Australian Open | French Open | Open University | open source | U.S. Open | For Your Eyes Only | Bright Eyes | Wacken Open Air | For Your Eyes Only (film) | The Open Championship | Bright Eyes (band) | U.S. Open (tennis) | All England Open Badminton Championships | U.S. Open (golf) | Open Source | Open-pit mining | 2006 Australian Open | Open Software Foundation | Indira Gandhi National Open University | Eyes Wide Shut | Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup | 2005 Australian Open – Men's Singles | Wolf Eyes | U.S. Women's Open | open access | Gerry Weber Open | Swedish Open | International GT Open | Federal Open Market Committee | Can't Take My Eyes Off You |
She has also made guest appearances on many television shows such as Trinity, Oz, CSI: Miami and Cuts; has performed in an off-Broadway entitled "Cloud Tectonics" in the role of Celestina Del Sol; and has appeared on the cover of popular magazines such as Open Your Eyes (OYE) twice, Tinta Latina and Profile.
During February 2006, Lambe took part in a charity song called "Otvori Oci" ("Open Your Eyes") written by Darko Dimitrov, in which the Macedonian divas Elena Risteska, Kaliopi, as well as Aleksandra Pileva, Adrian Gaxha and Maja Grozdanovska-Pancheva participated.
1979 "Open Your Eyes" (with McDonald and Henderson) - performed by The Doobie Brothers, and also by Maria Muldaur
Paige left Word in 2003 and moved to Los Angeles, California where she worked with producers Alain Johannes and Natasha Shneider on the songs Open Your Eyes and Love Is.
Open Your Eyes was the winner of the 2008 American Film Institute Jean Picker Firstenberg Award for Excellence, Best Short Film at the Anchorage International Film Festival 2008, Best Drama, Best Film, and Best Actress for Traci Dinwiddie at the Beverly Hills Shorts Festival 2009.
Charting singles included "New Church" (#34 UK Indie), "Open Your Eyes" (#7 UK Indie; #27 Mainstream Rock) and a cover of Madonna's "Like a Virgin" (#22 UK Indie), but the success of "Dance With Me" - a song that according to Dave Thompson's Alternative Rock came "close to a hit" - was hampered when the video directed by Derek Jarman was pulled from MTV's rotation for concerns about child pornography.