Armisen startled discovering he’s ‘quarter Korean’
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 pro-Nazi 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,