Independent 11,021 by Hoskins

Hoskins sets the Tuesday challenge this week.

It’s Tuesday, so we always look out for a theme… and we didn’t have to look far.

During our student years we were big fans of 23d 14ac, so as soon as we had solved 16ac and 20ac, we realised we were going to enjoy Hoskins’ excellent puzzle even more than usual. All the trademark references to sex and drugs were there, along with the Queen. There are no less than fourteen thematic entries relating to 23d 14ac sketches and films, plus one of the members of the team featuring at 5d.

Congratulations to Hoskins for getting so much thematic content into the puzzle at the expense of only a couple of rather unusual words. We have the films ’19ac of 6d’ and ’23d 14ac and the 3d 28ac’, and the ‘Ministry of 18ac 13d’, the ’16ac 20ac’  and the ’22d 26d’ sketches as well as ‘7ac 7ac’ and ’25d’.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
6. A daughter enthralled by hired killer’s swagger (7)
BRAVADO

A D (daughter) in or ‘enthralled by’ BRAVO (hired killer – a new meaning for us)

7. Jog naked around the centre of Rugby (5)
NUDGE

NUDE (naked) round G (middle letter or ‘centre’ of Rugby) – a reminder of the ‘Nudge nudge, wink wink’ 23 / 14 sketch

9. Emissions from SEAT and Triumph 500 (4)
WIND

WIN (triumph) D (500 in Roman numerals) – a typical ‘Hoskins’ definition

10. Period of time in which duke meets lady occasionally (3)
DAY

D (duke) + alternate or ‘occasional’ letters of lAdY

11. Flat seas and oceans primarily will be still (4,2)
EVEN SO

EVEN (flat) S O (first or ‘primary’ letters of seas and oceans)

12. Current news at the front? Two rude fools about to hug! (8)
UNDERTOW

N (first or ‘front’ letter of news) in or ‘hugged by’ an anagram (‘fools about’) of TWO RUDE

14. Super-happy thong covers up Serpent (6)
PYTHON

Hidden (‘covered up’) in super-hapPY THONg

16. Drug-smuggling old man in Six Feet Under? (4)
DEAD

E (drug) in or ‘smuggled by’ DAD (old man)

18. Kid is one making bishop look small and stupid (5)
SILLY

bILLY (Billy the Kid is one Billy) with the ‘b’ (bishop) replaced by or ‘made to look’ S (small)

19. Story written about France in US magazine (4)
LIFE

LIE (story) ‘written’ round F (France)

20. One who is likely to repeat usual rubbish (6)
PARROT

PAR (usual) ROT (rubbish)

21. Southern females must change, to be exact (8)
SELFSAME

S (southern) + an anagram (‘must change’) of FEMALES

24. Equipment found by small children’s camp? (6)
KITSCH

KIT (equipment) S (small) CH (children)

26. Impromptu session in the morning after joint (3)
JAM

AM (in the morning) after J (joint, as in marijuana)

27. Relative is wasted being out of head (4)
AUNT

gAUNT (wasted) without the first letter or ‘out of head’

28. Girl having trouble eating rare platter (5)
GRAIL

The parsing here had us in a bit of a quandary as at first it seemed to be an anagram (‘having trouble’) of ‘GIRL’ round A – but that doesn’t fit with ‘rare’. It seems more likely to be: G (girl, but we can’t find any references to this as an abbreviation) AIL (trouble) round or ‘eating’ R (rare – not in Chambers, but in Collins)

29. Relics broken by half-cut Oxbridge fellows? (7)
CLERISY

An anagram (‘broken’) of RELICS + bY (half-cut) – this is a new word for us

DOWN
1. Around noon, bad dealer shot conductor (10)
BANDLEADER

BAD around N (noon) + an anagram (‘shot’) of DEALER

2. Outlaw sex? Led Zeppelin perhaps not behind that! (6)
BANDIT

IT (sex) with BAND (Led Zeppelin perhaps) in front or ‘not behind’

3. Sacred as Jesus’ hands, as people have told us (4)
HOLY

A homophone (‘as people have told us’) of HOLEY – Jesus’ hands had holes from where he was nailed to the cross.

4. Do this and engineer penury and a touch of depression (8)
UNDERPAY

A clue-as-definition: an anagram (‘engineer’) PENURY, A and D (first letter or ‘touch’ of depression)

5. Unemployed Hoskins had beer, but no starter (4)
IDLE

I’D (Hoskins had) aLE (beer) without the first letter or ‘starter’

6. Man of intellect lowering head to another (5)
BRIAN

BRAIN (intellect) with the ‘a’ (first letter or ‘head’ of ‘another’) moved back or ‘lowered’ in a down clue

8. On removing their tops, flirt and aristo quieten down (4,3)
EASE OFF

tEASE (flirt)  tOFF (aristo) without or ‘removing’ the first letters or ‘tops’

13. With a bit of luck, head of Kew Society gets acquitted (5)
WALKS

W (with) A L (first letter or ‘bit’ of luck) K (first letter or ‘head’ of Kew) S (society)

15. Surprisingly, claimant is bringing good luck (10)
TALISMANIC

An anagram (‘surprisingly’) of CLAIMANT IS – another new word for us

17. Removing a rat is beneath Her Maj (7)
ERASING

A SING (rat, as in inform on) after or ‘beneath’ (in a down clue) ER (‘Her Maj’)

18. Bags of cash? Let’s let loose! (8)
SATCHELS

An anagram (‘let loose’) of CASH LET’S

22. Don’t start song after bit of lovely junk (6)
LUMBER

nUMBER (song) without the first letter or ‘not starting’ after L (first letter or ‘bit’ of lovely)

23. Boy, 10 today, getting disheartened (5)
MONTY

MON (Monday, a day – 10ac) + TodaY without the middle letters or ‘disheartened’

25. Secretary into S&M gets unwanted mail (4)
SPAM

PA (personal assistant – ‘secretary’) in S M – a reference to another 23 / 14 sketch

26. Sailor one associated with bowls? (4)
JACK

Double definition

 

21 comments on “Independent 11,021 by Hoskins”

  1. Superb! Hoskins back on form with a bang. Many thanks to him.

    B&J have said everything I was going to say including my struggles to parse 28a and the same two new words for me.
    Many thanks to them too.

  2. 28: If we consider ‘grail’ as ‘rare platter’, it becomes messier…

    Is the clue missing ‘a’ before ‘rare’?

  3. Good fun trying to identify all the MONTY PYTHON references. I’m glad that the theme wasn’t made obvious from the clues. Same comments as Rabbit Dave@2; maybe KVa@3 is right about a missing ‘a’ at 28a. I couldn’t get CLERISY at the end, which just seemed too unlikely a word despite the helpful wordplay and crossers.

    Favourite was the non-thematic WIND – as you say, a typical Hoskins def.

    Thanks to Hoskins and B&J

  4. Could also include BANDIT in the theme, film by Gilliam included Cleese and Palin. Great fun. Th as nks Hopkins and B&J.

  5. What a romp! It’s put me in a great mood for the day (and I’m going to the Apollo Theatre Company’s ‘Round the Horne’ this evening!).

    Great clues throughout – my favourites were SILLY, WALKS (coincidentally) and MONTY. Like B&J and Rabbit Dave, I didn’t know BRAVO or CLERISY but they were clearly clued.

    I’m with B&J’s parsing of GRAIL. It’s a while, I think, since we’ve met G and R as abbreviations for girl(s) and rare respectively but I remember seeing them a number of times in the past. I think G has been explained as a sign in a school, perhaps, and R as used in classifying stamps (or a waiter’s note on a steak order).

    Huge thanks to Hoskins for the fun and to (lucky, as crypticsue would say) B&J for an excellent blog.

  6. Great fun from Hoskins. Thanks for the blog, B&J; I’m sure you also spotted Eric IDLE, although you haven’t mentioned him.

  7. Just splendid in every single respect. To have included that many themed words is a work of genius. Having recently experimented with setting, I’ve discovered how hard it is simply to assemble a grid at all, let alone incorporate so much and so naturally.

    I suspect it may be coincidental but, having done a bit of Googling, there is a JAM link to Python too. Here. However, there is a more meaningful link: WIND in the Willows is a 1996 film featuring Jones, Idle, Cleese and Palin.

    Thanks Hoskins and B&J

  8. Thanks both. By chance the first two clues I attempted gave me NUDGE and IDLE so I suspected I knew where we were heading from there. A pleasant memory of Arthur ‘two sheds’ Jackson (I think) is currently occupying my mind

  9. Great fun. Even I spotted the theme and found it helpful. Strangely BRIAN made me think of the Australian philosophers sketch at first, but, of course, they were all Bruce.

  10. Amazing crossword, and just about as funny as the original. SILLY has now become one of my favourite clues of all time.

  11. Didn’t register the theme but that’s not unusual, plus the fact that MP never appealed to me – sorry, but there it is!
    Hoskins will know how I felt about his clue for HOLY, we’ve been down that route before today, but he did rather fool me with the hired killer whom I hadn’t come across previously and didn’t find in my admittedly brief searches.

    Thanks to Hoskins, looks as though you’ve brought pleasure to many contributors with this one!

  12. I don’t believe it! I know Tuesday is theme day, I was (and still am) a great fan of Monty Python, and I totally failed to spot that that was the theme.

  13. Lumber clerisy crossers held me up but a fun easy to spot (sorry Dormouse) theme. Thanks bloggers and Harry. Good grief i see from your recent blog it’s 10 years since you took over from me here.

  14. Many thanks to the reviewsome-twosome and to all who commented and solved. Hope to see y’all next time around two weeks this Sunday, but until then its cheers and chin chin from me. 🙂

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