|
ANAGRAMMED WEST WING STARS |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Social insects, termites live in groups of a few hundred to several million called these |
colonies
|
|
|
Hail to the chief: ART MEN SHINE |
Martin Sheen
|
|
|
One of these large birds is featured in "Les Maries de la Tour Eiffel" (reminds me of "Fantasia") |
(Arthur: What are flamingos?)
ostriches
|
|
|
The avant-garde author of "Three Lives", her home was a salon for emerging artists such as Picasso & Braque |
(Gertrude) Stein
|
|
|
Published in 1976, her last Miss Marple case, "Sleeping Murder", was actually written during WWII |
(Agatha) Christie
|
|
|
Add this letter to "S" for the Internet domain name of Napoleon's last home |
(Alex: .s[*], St. [*]elena.)
H
|
|
|
Dioxide of this element, symbol Cr, is used to make recording tape for cassettes |
chromium
|
|
|
She "presses" on: SOLE JAIL NANNY |
Allison Janney
|
|
|
The "Bluebird Pas de Deux" is performed at Princess Aurora's wedding in this fairy tale ballet |
Sleeping Beauty
|
|
|
While in Paris, poet & critic Ezra Pound helped little-known talent T.S. Eliot edit this 1922 poem |
"The Waste Land"
|
|
|
She introduced Mr. & Mrs. Dalloway in her first novel, "The Voyage Out" |
Virginia Woolf
|
|
|
Now add this letter to get H. Rider Haggard's novel about an African sorceress |
(Alex: Now you add an [*] to get She. S-H-[*]. We're building, you see. It's a building block sort of thing. Not an easy category.)
E
|
|
|
The Cassini spacecraft is scheduled to study this planet & send a probe to the surface of its moon Titan |
Saturn
|
|
|
We're still "laugh-in" at her: O MY ILL LINT |
(Alex: [After Russ gets the third straight clue in the category] Obviously you're a fan of West Wing.)
Lily Tomlin
|
|
|
Gelsey Kirkland starred in the 1972 version of "The Song of" this nocturnal bird |
a nightingale
|
|
|
This "Fanfare for the Common Man" composer sold his first work while studying with Nadia Boulanger in Paris |
(Aaron) Copland
|
|
|
Chapters in this novel include "Wickfield and Heep" & "Mr. Micawber's Gauntlet" |
David Copperfield
|
|
|
Next add this letter for a ballpark opened April 17, 1964 |
(Alex: [After Arthur selects TAKE IN ORDER! $600] You're gonna stick with it? Good for you, Arthur.) (Arthur: Get rid of it.) ... (Russ: What is I?) ... (Alex: Now you have She[*]. S-H-E-[*].)
A
|
|
|
The name of this pivoted frame for the combustion chamber & nozzle of a rocket sounds like Macy's one-time rival |
a gimbal
|
|
|
Quite a "lady": DANCING CART HONKS |
Stockard Channing
|
|
|
Tamara Karsavina won the role of this title bird in a 1910 ballet because Anna Pavlova didn't like the music |
the Firebird
|
|
|
Alexander Calder made one of his first wire sculptures in the image of this expatriate singer/dancer |
Josephine Baker
|
|
|
Published in 1590, "The Legend of the Red Cross Knight" is the first of 6 books in this poetic epic |
(Arthur: What is The Song of Roland?)
The Faerie Queene
|
|
|
Then add this letter to get a type of stress affecting solids or a change in the wind speed |
(Alex: [*] for shea[*], yes.)
R
|
|
|
This biologist first gained acclaim for writing in 1937 with her article "Undersea" in the Atlantic Monthly |
Rachel Carson
|
|
|
He's Toby Z: HARD CHIC RIFFS |
(Alex: Toby Ziegler is played by [*].)
Richard Schiff
|
|
|
Created for Anna Pavlova, this famous ballet solo is a lot shorter than "Swan Lake" |
"The Dying Swan"
|
|
|
During his self-exile, he voiced the strife of black Americans in books like 1961's "Nobody Knows My Name" |
James Baldwin
|
|
|
She's the heroine of the long-banned 18th century novel "Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure" |
Fanny Hill
|
|
|