Financial Times 16,878 by LEONIDAS

Solid cluing with the occasional flash of wit.

I particularly enjoyed the image of Champagne-filled opera-goers desperate for the missing Portaloos. Thanks, Leonidas.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1 GASPER
Smoke fish including small gutted plaice (6)
GA.R (‘fish’) includes S[mall] + P{laice}E, eviscerated.
5 WOODCHIP
Court near Washington with cool wallpaper (8)
WOO (to ‘court’) + DC (‘Washington’) + HIP (‘cool’).
9 INTREPID
Setter foolishly printed in bold (8)
I (1st person, ‘setter’) + anagram (‘foolishly’) of PRINTED.
10 TUMBLE
Roll of midriff meeting elbows halfway around (6)
TUM (‘midriff’) + 1st half of ‘ELBows’. reversed.
11 EXTEND
Offer solution to (E x 10) + (50 x 10) (6)
E + X + TEN + D (Roman 500, = 50 x 10).
12 LET LOOSE
Release hired toilets before end of Glyndebourne (3,5)
LET (‘hired’) + LOOS (‘toilets’) + last of ‘glyndebournE’.
14 GRAYSON PERRY
Artist knocking back Cornish cheese with his French drink (7,5)
Reversal of YARG (‘Cornish cheese’) + SON (Fr. ‘his’) + PERRY (pear ‘drink’).
18 INDEPENDENCE
Fresh new epic needed about national freedom (12)
Anagram (‘fresh’) of N[ew] + EPIC + NEEDED around N[ational].
22 DISCIPLE
Devotee putting impulses regularly on record (8)
DISC (‘record’) + alternate letters of “ImPuLsEs’.
25 ASYLUM
Safety area swiftly evacuated in front of chimney (6)
A[rea] + outside letters of ‘SwiftlY’.+ LUM (Scots ‘chimney’).
26 ACCORD
Agree places centrally next to rows three or four? (6)
Middle of ‘plACes’ + C OR D (3rd or 4th rows in e.g.theatre).
27 STERNUMS
What adders do to swallow bird bones (8)
Adders-up do S.UMS, which surrounds TERN (‘bird’).
28 MENSWEAR
Some women swearing in M&S department (8)
Included in ‘woMEN SWEARing’.
29 LAHORE
City mayor undone finally after halo slipped (6)
Anagram (‘slipped’) of HALO plus last letters of ‘mayoR’ & ‘undonE’.
DOWN
2 ANNEXE
The second of Henry’s cattle skinned in side building (6)
ANNE (Boleyn, 2nd wife of HVIII) + internal letters of ‘oXEn’.
3 PORBEAGLE
Shark left tailless on famous ship . . . . (9)
PORt (‘left’, de-tailed) + BEAGLE (Darwin’s famous ship).
4 REPUDIATE
. . . . floating at pier due for cast off (9)
Anagram (‘floating’) of AT PIER DUE.
5 WADDLES
Shuffles when top of bandage slips down (7)
sWADDLE (to ‘bandage’), its ‘S’ descended to last place.
6 OCTET
Composition of film that’s taken under a month (5)
OCTober + ET (‘film’).
7 COMBO
Trump’s hairstyle cryptically is a mixture of things (5)
The Donald famously sports a comb-over hairstyle, so, cryptically, COMB + O[ver] (as in cricket).
8 ILLUSORY
Exotic lily ours? It’s not real (8)
Anagram (‘exotic’) of LILY OURS.
13
See 19
15 NONPAREIL
Best apron tangled in twisted line (9)
Nested anagrams (‘tangled’, ‘twisted’) of APRON + LINE.
16 EVERY INCH
A German child assimilating so thoroughly (5,4)
E.IN (‘a’ in German) + CH[ild] surround VERY (‘so’).
17 ENCIRCLE
Ring nurse over poorly cleric (8)
E.N. (a qualified ‘nurse’) + anagram (‘poorly’) of ‘CLERIC’.
19, 13 PHILIP
Duke in character starts to laugh improvising part (6)
PHI (Gk. ‘character’) + 1st letters of last 3 words. The late Duke of Edinburgh, of course.
20
See 23
21 FULMAR
Seabird mostly stuffed with butter that’s turned (6)
Most of ‘FUL{l} (‘stuffed’) + reversal of RAM (a butting animal).
23, 20 CROSS-DRESSER
14 is one annoyed with American drawers (5-7)
CROSS (‘annoyed’) + DRESSER (chest-of-drawers in U.S.), for the flamboyant potter at 14.
24 PADRE
Priest keeping notebook on his own class? (5)
PAD (‘notebook’) + R[eligious] E[ducation].

14 comments on “Financial Times 16,878 by LEONIDAS”

  1. Hovis

    I think the blog for 15d should make it clearer that it is an anagram of APRON inside an anagram of LINE.

    I enjoyed this tussle, taking a little longer than my normal solve. I think I learned GASPER & FULMAR from previous cryptics. The wife of 14a was in Countdowns dictionary corner not long ago.

  2. Grant Baynham

    To Hovis @1:
    Picky as ever, Hovis. You’re right, of course, so I’ve added a ‘nested’ to the blog.

  3. Diane

    This witty puzzle from Leonidas was really something to get your teeth into, including my overall favourite, 14, with its ploughman’s-style surface. The artist here was not the first entertainer I thought of with that name but the enumeration ruled that one out. Liked 5, 12 and 27 too.
    A really good mix of clues and original wordplay.
    Too bad I didn’t see both halves of the unknown 3d – another unusual species to add to the growing list.
    Thanks to Leonidas and Grant .

  4. NNI

    Very enjoyable as per usual from Leonidas. Never heard of GASPER but guessed it from the word play. Had to look up a list of Cornish cheeses to get GRAYSON, but I managed everything else without aids.
    Number 10 from NH, if anyone is interested.

  5. WordPlodder

    Third out of three hard ones in the Fifteensquared stable today. This was very entertaining, even if some of the cultural references, eg GRAYSON PERRY being a CROSS-DRESSER, passed me by. A few not so common words as well; I just remembered PORBEAGLE, but WOODCHIP as a type of ‘wallpaper’ had to go in from wordplay.

    Favourites were GASPER (a descriptive word), the surface for TUMBLE and my last in, COMBO.

    Yes, number 10 from Leonidas, plus (I think) another 24 from Wire in the Indy, NNI @4. I can understand if you don’t wish to reveal his/her identity, but are you able to say who “NH” is?

    Thanks to Leonidas and Grant

  6. john

    Today I failed on 3 down and 14 across, even with “–a-son perry” and “por-e—e” and admit I had never heard of either of them or of “yarg”. The rest was fun if challenging. Thanks Leonidas and Grant.

  7. Roz

    Lovely crossword and a very thorough blog, thank you.
    I think all my favourites mentioned above, perhaps STERNUMS was the pick for me.

  8. AID

    I would have thought the plural of sternum was sterna.

  9. Simon S

    AID @ 8: both are acceptable.

  10. Sil van den Hoek

    WordPlodder @5:
    See the S&B York 2021 (29/30 Oct) post (in Announcements, or at the top of Fifteensquared’s home page), ‘comment’ @28.

    This was another very fine Leonidas crossword, one of those setters who think precision does matter!
    [that said, I did like our setter’s previous puzzle even more]

    Many thanks to Grant & Leonidas.

  11. Tony Santucci

    That took awhile — there were some words I didn’t know but I could get from the wordplay — GASPER, WOODCHIP (as wallpaper), and FULMAR; other unknowns required outside help such as GRAYSON PERRY and PORBEAGLE. Overall it was a nicely crafted crossword with LET LOOSE, EVERY INCH, and PADRE being favourites. Thanks to both.

  12. Castie

    A lovely challenge as ever from Leonidas. A slight tussle with 3d but very gettable from the wordplay.

  13. WordPlodder

    [To Sil @10, a belated thanks].

  14. brucew@aus

    Thanks Leonidis and Grant
    A day behind again – damned work ! Was only able to grab short gaps throughout the day to get this one done and enjoyed it immensely even though it took most of the day to finish.
    Had to resort to a word finder to get WOODCHIP as the penultimate entry – had never heard of that version of wallpaper. Also finished with COMBO and chuckled when I worked out the logic of it. GASPER was commonly used down here when smoking was more widely practiced in my circle. STERNUMS did raise an eyebrow, being more familiar with STERNA, but as Simon says, there it was as an alternative in the dictionary. Had to look up who GRAYSON PERRY was and that immediately led to the 23d, 20d answer.

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