In an MBC documentary memorial special, behind-the-scenes footage was revealed of the late Lee Soon-jae before he went to the emergency room during his performance of "Waiting for Godot."
On the 28th, MBC aired the documentary memorial special - actor Lee Soon-jae, I owe you much.
The rehearsal scene for the play "Death of a Salesman" was also revealed. A staggering 560 lines. Traces were full of him relentlessly studying and analyzing the script and building an original acting world.
In fact, footage was also revealed of Lee Soon-jae nurturing his dreams in the university theater club during his Seoul National University days. He debuted in 1956, and while he rose to become a national actor through repeated transformations in film and drama, he also constantly appeared on the theater stage.
Kai, who performed with him in "Waiting for Godot," recalled, "He seemed to get energy from the audience; I felt he really loved the stage." He said he didn't want to cause harm because he felt he had to keep his promise to the audience. Knowing how important a single performance was, he kept repeating that he didn't want to cause harm because of me," and "He completed the one-and-a-half-hour performance from start to finish without stumbling and went straight to the emergency room," he said.
The director in charge also said, "The teacher could not walk properly or speak," and "He even cried and begged to cancel today's performance."
Actor Lee Soon-jae always disciplined himself and quietly prepared for the next work to come. A 70-year acting life walked with the heart of an unfinished person, and thanks to him the public also had times of happiness, crying and laughing.
Actor Oh Man-seok said, "The people of Korea are indebted to him; he was someone who always gave laughter and moved us."
Lee Soon-jae during his lifetime said, "I don't want to fight with others, so I would just say anything was fine," and "After everything passes it's nothing special; I thought I should not be someone who makes others feel burdened," showing the appearance of a true elder of our time.
[photo] "broadcast screen "
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