Alphabet associations - I
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amateur51
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Originally posted by mercia View Post'fraid so
hazard a guess at those other two works?
EDIT: Curiosity Suite - correct
Good question, mercs - elusive yet leaving the impression that it was staring one in the face all along..."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Anna
I only ever had one York Bowen cd, can't remember what it was now as I gave it away.
Anyroadup, I won't be around this evening after 8pm to see what Ams has set - it's my annual Eurovision Party - yes I know that sounds a bit camp but it's tremendous fun, particularly when the scoring starts! I also quite like Graham Norton commentating. I have made a vat of chilli and there will be plenty of garlic bread, red wine, and possibly some ribald humour, particularly concerning Jedward. I assume no-one else here will have such base tastes and will be watching?
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amateur51
Originally posted by Anna View PostI only ever had one York Bowen cd, can't remember what it was now as I gave it away.
Anyroadup, I won't be around this evening after 8pm to see what Ams has set - it's my annual Eurovision Party - yes I know that sounds a bit camp but it's tremendous fun, particularly when the scoring starts! I also quite like Graham Norton commentating. I have made a vat of chilli and there will be plenty of garlic bread, red wine, and possibly some ribald humour, particularly concerning Jedward. I assume no-one else here will have such base tastes and will be watching?
I shall be a-watching as every year.
I have it on very good authority that Azerbaijan is the team to watch this year - remember, you heard it here first!
As for 'yes I know that sounds a bit camp ...' - a bit camp?
As Enoch Powell might have said "Camp as tits, my dear and all the better for that"
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amateur51
Right!
An extremely potent fictional sweetmeat
A feminist actor/singer whose early career highlights included supporting a latter-day TV detective on stage in a hit musical, and whose career became truly golden in later life
A librettist for an apparently one-man comic opera by a contemporary of Max and Harry
What A connects them?
The first clue is non-musical, t'other two are musical.
I always run & hide when I know that mercia is about, waiting to pounce on me clues
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Anna
You know what Ams? The more I know you, the more I love you! We shall certainly look out for Azarbaijan but were disappointed that International Dana didin't make it!
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostYou over-estimate me, madam!
I shall be a-watching as every year.
I have it on very good authority that Azerbaijan is the team to watch this year - remember, you heard it here first!
As for 'yes I know that sounds a bit camp ...' - a bit camp?
As Enoch Powell might have said "Camp as tits, my dear and all the better for that""...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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amateur51
Originally posted by Anna View PostYou know what Ams? The more I know you, the more I love you! We shall certainly look out for Azarbaijan but were disappointed that International Dana didin't make it!
A great shame about Dana International (ahem!), Anna
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Anna
Originally posted by merciano pouncing on clues tonight, I promise
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amateur51
Originally posted by Angle View PostNot sure about the sweetmeat clue but
the second is Beatrice Arthur, one of the late great Golden Girls
and number three is Arthur Jacobs who wrote the libretto for Nicholas Maw's One-Man Show, a comic opera.
I'll do a bit more thinking about the sweetmeats.
And you were spot-on with Arthur Jacobs
About the sweetmeats, I'll let you dangle, Angle
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I suppose that I should say that before her best known role as Dorothy Zbornak in The Golden Girls, Beatrice Arthur played the stage role of Vera Charles in Auntie Mame with Angela Lansbury (later TV detective whose name I have forgotten). She also played Vera Charles in the terrible film version with Lucille Ball as Mame, but she had the best line: "Oh, my God, how can you see with all that light?" uttered when Mame, I think, drew back the curtains in her bedroom at around two in the afternoon. I hope I am right about this line for I suppose it might have been in the Rosalind Russell version with someone else playing Vera.
Whatever: the Man in the Moon is a Lady.
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