|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fading actresses are the heroines of his novel "The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone" & his play "Sweet Bird of Youth" |
(Catherine: Who is Eugene O'Neill?)
Tennessee Williams
|
|
|
Bonnie Blue Butler was the daughter of this colorful woman |
Scarlett O'Hara
|
|
|
"Happy Days", "Hee Haw", "Hogan's Heroes", "Home Improvement" |
Hogan's Heroes (1965)
|
|
|
Models of this mask were popular in 1916 |
[A man wearing one with a skunk approaching was shown.]
a gas mask
|
|
|
To work this tool, you just have to take a whack, not at it, but with it |
A-X
|
|
|
A tabby cat named Dusty produced exactly 420 of these during her life, a world record |
kittens
|
|
|
This "Lolita" author wrote verse plays such as "Dedushka" under the pseudonym V. Sirin |
Vladimir Nabokov
|
|
|
(Hi, I'm Jane Leeves.) "FYI" producer Miles Silverberg was my boyfriend on this show that was set in Washington, D.C. |
Murphy Brown
|
|
|
Toyota Corolla, Ford Mustang, Chevy Corvette, Porsche Boxster |
(Catherine: What is the Mustang?)
Chevy Corvette (1953)
|
|
|
Even if you wear this mask into a Colorado bank in January, people will notice |
a ski mask
|
|
|
Freud had the gaul to divide the mind into three parts: the ego, the superego & this |
I-D
|
|
|
More of these retrievers are registered in the U.S. than any other dog breed |
(Randy: What is golden?)
Labradors
|
|
|
Folks in "Our Town" know his novel "The Bridge of San Luis Rey" made him famous |
Thornton Wilder
|
|
|
She played Sue Ellen Ewing on "Dallas" |
Linda Gray
|
|
|
Rachmaninoff's 2nd, Beethoven's 5th, Schubert's 7th, Mozart's 41st |
Mozart's 41st
|
|
|
This mask is good for stopping shots & generating movie sequels |
a goalie mask (or a hockey mask)
|
|
|
It's how to agree in German |
(Catherine: What is D-A?)
J-A
|
|
|
The 2 heaviest dog breeds on average are the mastiff & this Alpine rescue breed |
Saint Bernard
|
|
|
This native of Salinas adapted his play "The Moon is Down" from his own novel of the same name |
John Steinbeck
|
|
|
Performer Divine competes for the title of World's Filthiest Person in this 1972 John Waters classic |
Pink Flamingos
|
|
|
Jacques Cousteau, Jacques Cartier, Jacques Tati, Jacques-in-the-box |
Jacques Cartier
|
|
|
It's the pre-spring celebration at which you'd wear the mask seen here around the Vieux Carre |
Mardi Gras
|
|
|
A-M is the present, first person singular form of this |
B-E
|
|
|
Of 26, 46 or 66 pounds, the one closest to the weight of the world's heaviest domestic cat |
(Randy: What is 66?)
46
|
|
|
He was studying intermittently at the Univ. of Miss. when he wrote the 1-act play "Marionettes" in 1920 |
William Faulkner
|
|
|
A Top 10 hit for Cream in 1968, this song mentions "black curtains" |
"White Room"
|
|
|
"Guernica", "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon", "The Blue Room", "Three Musicians" |
"The Blue Room" (all by Pablo Picasso)
|
|
|
The famous mask seen here was discovered in this decade |
[King Tut's burial mask as shown.]
the 1920s
|
|
|
In the funnies, he's Lois Flagston's hubby |
H-I
|
|
|
The smallest dog ever recorded, one of these terriers, stood 2 1/2 inches tall & stretched 3 3/4 inches long |
a Yorkshire terrier
|
|