in Minari (2020).

Her critically acclaimed portrayal of Soon-ja in the film made her the first Korean actress to win a Screen Actors Guild Award, an Independent Spirit Award, a British Academy Film Award, and an Academy Award, as well as the first to be nominated for a Critics' Choice Movie Award, all in the Best Supporting Actress category.