|
GO SEE A MOVIE ABOUT A HORSE |
|
|
COUNTRIES THAT BORDER INDIA |
|
A CATEGORY FULL OF COR(E)YS |
|
|
|
You'll find the USA's oldest public Japanese Garden in this city's Golden Gate Park |
San Francisco
|
|
|
Tobey Maguire is jockey Red Pollard in this 2003 flick about a down-&-out racehorse |
Seabiscuit
|
|
|
The Met's home in this complex opened in 1966 with Samuel Barber's "Antony and Cleopatra" |
Lincoln Center
|
|
|
The border between India & this nation includes the village of Wagah with its rival army parades performed there daily |
(Ken: Now, you three were very good at that category; you just had the order all wrong.) [Laughter]
Pakistan
|
|
|
President of the Philippines from 1986 to 1992, she used the nickname Cory |
Corazon Aquino
|
|
|
It's the mildest type of burn but the harshest type of murder |
first degree
|
|
|
The U.S. Botanic Garden is on the National Mall & its acting director is the person in the post "Architect of" this |
the Capitol
|
|
|
Passionate about horses, Elizabeth Taylor wins one in a town lottery in this 1944 classic |
(John: What is Black Velvet?)
National Velvet
|
|
|
Emma Calvé might have tired of the habanera when she set a Met record singing this role 138 times |
(Ken: And I heard kind of a hushed, "yes" when I introduced the OPERA category, Jilana; are you going to bet big here?) ... (Jilana: I should have bet more.)
Carmen
|
|
|
India's longest land border, some 2,500 miles, is with this nation that gained independence in 1971 |
(Steve: What is Pakistan?)
Bangladesh
|
|
|
In February 2019, this New Jersey Democratic senator announced for president & hoped to "channel our common pain back into our common purpose" |
Cory Booker
|
|
|
It can mean to attach something, like with a clasp, or to detach something, like coupons |
clip
|
|
|
As well as offering gambling & a gallery of fine art, this Las Vegas hotel also boasts a conservatory & botanical gardens |
the Bellagio
|
|
|
In 2010 Diane Lane played the real-life owner who took a chance that paid off with this 1973 Triple Crown winner |
Secretariat
|
|
|
Enrico Caruso is seen here as this biblical hero in a Met production of a Saint-Saens opera |
Samson
|
|
|
In 1967 India & this nation had a military clash along the border of Sikkim, then an Indian protectorate & today a state |
(John: What is Bangladesh?)
China
|
|
|
Cory Doctorow's somewhat Orwellian look at the near future isn't called "Big" this but "Little" this |
Brother
|
|
|
If you get it on your food, it's a little bonus; if a court does it to your wages, it's anything but |
garnish
|
|
|
The Desert Garden at this San Marino, California library features more than 2,000 species of desert plants |
the Huntington Library
|
|
|
Robert Redford played the title character, a Montana rancher who is a mystical horse healer, in this 1998 film |
The Horse Whisperer
|
|
|
The Met gave the American premiere of his "Turandot" & the world premiere of his "Girl of the Golden West" |
Puccini
|
|
|
India shares an 1,100-mile border with this former kingdom & the practice of Hinduism by the majorities of both their peoples |
(Jilana: What is... what is China?)
Nepal
|
|
|
Corey Hawkins played Dr. Dre in this hip-hop biopic |
(Ken: Ooh, good movie, [*].)
Straight Outta Compton
|
|
|
This adjective describes both something that moves quickly & something that doesn't move at all |
fast
|
|
|
A National Historic Site of Canada, these gardens on Vancouver Island include the beautiful Sunken Garden seen here |
(Steve: What is Busch Gardens?)
the Butchart Gardens
|
|
|
The title equine of this 2002 animated film is a Kiger Mustang, the leader of the Cimarron herd |
Spirit
|
|
|
In 2021 the Met premiered its first opera by a Black composer, this jazz trumpeter 5 months younger than Wynton Marsalis |
(Ken: It's a tough one, [*].)
Terence Blanchard
|
|
|
In the northeast, India's Arunachal Pradesh state shares a border with this nation's Kachin state |
(John: Uh, what is Nepal?)
Myanmar (Burma)
|
|
|
Edwin Arlington Robinson wrote a poem about this rich, enviable gentleman who yet kills himself |
Richard Cory
|
|
|
It can mean to withstand something (a storm, for instance) as well as to erode under it |
weather
|
|