Menu
All
All
Titles
TV Episodes
Celebs
Companies
Keywords
Advanced Search
Watchlist
Sign In
Sign In
New Customer?
Create account
EN
Fully supported
English (United States)
Partially supported
Français (Canada)
Français (France)
Deutsch (Deutschland)
हिंदी (भारत)
Italiano (Italia)
Português (Brasil)
Español (España)
Español (México)
Use app
Back
Cast & crew
User reviews
Trivia
FAQ
IMDbPro
All topics
Soundtracks
Husbands and Wives
Edit
What Is This Thing Called Love
(1929)
Written by
Cole Porter
Performed by
Leo Reisman and His Orchestra
(as Leo Reisman & His Orchestra)
Courtesy of Academy Sound & Vision Limited
West Coast Blues
(1960)
Written by
Wes Montgomery
(as John L. {Wes} Montgomery)
Performed by
Wes Montgomery
(as John L. {Wes} Montgomery)
Courtesy of Fantasy, Inc.
Symphony No. 9 in D ('Andante Comodo')
(1909-10)
Written by
Gustav Mahler
Performed by
John Barbirolli
(as Sir John Barbirolli) &
Berliner Philharmoniker
(as The Berlin Philharmonic)
Courtesy of Angel/EMI Classics
by Arrangement with CEMA Special Markets
That Old Feeling
(1937)
Written by
Lew Brown
(lyrics) &
Sammy Fain
(music)
Performed by
Stan Getz
&
Gerry Mulligan
Courtesy of PolyGram Special Products
A Division of PolyGram Group Distribution, Inc.
Top Hat, White Tie and Tails
(1935)
Written by
Irving Berlin
Performed by
Bernie Leighton
Makin' Whoopee
(1928)
Written by
Walter Donaldson
(music) &
Gus Kahn
(lyrics)
Performed by
Bernie Leighton
The Song Is You
(1932)
Written by
Jerome Kern
(music) &
Oscar Hammerstein II
(lyrics)
Performed by
Bernie Leighton
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was Husbands and Wives (1992) officially released in India in English?
Answer
See more gaps
Learn more about contributing
Edit page
More from this title
More to explore
Photos
2024 Met Gala — See the Photos
See the gallery
Photos
The Greatest Character Actors of All Time
See the gallery
List
5 Movies to Watch While Gearing Up for 'Furiosa'
See our picks
Recently viewed
Please enable browser cookies to use this feature.
Learn more.
Back to top