Financial Times 18,180 by GAFF

Quite a thorny/inventive puzzle from Gaff, evidently thematic, as it bears the epigraph: “A 40th anniversary puzzle” . . .

. . . referring to the October 8, 1985 première of the English-language version of the musical Les Misérables at the Barbican Centre in London. I admit that I am really not a fan, but I have attempted to mark the thematic ninas that I do know, including COSETTE going around the corner. (If you squint, ENJOLRAS is kind of jumbled up around ROSA toward the middle.) Please let me know if there are more that I missed.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1 PRISONER
One held leaves at the end of term (8)
I think this is: Cryptic definition. I do see that ONE is “held” inside [PRIS]ONE[R], but I cannot make out anything further from there.
5 EROTIC
Romantic hero ticks boxes (6)
Hidden in (boxes) [H]ERO TIC[KS]
9 UNFOLDED
Missing a meal eats medieval spread (8)
UNFED (missing a meal) around (eats) OLD (medieval)
10 ATONAL
Harsh treatment for an alto (6)
Anagram of (treatment for) AN ALTO
12 GENUS ROSA
Dozens of lovers saw generous arrangement we left (5,4)
Anagram of (arrangement) {SA[W] G[E]NEROUS minus (left) WE}, the definition cryptically referring to the bouquet of a dozen roses typically bestowed by lovers
13 IDIOM
Saying Gaff would rock in the Irish Sea (5)
I’D (Gaff would) + IOM (rock in the Irish Sea, i.e., the Isle of Man)
14 SMUG
Satisfied with small cup (4)
S (small) + MUG (cup)
16 ADVISER
Erratically drives a coach (7)
Anagram of (erratically) DRIVES A
19 AMNESIA
Incontinent men suffering blackout (7)
Anagram of (suffering) MEN inside (in) ASIA (continent), with a spacing misdirection, i.e., IN CONTINENT
21 VALE
Farewell to depression (4)
Double definition
24 AIRER
Stand for clothes, but more beautiful topless (5)
[F]AIRER (more beautiful) minus first letter (topless)
25 MARY JANES
Women’s shoes (4,5)
Double definition
27 CRABBY
Taxi driver has right to be cross (6)
CABBY (taxi driver) around (has) R (right)
28 DISASTER
Calamity to be little plant (8)
DIS (to belittle, with a spacing misdirection) + ASTER (plant)
29 SETTER
Gaff’s dog (6)
Double definition
30 CONSIDER
Think the right place to be is in credit (8)
ONSIDE (the right place to be) inside (in) CR. (credit)
DOWN
1 PLUNGE
Source of breath in exercise taken by diver (6)
LUNG (source of breath) inside (in) PE (exercise)
2 INFANT
Starts to indicate need for a new table being under one, maybe (6)
First letters of (starts to) I[NDICATE] N[EED] F[OR] A N[EW] T[ABLE], the definition referring to age
3 OGLES
Eyeballs turn up at Leeds, oddly (5)
GO (turn) inverted (up) + odd letters of (oddly) L[E]E[D]S
4 ERELONG
Green log cut and carved soon (7)
Anagram of (carved) {GREEN + LO[G] minus last letter (cut)}
6 RETRIEVAL
Leaf maybe found in new suit’s recovery (9)
EV ([Nissan] Leaf maybe) inside (found in) RETRIAL (new suit)
7 TANGIEST
Most biting gnats it seems at heart are problematic (8)
Anagram of (are problematic) {GNATS + IT + middle letter of (at heart) [SE]E[MS]}
8 CALAMARI
Seafood around mid-May is shellfish and fresh air (8)
CLAM (shellfish) around middle letter of (mid-) [M]A[Y] + anagram of (fresh) AIR
11 RAJA
Part for a jazz king (4)
Hidden in (part) [FO]R A JA[ZZ]
15 MISERABLE
Sad note in Italy will be blue without you, it’s said (9)
MI (note) + SERA (will be, in Italy, i.e., in Italian) + BL[U]E minus (without) U homophone of (it’s said) YOU
17 TABASCOS
Sauces start becoming amazingly spicy filling for wraps (8)
{First letters of (start) B[ECOMING] A[MAZINGLY] S[PICY]} inside (filling for) TACOS (wraps), with a bit of an &lit flair overall
18 INERRANT
Flawless top restaurant gets complaint (8)
[D]INER (restaurant) minus first letter (top) + RANT (complaint)
20 ARMY
Force commando into agreement (4)
RM (commando, i.e., Royal Marine[s]) inside (into) AY (agreement)
21 VERTIGO
Arranging duck v tiger is feeling unbalanced (7)
Anagram of (arranging) {O (duck) + V + TIGER}
22 UNITED
Combined club (6)
Double definition, the latter presumably referring generically to a football club
23 USURER
Dealer’s turn to be more certain (6)
U- ([type of] turn) + SURER (to be more certain). A usurer lends money at interest, but I suppose “dealer” is broadly synonymous.
26 JEANS
Norma’s trousers? (5)
Or JEAN’S, double definition, presumably an oblique reference to Norma Jean[e] Mortenson aka Marilyn Monroe

6 comments on “Financial Times 18,180 by GAFF”

  1. Very enjoyable puzzle. Thanks Gaff.
    Excellent blog. Thanks Cineraria.

    PRISONER
    Can’t think of anything better. ONE ‘held’ in the solution looks coincidental.
    CONSIDER
    A query: ‘the right side to be’ is nounal, whereas ‘ONSIDE’ is adj or adv.
    (I think the onside on a cricket field doesn’t fit here). Am I missing
    something?

    Liked GENUS ROSA, AMNESIA and TABASCOS.

  2. Tricky, especially as I have never seen or read Les mis and was looking out for the miners’ strike or Heysel disaster references.

    Good blog!

  3. Nope, noticed nothing. [Like Cineraria, not really fans, but we saw Les Mis in ’90, along with, yes, Phantom, and Mousetrap. Just summat you did, like the pic sitting on a Landseer lion].
    A dnf today, needed to guess-and-check a couple of squares to finish Tabasco, genus rosa, and the nho Mary Janes. A couple of hmm?s along the way, like romantic =? erotic, and inerrant (erk) for flawless, but otherwise a pretty neat set of clues, thanks Gaff and Cineraria.

  4. James P@3
    CONSIDER
    I think my previous post was somewhat ambiguous. I took ONSIDE as the football term,
    which is used as an adj or adv not as a noun. The cricket term is used as a noun as well,
    but it doesn’t fit the context.

  5. I took ONSIDE as a football term too but take KVa’s point.
    Well, I’ve read a lot of French literature in my time but I failed to spot the Les Mis theme though it’s fairly jumping out at me now!
    I’m not a fan of such musicals but the theme is cleverly done. What I did like was a properly chewy challenge with some interesting devices. In particular, I liked the women’s attire ((25, 26), those crafty spaces (or lack thereof) in AMNESIA and DISASTER, the neat ADVISER and SMUG (I was certainly satisfied with my piccolo consumed while solving this!).
    Had absolutely no idea about the Nissan Leaf but got this from the definition alone.
    Thanks Gaff for a great challenge and a similarly great blog from Cineraria.

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