SHIN Seong-il, the towering figure of Korean cinema who appeared in well over 500 films during his 50-year career, passed away on Sunday, November 4 following his battle with lung cancer. The actor was 81 years old and is survived by his wife, fellow actress
UM Aeng-ran, as well as his son and two daughters.
Born in Daegu in 1937, SHIN (born
KANG Shin-young) quickly found fame through his debut, the now-classic
A Romantic Papa (1960). He established himself as the most in-demand leading man of the Korean film industry in the 1960s and 70s, as his popularity lasted beyond the industry’s so-called Golden Era. He was particularly prolific between 1964 and 1971, when he clocked up 324 credits, which was over a quarter of the 1,194 features produced in the country during that period.
SHIN was first regarded as a youth icon in the early 1960s, owing to works such as
KIM Kee-duk’s
The Barefooted Young (1964). Subsequently, he branched out into other roles and worked with all the leading directors of the period, including
KIM Soo-yong (
Mist, 1967),
LEE Man-hee (
A Day Off, 1968),
SHIN Sang-ok (
The Eunuch, 1968) and
KIM Ki-young (
Ban Geum-ryun - produced in the mid-1970s but only released in 1981). In his later career he continued to work with major talent, such as
IM Kwon-taek (
Gilsotteum, 1986). The
Busan International Film Festival devoted its Korean Cinema Retrospective section to the thespian last year. SHIN’s final work was in 2013’s
Door to the Night.
Director
PARK Chan-wook is known to have compared the actor to such world cinema luminaries as Gregory PECK and Alain DELON. Describing his incalculable contribution to Korean cinema, the director said: “Without understanding
SHIN Seong-il, it is hard to get a grasp of either Korean film history or Korean modern cultural history.”
Prior to his death, SHIN had signed on to appear in
Small but Certain Happiness (translated title), a new project by classic filmmaker
LEE Jang-ho, in which he would have co-starred with fellow acting titan
AHN Sung-ki. The project was expected to go into production next year.