Kang Soo-yeon (; August 18, 1966 – May 7, 2022) was a South Korean actress. An internationally acclaimed star from the mid-1980s to the end of the 1990s, she is often honorifically nicknamed Korea's "first
world star".
Kang began her acting career as a child and gained national recognition with ''A High School Student's Diary'' on KBS 1TV (1983–1984), and the comedy films ''Whale Hunting 2'' (1985) and ''Mimi and Cheolsu's Youth Sketch'' (1987). However, she would remain unknown outside her country until her breakout role in
Im Kwon-taek
Im Kwon-taek (; born December 8, 1934) is one of South Korea's most renowned film directors. In an active and prolific career, his films have won many domestic and international film festival awards, as well as considerable box-office success, ...
's ''
The Surrogate Woman'' (1987). She won the
Volpi Cup for Best Actress at the
44th Venice International Film Festival for this role, making her the first Korean actor to receive an award at a major international film festival. In 1989, she received the Bronze St. George at the
16th Moscow International Film Festival for ''
Come Come Come Upward'' (1989), which further established her "world star" title.
From the early 2000s and onwards however, her output slowed significantly. Kang took years off between film appearances and switched to acting on the small screen, where she achieved moderate success for starring in ''Ladies of the Palace'' (2001–02) on
SBS TV. Her last film that was released during her lifetime was ''Juri'' (2013). After a nine-year gap, she was set to return to film with the Netflix original ''
Jung_E'', directed by
Yeon Sang-ho. The production, which finished filming in January 2022, was released after Kang died, in January 2023.
After collapsing from
cerebral hemorrhage at her home in southern Seoul on May 5, 2022, Kang was transported to hospital and stayed in the ICU for recovery. She never awoke from the coma and died on May 7, 2022.
Career
Kang began professionally acting as a child in 1969.
1970s–1991
As a child actress, Kang appeared in a number of low-profile movies and TV shows in the 1970s and 1980s.
Her career breakthrough happened when she took on a lead role as the vulnerable teenager Ok-nyo in the
Im Kwon-taek
Im Kwon-taek (; born December 8, 1934) is one of South Korea's most renowned film directors. In an active and prolific career, his films have won many domestic and international film festival awards, as well as considerable box-office success, ...
-directed movie ''
The Surrogate Woman''. For the film, she was honored with the
Volpi Cup for Best Actress award at the 1987
Venice International Film Festival as well as the Best Actress Award at the Nantes International Film Festival. The former achievement marked the first time a Korean actor, female or male, had been given an award at the major film festival. At the time, it was still considered shocking to many that South Korea even had a film industry.
[koreanfilm.or]
Brief profile
Retrieved on November 9, 2007
Two years later, ''
Come Come Come Upward'', a
Buddhist
Buddhism, also known as Buddhadharma and Dharmavinaya, is an Indian religion and List of philosophies, philosophical tradition based on Pre-sectarian Buddhism, teachings attributed to the Buddha, a wandering teacher who lived in the 6th or ...
-themed movie also directed by Im, was released. In the film, Kang played the role of Sun-nyeo, a young student who seeks refuge in a monastery to escape from her troubled home; she studies to become a nun and later falls in love. Kang did, in fact, get her head shaved onscreen in the scene when Sun-nyeo becomes a nun.
She personally felt proud of her performance—later stating she felt her ego was insignificant to her portrayal and that it was "natural for
un-nyeoto shave her head", due to the character's wish to be a nun.
Kang won the Bronze St. George at the
16th Moscow International Film Festival for her role in ''Come Come Come Upward'',
establishing further credit as Korea's "world star".
In the same year, she was invited to serve as a juror in the
Tokyo International Film Festival
The is a film festival established in 1985. The event was held biennially from 1985 to 1991 and annually thereafter. According to the FIAPF, it is one of Asia's competitive film festivals and the second largest film festival in Asia behind the ...
. In addition, she later became a member of the jury for the
17th Moscow International Film Festival, in 1991.
1990s
In the 1990s, Kang appeared in a number of movies, the most notable of which are
Jang Sun-woo's ''Road to the Racetrack'' (1991), ''That Woman, That Man'' (1993) by
Kim Ui-seok,
Lee Myung-se's ''Their Last Love Affair'' (1996), and
Im Sang-soo's debut, ''
Girls' Night Out'' (1998). ''Road to the Racetrack'' won her several accolades for best actress at award ceremonies, including the
Baeksang Arts Awards,
Chunsa Film Art Awards, and the
Blue Dragon Film Awards. ''That Woman, That Man'' was a commercial success at the
box office
A box office or ticket office is a place where ticket (admission), tickets are sold to the public for admission to an event. Patrons may perform the transaction at a countertop, through a hole in a wall or window, or at a Wicket gate, wicket. ...
, and she earned another
Baeksang Arts Award for Most Popular Actress (her first being in 1990 for her performance in ''
All That Falls Has Wings'').
By the end of the decade, Kang had acted in 32 movies. After ''Rainbow Trout'' was released in 1999, she cut down her work in film and took to acting on television.
[koreanfilm.or]
Awards List in excel spreadsheet
Retrieved on November 10, 2007 The actress was invited to be a juror in the 5th
Busan International Film Festival, in 2000.
2000s
After a fifteen-year gap, Kang returned to television in 2001. She was given a starring role in ''Ladies of the Palace'' (), a historical drama that aired on
SBS TV. The 150-episode series was successful, and it managed to garner her renewed visibility among mainstream audiences.
Her performance as
Jeong Nan-jeong enabled her to win a ''daesang'', awarded by the channel.
[china.tour2korea.co]
Profile (Chinese)
Retrieved on November 10, 2007
After a hiatus from the movie scene, Kang made her comeback by playing the role of an attorney in ''The Circle''. She then appeared in two more movies, ''
Hanbando'' in 2006 and ''
With a Girl of Black Soil'' in 2007. ''Hanbando'' received largely negative reviews. In 2007, she continued her foray into mainstream TV by acting in the drama miniseries ''Moonhee'' on
MBC TV. On the show, she played the role of a woman who is forced to leave her child she had when she was only eighteen.
2010s and 2020s
Throughout the 2010s, Kang only appeared in two films, one of which was Im Kwon-taek's ''
Hanji'' (2011).
In 2015, she became the co-director for the Busan International Film Festival, but left the board two years later.
In 2022, Kang was given a starring role in
Yeon Sang-ho's sci-fi action film ''
Jung_E'', set in the 22nd century. Filming began in November 2021 and concluded in January 2022. Kang played the role of a researcher at an AI lab who clones the brain of an elite soldier—her mother. The film was released globally on Netflix in January 2023, after Kang's death.
Death
At 5:48 p.m. (
KST) on May 5, 2022, Kang was found unconscious at her home in southern Seoul by
first responder
A first responder is a person with specialized training who is among the first to arrive and provide assistance or incident resolution at the scene of an emergency. First responders typically include Law enforcement, law enforcement officers (co ...
s. They reported that she had suffered a
cardiac arrest
Cardiac arrest (also known as sudden cardiac arrest CA is when the heart suddenly and unexpectedly stops beating. When the heart stops beating, blood cannot properly Circulatory system, circulate around the body and the blood flow to the ...
after collapsing from a
cerebral hemorrhage.
Immediately, she was transported to the local Gangnam Severance Hospital, where she was admitted to the
ICU and became comatose.
After receiving two days of medical treatment at the hospital, Kang died at 3 p.m. on May 7, 2022.
She was cremated at Seoul Memorial Park () and her ashes were buried at the Honor Stone () on May 11, 2022.
Reactions
Jeonju International Film Festival, which incidentally concluded on May 7, 2022, commemorated Kang's legacy through social media, writing: "The Jeonju International Film Festival commemorates the passing of the late actress Kang Soo-yeon, who was a shining star of Korean cinema. I will not forget the legacy she left in the Korean film industry."
Filmography
Source:
[asiandb.co]
Selected Filmography
Retrieved on November 9, 2007
Film
Television
Awards and nominations
State honors
See also
*
Contemporary culture of South Korea
*
List of South Korean actresses
Notes
References and notes
External links
* (in Korean)
*
*
Kang Soo-yeon's profile (Korean)at epg.epg.co.kr
Kang Soo-yeon's filmographyat movies.nytimes.com
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kang, Soo-yeon
1966 births
2022 deaths
20th-century South Korean actresses
21st-century South Korean actresses
Actresses from Seoul
Best Actress for Grand Bell Awards winners
South Korean child actresses
South Korean film actresses
South Korean television actresses
Volpi Cup for Best Actress winners
Best Actress Paeksang Arts Award (film) winners