An enjoyable Tuesday challenge from Atrica.
The influences here range from MPs of the late 20th century to current football players and recent food fads. I enjoyed the sneaky definitions in 11a/12a, 2d, and (especially) 23d.
It’s Tuesday so we’re looking for a theme. I must admit that solving 9a followed by 10a made me think of Notre-Dame de Paris, but the real theme appeared soon afterwards, helped by 24a (cleverly clued with reference to a different author) and 25a (with a more direct reference). We’re looking at the poet and playwright TS ELIOT: his works include The HOLLOW Men, Murder in the CATHEDRAL, The LOVE SONG of J Alfred Prufrock, Old Possum’s Book of Practical CATS, Journey of the MAGI, The WASTE LAND, EAST Coker, The Dry SALVAGES, and LITTLE Gidding. Have I missed anything? I’m sure you’ll tell me if I have. UPDATE: that should be EAST COKER, and also BURNT Norton; thanks to Ian SW3 and mw7000 for their comments.
Thanks Atrica for the fun.
Definitions are underlined; BOLD UPPERCASE indicates letters used in the wordplay; square brackets [ ] indicate omitted letters.
ACROSS | ||
1 | HOLLOW |
Do this to physique to make exercise valueless (6)
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If you HOLLOW out P[hysiqu]E by removing the inner letters, you get PE (physical education = exercise). | ||
4 | SALVAGES |
After collapse, Las Vegas recovers (8)
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Anagram (after collapse) of LAS VEGAS. | ||
9 | BURNT |
Overcooked cake at temperature recipe included (5)
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BUN (a small cake) + T (temperature), including R (abbreviation for Latin recipe = take, in old-fashioned drug prescriptions). | ||
10 | CATHEDRAL |
One hundred articles rejected shortening church (9)
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C (Roman numeral for 100) + A + THE (indefinite and definite articles), then LARD (shortening = solid fat used for baking) reversed (rejected). | ||
11/12 | LOVE SONG |
Tonight, for example, scoreless prior to Spurs forward getting header for goal (4,4)
|
LOVE (scoreless, in tennis) + SON (Spurs football forward Son Heung-min) + first letter (header) of G[oal].
Tonight is a love song from the musical West Side Story. |
||
13 | PEACH |
Fruit and vegetable? Chef chops only the common ingredients (5)
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PEA (a vegetable), then the two letters that are common to CH[ef] and CH[ops]. | ||
15 | NORMANS |
Fowler and Lamont, perhaps not completely typical partners (7)
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NORMA[l] (typical) without the last letter (not completely), then N + S (North and South = partners in the game of bridge).
Norman Fowler and Norman Lamont are both former Conservative cabinet ministers, now life peers. |
||
16 | NAIL |
Arrest invalidly, ignoring the odds (4)
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[i]N[v]A[l]I[d]L[y], ignoring the odd-numbered letters. | ||
19 | EAST |
Cardinal‘s festival spurning the Queen (4)
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EAST[er] (festival) without ER (the Queen).
One of the four cardinal directions of the compass. |
||
21 | OCTUPLE |
Original couplet, eight times over (7)
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Anagram (original) of COUPLET. | ||
24 | ELIOT |
John almost making a comeback, or George? (5)
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TOILE[t] (john = a slang word for toilet), without its last letter (almost), reversed (making a comeback).
George Eliot = pen name of the author Mary Ann Evans, which she used because women weren’t generally taken seriously as writers in the 1800s. The surface seems to refer to two late members of the Beatles; and of course the solution also refers to another writer Eliot, who gives us today’s theme. |
||
25 | CATS |
Initials of Anglo-American poet going on about practical creatures (4)
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TS (T S Eliot, Anglo-American poet) added to (going on) CA (ca = abbreviation for Latin circa = about = approximately).
Extended definition: Eliot wrote Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats, a collection of verses (on which the musical Cats is based). |
||
26 | MAGI |
Bearers of gifts damaging contents (4)
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Hidden answer (contents) in [da]MAGI[ng]. | ||
28 | WASTELAND |
Dawn’s late breaking in the desert (9)
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Anagram (breaking) of DAWN’S LATE. | ||
29 | COKER |
US junkie more politically correct, giving up whiskey for a bit of chardonnay (5)
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[w]OKER (woke = often derogatory word for “politically correct”), replacing W (Whiskey in the radio alphabet) with the first letter (a bit) of C[hardonay].
Coker = US slang for a cocaine user = junkie. |
||
30 | TALISMAN |
Charm in part of capital is manifest (8)
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Hidden answer (part of . . .) in [capi]TAL IS MAN[ifest].
Charm = an object with supposed magical powers. |
||
31 | LITTLE |
Origin of literary title freely associated with Women, Chicken and Gidding? (6)
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First letter (origin) of L[iterary] + anagram (freely) of TITLE.
Reference to the titles of three literary works: Little Women (by Louisa May Alcott), Chicken Little (folk tale otherwise known as Henny Penny), and Little Gidding (a poem by today’s theme writer). |
||
DOWN | ||
1 | HOBBLING |
Henry heading off, teetering and limping (8)
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H (abbreviation for Henry = unit of electrical inductance) + [w]OBBLING (teetering) with its first letter (heading) taken off. | ||
2 | L-DRIVERS |
Left and right blocking various impediments to rapid progress? (1-7)
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L (left), then R (right) inserted into (blocking) DIVERS (archaic spelling of diverse = various).
Short for learner drivers, who may drive more slowly than other road users would like them to. |
||
3 | OATH |
Curse unlimited hate (4)
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[l]OATH[e] (hate, as a verb) without the outer letters (limits). | ||
5 | ANTIGEN |
What can produce an allergic reaction? Some say Aunt Jennifer (7)
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Homophone, possibly, depending on your accent (some say) of AUNTIE JEN (Aunt Jennifer). Some would pronounce “aunt” or “auntie” with a short A as in “ant”; some wouldn’t. But the homophone indicator acknowledges that this won’t work for everyone. | ||
6 | VIEWPOINTS |
Unusual case of Washingtonian with positive opinions (10)
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Anagram (unusual) of the outer letters (case) of W[ashingtonia]N + POSITIVE. | ||
7 | GERMAN |
Endless material from Heidelberg? (6)
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GERMAN[e] (material = relevant) without the last letter (endless). | ||
8 | SYLPHS |
Superficially, sorry leadership hurts spirits (6)
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Outer letters (superficially) of S[orr]Y L[eadershi]P H[urt]S. Could our setter possibly be thinking of the Prime Minister and his colleagues? | ||
10 | CROSS |
Angry mule? (5)
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Double definition: the second refers to cross = crossbreed = a hybrid animal. | ||
14 | BAD ACTRESS |
Car ads best alternative for a talentless performer (3,7)
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Anagram (alternative) of CAR ADS BEST. | ||
17 | UPMARKET |
Maker put out high quality (8)
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Anagram (out) of MAKER PUT. | ||
18 | PEDIGREE |
Strain of impeding disagreeable central characters (8)
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Central characters from the words [im]PEDI[ng] [disa]GREE[able].
Strain = pedigree = biological lineage. |
||
20 | TOCCATA |
Pointless staccato playing in organ piece (7)
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Anagram (playing) of [s]TACCATO, without the S (south = a point of the compass). Or “point” could just mean “first letter” perhaps.
A piece for a keyboard instrument (often but not necessarily the organ), showing off the player’s fingering skills. |
||
21 | OUTED |
Revealed the truth – I’d say that hurt Mr Heath (5)
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Homophone (I’d say) of OW! (that hurt!) + TED (Ted Heath, former Conservative PM).
Out (as a verb) = to say something publicly about someone who would prefer to keep the matter private. |
||
22 | PEEWIT |
Uplifting cry? It could be a bird (6)
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WEEP (cry), reversed (uplifting, in a down clue) + IT.
A bird named for the sound of its call. |
||
23 | MISSAL |
Girl from the north shares letters with girl from the south in book for the masses (6)
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MISS (girl) reading downwards in a down clue (from the north), and LASS (girl) reading upwards (from the south), sharing the SS in the middle.
Book of texts, prayers and instructions for Roman Catholic Mass services. |
||
27 | ACAI |
Leaders to advocate celery as indispensible superfood (4)
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First letters (leaders) of A[dvocate] C[elery] A[s] I[ndispensable].
South American berry, regarded by some as a “superfood”, with various unsubstantiated claims about its medicinal value. |
BURNT Norton.
COKER in caps (!)
Do I dare to eat a PEACH?
Liked HOLLOW, LITTLE, L-DRIVERS, GERMAN and MISSAL (a rarely used device, I think).
Thanks, A and Q!
T.S. Eliot’s love of cryptic crosswords and desire to be referenced in them has been noted here before, so he would be pleased. I came to 24 across and thought “Nice to see a toilet clue
refer to a different Eliot” only to come to 25 across to stumble across the theme, which helped with COKER and WASTELAND, but had me looking in vain for Murder and Norton. I suppose OCTUPLE makes only two of the FOUR QUARTETS.
Thanks Quirister as I did wonder what had happened to the second “e” of “diverse”, had forgotten why H for Henry was valid and didn’t exactly know what a MISSAL was. Not sure I have ever referred to L-DRIVERS (of course L-PLATES are familiar, as are just “Learners”) and BAD ACTRESS comes close to being a “Green Car” doesn’t it? Nevertheless, lots of fun from the clever clues and unusual devices, thanks Atrica.
An enjoyable solve, helped by spotting the theme as we went along. We found most of the thematic entries, apart from 4ac. We wondered if there was a particular reason, such as a significant anniversary, for the theme today but couldn’t find anything. We failed to parse OATH, taking ‘unlimited hate’ as the middle letters of ‘hate’ so that we couldn’t fathom wher the O and the H came from, and we thought 14dn a bit disappointing in that the answer seems to be just two words put together rather arbitrarily – but perhaps it was dictated by the constraints of the theme.
Two of the themed entries were among our favourites – CATHEDRAL and WASTELAND, together with TOCCATA.
Thanks, Atrica and Quirister.
Thanks, Atrica, for a fun puzzle. Highlights for me were 1a, 13a, 24a, 25a, and 23d.
Thanks very much to all who commented and particularly to Quirister, whose blogs are always a great pleasure to read. I’m kicking myself for not noticing that two quartets would be OCTUPLE as Petert pointed out. That could have been the basis for a much better clue! As to “bad actress” it was either that or “papaw trees” (or a radical redesign…). I’ve never seen pawpaw spelled with only one “W” before so didn’t feel that would have been fair. Incidentally, the clue for “bad actress” was a reverse anagram until it was pointed out to me that it did not have a unique solution.
Maybe Mad Hatters for 14D, with a slight change of 19A?
Thanks Atrica and Q
Trouble is, 19A is a themer! You can use “copartners” or “tenantless” with some nonthematic changes, but I don’t much like those words either. I wonder how one draws the line with adjective + noun? I think “bad actress” is more coupled than “green car” but less than “mad hatter”.
Funnily enough, Bad Actor is a known phrase of course!
Thanks Atrica for the insight into your construction process and I am very happy that you rejected the papaw trees and other possibles! Dave@12 yes I thought that at the time although I think the meaning is different isn’t it? Anyway as we all got it I don’t suppose we mind too much after all.