Bangkok Post

South Korea’s Youn Yuh-jung ready for Oscars

Youn Yuh-jung never dreamed of acting. Now she’s an Oscar nominee for Minari

- CARLOS AGUILAR

For her 60th birthday, veteran Korean star Youn Yuh-jung made herself a promise. She would collaborat­e only with those she trusts. Even if their ventures fell short, as long as she personally appreciate­d the people making them, the result wouldn’t much concern her.

That late-life philosophy, born of decades of limited choices and profession­al trauma, brought her to Minari, director Lee Isaac Chung’s semi-autobiogra­phical story about a Korean family putting down roots in Arkansas. Youn’s bitterswee­t performanc­e as the grandmothe­r, Soonja, in the tenderhear­ted immigrant drama has earned her an Academy Award nomination for best supporting actress, the first for a Korean actress. The film is now available in Thai cinemas.

“Me, a 73-year-old Asian woman could have never even dreamed about being nominated for an Oscar,” Youn said via video call from her home in Seoul. “Minari brought me a lot of gifts.”

As she recounted this triumph and the many pitfalls that preceded it, her pensive expression often broke into an affable smile, cheerful laughter even. Dressed in a demure black top and long necklace, there was an effortless grace to her serene presence. She came off unhurried and welcoming but determined to make her ideas understood. Occasional­ly she asked a friend off-camera for help with certain English words to hit each point more precisely.

She expressed surprise at the fact that co-star Steven Yeun was the first Asian-American performer to receive a nomination for best actor.

“All I can say is: It’s about time! The success of Parasite has definitely helped” get more recognitio­n for Korean performers, she said.

That movie, directed by Bong Joon-ho, was the first not in English to win best picture, and it has figured into Youn’s Oscar run in other ways.

She had returned from shooting a new project in Vancouver, British Columbia, an Apple TV drama titled Pachinko, just in time to hear the announceme­nt of her nomination. First, she felt numb. Then the Korean news media began effusively reporting on her chances.

“It’s very stressful. They think I’m a soccer player or an Olympian,” she said, adding: “That pressure is really hard on me.” Because of Bong’s movie, “they have hope I can win. I keep telling him it’s all because of you!”

Bong, a fan of Kim Ki-young’s Woman Of Fire, the 1971 film in which Youn made her feature debut, envied her awards-season experience during the pandemic.

“He told me, ‘You’re lucky you can just sit down and do Zoom calls. In America they have an awards race and you have to go here and there and everywhere.’ I thought running races were only for horses,” she said.

She’s making a strong push to the finish. Youn is nominated at last week’s SAG Awards for her performanc­e and as part of the Minari ensemble. She’s also up for an Independen­t Spirit Award later this month. And she’s already won accolades from more than 20 groups of critics.

They’re the latest turn in a career that covers more than 50 years in Korean television and film — including a recent cooking reality show titled Youn’s Kitchen and a new nonfiction series set in a guesthouse, Youn’s Stay — but the self-taught thespian never envisioned a life in the performing arts. Her internatio­nal breakthrou­gh seems to her, like everything else along the way, fortuitous.

‘‘ A 73-year-old Asian woman could have never even dreamed about being nominated

“It’s embarrassi­ng,” she said. “Most people fell in love with the movies or fell in love with theatre. But in my case, it was just an accident.”

When she was a teenager in the early 1960s, an emcee for a children’s game show saw her touring a TV station and invited her to pass out gifts to the audience: “I got the check after that, and it was good money.”

Similar jobs ensued until a director suggested she audition for a drama. Although she was hesitant, necessity propelled her: She had failed her college entrance exam, causing her mother profound shame, she said. (After publicatio­n of this article online, her representa­tives clarified that she passed but with a low score that meant she couldn’t get into a top-tier college.)

“To tell you the truth, I didn’t know what acting was,” she said. “I tried to memorise the line and do whatever they asked me to do. At the time, I didn’t know if I was enjoying it or if I disliked it.”

But as she was on the rise in the mid-1970s, Youn married and moved to Florida, where her husband attended a university. She spent nearly a decade as a housewife raising her two American-born children, but then she divorced and returned to Korea as a single mother. Her fame had vanished, and ingrained sexism in Korean society made resuming her career a cruel pursuit.

“The audience would call and say, ‘She is a divorcee. She shouldn’t be on television,’” she recalled, adding: “Now they like me very much. That’s very strange, but that’s human.”

To put her two sons through college, she accepted parts almost indiscrimi­nately. But turning 60 — and no longer obligated to financiall­y support her family — meant she could invest only in people she believed in, such as auteur Hong Sang-soo, who occasional­ly frustrates her for the many takes he requests, and Im Sang-soo, who cast her in roles unheard of for a Korean actress of her age. In The Taste Of Money (2013), for example, Youn embodies a powerful woman who sexually harasses her younger male secretary.

Youn’s close friend Lee In-ah, a producer, introduced her to Chung at a film festival in Busan. Chung, like Bong, revered her in Woman Of Fire, and his knowledge or her early work impressed her. She wanted to know more about him.

“Everybody teases me about this now,” she said. “I fell in love with Isaac because he is a very quiet man. I wish he was my son too.”

Intense preparatio­n had always served as Youn’s shield against self-consciousn­ess about her background.

“I didn’t go to acting school and I didn’t study film, so I had an inferiorit­y complex. I practised so hard when I got a script,” she said.

But she is sceptical about further prospects in Hollywood. Youn, who often apologised during the interview for how blunt she thinks she sounds in a tongue not her own, fears that her lack of English proficienc­y may impede her. But given time to learn her dialogue, she is willing to try.

“Come to think of it, it was all worth it,” Youn said. “At the time, I was suffering with only small roles and most people hated me. I thought about just quitting or going back to the States.” But she’s a survivor, she said. “I’m still alive and finally enjoying acting.” © 2021

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 ??  ?? Youn Yuh-jung in Seoul, South Korea.
Youn Yuh-jung in Seoul, South Korea.
 ??  ?? Youn Yuh-jung, right, in
Minari.
Youn Yuh-jung, right, in Minari.

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