Soon-Yi Previn (; born Oh Soon-hee, ; October 8, 1970) is the adopted daughter of actress Mia Farrow and musician André Previn. She is married to filmmaker Woody Allen, and the couple have two adopted children.
According to Soon-Yi Previn and Allen, they began their relationship in 1991, when Previn was 21, several years after her mother had ended her romantic relationship with Woody Allen. In 1992, their relationship became news.
In 1978, Mia Farrow and her then husband, André Previn, adopted Soon-Yi and took her to the United States. At the time, U.S. law allowed two travel visa per family for international adoption, and the couple had already adopted Vietnamese infants Lark Song Previn and Summer "Daisy" Song Previn. Farrow asked her friends Rose and William Styron to have U.S. Representative Michael Harrington sponsor a private bill to enable the girl's adoption to the United States. This bill, HR 1552, was passed as Private Law 95-37 on May 15, 1978, paving Soon-Yi's way to immigrate to the United States.
Just after the adoption, Farrow wrote to Nancy Sinatra about Soon-Yi, "Now she speaks English and is learning to read, write, play piano, dance ballet & ride a horse". Farrow later said that at the time of her adoption, Soon-Yi had learning disabilities. Rose Styron is Soon-Yi's godmother.
Farrow's marriage to André Previn ended in 1979. In 1980, Farrow began a long-term relationship with filmmaker Woody Allen. Allen later adopted two of Farrow's adopted children: Dylan Farrow and Moses Farrow. In 1987, Mia Farrow gave birth to Ronan Farrow.
Soon-Yi Previn graduated from Marymount School of New York in 1991. After a summer as a sales associate at Bergdorf Goodman, she began her freshman year as a commuter student at Drew University in Madison, New Jersey, in September 1991. Previn graduated from Drew University and earned a master's degree in special education from Columbia University.
During her teens, Previn made an uncredited appearance in Allen's Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), which starred Farrow. She appeared as an extra in Paul Mazursky's 1991 film Scenes from a Mall, which starred Allen. She also appeared alongside Allen in the documentary Wild Man Blues (1997).
In 1992, Previn said that Farrow had physically abused her. In 2018, Previn's brother Moses Farrow has said that he too was physically abused by Farrow.
Previn graduated from high school and began college in 1991. According to the birthdate the Seoul Family Court assigned her, she turned 21 in October 1991. The judicial investigation during the custody trial between Farrow and Allen concluded that Allen's and Previn's sexual relationship began in December 1991. Mia Farrow's friends have said it might have started in the spring or summer of 1991, before Soon-Yi turned 21, but Mia Farrow has never legally challenged the custody court's conclusion.
In January 1992, Farrow found nude photographs of Previn in Allen's home. Allen, then 56, told Farrow that he had taken the photos the day before, approximately two weeks after he and Previn first had sex. Farrow contends that she broke off her relationship with Allen in 1992 following her discovery of the affair. Previn and Allen dispute that, claiming that Allen and Farrow were no longer involved when Farrow discovered the photos.
Allen described his relationship with Previn as a "fling" that developed into a more significant relationship. But in a 2018 interview Previn said, "From the first kiss I was a goner and loved him." On August 17, 1992, Allen issued a statement that he was in love with Previn. Previn was surprised by his declaration: "I only knew that he loved me when he gave the press conference and said it publicly. Even then, I wasn't sure if he meant it. We had never said those words to each other."
When Previn's relationship with Allen became public, it was a catalyst for "tabloid headlines and late-night monologues in August 1992", in part due to the allegation that he had sexually abused Previn's adoptive sister Dylan Farrow.
As of 2021, Previn remained estranged from Mia Farrow.
Relationship with Woody Allen
Personal life
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