Starry-eyed idealist, a pejorative use of the term do-gooder or goody two-shoes, often used to describe an unadvised virtuous person
The Black Eyed Peas | Cotton-Eyed Joe | Brown Eyed Girls | One-Eyed Jacks | White-eyed River Martin | The Milk-Eyed Mender | One-Eyed Doll | The Cock-Eyed World | Starry Eyed Surprise | Starry Eyed and Laughing | Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus | Black Eyed Man | Wide-Eyed Wonder | White-eyed Vireo | The Starry Night | Starry Nights | Songs For The Sad Eyed Girl | Red-eyed Vireo | Rama and Lakshmana seated on Kabandha's arms, about to sever them. Kabandha is depicted with a big mouth on his stomach and no head or neck; though depicted with two eyes, the ''Ramayana'' describes him as one-eyed. (Painting on ceiling of temple in Ayodhyapattinam near Salem, Tamil Nadu | Order of the Starry Cross | One Eyed King | Four Eyed Monsters | Fire-eyed Diucon | Don't Stop the Party (The Black Eyed Peas song) | "crazy-eyed look | Candy Eyed | Brown Eyed Handsome Man | Brown Eyed Girl | Black-eyed Susan (disambiguation) | Black-eyed Susan |
Moon Faced and Starry Eyed is an album by American jazz drummer Max Roach, featuring vocalist Abbey Lincoln on two tracks, recorded in 1959 and released on the Mercury label.
Poole and McGeeney, together with Wackford, released two singles on CBS Records as Starry Eyed, produced by Flo & Eddie, "Song on the Radio" and "Saturday".