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Thread: Auntie's Quiz O' the Week

  1. #226
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    "It Gets Late Early"

    Answer to previous clue: “Night”

    Regarding the subject of “embarrassing moments,” when it applies to yours truly here have been hundreds -- with doubtlessly many more to come. I still blush nevertheless when I think of EM #849, which occurred over a quarter of a century ago. The workplace was closing for the weekend, and I asked one of my colleagues if she had a heavy date scheduled for that evening. “Not tonight,” she replied. “My boyfriend works on Friday nights.” “Oh?” I said, “what is he, a bartender?” “No,” she answered, as her smile disappeared. “He’s a rabbi.”

    I have sympathy for people who have to tweak the natural human circadian rhythm in order to work nights. Speaking of “night shifts,” I wonder from where the expression “lobster shift"came. What is it about lobsters that they are the marine version of night owls? Unlike nocturnal crustaceans, species of fish must be morning people,especially on “school” nights.

    Some folks shine with the sun; others find their element when the stars come out – (and if you see a Hollywood star before noon, it’s more likely he or she is heading home rather than heading out.) Me, I'm not particular – I can sleep any time of the day or night. No Ambien necessary. Just prop me in a chair in front of a televised Atlanta Braves game, and I'm stacking up zzzz’s quicker than a Congressman at a health care committee meeting. Listen, when you get to be my age, you'll see the truth in the words of Yogi Berra:

    “It Gets Late Early”

    1. What’s the word for a painting of a night scene, or in music, an evening song?

    2. In a 1955 movie, Robert Mitchum plays a menacing preacher. What’s the title of this, the only film ever directed by British actor Charles Laughton?

    3. According to F. Scott Fitzgerald, “In the dark night of the soul, it’s always. . .”(what?)

    4. Which playwright (1911-1983) wrote the 1961 drama, The Night of the Iguana?

    5. Identify the title and the creator of these lines: “Day and night/Under the hide of me/There’s oh such a yearning, burning down deep inside of me.”

    6. Broadcast between 1956 and 1984, what was one of television’s oldest daytime dramas?

    7. Who wrote the most famous villanelle in English, “Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night”?

    8. Name the song from West Side Story which stops the show with its breathtaking four-part harmony and which shares its title with America’s oldest late night talk show.

    9. Who was the Romantic poet who wrote “Ode to a Nightingale”?

    10. Name the “visionary” title of a 1948 film noir or its more familiar theme song that became a jazz standard for Horace Silver, Sonny Stitt, and John Coltrane, as well as pop hits for Bobby Vee and for the Carpenters.

    11. What is the informal name for the collection of stories featuring such fabulous creations as a flying carpet and a stone door which opens only with a secret magic word?

    12. What is the Shakespearean play whose dramatis personae include a duke named Orsino, Sir Toby Belch, a Puritan named Malvolio, and Feste, a clown?

    13. And finally-- since this is the World Wide Web where spelling apparently doesn't count-- which National Leaguer was the Most Valuable Player in the 1986 World Series?


    Answers:
    1. Nocturne
    2. The Night of the Hunter
    3. “three o’clock in the morning.”
    4. Tennessee Williams
    5. “Night and Day” by Cole Porter
    6. The Edge of Night
    7. Dylan Thomas (Score no points if you said “Bob Dylan”)
    8. “Tonight”
    9. Keats (Give yourself half-credit if you said “Shelley.” Who doesn't confuse those two guys?)
    10. “The Night Has a Thousand Eyes.”
    11. A Thousand and One Arabian Nights
    12. Twelfth Night
    13. NY Mets third baseman Ray Knight


    Clue for next quiz topic:
    Decades before James Cameron’s blockbuster, Titanic, Walter Lord (1917-2002) published his book about the tragedy, A Night to _______(What?)
    Last edited by AuntShecky; 05-13-2009 at 01:47 PM. Reason: line breaks-- can't fix 'em!

  2. #227
    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    I got seven. Maybe I'm coming out of my slump. I got 4,5,7,9,11,12,13. (I should have known numbers 1 and 8).

    I've never heard of the "lobster shift." In my dealings with factories in my career, the 12AM to 8AM shift has always been reffered to as the "graveyard shift."
    LET THERE BE LIGHT

    "Love follows knowledge." – St. Catherine of Siena

    My literature blog: http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/

  3. #228
    Cat Person DickZ's Avatar
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    Thanks, Auntie, for the clever quiz, and for working Yogi Berra's classic line into it.

    I got numbers 4, 7, 8, 11, and 13 correct, and will take you up on your offer for half credit on 9 since I’m like Marilyn Monroe in that she lamented how hard it was to distinguish Sheets from Kelly.

    Number 13 was quite painful though, since I’m a Red Sox fan and we lost that series to the Mets in 1986.

    I loved your bonus question, because my father gave me the Walter Lord book in 1956.

  4. #229
    aspiring Arthurianist Wilde woman's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by bounty
    Just prop me in a chair in front of a televised Atlanta Braves game, and I'm stacking up zzzz’s quicker than a Congressman at a health care committee meeting.
    Haha! For me, it's golf. Every time my grandpa puts that on, I fall asleep. When I wake up on the couch, my grandpa is then inevitably asleep with the golf still running on TV. Which begs the question....why do we watch golf???

    I got 7 correct on this week's quiz...not as good as last week.

    Got #1 (thanks Chopin!), 5, 7, 8, 9, 11, and 12.

    I, for one, like Keats a lot better than Shelley.

  5. #230
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    Remember?

    Clue from previous quiz: “Remember”

    In the emotion-laden days following the tragedies occurring in the United States of America in 2001, officials proposed that the eleventh of September be declared a National Holiday. After a few cursory mentions, the matter was dropped and perhaps that is a good thing. For the first few years, commemorations of the fateful date would undoubtedly consist of prayer services or secular ceremonies. A short time later it would deteriorate into a less solemn occasion.

    Some Americans might consider the day off from school or work as an opportunity to take advantage of the fine weather in late summer. Armed with festive fare and beer, they'd head for the beaches, parks, or the campgrounds armed with festive fare and beer. The increase in traffic, along with intoxicated drivers, might cause a spike in motor vehicle accidents.

    In time, the poignant significance of the date itself will yield to the appeal of the three day weekend, and the official holiday will be moved to the Monday after Labor Day. The inevitable picnicking and partying will gradually shed the unseemly appearance of impropriety. Discount stores and malls will advertise special sales, and the day itself most likely would topped off with fireworks.

    Don't shake your head and cluck your tongue at this scenario -- it’s exactly what happened to Memorial Day.

    All seriousness aside, let’s go to the quiz:

    1. In the doo-wop era, The Five Satins added the parenthetical phrase, “I Remember” on the label of their recording of a tune to distinguish it from a Cole Porter standard. What’s the title which both songs share?

    2. The subjective experience of memory as well as an analysis of the nature of love are just two of the themes in a 16-volume work written by a prominent French novelist who called it “In Search of Lost Time.” Name the title and author of this monumental work.

    3. Who is the prominent artist (1899-1977) perhaps best known for the novel Lolita who also wrote a memoir of childhood called Speak, Memory?

    4. A mental trick employed to help one’s memory (which upon typing this term might send the Spell-Check into overdrive) is called what kind of device?

    5. In his role of Pruitt, a soldier serving in Pearl Harbor on the days prior to and including December 7, 1941, Montgomery Cliff plays a particularly poignant bugle solo of “Taps.” Name this award-winning 1953 film based on a novel with the same title.

    6.What was the long-running series from the so-called “Golden Age of Television” which starred Peggy Wood as the matriarch of a family of Scandinavian immigrants?

    7. Who was the British poet who wrote “In Memoriam,” a long poem written between 1833-1850 that is described as one of the “finest elegies in the English language”?

    8. Remade in 1994, name the original 1957 movie, a “weepie” starring Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr as lovers daunted but not defeated by ill luck.

    9. Which Shakespearean character wanders around in a confused state while gathering wildflowers -- one of which, Rosemary, is known for “remembrance”?

    10. Which centenarian songwriter/pianist (1883-1983) co-wrote the song, “Memories of You”?

    11. Name the American novelist (b. 1915) honored last fall by the Library of Congress and who wrote the 1978 work, War and Remembrance, upon which a successful miniseries was based.

    12. In Stardust Memories, a 1980 semi-autobiographical work, an extraterrestrial creature offers this advice: “You want to do mankind a service? Tell funnier jokes.” Who was the director as well as the star of this movie?

    13. And finally, the mishaps of a Midwestern boy preparing for and attending his high school prom provide the content for Wanda Hickey’s Night of Golden Memories, created by which prominent American humorist (1921-1999)?


    Answers
    1. “In the Still of the Night”
    2. Remembrance of Things Past, Marcel Proust
    3. V. Nabokov
    4. Mnemonic
    5. From Here to Eternity
    6. I Remember Mama
    7. Alfred Lord Tennyson
    8. An Affair to Remember
    9. Ophelia
    10. Eubie Blake*
    11. Herman Wouk
    12. Woody Allen
    13. Jean Shepherd


    Clue for the next quiz topic can be found in the missing word in this title of a 1935 song by Rodgers and Hart: “It’s Easy to Remember and So Hard to (What?)”

    *Someone is going to read this quiz with all its old timey references and think that the author is a centenarian herself. I'm not – though I don't doubt that I look it.
    Last edited by AuntShecky; 05-23-2009 at 03:04 PM.

  6. #231
    Lady of Smilies Nightshade's Avatar
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    annoyingly, I only got 1 (number 9) , oh I knew several of the other ones but I just couldnt think of the answer
    My mission in life is to make YOU smile
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  7. #232
    aspiring Arthurianist Wilde woman's Avatar
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    Hi Auntie,
    Fun times as always. I got 6 this week - 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, and 9. Oh, I just realized I got the bonus question from last week too!

    By the way, the Tennyson poem is one of my favorites. Very moving.

    Quote Originally Posted by AuntShecky
    *Someone is going to read this quiz with all its old timey references and think that the author is a centenarian herself.
    Haha! Oh Aunty...you're only as old as you feel. And judging by the energy and effort you put into your quizzes, you're quite young indeed. I will say, though, that many of the movies you reference are before my time.

  8. #233
    Auntie,

    I've been ignorant of this thread from the time of its inception, and have only just discovered it. What fun it is! The content of these quizzes is interesting and varied, but I most appreciate the introductions, which are so very clever and subtle.

    You have a talent. I wish I had even a smidgen of the creativity exhibited by yourself and others here at LitNet.

    As for this quiz, I was able to answer questions 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 11, and 12.
    As Kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame . . .


    Why disqualify the rush? I'm tabled. I'm tabled.



  9. #234
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    Thank you, ShoutGrace and Nightshade, and Wilde Woman, but WW, do you have cable and if you do, do you ever watch Turner Classic Movies? Some of the old films really creak (like me bones!) but some of them are really "classic." You owe it to yourself to see the original From Here to Eternity.

  10. #235
    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    Oh my God, I'm getting worse. I know nothing of movies. I only got three: 2,3,4. I can't believe I got Ophelia wrong. I had said King Lear. He wandered the country side too. I am really stinking lately.
    LET THERE BE LIGHT

    "Love follows knowledge." – St. Catherine of Siena

    My literature blog: http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/

  11. #236
    Lady of Smilies Nightshade's Avatar
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    not so bad really virgil, I thought lear in the first minute ( I guess because people have been discussing lear on the litnet ) but there is a whole thing about the rosemerry and I wrote an essay on it at aschool so it hit me pretty quick.
    My mission in life is to make YOU smile
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  12. #237
    Cat Person DickZ's Avatar
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    Thanks, Auntie, for the quiz and for remembering the true meaning of Memorial Day. Very few people do that anymore. If we have any current or former servicemen in this forum, thank you for your service.

    I had no idea of the first question, even though I’m old enough to have known it, but I knew about Proust’s work – just not well enough to know it was that many volumes, or that it had another title. So I missed the first two.

    Then I got hot – I remember Lolita, but none of the other Nabakov books. Besides, he’s in lots of crossword puzzles.

    And don’t get me going on mnemonic devices. I know HOMES for the names of the Great Lakes and there’s another one for remembering the colors of the spectrum, but I always forget what it is. And then there was the one I learned in school for the cabinet succession to the US presidency that was called ST DAPIACL back then in the early days, but now there are so many more cabinet departments that they probably can’t come up with an acronym for the succession anymore.

    I didn’t watch the TV series I Remember Mama, but I knew about it. However, I watched the movie of the same name, on which the TV series was based, so I got that one too.

    I knew the writer of In Memoriam, and I even think I know the name of the person for whom it was written – his initials are AH but it’s not Alexander Hamilton, nor is it Andy Hardy.

    The movie you described for number 8 is one of my favorites, so I had no trouble with that one, either.

    It didn’t hit me until AFTER I saw the name Ophelia in your answers that Ophelia was out picking flowers after her major trauma, so I can’t say I got that one. But I should have.

    And then I missed the last four as well. I knew 11 was either Wouk or Uris, but I went with Uris.

    I’m almost embarrassed to say that the only Jean Shepherd work I’m familiar with is A Christmas Story.

    So I got 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8.

  13. #238
    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nightshade View Post
    not so bad really virgil, I thought lear in the first minute ( I guess because people have been discussing lear on the litnet ) but there is a whole thing about the rosemerry and I wrote an essay on it at aschool so it hit me pretty quick.
    Thanks Nightie. I was averaging seven to nine correct, but lately I can't seem to break five. And this time only three. I haven't read Hamlet in a bit so perhaps that's why I forgot Ophelia. Definitely remember the rosemary quote. However I don't remember her wondering the countryside. That's what threw me.

    Hey special hello to Shoutgrace. Perhaps now that he's discovered Auntie's quiz of the week, he'll drop by for them.
    LET THERE BE LIGHT

    "Love follows knowledge." – St. Catherine of Siena

    My literature blog: http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/

  14. #239
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    Quote Originally Posted by DickZ View Post
    Thanks, Auntie, for the quiz and for remembering the true meaning of Memorial Day. Very few people do that anymore. If we have any current or former servicemen in this forum, thank you for your service.

    I second that!
    I had no idea of the first question, even though I’m old enough to have known it. . .
    If you get a chance, go to YouTube (not that I'm promoting that site, nor that it needs any promotion.) But that's the site where you might find "In the Still of the Night" by the original Five Satins. Love that tune, but Cole Porter's song of the same name is one of the most
    beautiful ever composed in America
    .

    And don’t get me going on mnemonic devices.
    there was the one I learned in school for the cabinet succession to the US presidency that was called ST DAPIACL
    A new one on me! I'll have to jot it down and try to remember it.
    I knew the writer of In Memoriam, and I even think I know the name of the person for whom it was written – his initials are AH but it’s not Alexander Hamilton, nor is it Andy Hardy.
    I've got the book in front of me, and I see that "A.H.H." was Arthur Henry Hallam, Tennyson's bff as well as the intended of Tennyson's sister, Emily. Tragically, AHH passed away before the marriage could take place.


    So I got 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8.
    Thanks so much for taking the quiz, DickZ. I can't tell you how much I appreciate it.
    Auntie

  15. #240
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    Virgil, thanks for taking the quiz. I can see where "wandering the countryside" might make somebody think of King Lear.

    Also, there's a case to be made for not watching movies, especially the ones being produced at present --all sequels and remakes!

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