Enigmatic Variations No. 1072: Companions by Wiglaf

I found this puzzle quite challenging, partly due to a gap in my cultural references, which will be revealed – although I suspect many people who don’t have this gap may have got to the thematic entries, at least, straight from the title? Six thematic answers (undefined) need to be found, 20 extra letters identified to describe a related  ‘object’, which is then to be highlighted/shaded in the grid…

(My cultural ‘gap’ is that for various reasons – a combination of living abroad until the age of 10 and going to boarding school at 12 – a general lack of televisual availability in my formative years meant I must be one of the very few people of my ‘generation’ who never really got into Doctor Who – I don’t particularly remember watching it very keenly in the 70s or 80s – and I just never felt the urge to start watching it when it suddenly became popular again in the last 5-10 years…)

So, after a while ploughing and plodding my way through some generally tough clues, I came up with ‘SUSAN’ at 37A – and immediately thought ‘Famous Five’ – was there a Susan?! – and started looking for George and the others – and Timmy the dog, to make 6?

But then MARTHA and DONNA appeared, and ROSE – and I eventually had to resort to the power of wiki-oogling to find the connection between them: they are all names of various companions of the said Doctor over the years. Plus RIVER and ROMANA.

Next came the extra letters – which gradually spelled out ‘IT IS LARGER ON THE INSIDE’ – although that was 21, so IT IS got contracted to IT’S. Which even for a non-fan, was obviously a reference to the Tardis. With the grid not quite full yet, I then spent an inordinate amount of time looking for ‘TARDIS’ – there are a couple of places with T, A and R close together – maybe it was split with TAR <something meaning ‘larger’> DIS? When this proved fruitless, I saw POL in POLIS and thought maybe the letters POLICE – forming a ‘box’? But again, a dead herring and a wild goose chase.

Then, just as the submission deadline loomed, and I was about to file it as ‘not quite there’, I spotted the letters LARGER in a rectangle in the NE quadrant and guessed that these had to be shaded in blue to represent the Tardis:

EV1072

Wow – quite hard work, for me at least, but I got there in the end! Generally quite tough clues, I thought – and some not too familiar words – VATIC, SNITS, IRADE, MOIETY – which, combined with that denouement, put this towards the harder end of the EV scale (again, for me). As I implied earlier, maybe the more die-hard Who-eys, or whatever they call themselves, might have got there quicker?

I liked the idea of the ‘Story of O’ being set as a musical, and involving squaddies!, in 2D. And I couldn’t parse 12D and 29D in the rightmost column at the time – they just fitted the crossing letters and definitions – until forced to revisit them for this blog.

I blogged Wiglaf’s debut EV1044 last November, and this has certainly matched the standards set there – keep them coming!

Across
Clue No Extra letter Entry Clue (definition in bold) /
Logic/Parsing
1A thematic/
undefined
ROSE British regiment conceals well after retreating (4) /
RE (Royal Engineers, British regiment) around (concealing) OS (so, or well, retreating)
4A I PRETENSE False pine trees for false show in Hollywood (8) /
anag (i.e. false) of P(I)NE TREES
10A T IRADE Decree’s string of invective (5) /
double defn. (T)IRADE – string of invective, IRADE – decree, or edict
11A SNITS Fool on board ship displaying fits of sulking (5) /
NIT (fool) in (i.e. on board) SS (steam ship)
13A VATIC Inspired holiday protecting tree (5) /
VAC (vacation, holiday) around (protecting) TI (small Pacific lilliaceous tree)
14A S MUDFLAT Odd bits in mound of istle, apt for wet area (7) /
odd letters in MoUnD oF i(S)tLe ApT
15A L ET AL Ecstasy leading to high and other things (4, 2 words) /
E (ecstasy) + TAL(L) (high)
18A ROPE IN Bring in bird exercises for British … (6, 2 words) /
ROPE IN = RO(B)IN – bird – with PE (exercises) replacing B (British)
20A FOREGO … because I give up (6) /
FOR (because) + EGO (i)
24A ASOCIAL Avoiding contact in a party (6) /
A + SOCIAL (party)
25A A OIL PALM Source of fat Lola, Pam and I used for cooking (7, 2 words) /
anag (i.e. cooking) of LOLA P(A)M and I
27A MOIETY Tim Yeo ordered half (6) /
anag (i.e. ordered) of TIM YEO – topical?!
28A R ADONIC Sneering son dismissed verse possibly used in festival of mourning (6) /
(S)A(R)DONIC – sneering – with S (son) dismissed
31A G ARAK Strong drink from city in Uttar Pradesh, Kanpur initially (4) /
A(G)RA (city in Uttar Pradesh) + K (first letter of Kanpur)
33A E ELEGANT Simple and effective as in the Spanish advance (7) /
EL (the, in Spanish) + EG (as) + ANT(E) – advance payment
35A R IDLER Enigmatist disembowelled a spiv (5) /
(R)ID(D)LER – enigmatist – losing a middle letter (D) – i.e. disembowelled
36A thematic/
undefined
DONNA Proceed with genetic material around (5) /
DNA (genetic material) around ON (interjection, proceed!)
37A thematic/
undefined
SUSAN Tin found in America? The opposite (5) /
USA found in SN (tin) – not the other way around
38A SPEEDWAY Benny with a year in the fast track (8) /
SPEED (benny, amphetamine, slang for Benzedrine) + W (with) + A + Y (year)
39A TONY Theatre award? An old spoon (4) /
Double def’n – a ‘Tony’ being a theatre award, and a ‘tony’ being a simpleton, or ‘spoon’
Down
Clue No Extra letter Entry Clue (definition in bold) /
Logic/Parsing
1D thematic/
undefined
RIVER Topless club (5) /
(D)RIVER – golf club, without top letter
2D ORATORIO Musical setting of Story of O, a proportion involving squaddies (8) /
O + RATIO (proportion) around (involving) OR (Other Ranks, squaddies)
3D O SATE A Malaysian dish likewise consumed (4) /
S(O) – likewise – plus ATE (consumed)
4D N PECTINATE Muscle flexing in attendants? Not half having narrow parallel lobes (9) /
PEC (muscle, pectoral) + anag (i.e. flexing) of IN ATTE (half of ‘in attendants’)
5D thematic/
undefined
ROMANA Humus served up in equal quantities (6) /
ROM (mor, layer of humus, served up) + ANA (in equal quantities, cooking term)
6D ELUL Measure to restrict university for a month (4) /
ELL (measure) around U (university)
7D T ENFORCE Centre of manic urge (7) /
anag (i.e. manic) of CEN(T)RE OF
8D H NIL Love in the London Hilton (3) /
hidden word in ‘LondoN (H)ILton’
9D E STAR Sun glare (4) /
double defn – STAR – sun – and STAR(E) – glare
12D I STROLL Left in gutted volcanic island to saunter (6) /
STR(OMB)OL(I) – volcanic island, gutted – with L (left) added
16D N MOON DAISY Old form of 36 is in my flowering plant (9, 2 words) /
MY around O (old) plus ON(N)DA (anag. i.e. form of, DON(N)A, 36A) + IS
17D S REIGN Singer rocking gets to prevail (5) /
anag (i.e. rocking) of (S)INGER
19D POLIS Ancient city state chamber to have pleasure in once? Not quite (5) /
PO (chamber pot) + LIS(T) – not quite ‘list’, archaic for ‘have pleasure in’
21D GALILEAN Former Christian girl is short and thin (8) /
GAL (girl) + I (contraction, i.e. short, of ‘is’?) + LEAN (thin)
22D I TOMBED Buried headless snake god in environs of Thailand (6) /
TD (outside letters, or environs, of ThailanD) around (Z)OMB(I)E (voodoo/occult snake god, Zombie, headless)
23D EPERGNE English, English salesman knocked over centrepiece for table (7) /
E (English) plus PER GNE – (ENG – English, again! + REP – salesman) – all knocked over.
26D thematic/
undefined
MARTHA Spoil the short one (6) /
MAR (spoil) + TH(E) (the, short) + A (one)
29D CORNY Old-fashioned about taking turns with prayer (5) /
CRY (prayer) and ON (about) ‘taking turns’ – C – o – R – n – Y
30D D SLOP Old policeman, poor, sold up at last (4) /
SLO (anag, i.e. poor, of SOL(D)) + P (last letter of uP)
31D E ANEW The Time Traveller’s Eloi girl turned up again (4) /
WE(E)NA – Eloi character from HG Wells’ The Time Machine – turned up
32D ALSO Further solar trips (not the last) (4) /
anag (i.e. trips) or SOLA(R) – not the last letter
34D ENE Eve’s area of interest? Not self-catering (3) /
(SC)ENE – area of interest, minus SC – self catering

2 comments on “Enigmatic Variations No. 1072: Companions by Wiglaf”

  1. Thanks for the blog. I needed your help to parse 22d & 29d but mostly I found this a pleasant steady solve.

    I’m no great fan of Dr Who but the spare letters gave it away & the names then all rang a bell.

    I gave up on the blue box though – congrats on finding it.

  2. Thanks, shikasta. I think I would have given up on the blue box (if it is correct? – will see tomorrow!) as well, if it hadn’t been my turn on the blogging rota…

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