<p>Septuagenarian Youn Yuh-jung, the first South Korean actress nominated for an Oscar, has spent decades portraying nonconformist characters, from a vicious heiress to an ageing prostitute, challenging social norms in both her career and life.</p>.<p>Her role in "Minari", a family drama about Korean immigrants in the US, is more conventional: grandmother to a mischievous young boy trying to fit into rural Arkansas.</p>.<p>The film secured six Academy Award nominations last week, also including best picture, best director and best actor.</p>.<p>That raises the prospect of a second multi-Oscar haul for a Korean-language film in successive years, after "Parasite" became the first non-English Best Picture winner in 2020 -- though it did not snag any acting nominations.</p>.<p>Youn played down excitement over her chance to make history at next month's ceremony, saying: "I don't enjoy competition."</p>.<p>"This is not a playoff game of actors, placing them in order. I consider this nomination just as valuable as the actual award."</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/formal-in-person-oscars-in-hands-of-veteran-director-964098.html" target="_blank">Read | 'Formal' in-person Oscars in hands of veteran director</a></strong></p>.<p>Her two grown sons are Asian-Americans and she said she had taken a role in "this small movie made by second-generation Korean-Americans" for its own reward.</p>.<p>Based on director Lee Isaac Chung's experiences growing up in the 1980s, "Minari" follows a Korean-born father who moves his family to an all-white town in rural Arkansas in pursuit of a better life.</p>.<p>Bong Joon-ho, who earned last year's Best Director Oscar for dark satire "Parasite", said the role was "the loveliest character Youn has ever played".</p>.<p>It is the latest of several grandmotherly castings for Youn, who has already picked up a host of best-supporting actress awards at US film festivals and is on the shortlist for a Screen Actors Guild Award.</p>.<p>Busan International Film Festival programme director Nam Dong-chul told <em>AFP </em>that Youn's Oscar nomination "acknowledges an extraordinary actress who has pioneered her own path for a very long time".</p>.<p>"I don't think she ever intended to break into the international film scene," he said, "but throughout decades she has developed a fine taste when choosing her projects".</p>.<p>In a career spanning more than 50 years, Youn has often played provocative and atypical characters who do not conform to the rules of socially conservative Korean society.</p>.<p>Born in 1947 in Kaesong — now in North Korea — she made her film debut in groundbreaking director Kim Ki-young's 1971 "Woman of Fire", as the live-in maid to a middle-class household who becomes impregnated by the father of the family.</p>.<p>The thriller was a critical and commercial hit, and remains a classic of modern South Korean cinema. But Youn's first heyday came to an abrupt end in 1975, when she married singer Jo Young-nam and the couple moved to the US.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/riz-ahmed-on-being-the-first-muslim-nominated-for-the-best-actor-oscar-962648.html" target="_blank">Read | Riz Ahmed on being the first Muslim nominated for the Best Actor Oscar</a></strong></p>.<p>Youn returned to South Korea in 1984. But after divorcing Jo three years later, she battled heavy stigma to resume her acting career to support her two children.</p>.<p>"To be divorced was like having the scarlet letter at the time," Youn told a local magazine in 2009.</p>.<p>"There was this thing that dictated women shouldn't make TV appearances so soon after their divorce."</p>.<p>She countered by accepting every role she was offered, however small.</p>.<p>"I worked very hard. I had this mission of somehow feeding my children. I'd say yes even when I was asked to climb 100 stairs."</p>.<p>By the 1990s Youn was a regular in TV dramas, often portraying mothers, and later grandmothers.</p>.<p>In 2003, Youn made her film comeback in director Im Sang-soo's "A Good Lawyer's Wife", as an unconventional mother-in-law in a dysfunctional family.</p>.<p>She played a cruel and rich heiress betrayed by her husband in Im's 2012 thriller "Taste of Money", and an ageing haenyeo -- the women of Jeju island who free-dive to collect shellfish -- reunited with her long-lost granddaughter in 2016 drama "Canola".</p>.<p>Also in 2016, she was praised for her role in E J-yong's drama "The Bacchus Lady" as an elderly prostitute -- a veteran of the brothels set up for US soldiers in the South -- who becomes involved in the deaths of former clients.</p>.<p>Youn is "one of the few leading actresses of her generation" to have worked consistently in Korean cinema over the last two decades, said Jason Bechervaise, a professor at Korea Soongsil Cyber University.</p>.<p>She had to navigate, he added, the "fiercely competitive waters" of a film and television industry "largely focused on young and often male talent for leading roles".</p>
<p>Septuagenarian Youn Yuh-jung, the first South Korean actress nominated for an Oscar, has spent decades portraying nonconformist characters, from a vicious heiress to an ageing prostitute, challenging social norms in both her career and life.</p>.<p>Her role in "Minari", a family drama about Korean immigrants in the US, is more conventional: grandmother to a mischievous young boy trying to fit into rural Arkansas.</p>.<p>The film secured six Academy Award nominations last week, also including best picture, best director and best actor.</p>.<p>That raises the prospect of a second multi-Oscar haul for a Korean-language film in successive years, after "Parasite" became the first non-English Best Picture winner in 2020 -- though it did not snag any acting nominations.</p>.<p>Youn played down excitement over her chance to make history at next month's ceremony, saying: "I don't enjoy competition."</p>.<p>"This is not a playoff game of actors, placing them in order. I consider this nomination just as valuable as the actual award."</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/formal-in-person-oscars-in-hands-of-veteran-director-964098.html" target="_blank">Read | 'Formal' in-person Oscars in hands of veteran director</a></strong></p>.<p>Her two grown sons are Asian-Americans and she said she had taken a role in "this small movie made by second-generation Korean-Americans" for its own reward.</p>.<p>Based on director Lee Isaac Chung's experiences growing up in the 1980s, "Minari" follows a Korean-born father who moves his family to an all-white town in rural Arkansas in pursuit of a better life.</p>.<p>Bong Joon-ho, who earned last year's Best Director Oscar for dark satire "Parasite", said the role was "the loveliest character Youn has ever played".</p>.<p>It is the latest of several grandmotherly castings for Youn, who has already picked up a host of best-supporting actress awards at US film festivals and is on the shortlist for a Screen Actors Guild Award.</p>.<p>Busan International Film Festival programme director Nam Dong-chul told <em>AFP </em>that Youn's Oscar nomination "acknowledges an extraordinary actress who has pioneered her own path for a very long time".</p>.<p>"I don't think she ever intended to break into the international film scene," he said, "but throughout decades she has developed a fine taste when choosing her projects".</p>.<p>In a career spanning more than 50 years, Youn has often played provocative and atypical characters who do not conform to the rules of socially conservative Korean society.</p>.<p>Born in 1947 in Kaesong — now in North Korea — she made her film debut in groundbreaking director Kim Ki-young's 1971 "Woman of Fire", as the live-in maid to a middle-class household who becomes impregnated by the father of the family.</p>.<p>The thriller was a critical and commercial hit, and remains a classic of modern South Korean cinema. But Youn's first heyday came to an abrupt end in 1975, when she married singer Jo Young-nam and the couple moved to the US.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/riz-ahmed-on-being-the-first-muslim-nominated-for-the-best-actor-oscar-962648.html" target="_blank">Read | Riz Ahmed on being the first Muslim nominated for the Best Actor Oscar</a></strong></p>.<p>Youn returned to South Korea in 1984. But after divorcing Jo three years later, she battled heavy stigma to resume her acting career to support her two children.</p>.<p>"To be divorced was like having the scarlet letter at the time," Youn told a local magazine in 2009.</p>.<p>"There was this thing that dictated women shouldn't make TV appearances so soon after their divorce."</p>.<p>She countered by accepting every role she was offered, however small.</p>.<p>"I worked very hard. I had this mission of somehow feeding my children. I'd say yes even when I was asked to climb 100 stairs."</p>.<p>By the 1990s Youn was a regular in TV dramas, often portraying mothers, and later grandmothers.</p>.<p>In 2003, Youn made her film comeback in director Im Sang-soo's "A Good Lawyer's Wife", as an unconventional mother-in-law in a dysfunctional family.</p>.<p>She played a cruel and rich heiress betrayed by her husband in Im's 2012 thriller "Taste of Money", and an ageing haenyeo -- the women of Jeju island who free-dive to collect shellfish -- reunited with her long-lost granddaughter in 2016 drama "Canola".</p>.<p>Also in 2016, she was praised for her role in E J-yong's drama "The Bacchus Lady" as an elderly prostitute -- a veteran of the brothels set up for US soldiers in the South -- who becomes involved in the deaths of former clients.</p>.<p>Youn is "one of the few leading actresses of her generation" to have worked consistently in Korean cinema over the last two decades, said Jason Bechervaise, a professor at Korea Soongsil Cyber University.</p>.<p>She had to navigate, he added, the "fiercely competitive waters" of a film and television industry "largely focused on young and often male talent for leading roles".</p>