Soon-Tek Oh

Soon-Tek Oh

actor, soundtrack

Soon-Tek Oh was born on Jun 29, 1932 in South Korea. Soon-Tek Oh's big-screen debut came with Murderers' Row directed by Henry Levin in 1966, strarring Tempura - Japanese Secret Agent (uncredited). Soon-Tek Oh is known for Mulan directed by Tony Bancroft, Miguel Ferrer stars as Shan-Yu and Harvey Fierstein as Yao. Soon-Tek Oh has got 1 awards and 1 nominations so far. The most recent award Soon-Tek Oh achieved is San Diego Asian Film Festival. The upcoming new movie Soon-Tek Oh plays is True Blue which will be released on Nov 29, 2001.

A 1960's pioneer of Asian-American theatre, Soon Tek Oh (aka Sun-Taek Oh, Soon-Tek Oh or Soon-Taik Oh) was born on June 29, 1932, in Mokpo, Korea at the time the country was under Imperial Japanese rule. He attended high school at Gwangju, South Korea, and went on to study at Yonsei University in Seoul. His family (including one sister) moved to the United States in 1959, where they settled in Southern California.Oh studied at USC before attending UCLA and receiving his Masters of Fine Arts in acting and playwriting. Trained in performance at New York's Neighborhood Playhouse, his mounting of a California production of "Rashomon" led to his co-founding (along with fellow actors Mako, James Hong , Beulah Quo and five others) of the renowned Los Angeles' East West Players theatre company in 1965.Breaking into TV that same year with a minor role on "I Spy," Oh resolved to work against the restrictive servile Asian stereotypes he found himself playing on such 60's TV programs as "The Wild, Wild West," "The Invaders" and "It Takes a Thief." Via the stage, he strove to broaden the types of roles available, which included other theatre troupes he founded or guided (i.e., Korean American Theatre Ensemble). As such, his companies went on to produce a variety of plays from Ibsen ("A Doll's House") and Shakespeare ("Twelfth Night") to Tony-winning vehicles ("Pippin," "Equus, "Sweeney Todd") to original contemporary pieces, several written by Oh himself.Following unbilled parts as secret agent types in such films as Bien joué Matt Helm (1966) and La folle mission du docteur Schaeffer (1967), he achieve a degree of notoriety in the James Bond feature L'homme au pistolet d'or (1974) as Lt. Hip, an intelligence operative. He continued sporadically in films with featured parts in Le commando des tigres noirs (1978), Nimitz, retour vers l'enfer (1980), Portés disparus 2 - Pourquoi ? (1985), Steele Justice (1987), Bialy smok (1987), Le justicier braque les dealers (1987), Collision Course (1989), A Home of Our Own (1993), Red Sun Rising (1994), Le ninja de Beverly Hills (1997), Yellow (1997) (the first film by and featuring Korean-Americans) and gave voice to Fa Zhou, the father, in the Disney animated classic Mulan (1998). TV roles continued to come his way with several episodes of "Kung Fu," "Hawaii Five-0," "M*A*S*H" and "Magnum P.I.,, as well as a recurring part as a lieutenant on Drôles de dames (1976) and the quality mini-series À l'est d'Eden (1981) and Marco Polo (1982).Oh and Mako both made their Broadway debuts in Stephen Sondheim's "Pacific Overtures" in 1976. His later stage performances include "The Woman Warrior (1994) and "The Square" (2000). He was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008 by the San Diego Asian Film Festival.Making his last on-camera appearance featured in the action film Les Formidables (2006), Oh was later diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease and forced to retire. He died of complications in Los Angeles, on April 4, 2018, at age 85.

  • Birthday

    Jun 29, 1932
  • Place of Birth

    Mokpo, South Korea

Known For

Awards

1 wins & 1 nominations

San Diego Asian Film Festival
2008
Winner - Lifetime Achievement Award

Movies & TV Shows

All
Movies
TV Shows