Song Seung-heon

Song Seung-heon
Born 5 October 1976 (1976-10-05) (age 35)
Suyuri, Seoul, South Korea
Alma mater Kyonggi University
(B.A. Multimedia)[1]
Hankyong National University
(B.A. Business)[1]
Occupation Actor
Years active 1995–present
Agent Storm S
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)[1]
Religion Christianity[1]
Korean name
Hangul 송승헌
Hanja 宋承憲
Revised Romanization Song Seung-heon
McCune–Reischauer Song Sŭnghŏn
Website
www.songseungheon.com

Song Seung-heon (Korean: 송승헌; born October 5, 1976) is a South Korean actor. Song is noted for his roles in Korean dramas like East of Eden, Autumn in My Heart (2000) and Summer Scent.[2][3][4]

Contents

Career

Song started his career as a model in 1995, modeling for the jeans brand STORM,[5] and began acting in sitcoms and TV dramas in 1996.

He first became known to viewers in the popular sitcom Three Guys and Three Girls in 1996. The following year he started his extremely successful career in TV dramas, which made him well-known throughout Korea. His feature film debut came in 1999 in the film Calla together with star Kim Hee-sun. True stardom only came to Song in late 2000,[6] however, with the broadcast of the hugely popular TV drama Autumn in My Heart. The series was exported all over Asia, making pan-Asian stars of both him and co-stars Song Hye-kyo and Won Bin. He is known to be one of the most popular stars in Korea today whose popularity even gave rise into other countries in Asia, adding to the Hallyu wave. Because of this, he has been actively recruited for film roles and advertisements in Hong Kong and other Asian countries.

In 2002, Song starred in the comic-action film Make It Big by director Cho Ui Seok, and also in the Hong Kong film So Close with Hong Kong actresses Karen Mok, Shu Qi and Zhao Wei. He also starred in Summer Scent, the third "season-themed" TV drama after Autumn in My Heart and Winter Sonata, which was well-received, but not as popular as the ones that preceded it.

In 2004 Song appeared in two films, but neither was judged to be a success. Ice Rain, shot in the Canadian Rockies, failed to enthuse viewers with its mixture of mountaineering and melodrama, while He Was Cool, based on an internet novel, proved unable to compete with Harry Potter and other films from the 2004 summer season.

In 2008 he starred in the television drama East of Eden with Lee Yeon-hee. In 2010 he was cast as the lead character in A Better Tomorrow, a Korean remake of the Hong Kong film of the same name starring Chow Yun-fat, and Leslie Cheung, but with a different plot.[7]

In January 2011, he starred in the MBC romantic comedy drama My Princess with Kim Tae-hee. His 30-minute short film Lucid Dreaming will start filming in October 2011, and will be released on DVD in early 2012.[8]

Other activities

In 2009, he created his own management company, Storm S, which also manages actresses Lee Young-ae and Kim Jung-eun.[9][10]

Controversy

In late 2004, just as he was getting ready to start shooting another high profile TV drama, it was revealed that the actor had illegally avoided his compulsory military service by taking a drug that made him fail the military's health test. Song had previously successfully dodged the draft by claiming to have severe diabetes and high blood pressure, but his claim was discovered by the South Korean government to be false.[11] Amidst the press coverage and scandal this aroused, Song publicly apologised and agreed to immediately serve his two-year term in the military. Song was discharged on November 15, 2006 with the rank of Corporal.[12][13]

Filmography

Dramas

Year Title Role
1996 Three Guys and Three Girls (MBC) Seong-heon
1997 Beautiful Lady (SBS)
You and I (MBC) Park Min-kyu
1998 Victory (SBS)
1999 Happy Together (SBS) Suh Ji-suk
Love Story: "Message" (SBS)
2000 Popcorn (SBS) Lee Young-hoon
Autumn in My Heart (KBS2) Yoon Joon-seo
2001 Law Firm (SBS) Jung Young-woong
2003 Summer Scent (KBS2) Yoo Min-woo
2008 East of Eden (MBC) Lee Dong-chul
2011 My Princess (MBC) Park Hae-young

Films

Year Title Role
1999 Calla Seon-Woo
2002 Make It Big Seong-hwan
So Close Yen
2003 Ice Rain Han Woo-sung
2004 He Was Cool Ji Eun-sung
2008 Fate Kim Woo-min
2010 A Better Tomorrow Lee Young-Choon
Ghost: In Your Arms Again Kim Jun-Ho
2011 Lucid Dreaming

Music videos

Awards

References

External links