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Baby Love is a 1969 British drama film directed by Alastair Reid and starring Diana Dors, Linda Hayden, Keith Barron and Ann Lynn. [2] It was written by Reid, Guido Coen and Michael Klinger, based on the 1968 novel Baby Love by Tina Chad Christian.
Hayden was born in Stanmore, Middlesex.She trained with the Aida Foster stage school in dancing, singing and stage acting before making her film debut at the age of 15 in the controversial Baby Love (1969), playing a schoolgirl who seduces her adoptive family.
"Baby Love" is a song by the American music group the Supremes from their second studio album, Where Did Our Love Go. It was written and produced by Motown 's main production team Holland–Dozier–Holland [ 1 ] and was released on September 17, 1964.
Elizabeth Ann Lynn (7 November 1933 [1] – 30 August 2020 [2] [3]) was a British actress, especially prominent during the British New Wave of the 1960s, appearing in many films that represented what is known as kitchen sink realism.
Baby Love: Choosing Motherhood After a Lifetime of Ambivalence, a 2007 memoir by Rebecca Walker; Walt "Baby" Love, radio personality and minister; Baby Love, lead singer and rapper of Rock Steady Crew; Walter Afanasieff a.k.a. "Baby Love", Russian-American songwriter and producer; Baby Love, a 2022 young adult novel by Jacqueline Wilson
"Too Busy Thinking About My Baby" was also covered by the New York-based rock group Mardi Gras in the early 1970s, and released as a single on Map City Records. It climbed high up the charts across Europe in 1971–72. Elkie Brooks included it on her 1981 hit album Pearls. Mark Everett put it on his 1985 debut Bad Dude in Love
Baby I Love You is an album by Andy Kim released by Steed Records. [2] The single title song hit #9 on the Billboard Hot 100, #1 in Canada, and #32 on the U.S. adult contemporary chart in 1969. The single "So Good Together" hit #36 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #37 in West Germany. [3] The album landed on the Billboard 200 chart, reaching #82. [4]
Brenda Holloway's "You've Made Me So Very Happy" received a boost when the jazz-rock group Blood, Sweat & Tears recorded a new arrangement in 1969. [7] Included on the group's eponymous second album , it became one of Blood, Sweat & Tears' biggest hits, reaching number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States in April 1969. [ 8 ]