Independent Saturday Prize Puzzle 8459 / Bannsider – 23 November 2013

As soon as we saw it was Bannsider today, we knew we were in for a tricky challenge – and we were right!

The theme was fairly obvious (and predictable!) from the first two clues and we were really impressed by the number of thematic references there were in both the clues and the solutions – two of the twelve Doctors featured in the clues, along with the Tardis, and five other Doctors appeared in the solutions (one reading across two answers), along with the Daleks. The 50th anniversary also featured in  today’s Inquisitor, although in a rather different guise!

It was obviously necessary to include some unusual words in order to accommodate the thematic answers, but these were clued very fairly, so no complaints! However the parsing of some of the clues was very tricky and we’re still not sure about 27ac. Can anyone help us out?

Across
1   Doctor fifty today: one is right to show support
SOLIDARITY An anagram of L (fifty) TODAY I (one) IS R (right) – anagrind is ‘doctor’ – nothing to do with the theme!
6   Hardly a sound from Tom Baker, running out of energy
BARK An anagram of BAKeR without, or ‘running out of’ E (energy)  – anagrind is ‘from’. (The reference to Tom is to a cat, as opposed to a dog!) Tom Baker was the 4th Doctor Who
10   Player to come from supermarket with hat
CAPALDI CAP (hat) + ALDI (supermarket). The ‘player’ is Peter Capaldi, the current next (12th) Doctor Who. See comments 2 and 3- thanks Phi.
11   Ex-player – forward – petite for a Scot
PERTWEE PERT (forward) + WEE (Scots word for small or ‘petite’). Jon Pertwee was the 3rd Doctor Who
12   Only watch, perhaps from behind sofa?
TAKE A BACK SEAT Cryptic definition – with a reference to the Doctor Who theme. If you ‘only watch’ you TAKE A BACK SEAT, and if you were behind the sofa (where many children were reputed to be when they watched the scarier sequences in the early days of Doctor Who), you could also be said to be ‘taking a back seat’, although we have to say this doesn’t quite work as an alternative definition.
13/23   Philosophy of millions following Tardis, with love for returning doctor
TAOISM M (millions) following TArdIS with O (love) in place of dr (doctor) reversed or ‘returned’. A clever thematic clue with a non-thematic answer!
14   Long-running programme no longer fronted by singular senior citizen
OAP sOAP (long-running programme) without, or ‘no longer fronted by’ S (singular)
16   Thirty-four too few for thieves to hide in? They’ve got to watch it!
VIEWERS This took a bit of parsing, but we think it is: VI (six) EWERS – in the story of Ali Baba and the forty thieves, the thieves hide in oil jars or ewers – if there were only six ewers, there would be thirty-four too few!
18   Learned not to show first repeat
ITERATE lITERATE (learned) with the first letter omitted, or ‘not shown’
20   Spur from the right drug: genuine bottles
EGG Hidden or ‘bottled’ backwards (from the right) in druG GEnuine
23   See 13
See 13
25   Simultaneously, a multiple repeat of European plays with Matt Smith
AT THE SAME TIME An anagram of A + E + E + E (European, repeated) + MATT SMITH – anagrind is ‘plays’. Matt Smith was the 11th Doctor Who
27   Ex-player’s lawyer, one following FA in Bordeaux?
DAVISON Peter Davison was the 5th Doctor Who, but we’re really stuck on parsing this one! We think the ‘lawyer’ is DA, but we can’t figure out the VISON. Our French is pretty limited, but we have discovered that ‘vison’ is French for mink and FA can stand for ‘Fur Affinity’ – but this all seems far too obscure – are we missing something right under our noses? Yes it was ! Thanks Gaufrid – see comment 1 for the correct parsing.
28   Ex-player’s explosive defending a shade hard to escape
TENNANT TNT (explosive) around or ‘defending’ hENNA (a shade) from which the ‘h’ (hard) is omitted, or has ‘escaped’. David Tennant was the 10th Doctor Who
29   England’s number one broadcasting centre
HART A homonym (‘broadcasting’) of HEART (centre). Joe Hart is an England goalkeeper, or ‘number one’
30   Old song in French recalled German one in list
NELLIE DEAN EN (‘in’ in French) reversed or ‘recalled’ + LIED (German song) in LEAN (list). Connecting this to the solution to 29ac gives us HARTNELL – William Hartnell was the 1st Doctor Who
Down
1   Fitting place to strike visitor from another world
SOCKET SOCK (strike) + ET (visitor from another world)
2   Rock for hammering on planet, so roughly
LAPSTONE An anagram of PLANET SO – anagrind is ‘roughly’
3   Major adversary of alcoholics, having run out getting beer in
DALEKS DrunKS (alcoholics) with ‘run’ removed or ‘out’ to be replaced by ALE (beer)
4   Artist at home came up to find US folk singer
RAINA ROSE RA (artist) + IN (at home) + AROSE (came up). We’d never come across this singer before – perhaps we’re the wrong generation, or maybe she’s not that well known in the UK anyway?
5   Plant genus in acidity phase
TYPHA Hidden in acidiTY PHAse. Another word we’d not come across before.
7   Periodically, empty aircraft flew above the cybermen’s bases
ATWEEN AircrafT with the middle letters removed, or ‘empty’ + the last letters or ‘bases’ of fleW abovE thE cybermeN. The Cybermen were some of the most persistent enemies of the Doctor. 
8   Throw out watch, secretly upset, if it fails to?
KEEP TIME EMIT (throw out) PEEK (watch secretly) reversed or ‘upset’ – if a watch fails to keep time, you might want to throw it out!
9   Sci-fi fan tense over survey for radio
TREKKIE T (tense) + a homonym (‘for radio’) of RECCE (survey). A reference to a fan of the other big Sci-Fi TV series that started in the 60s
15   Doctor turned up, overwhelming one in a frenzy of colour
PIGMENTAL GP (doctor) reversed or ‘turned up’ round or ‘overwhelming’ I (one) + MENTAL (in a frenzy)
16   In short, hadn’t a gun when mounting platform under cover
VERANDAH HADNt (last letter removed or ‘in short’) + A + REV (revolver or ‘gun’) all reversed or ‘mounting’
17   Writers of old English causing damage
EXPENSE EX PENS (‘writers of old’) + E (English)
19   Distance between areas is right, note
ALIENATE LIEN (right) between A and A (areas) + TE (note)
21   Old bit of Netherlands jail, holding centre for perverts
STIVER STIR (jail) round or ‘holding’ perVErts (middle letters or ‘centre’)
22   One with devoted admirer about to descend on church?
FIANCE Cryptic definition – I (one) with FAN (devoted admirer) outside or ‘about’ ‘descending’ (it’s a down clue!) on CE (church).
24   Creature that flies from neighbouring planet losing acceleration nearer ground
MARTIN MARTIaN (from neighbouring planet) with the ‘a’ (acceleration) nearer the end or ‘ground’ omitted or ‘lost’
26   Cannon-fire oddly missed: girl instructed to get gun
ANNIE cAnNoN-fIrE with alternate (‘odd’) letters omitted or ‘missed’ – referring to the musical ‘Annie Get Your Gun’

 

12 comments on “Independent Saturday Prize Puzzle 8459 / Bannsider – 23 November 2013”

  1. Avatar for Gaufrid
    Comment #1
    Gaufrid
    November 30, 2013 at 7:17 am at

    Thanks Bertandjoyce
    27ac is DA (lawyer) SO (one following FA {in the sol-fa system}) in VIN (Bordeaux)

  2. Avatar for Phi
    Comment #2
    November 30, 2013 at 7:50 am at

    I think Bannsider’s precision should be noted – CAPALDI is actually ‘player to come’ while all the others are ‘ex-players’.

  3. Avatar for Bertandjoyce
    Comment #3
    Bertandjoyce
    November 30, 2013 at 8:49 am at

    Thanks Gaufrid for the explanation – it was staring us in the face!

    Thanks Phi – neither of us know much about Doctor Who. Bert found a wiki list of Doctors and it stated that Peter Capaldi had a non-speaking cameo appearance in The Day of the Doctor on 23rd November when the crossword was published. However, as you say he is the ‘new’ Doctor Who! We’ll change the blog to reflect this!

  4. Avatar for Dormouse
    Comment #4
    Dormouse
    November 30, 2013 at 9:37 am at

    As someone who remembers watching the first episode of Doctor Who and has been a fan ever since, I still found this a bit of a struggle, but did complete it eventually. But I totally missed William Hartnell’s appearance in grid. Thanks for pointing that out!

  5. Avatar for Andy B
    Comment #5
    November 30, 2013 at 11:23 am at

    A very enjoyable anniversary puzzle. As has been said, the unfamiliar answers such as TYPHA, STIVER, ATWEEN and RAINA ROSE were fairly clued so no grumbles from me. SOLIDARITY was my LOI after I realised that 2nd had to be LAPSTONE rather than my initial guess from the anagram fodder of “alpstone”.

    Count me as another who didn’t spot HARTNELL hidden in the bottom row.

  6. Avatar for DF
    Comment #6
    DF
    November 30, 2013 at 12:42 pm at

    This was a super contribution to the weekend celebrations for Doctor Who’s 50th which did feel a slightly easy solve, given the theme, for a Bannsider Saturday Prize Cryptic.

    Last in was HART which which baffled me for ages as (John) HURT appeared to be the obvious choice until, after some considerable head scratching, I spotted the NELL at 30A!

    Thanks to Bertandjoyce for the blog and to Bannsider for his tribute.

  7. Avatar for crypticsue
    Comment #7
    crypticsue
    November 30, 2013 at 1:33 pm at

    The theme did make for a user-friendly Bannsider but I did like the way the non-themed clues were of the usually head-scratch inducing quality. I also liked the ‘player to come’

    Thanks to Bannsider and to B&J too.

  8. Avatar for WordPlodder
    Comment #8
    WordPlodder
    November 30, 2013 at 1:52 pm at

    Thank you very much to setter and bloggers. Hart+ Nell was a good spot and I’m glad that the Daleks, my favourite baddies, got a guernsey. I think “gun” in 16d is a verb, as in to “gun it” referring to a car, meaning to (over) REV the engine.

  9. Avatar for flashling
    Comment #9
    flashling
    November 30, 2013 at 4:41 pm at

    My problem with this was i couldn’t read it. Come on Indy there’s lots of white space, use it! Bigger fonts please. Bah humbug seriously this was too damn small in the dead tree version.

  10. Avatar for allan_c
    Comment #10
    allan_c
    November 30, 2013 at 9:13 pm at

    Can’t say I understand why there’s all this fuss about the celebrated doctor, but at least it makes one sufficiently aware to be able to complete the puzzle. I liked the mix of references between clues and answers. Raina Rose was a lucky guess, confirmed here

    I’ve not been exterminated, merely lurking (behind the sofa?) for the past fortnight, having missed a few days’ puzzles and been catching up.

  11. Avatar for Paul B
    Comment #11
    Paul B
    December 1, 2013 at 12:21 pm at

    Nerdy boys thing, Allan.

    The submit calcs are getting more interesting Gaufrid: will we get algebra soon?

  12. Avatar for Bannsider
    Comment #12
    Bannsider
    December 1, 2013 at 10:34 pm at

    Thanks for the blog Bertandjoyce.

    I apologise for the obscure vocab in this: it was set at quite short notice and as it was I discarded several grids before settling reluctantly for this final version.

    One small point about 12 across – a “behind sofa” is meant to be a reference to a “back seat” (I actually watched from behind the door back in the day – the sofa was far too close!). The modern Doctor Who is quite intriguing: mostly completely unintelligible to me and I can’t help feeling that the 50th anniversary edition was a triumph of over-plotting and over-complication. But maybe I’m just getting old 🙂

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