
Song Chang-eui
Acting
Biography
Song Chang-eui (송창의) is a South Korean actor.
Born: January 24, 1979
Place of Birth: Seoul, South Korea
Known For

Running Man
These days, as variety shows are gradually disappearing, this is one of Korea’s representative variety shows that has been responsible for Sunday evenings for over 10 years. This program features numerous stars and members going around various places, playing games, and completing missions. In particular, among the many fun elements of variety shows, this one focuses solely on laughter. Open your eyes! Big fun is coming in! Open your mouth! Big laughter is coming in! Open your heart! Useful lessons are coming in!

The 101st Proposal
The 101st Proposal is a 2006 South Korean television series starring Lee Moon-sik and Park Sun-young. It aired on SBS from May 29 to July 25, 2006 on Mondays and Tuesdays at 21:55 for 15 episodes. It is a remake of the Japanese drama 101st Marriage Proposal which aired on Fuji TV in 1991.

Family Outing
Family Outing Season 1 was a South Korean variety show; a part of SBS's Good Sunday lineup, along with Gold Miss is Coming. It was first aired on June 15, 2008, and was one of the top rated programs on Sunday Korean television. In each episode, the "Family" travels to different parts of South Korea and takes care of the house of an elderly family while that family goes on a vacation. The "Family" then accomplishes the tasks left for them by the house's owners. The first season ended on February 14, 2010, and a second season featuring a brand new cast, production team, and concept, aired until July 11, 2010.

Life Is Beautiful
Set in Jeju, the drama revolves around a loving, multi-generation family led by the parents, Yang Byung Tae and Kim Min Jae, and their four children Tae Sub, Ji Hye, Ho Sup, and Cho Rong, as well as assorted grandparents and uncles. The story follows the family's everyday lives and conflicts.

Heartstrings
Lee Gyu Won is the daughter of one of the top three maestros of pansori and is also a gayageum protégé herself. Following her grandfather’s wishes for her to study the gayageum, she enrolls as a major of gugak, or traditional Korean music. Lee Shin is unfriendly, yet a clever student in the Applied Music Department who also is the famed vocalist and talented guitarist of the handsome band named The Stupid. With charming looks equal to those of a handsome character in a romance comic and a cold, taciturn personality, he thinks gugak is boring and belittles it. As the vocalist Lee Shin and Gayageum Protégé Lee Gyu Won passionately confront each other to champion their respective music, they soon fall in love.

Green Days
One day, Yi-rang fakes a fall in a race because she was afraid of losing. After the race, she decides to never run again. Soon, Yi-rang becomes friends with Soo-min, a new student from Seoul, and starts to ask herself about her future.

On Air
The lives and love stories of drama producers, writers, actors, and managers.

A Reason to Live
A female producer loses her fiancée in a hit and run accident and stands in the line of conflict.

Syndrome
Syndrome is a 2012 South Korean medical drama series, starring Han Hye-jin, Song Chang-eui and Park Gun-hyung. It is set in the world of neurosurgery where a medical student finds herself in a love triangle with two fellow doctors. The television series aired on jTBC from February 13 to April 17, 2012 on Mondays and Tuesdays at 21:55 for 20 episodes.

My Girl and I
Su-ho is a plain high school boy, and Su-eun is a bright and beautiful girl in the same school. For some unknown reason, Su-eun has a crush on the boy, and for equally mysterious reasons she rescues Su-ho in the sea though he doesn't know who actually saved him.
Filmography
as Kim So-woo
as Kang-hyeon
as Kang Seong Gu
as Kim Ik-hyeon
as Chan Eun-hyuk
as Han Ji-Sub
as Kang Jin-Woo
as Baek Nam-bong
as Jung Tae-won
as Lee Jung-geun
as Cha Yeo-wook
as Song-ho
as Kim Suk-hyun
as Kim Chul-su (voice)
as Yang Tae-Sup
as Lee Jae-min
as Tae-ho
as Jang Joon Ha
as himself
as himself
as Seo Hyun-joon
as 서현준
as Park Jong-goo
as Shin Woo-young