User:Roman Spinner/Y (disambiguation)
Yellow Handkerchief[edit]
Yellow Handkerchief may refer to:
- The Yellow Handkerchief (1977 film), Japanese film directed by Yôji Yamada; winner of Hochi Film Award for Best Film, Blue Ribbon Award for Best Film, Mainichi Film Award for Best Film and first Japan Academy Prize for Best Film
- Yellow Handkerchief, 2005 Korean television drama which was among list of programmes broadcast by MediaCorp Channel U
- The Yellow Handkerchief (2008 film), American film directed by Udayan Prasad with stars William Hurt, Maria Bello, Kristen Stewart and Eddie Redmayne; filmed on location in Louisiana
The Young Lovers[edit]
The Young Lovers or Young Lovers may refer to:
Film and television[edit]
- The Young Lovers (1949 film), American drama about young girl dancer afflicted with polio; directorial debut of Ida Lupino who also co-wrote; title roles played by Sally Forrest and Keefe Brasselle; also known as Never Fear
- The Young Lovers (1954 film), British Cold War drama about romance between American embassy official and daughter of Soviet ambassador in London; directed by Anthony Asquith; also known as Chance Meeting
- "Young Lovers", March 29, 1957 installment (season 8, episode 17, also known as "Charley Wigle [portrayed by Charles Aidman] of The Denver Post") of American (NBC) newspaper anthology, The Big Story (radio and TV series)
- "The Young Lovers", October 14, 1961 installment (season 1, episode 5) of American (CBS) lawyer drama, The Defenders (1961 TV series); episode title characters played by Burt Brinckerhoff and Lynn Loring
- The Young Lovers (1964 film), American romantic drama about college students; produced and directed by Samuel Goldwyn, Jr.; title roles played by Peter Fonda, Sharon Hugueny, Nick Adams and Deborah Walley
- Young Lovers, Hong Kong-based Shaw Brothers film (Chinese title Kuai lo qing chun) released in December 1966; written and directed by Zhen Luo; title roles played by Angela Yu Chien and Lee Ching
- The Young Lovers, Hong Kong-based Kam Kwok/Chi Leun film (Chinese titles Mi ren xiao niao / Mai yan siu niu) released in August 1967; directed by Yao Huang; title roles played by Connie Chan and Chi Lu
- Young Lovers, Hong Kong-based Shaw Brothers/Celestial Pictures film (Chinese titles Qing chun lian / Ching churn luen) released in May 1970; written and directed by Umetsugu Inoue; also known as The Glory of Youth
- Young Lovers, Tagalog-language film (Tagalog Ilang-Ilang Productions) from Philippines released in August 1971; directed and co-written by Tony Santos; title roles played by Vilma Santos and Edgar Mortiz
- Young Lovers, Taiwan-based Golden Gate Film Company/Ocean Shores Entertainment film (Chinese title Qing dou chu kai) released in September 1978; with stars Shang-Lin Chin (known as Charlie Chin) and Niu Tien
- Young Lovers, Hong Kong-based Shaw Brothers film (Chinese titles Se yu yu chun qing, Sik yuk yu seun ching and Chun ai) from March 1979; directed by Michihiko Obimori, with Derek Yee and Candice Yu in title roles
- Young Lovers, 1979 Egyptian film, in Arabic (original title Ualla azae lel sayedat), directed by one of Egypt's longest-working and most-prolific filmmakers, Henry Barakat, who directed Arab world's best-known actors, singers and dancers
- Young Lovers, 2001 Argentine telenovela (original title Enamorarte, alternative English title To Fall in Love) with 127 60-minute episodes (List of Argentine telenovelas); title roles played by Emanuel Ortega and Celeste Kid
Other[edit]
- "Young Lovers" (song), 1963 composition performed by American pop singing duo Paul & Paula; as follow-up to their number-one hit, "Hey Paula", "Young Lovers" reached number six on Billboard Pop Singles chart