Show #3711 - Monday, October 23, 2000

Contestants

[<< previous game]

Kirsten Edwards, a college student from Chicago, Illinois

Matt Blum, a web designer from Burlington, Massachusetts

Marjorie Goldman, an actor and homemaker from Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania (whose 1-day cash winnings total $10,100)

[next game >>]

Jeopardy! Round

STATE CAPITALS
CELEBRITY RELATIVES
IRISH EYES
INTERNATIONAL ROAD VEHICLE STICKERS
(Alex: You have to name the country each one represents.)
THE "HALL"S
OF MONTEZUMA
    $100 6
In the old railway line it fell between Atchison & Santa Fe
    $100 10
"Postcards from the Edge" is loosely based on her life & her relationship with mom, Debbie Reynolds
    $100 16
This Boomtown Rat organized Band Aid
    $100 17
GB
    $100 1
Noted for its rich acoustics, it's located on NYC's West 57th Street
    $100 22
From 1502 to 1520 Montezuma II ruled these people
    $200 7
Capitals named for women include the capital of Maryland & this Maine capital
    $200 11
"Peggy Sue Got Married" is one of the movies he directed that featured nephew Nicolas Cage
    $200 27
This man with a grandmother from Cork played an Irish-American boxer in 1952's "The Quiet Man"
    $200 18
BR
    $200 2
Once a popular talk show host, he's now the 1-800-COLLECT Man
    $200 23
One of these works entitled "Montezuma" was composed by Roger Sessions in 1964
    $300 8
It's the capital of the state nicknamed "Heart of Dixie"
    $300 13
Between the 2 of them, Dionne Warwick & this cousin have had more than 50 Top 40 hits
    $300 28
Hey, 20 bucks says that you know this president's father was from County Antrim & his mother was Irish, too
    $300 19
DK
    $300 3
1996's "Brain Candy" was this troupe's big screen debut
    $300 24
This defeater of Montezuma reached Mexico in 1519 & some historians believe he was mistaken for a god
    DD: $600 9
In 1999 the team once known as the Houston Oilers made a slick move to this capital
    $400 14
She's mum to actresses Joely & Natasha Richardson
    $400 29
The record says in 1759 he opened his brewery at St. James Gate
    $400 20
KZ
    $400 4
Specific term for the place where Jehovah's Witnesses meet to practice their faith
    $400 25
Reputedly, Montezuma drank as many as 50 cups a day of this drink which the Spanish made sweeter
    $500 12
A synonym for this New England state capital could be what's symbolized by the sign here
[Deer Crossing]
    $500 15
(Hi, I'm Candice Bergen.) My father Edgar Bergen created 2 of the world's most beloved ventriloquist dummies... Charlie McCarthy & this goofy sidekick
    $500 30
Everyone knew when it was windy, but not how windy until this Irishman came up with his scale in 1805
    $500 21
SGP
    $500 5
It's the former name of the college football bowl game now known as the Outback Bowl
    $500 26
With some of the USA's best-preserved cliff dwellings, Montezuma Castle National Monument is in this state

Scores at the first commercial break (after clue 15):

Marjorie Matt Kirsten
$1,200 $200 $200

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Marjorie Matt Kirsten
$2,200 $1,600 $700

Double Jeopardy! Round

ART FOR ART'S SAKE
ONCE THEY WERE ANGELS
(Alex: That's Charlie's Angels we're talking about.)
WEIGHTS & MEASURES
DEAD POETS SOCIETY
MAKE-UP TEST
PHRENCH PHRASES
    $200 6
Now at the Huntington Gallery, it's the "colorful" Sir Thomas Lawrence work seen here
    $200 23
The December 1995 & July 1997 editions of Playboy featured revealing photo spreads of this ex-Angel
    $200 11
Term for 1/36 of a yard
    $200 1
In an Ernest Thayer poem, Cooney, Burrows, Flynn & Blake preceded this man to the plate
    $200 21
Ballerina Julie Kent told Vogue she wears lots of the waterproof type of this instead of false eyelashes
    $200 16
Sam Goldwyn stood on the deck of a departing ship & shouted this to his friends on shore
    $400 7
Edouard Manet painted his portrait of this American author seen here from a daguerreotype
    $400 27
She's had a clothing line at K-Mart since 1985
    $400 12
The Greek letter lambda, which stood for 30, was adopted by the Romans as this value
    $400 2
In "Sea Fever" all John Masefield asked for "is a tall ship and a star to" do this
    $400 22
This shy Disney dwarf shares his name with a shade of Club Monaco's Cheek Dew
    $400 17
A volte-face is the French equivalent of this military maneuver
    $600 8
This innovative painter & print maker seen here passed on to his surrealistic reward in 1989
    $600 28
She's Midge Pinciotti on "That '70s Show"
    $600 13
To get the paper size known as an octavo, you fold the paper this many times, creating 8 parts
    DD: $1,000 3
Whitman's "When Lilies Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" was an elegy for this man
    $600 24
Madame Curie would like this shade of Urban Decay eyeliner named for a radioactive element
    $600 18
This severe epileptic seizure, literally "great illness", involves a wide area of the brain
    $800 9
He's the masterful German composer seen here in a 1746 portrait by Haussmann
    $800 29
A star of the 1973 TV movie "Satan's School for Girls", she was back in the 2000 remake
    $800 14
To figure out your latitude you need the exact time & this instrument that replaced the octant
    $800 4
This Harlem Renaissance poet wondered, "What happens to a dream deferred?"
    $800 25
The Max Factor make-up inspired by this 1999 Shakespeare film features colors like Cob Web & Mustard Seed
    $800 19
An impressive display of power or skill; you might say Lance Armstrong put one on in 1999 & in 2000
    $1000 10
The clouds tell you why this work by Giorgione shares its name with a Shakespeare play
    $1000 30
Kris Munroe as an Angel, she later set up shop at TV's "One West Waikiki"
    $1000 15
Quick, it's the term for 1 billionth of a second
    $1000 5
By the title, it's what Keats' "La Belle Dame" was "Sans"
    DD: $1,000 26
The name of this Cristina Carlino cosmetics line is from the Greek for "love of wisdom"
    $1000 20
(Hi, I'm Mick Jones of Foreigner.) In French, this title of a Foreigner album means someone who incites others to civil unrest

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Marjorie Matt Kirsten
$2,200 $7,400 $6,900

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

ANATOMY
The petrous temporal bone, the hardest in the body, encases the delicate structures of this organ

Final scores:

Marjorie Matt Kirsten
$1,100 $999 $3,900
2nd place: Trip to Stockholm, Sweden courtesy of Priceline.com 3rd place: Zenith 36" TV New champion: $3,900

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Marjorie Matt Kirsten
$2,800 $7,000 $6,900
12 R,
3 W
(including 1 DD)
19 R
(including 2 DDs),
3 W
14 R,
1 W

Combined Coryat: $16,700

[game responses] [game scores] [suggest correction]

Game tape date: 2000-09-26
The J! Archive is created by fans, for fans. Scraping, republication, monetization, and malicious use prohibited; this site may use cookies and collect identifying information. See terms. The Jeopardy! game show and all elements thereof, including but not limited to copyright and trademark thereto, are the property of Jeopardy Productions, Inc. and are protected under law. This website is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or operated by Jeopardy Productions, Inc. Join the discussion at JBoard.tv.