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Broadcast Title Eps. Prod. Cast and crew Theme song(s) Genre Notes 11 Mar–3 Jul [17] [18] [19] [20]Trạm cứu hộ trái tim (Heart Rescue Station) 51 VFC Vũ Trường Khoa (director); Nguyễn Thu Thủy, Nguyễn Nhiệm, Thùy Dương, Lương Ly, Đỗ Lê (writers); Hồng Diễm, Quang Sự, Trương Thanh Long, Lương Thu Trang, Đồng Thu Hà, Phạm Cường, Mỹ Uyên, Thúy ...
Đặng Phi (director); Hương Trà, Đặng Diệu Hương (writers); Dũng Nhi, Thanh Lê, Phạm Tần, Đức Sơn, Kim Thu, Vĩnh Xương, Anh Tuấn, Thu Hường, Minh Huyền, Đặng Tất Bình, Trọng Phan, Hồng Khuyên, Tùng Lâm, Tự Do, Vân Anh, Thu Ngà, Hồng Phúc, Ngọc Anh, Mai Lan... Scholastic, Drama 15-20 Apr Wed-Mon
As the filmmaking community in the U.S. and elsewhere spoke out against the government's negative treatment of Duong, the government of Vietnam relented and allowed him and his family to emigrate to the United States. [5] [6] He has also acted in the South Korean film Farewell the River. As of 2006, Duong lived in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Son was selected to the national U16 team. The coaches were Nguyen Hong Thanh and Nguyen, both belonged to the Song Lam Nghe An. Nguyen told him, "Little goalkeepers, if hard training, confident and Have the talent to become good goalkeepers." He again moved Duong to the position of goalkeeper. In 2002, he was brought to the Hanoi Football Club.
Nguyễn Thanh Tùng (born 5 July 1994), known professionally as Sơn Tùng M-TP ([s̪əːn˧ tuŋ͡m˨˩ ɛm˧ ti:˧ bi:˧]), is a Vietnamese singer-songwriter and actor.Born and raised in Thái Bình, Thái Bình province, his family discovered his singing ability when he was two years old.
Since 2009, Lan Ngọc started taking a few small roles in music videos and advertising video. In 2010, she played Nương in The Floating Lives.This role helped her win the Best Leading Actress award at the 2010 Golden Kite Awards [3] and the Audience Choice Award for Favourite Actress in a Foreign Film in the 20th Golden Rooster Awards.
The first of five Vietnamese journalists to be murdered, Duong Trong Lam was shot by an assassin July 21, 1981. He was known as a "left-wing" publisher of Cai Dinh Lang (Translated: The Village Temple), a Vietnamese-language newspaper published in San Francisco, California, and for his criticism of the Vietnam War.
The Lam Sơn partisans later gained control of the upper Mã River. [5] In the next year, a large Ming army under General Chen Zhi marched to the Mã River valley to attack the Lam Sơn rebels. [6] From the opposite direction, a Laotian army with 30,000 men and 100 elephants from Lan Xang approached down the valley. [7]