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Đăng Khoa has admitted to being the one who did the recording but has denied being the one who released the audio. On behalf of the Executive Producers and Judges of Vietnam Idol, Diễm Quỳnh accepted Khoa's request to withdraw; therefore, Uyên Linh was saved from elimination at the last moment and did not have to perform her exit song.
When a ten-year-old boy named Trần Đăng Khoa from Hải Dương Province gained attention with his flair for poetry, Xuân Diệu himself went to meet the boy and offered to proofread his first poetry collection. In his later reminiscences, Khoa remarked on how Xuân Diệu mentored him as he grew up and changed his writing style.
Uyen Linh's performances were highly applauded by the judges throughout the contests. However, she was in the bottom three in the fifth gala round and was originally eliminated from the show but later was saved thanks to Đăng Khoa's withdrawal (one of the judges later confirmed that they would have saved her otherwise).
Typically, as in the above examples, it is middle or the last personal given name which varies, as almost any Hán-Nôm character may be used. The number of family names is limited. Further, some historical names may be written using different chữ Hán (Chinese characters), but are still written the same in the modern Vietnamese alphabet.
Broadcast Title Eps. Prod. Cast and crew Theme song(s) Genre Notes 31 Jan Lão hà tiện vui tính (Funny Miser Man) 1 (80′) VTV Film Prod. Vũ Hồng Sơn (director); Phạm Văn Khôi (writer); Trần Quốc Trọng, Thu Hạnh, Lệ Hằng, Vi Cầm, Sỹ Tiến, Tăng Nhật Tuệ, Tuyết Liên, Thành An, Tạ Am, Trần Thụ, Tuấn Anh, Thu Phương, Mậu Hòa, Phương Thanh...
Broadcast Title Eps. Prod. Cast and crew Theme song(s) Genre Notes 20 Jan-26 May : Nơi chốn ta quay về (Where We Come Back) 42 VnFilm Lê Minh (director); Lê Anh Thúy (writer); Hoàng Hải, Đinh Y Nhung, Mai Huỳnh, Minh Thư, Huy Cường, Văn Thênh, Kiều Chinh, Đoàn Thanh Tài, Hoàng Thiên Long, Quang Thái...
My Best Gay Friends (Vietnamese: Bộ ba đĩ thõa, roughly translated as The Slutty Trio) is a Vietnamese web series that debuted on YouTube in 2012. Considered to be the first gay sitcom in Vietnam, it has garnered a large following, receiving about two million views per episode despite being made on a shoestring budget.
Rainbow Without Colours (Vietnamese: Cầu vồng không sắc) is a 2015 Vietnamese film directed by Nguyen Quang Tuyen. It was screened at the 39th Montreal World Film Festival. [1]