Morning glory, moonflower and thunburgia (black-eyed susan vine).
Ampelopsis brevipedunculata ‘Elegans’ Variegated Porcelainberry -%26xargs%3D0%26pstart%3D1%26b%3D41%26ni%3D20&w=150&h=230&imgurl=www.worldplants.com%2Fpics%2Fampelele.jpg&rurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.worldplants.com%2Fampelopsis.htm&size=8.9kB&name=ampelele.jpg&p=ampelopsis%20elegans&type=JPG&oid=6a1a604c9f540ac4&no=43&tt=58
or maybe bouganvilla -&w=421&h=500&imgurl=static.flickr.com%2F79%2F235322098_3a2c8b6ec5.jpg&rurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.flickr.com%2Fphotos%2Fchaseastwood%2F235322098%2F&size=269.9kB&name=Bougainvillea%202&p=bougainvillea&type=JPG&oid=2b5d216df1788182&fusr=chas.eastwood&tit=Bougainvillea%202&hurl=http://www.flickr.com/photos/chaseastwood/&no=7&tt=52395
Clementis,Jasmine,Mandevilla,Honeysuckle.
clematis grow fairly fast and come back every year so you don’t need to replant them like you do morning glories.
That said sometimes they do take a year to bloom so you could plant the clemaitis AND the morning glories the first year and then after that you’d be all set!!
you can read more about clematis here:http://www.clematis.com/html-docs/homepage.html
Perennial Woody Vines: Clematis, Trumpet Creeper (Campsis), Honeysuckle (Lonicera), Bittersweet - need a male to pollinate the female (Celastrus), Dutchman’s Pipe (Aristolochia), Hydrangea Vine (H. petiolaris), Wisteria (’Aunt Dee’ is the hardiest)
Perennial Herbaceous vines (die back to the ground in the winter): Perennial Sweet Pea (Lathyrus)
Annual Vines: Morning Glory, Thunbergia, Sweet Peas
Check the hardiness on some of the other answers…many aren’t hardy enough for you. I live in northern Vermont…if I can grow it, you can!
Jasmine and madavilla are not winter hardy in zone 5!
If you want perennial, I’d add honeysuckles to the list. For annuals, add canary creeper and michauxia.