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Song Hye-rim

Actress, mistress of Kim Jong Il (1939–2002)


Summary

Actress, mistress of Kim Jong Il (1939–2002)

FieldValue
nameSong Hye-rim
native_name
imageSong Hye-rim portrait.jpg
birth_date
death_date
partnerKim Jong Il (1968–2002; her death)
birth_placeChangnyeong, Korea, Empire of Japan
death_placeMoscow, Russia
children2, including Kim Jong-nam
relativesSeong Hye-rang (sister)
Yi Han-yong (nephew)
module{{Infobox Korean name/auto
hangul%성혜림
hanja成蕙琳
childyes

Yi Han-yong (nephew) Song Hye-rim (; 24 January 1939 18 May 2002) was a North Korean actress, best known for being the one-time favored mistress of Kim Jong Il.

Early life and education

Song was born in Changnyeong, Keishōnan Province, Korea, Empire of Japan (now in South Gyeongsang Province, South Korea). She entered the Pyongyang Movie College in 1955, but left in 1957 to give birth to a daughter. She later re-enrolled and graduated, having her film debut in 1959. She became a popular actress in the 1960s, appearing in movies including Onjŏngryŏng () and Baek Il-hong ().

Most accounts of Song are drawn from the memoirs of her sister, Song Hye-rang. Her former friend Kim Young-soon published her memoir I was Song Hye-rim's Friend, and revealed that she and her family were sent to a concentration camp for ten years after she found out Hye-rim's secret, namely, that she was Kim Jong Il's mistress, a fact that was hidden at the time even from Kim Il Sung. This resulted in the death of her parents and children, and her husband was taken away to never be seen again. She was rumored to have defected to South Korea in 2003.

Personal life

Song began dating Kim Jong Il in 1968, after divorcing her first husband; she is believed to have been his first mistress. The birth of her son is said to have been kept secret from Kim Il Sung until 1975.

Rumored defection and death

Starting in the early 1980s, Song travelled to Moscow frequently for medical care. In 1996, Song was reported to have defected to the West, but intelligence officials in South Korea denied the story. She is reported to have died on 18 May 2002. Some reports state she died in Moscow.

Notes

References

References

  1. link
  2. "North Korean defector says Kim Jong Il stole her life". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  3. (3 February 2010). "A N.Korean life shattered by Kim Jong-il's secret".
  4. [https://web.archive.org/web/20140218222624/http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hx-Dxwu2aXlb3LGcp3VozEgmzmlw?docId=CNG.541f67cfc8bccc2a7627aee90771b001.251 Nine years in N. Korea gulag to keep a secret]
  5. (12 October 2013). "North Korean Defector Reveals The Horrifying Conditions Inside Secretive State's Concentration Camps". Huffington Post.
  6. Lee (2005), par. 6
  7. Empas (n.d.)
  8. Lee (2005), sect. 4 par. 1
  9. Michael Rank. (18 February 2012). "North Korean secrets lie six feet under". Asia Times Online.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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