Legendary Actress Yoon Seok Hwa Passes Away After Battling Cancer While Refusing Chemotherapy
Actress Yoon Seok Hwa, regarded as the emblematic figure of Korea’s first-generation theater, has passed away.

According to reports, the 69-year-old actress passed away on December 19 at 9:45 am KST. She breathed her last in the Seoul Sinchon Severance Hospital, while surrounded by family and close acquaintances.

Yoon Seok Hwa was diagnosed with a brain tumor after she collapsed during a business trip to the UK in October 2022 to perform in the Shakespearean play, Hamlet. After undergoing three major surgeries in Seoul to treat the tumor, she resisted chemotherapy, choosing natural remedies and dietary treatments.
Yoon reportedly asked to be discharged, stating that she wanted to live as herself, even if it meant she would survive just one more day. Her choice of healing practices included mugwort moxibustion, health drinks, walks, and meals with friends. At one point, her condition improved so much that even the medical staff expressed surprise. However, the illness eventually took over her body.

Even during her battle with cancer, Yoon never relinquished her passion for the stage. In 2023, she made a special appearance in the play Toccata at the LG Arts Center in Seoul, bidding her final farewell to the audience. While Yoon’s primary field was theater, she was also active in other fields, including musicals, dramas, and movies. Some of her best-known screen appearances include K-Dramas such as Melting Me Softly, The Penthouse: War in Life, and Excellent Shaman Ga Doo Shim.

Furthermore, Yoon founded Wildflower Company in 1995, producing the animation, Hong Gil-dong 95. She directed the musical Saturday Night Fever and also participated in the production of Top Hat, which won the UK’s Laurence Olivier Award.
While practically living her entire life on stage, Yoon Seok Hwa won several accolades in South Korea, including the Baeksang Arts Awards Best Actress (four times), the Dong-A Theater Award, the Seoul Theater Festival Award, and the Lee Hae Rang Theater Award, along with the Presidential Commendation in 2005 and the Korea Culture and Arts Award (Theater/Dance category) in 2009.
Yoon’s passing has left a vacuum in the Korean theater world, with colleagues and audiences mourning the loss deeply.