Fang Yin


Biography

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

The Female Prince (1966)

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Hard Day's Night, A (1964) -- (Movie Clip) I Should've Known Better Paul (McCartney) has taken pity on grandfather (Wilfrid Brambell) whom he's had to imprison on the train so his mates (John Lennon, George Harrison, Ringo Starr) join them for a hit tune written by John and Paul, early in director Richard Lester's Beatles' movie A Hard Day's Night, 1964.
Hard Day's Night, A (1964) -- (Movie Clip) Tell Me Why The whole picture’s been working up to this, the first song for the TV show, John Lennon’s vocal and harmony from Paul McCartney and George Harrison, on the Lennon-McCartney composition, shot at the since-demolished Scala Theatre, Charlotte Street, Fitzrovia, London, director Richard Lester providing maybe more fans than Beatles, in A Hard Day’s Night, 1964.
Hard Day's Night, A (1964) -- (Movie Clip) Rule, Brittania! Hotel bathroom hijinks, John Lennon in the tub and George Harrison shaving at the mirror with assistant manager Shake (John Junkin), their discourse on the topic not quite explained, but germane in Alun Owen’s nutty original screenplay, and manager Norm (Norman Rossington) hunting John, Richard Lester directing, in the Beatle’s A Hard Day’s Night, 1964.
Hard Day's Night, A (1964) -- (Movie Clip) I'm A Mocker Manager Norm (Rossington) leads the lads into a London news conference for a series of wacky solo interviews and editing, then slipping into the famous Scala theater where Shake (John Junkin) and grandfather (Wilfrid Bramble) are having a drink, in Richard Lester's A Hard Day's Night, 1964.
Cry Terror! (1958) -- (Movie Clip) That Makes Him The Patsy James Mason as electronics expert Jim has hurried to his suburban home to explain to his wife (Inger Stevens) that he’s realized he was tricked into making a bomb used in a sensational hijack threat, and as the perpetrator Hoplin (Rod Steiger) appears, his play is not yet clear, in Cry Terror!, 1958 from independent and thriller specialist Andrew L. Stone.
Mouse That Roared, The (1959) -- (Movie Clip) We've Come To Capture You Kokintz (David Kossoff), who's just finished his prototype Q-Bomb, and daughter Helen (Jean Seberg) are hoping lunch will arrive before they join the air raid drill that has left New York deserted, when Tully (Peter Sellers) and the invaders from Grand Fenwick happen by, in The Mouse That Roared, 1959.
Mouse That Roared, The (1959) -- (Movie Clip) Opening, Grand Fenwick Opening sequence for The Mouse That Roared, 1959, features a gag on the Columbia Pictures open, animated credits, and the narrated introduction of Peter Sellers in three key roles.
Mouse That Roared, The (1959) -- (Movie Clip) Do You Like American Girls? Dr. Kokintz (David Kossoff) urges daughter Helen (Jean Seberg) to persuade Tully (Peter Sellers), their bumbling captor from the Grand Duchy of Fenwick, to let him disarm the titanic Q-Bomb, in The Mouse That Roared, 1959.
Cowboys, The (1972) -- (Movie Clip) Everybody Lit Out John Wayne as 1870’s Montana rancher Wil Andersen, hard at work in director Mark Rydell’s opening, visited by erstwhile cowhands (Matt Clark as Smiley, with Jerry Gatlin and Walter Scott), not up for a cattle drive, then conferring with his wife (Sara Cunningham), in The Cowboys, 1972.
30 Is A Dangerous Age, Cynthia -- (Movie Clip) The Real Stuff Composer and wanna-be husband Rupert (Dudley Moore) getting acquainted with new neighbor Louise (Moore's wife, Suzy Kendall), leading to a musical fantasy of Moore's own composition, in 30 Is A Dangerous Age, Cynthia, 1968.
30 Is A Dangerous Age, Cynthia -- (Movie Clip) There's No Bell First meeting between Rupert (co-screenwriter Dudley Moore), who's in a hurry to get married, and the new girl down the hall Louise (Suzy Kendall, Moore's then-wife), from 30 Is A Dangerous Age, Cynthia, 1968.

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Bibliography