Cape Breton Post

Armisen startled discoverin­g he’s ‘quarter Korean’

- BY KIM TONG-HYUNG

American actor and comedian Fred Armisen has just learned that his grandfathe­r was a legendary dancer from Japan who, while living in Germany in the 1930s and 1940s, allegedly volunteere­d in propaganda work for the Third Reich and moonlighte­d as a spy for the emperor in Tokyo.

But among the startling discoverie­s about his lineage, the “Portlandia’’ star seemed most shocked about what has been general knowledge in the art world — the late Masami Kuni was actually Korean.

“Well, that changes everything,’’ a stunned Armisen said during a recent appearance on the PBS ancestry series “Finding Your Roots,’’ where host Henry Louis Gates Jr. revealed to him that Kuni was born in Korea in 1908 as Park Yeong-in.

“I’m a quarter Korean?’’ Armisen continued in disbelief. “You have to understand that I tell people, that I have interviews where I say I’m quarter Japanese ... I’m not Japanese at all.’’

Before the end of the Second World War, Kuni was seen as an influentia­l dancer, choreograp­her and theorist whose work bridged Asian traditions and European modern dance. However, he received less recognitio­n after the 1950s, apparently because of his past as a proNazi artist, according to South Korean dance scholar Okju Son, who wrote a study about Kuni in 2014.

While living in Germany from 1937 to 1945, Kuni staged dozens of performanc­es in Germany and other European countries such as Italy and Hungary, according to Son. It was during this time when Kuni had a brief affair with a young German woman who gave birth to Armisen’s father in 1941, according to “Finding Your Roots.’’

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