Enigmatic Variations No. 1404: Lady by Vismut

Hi everybody.  Thanks to Vismut for a puzzle which I found very tough, but which revealed at the end the story of a remarkable lady, one well worth reading about.

 

The preamble reads:

14 across clues have fallen to the down set; 14 down clues have jumped to the across set.  Fallers contain an extra letter in the definition; jumpers have a misprint in their wordplay.  When the clues are correctly ordered extra letters spell out a LADY; choosing either a misprint or its correction identifies a country; remaining corrections/misprints name an event.  Solvers must change the appropriate entry to the name of the lady’s partner and highlight 10 cells to show the largest obstacle to their success.  Numbers in brackets give entry length and are in normal clue order.  Chambers Dictionary (2016) is recommended.

 

Sounds like fun!  A worrying number of amended clues, with no idea where to put them, but as usual nothing for it but to crack on and try to solve some clues.  A few answers fell early but then I hit a very long and very worrying sticky patch.  Many clues had to be solved without knowing either checking letters or entry length before the “fallers” and “jumpers” could start to find their stable positions.

The horsey feel was apparent from very early on – indeed, I think HORSE was my first answer – but some cheeky early internet searching revealed nothing.  Most of the letters had to be identified and put in original clue order before they yielded the required names.  The deleted letters from the definition of the fallers, and the deleted/amended letters from the wordplay in the jumpers give:

LATA BRANDISOVA

CZECHOSLOVAKIA

GRAND PARDUBICE

This reveals the story of Lata Brandisova of Czechoslovakia, who won the Grand Pardubice steeplechase in 1937 with the HORSE NORMA, which is the entry changed in the grid.  The grid also contains the most dangerous of jumps: the TAXIS DITCH.  I can’t do justice to her in a summary, so will instead link to the article in the Telegraph which may well have inspired this puzzle:

The woman who defied the Nazis to win the toughest horse race in history

 

 

Given
Clue No
Actual
Clue No
ANSWER Clue with definition underlined    
Explanation, with quoted indicators in italics and letters appearing in the ANSWER capitalised and emboldened
Across
1a 7d ROSE Couples ba[c]<n>king roadhouse wine (5) C N
The pairs of letters (couples) at the edges of (banking) ROadhouSE
6a   SURPASS Goad donkey quietly shifting sideways to go over (7)    
SPUR (goad) + ASS (donkey), with P (quietly) shifting sideways
11a 24d SUMPHS Quiet ape mo[v]<u>es regularly up Glaswegian flats (8) V U
SH (quiet) plus alternate letters of (… regularly) aPe MoUeS reversed (up).  Scottish (Glaswegian) word for simpletons (flats)
12a 26d FRISÉE [A]<b>aron leaves plastic saucer for salad leaves (4) A B
B (baron) leaves FRIS[b]EE (plastic saucer)
13a   CATASTAS They show unpaid workers about, two Saturdays over (8)    
CA (circa, about) then SAT+SAT (two Saturdays) reversed (over)
15a 8d PLAYTIME Working, I temp covering lady losing [h]<d>ead in games period (5) H D
An anagram of (working) I TEMP around (covering) LA[d]Y missing (losing) D (dead)
16a   HORSE Hack having husky voice on radio (5)    
Sounds like (having … on radio) HOARSE (husky voice)
17a 34d ICON Bit of indecent l[e]<a>g in portrayal of Virgin Mary (3) E A
The first letter of (bit of) Indecent + CON (lag)
18a 5d ALTO CLEFS A soft c[a]<e>ll organised pitch fixers (4) A E
A SOFT CELL, anagrammed (organised)
19a   TATERS Hog might store these exotic treats (6)    
An anagram of (exotic) TREATS
21a 19d TENTACLES Feelers king put out from [a]<s>top succeeded – 10 at first (8) A S
K (king) removed from (put out from) TAC[k]LE, then S (succeeded), with TEN (10) at first
25a   COMPLEX NUMBER Mental condition: feeling less imaginary plus real figures tallied (13, two words)    
COMPLEX (mental condition) + NUMBER (feeling less)
27a 14d SHELLS Schooner’s to[o]<p> singular; purgatory inside hulls (8) O P
Schooner’s first letter (top) and S (singular), with HELL (purgatory) inside
28a   SARODS Instruments pinpoint day in cycle of years (6)    
Place (pinpoint) D (day) in SAROS (cycle of years)
30a 4d SAAME Lapps run from ma[z]<r>e as disconcerted (4) Z R
R (run) removed from MA[r]E AS, anagrammed (disconcerted)
32a 31d ORION [I]<c>an’s beginning to go from 34, following gold hunter (3) I C
Can’s first letter (beginning) to go from I[c]ON (34d), after (following) OR (gold)
33a 20d SARSENETS Crafted a[l]<r>es special, nest in tissues (5) L R
AN anagram of (crafted) ARES S (special) NEST
35a   ASSAI Very nutritious fruit (5)    
A double definition
36a 30d SUTRA Loc[i]<k> ignoring hard god in religion’s scripture (8) I K
S[h]UT (lock) without (ignoring) H (hard) + RA (god)
37a   DIET Conference that is in vacant development (4)    
IE (that is) in DevelopmenT with the inner letters removed (vacant)
38a 2d TSAR Leader’s first to take [g]<c>old out of mark (8) G C
The first letter of (first to) Take, then C (cold) is removed from (out of) S[c]AR
39a   KNEECAP Vagrant can keep protective cover (7)    
An anagram of (vagrant) CAN KEEP
40a 23d UP TO DATE With it at college to[o]<d>! Pals cutting fringes (5) O D
UP (at college), TOD (from the clue), and [m]ATE[s] (pals) without the outer letters (cutting fringes)
Down
1d   SACK RACES Heats in a bag? (9, two words)    
A cryptic definition
2d 15a SALMI Di[a]ne on this mail’s crude (4) A  
An anagram of (… crude) MAILS
3d   ASTER Top chief for plant (5)    
Remove the first letter from (top) [m]ASTER (chief)
4d 1a STASH Rough old qui[l]t a host’s produced after overcoat’s first lost (5) L  
A H[o]STS anagrammed (produced) after the first letter of overcoat (overcoat’s first) is removed (lost)
5d 21a AMPULLAE They carry v[a]in, American jerk – gutless ape (9, two words) A  
AM (American), PULL (jerk), and ApE without its central letter (gutless)
6d   START Begin stone design (5)    
ST (stone) + ART (design)
7d 11a ASSAULTS Se[a]ts upon a ship accommodating sailor eating last piece of tofu (4) A  
A (from the clue) and SS (ship) containing (accommodating) SALT (sailor), in turn containing (eating) the last letter of (last piece of) tofU
8d 36a SOLSTICE One’s 21st Dec[o] closet is extravagant (8) O  
An anagram of (… extravagant) CLOSET IS
9d   AILEEN Elaine’s new name for filly (6)    
ELAINE, anagrammed (new)
10d   SOMERSET County club chasing a few runs? (8)    
SET (club) following (chasing) SOME (a few) + R (runs)
14d 33a DITCH Parisian named children in scrap[s] (6) S  
DIT (Parisian named) + CH (children)
19d 27a FITMENTS Bill’s Du[n]es, old songs including tenor pieces (9) N  
FITS (old songs, archaic word for songs) containing (including) T (tenor) and MEN (pieces).  Shakespearean (Bill’s) word for dues
20d 38a BEETROOT Go[v] this colour as ill at ease from press machine – they’re heartless (9) V  
BEsET (press) and RObOT (machine) without their central letters (they’re heartless)
22d   MOCASSIN Snake doctor evil bewildering immature patient (8)    
MO (doctor) + SIN (evil) containing (bewildering, overcoming) CASe (patient) without the last letter (immature, unfinished)
23d 40a BANNS Notice that couple are getting [a]wed by Poles to the right of bar (8, three words) A  
NS (poles) after (to the right of, in an across answer) BAN (bar)
24d 32a PSI Number of Hellenic pla[i]ce being reflected in display (6) I  
The answer is being reversed (reflected) in dISPlay
26d 18a RARE Like a st[r]eak through heat; briefly extraordinary (6) R  
A double definition
29d   STOEP European opts to change platform in East London (5)    
An anagram of (… to change) E (European) with OPTS.  East London, South Africa
30d 30a SORE [D]raw flowers or Egyptian masks (5) D  
FlowerS OR Egyptian hides (masks) the answer
31d 12a LION Aslan[t] perhaps in review of new painting (5) T  
Reversal of (review of) N (new) + OIL (painting)
33d   DISC Show the first half round (4)    
DISClose (show), just the first half
34d 17a EEL Skinned deer left slippery [b]one (4) B  
With outer letters removed (skinned), dEEr, then L (left)

 

3 comments on “Enigmatic Variations No. 1404: Lady by Vismut”

  1. Yes, very tough, hard to keep track of what preamble said we were to do with jumpers and fallers without making a note to myself. Thanks to Vismut and Kitty. I thought I got there in the end but only just realised I never saw mocassin with two S’s and one C before. No wonder what I had entered at 28A and 32A made no sense.

  2. Kitty, thanks for the excellent blog – on an excellent puzzle which was extremely satisfying. It was quite tough in places, but I really enjoyed it. It was great to have a totally new subject, theme – and one that was so interesting.

  3. I’ve enjoyed the puzzles I’ve seen from Vismut to date, and this was a fine puzzle too. I’ll admit I got in a muddle with the moving clues, which I found frustrating, but it all came together nicely in the end. I couldn’t find a Wiki entry in English and there wasn’t a lot of information online, but the Telegraph article referenced above was useful. Perhaps too much so, as I spent ages trying to find SCHLAGBAUM in the final grid. He was after all an obstacle in that he tried to prevent Lata Brandisova taking part and, of course, would occupy 10 cells.

    I hadn’t heard of this remarkable lady before and enjoyed learning about her. Super blog from Kitty- but that’s hardly a surprise, is it?

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