Choi Eun-hee

Choi Eun-hee (November 20, 1926 – April 16, 2018) was a South Korean actress, who was one of the country's most popular stars of the 1960s and 1970s. In 1978, Choi and her then ex-husband, movie director Shin Sang-ok, were abducted to North Korea, where they were forced to make films until they sought asylum at the US Embassy in Vienna in 1986. They returned to South Korea in 1999 after spending a decade in the United States.

Cast

Iljimae the Chivalrous Robber

(Yeon-hwa)

Love, Love, My Love

(Chunhyang's mother)

Six Daughters

The Tale of Shim Cheong

(Shim Cheong's mother)

A Country Girl

(Kim Ok-gyeong)

Chun Hui

(Chun-hui)

Evergreen Tree

(Chae Yeong-shin)

The Sun of Night

A Sad Pastorale

(Han Do-sook)

Prince Yeonsan

The Monkey Goes West

Mountain

Dream

(Dal-lye)

A New Oath

The Sino-Japanese War and Queen Min the Heroine

(Queen Min)

Revenge

The Story of Bae Local Offcial

The Moral of Youth

The Woman Coming in Fall

Heartlessness

Red Scarf

(Ji-seon)

The Flower in Hell

(Sonia)

A College Woman's Confession

(So-yeong)

It's Not Her Sin

(Young-sook)

Romance Papa

(Eumjeon (Oldest daughter))

The Love Marriage

(Suk-hee)

Love Affair

When Night Falls at Myeongdong

Bound by Chastity Rule

Tyrant Yeonsan

(Queen Shin)

Under the Sky in Seoul

(Kim Hyeon-ok)

Women of Yi-Dynasty

Mother and a Guest

(Mother)

Seong Chun-hyang

(Seong Chun-hyang)

Madam White Snake

(Madam White Snake)

A Sister's Garden

(Jeong-hui)

The Lovers and the Despot

(Self - Actress / Various Roles)

Dongsimcho

(Lee Sook-hee)

The Story of Sim Cheong

The Homeless Wanderer

Woman

A Reluctant Prince

The Last Woman of Shang

Deaf Sam Yong

The Phantom Queen

A Happy Day of Jinsa Maeng

(Ipbun)

A Returned Man

(Gyeong-hui)

Salt

(mother)

A Hometown in Heart

(Widow)

Rice

The Girl Raised as a Future Daughter-in-law

(Jum-soon)

Keeping the Vision Alive

(Herself)

The Shadowless Pagoda

(Guseulagi)

I'll Be Seeing Her

(Herself)

The Youth

(Lee In-hwa)

Runaway

(Song Ryul's wife)

The Money

(Ok-gyeong)

To the Last Day

(Hye-kyung)