Veteran Korean Actress Dies at 55 – The Hollywood Reporter
Kang soo-yeon, a veteran Korean actress, has died. She was 55.
The Korea Herald reported that the actress died on Saturday following a cerebral hemorrhage, two days after she was taken to hospital in Southern Seoul for a cardiac arrest.
Kang was born in Seoul in 1966 and began her career as a child actor in the 1970s. In 1977 she appeared in the family drama 3 Stars, followed by a slew of films including Chorus of Doves, Two Tomboys and All That Falls Has Wings.
In 1987 at age 21, Kang became the first Korean actor to win the best acting prize for Kwon-taek Im’s The Surrogate Womb at the 44th Venice Film Festival. Two years later in 1989, she won best actress for Come, Come, Come Upward — another film from the same director — at the Moscow International Film Festival.
Kang took a break from her acting career after the 2011 drama Hanji, in which she also served as a producer; and the short film Jury. In 2015, she was named co-director of the Busan International Film Festival, a position she shared with Lee Yong-kwan and held until 2017.
According to local reports, Kang had recently shot scenes for Netflix original sci-fi movie Jung-E, from Train to Busan director Yeon Sang-ho. The film will debut on the streamer later this year.
A funeral is set for Wednesday, with its committee led by Busan International Film Festival co-founder and current Gangneung International Film Festival chairman Kim Dong-ho. The ceremony will be livestreamed on Korean Film Council’s YouTube channel.