ACROSS
1. AT A PINCH – A TAP-IN + CH[eck]; sadly, the big Yeovil lad missed his yesterday, conjuring memories of the greatest misser-of-tap-ins of them all, Roger Davies .
5. CHASTE – H in CASTE.
10. ALEC DOUGLAS-HOME – smart ALEC with a HOME in DOUGLAS (capital of the Isle of Man) for the chap who succeeded Macmillan and was swiftly consigned to the history books by Harold Wilson.
11. HIGH AND DRY
13. STUN – S + TUN[a]
15. TRAMCAR – MART reversed + CAR[e].
17. NEITHER – anagram* of In THERE.
18. OROTUND – gOlfers + ROTUND (round); I thought this meant ‘fat’, but no, of voice it means ‘resonant’, and of writing, style, or expression it means ‘pompous’; from the Latin ore rotundo (‘with rounded mouth’). But will I remember all this?
19. EGOTIST – TIES* around GOT (‘caught’).
21. FIRE – F + IRE; Collins has for ‘trigger’: ‘to fire or set in motion by or as by pulling a trigger’; me, I can’t think of a like for like substitution, but that just may be me. Can one ‘fire a mechanism’, I wonder? It sounds ugly but do those engineers care?
22. SHEARWATER – WHEAT EARS + R[iver]; is it because I have them living on cliffs that I always want to spell them ‘sheerwaters’?
25. CAUGHT RED-HANDED – CAUGHT (sounds like ‘court’) + RED HAND (‘socialist worker’) + E[mbarrasse]D; ‘bang to rights’ is one of those phrases I never know quite what they mean. Another Americanism ‘no brainer’ occupied that category for quite a while till I finally ‘sussed’ which way it pointed.
27. RESORT– double (loosish) definition, where the first is verbal (‘resort’ and repair’ both mean ‘go’ in restricted contexts) and the second nominal (‘resort’ and ‘centre’ both being places people go to for a particular purpose).
28. GENEROUS – GEN + EROS around U; free as in generous with one’s time. It may really be Anteros, but everyone calls it Eros, which is good enough for me.
DOWN
1. A BAD HAT – titfer is Cockney Rhyming Slang for ‘hat’ via ‘tit for tat’; a bad hat is given in the US dictionary Merriam-Webster as British slang for ‘a disreputable dissolute person’, while most British dictionaries seem to ignore it. Well, I’d never heard of it, and who needs it when you have the perfectly good ‘bad egg’?
2. AXE
3. INDIAN CLUB – bottle-shaped clubs used by chaps with waxed moustaches.
4. CO[U]LD
6. H+ASH – what you must do to the potatoes and onions to make them ‘hash browns’.
7. SHORT SHRIFT – SHORT + R[egina] in SHIFT for ‘curt treatment’.
8. ELEANOR – [romanc]E in A LONER*; did the Beatles song sound the death-knell for this Christian name?
9. CLARENCE – I like to think I’m pretty good on carriages with my reading of Walter Scott and George MacDonald but maybe this one never got north of the border; ‘a closed horse-drawn carriage with four wheels, seating four inside and two outside next to the coachman’, named after the Duke of Clarence, later William IV.
12. GLAMOUR PUSS – usually wearing hot pants and appearing in the Daily Express (in the 60s); a slightly odd clue referencing, I think, the Batman franchise. Not so odd, actually, when one thinks of Michelle Pfeiffer beleathered in Batman Returns…
14. PILOT WHALE – PILOT (captain) + W[eight] + HALE (healthy).
16. REDSHIRT – my last in and a very nice clue; H in STIRRED* gives ‘supporter of revolutionary’.
18. OFF[IC]ER
20. T[I]RADES
23. A[DD]LE – is the setter running out of steam, or is it just me?
24. CHAR – triple definition.
26. D[U]O
I also never heard of A BAD HAT but it’s in Brewer’s. I had resolved not to mention the misnamed London statue today but when it comes to it I can’t let it pass.
Those who aren’t familiar with the British Prime Minister might like to know that his surname is pronounced “Hume”. Private Eye always refers to him as Baillie Vass, a running joke that started in 1964 and continues to this day on the rare occasions he comes up.
Edited at 2015-01-05 02:05 am (UTC)
Home caught a cold and the Evening News placards said “Home in bed with flu”. Frost read it out as “Hume in bed with flu” and then added “or should I say home in bed with Flo?”
Edited at 2015-01-05 02:54 am (UTC)
I did actually write HUME at 10ac from the pronunciation and reflected briefly that a question mark was unsatisfactory as a homophone indicator before the penny dropped.
In response to ulaca’s question at 8dn, my youngest daughter is ELEANOR, but it’s probably less common than it once was.
We drew on family names for all my children, but I resisted naming my son after a distant but very distinguished French relative called Adolphe – now there’s a name that really has been killed!
I saw it in France and therefore in French, but apparently there’s an English version called “What’s in a name?”
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2179121/
It was extremely funny, but also thought-provoking. The quality of the dialogue and the fact that it all takes place in the sitting room of a Parisian apartment suggest that the script was originally a stage-play.
UK solvers should note that ‘redshirt’ means something entirely different in the US, and can be used as a verb.
Needless to say 9d was my LOI. When you say it has a “’60s feel”, does you mean the 1860s?
Incidentally I think that ELEANOR is a really charming name. I’m glad that it’s making a comeback. Unlike CLARENCE.
Edited at 2015-01-05 08:45 am (UTC)
Otherwise, a very Monday puzzle, with NEITHER standing out.
Thanks for blog, Ulaca. Wouldn’t ‘George Best triggered/fired his enthusiasm for soccer’ meet the substitution test?
For what it’s worth I agree with ulaca that these two aren’t synonymous (you don’t trigger a gun) but they’re sufficiently adjacent that it doesn’t bother me.
terencep
The acid test would be to find an attested native-speaker utterance in which ‘x triggered the gun’ meaning ‘x fired the gun’ occurred.
terencep
I’m not really articulating this very well, am I? And I’m not sure why I care, considering the definition didn’t bother me!
Edited at 2015-01-05 08:24 pm (UTC)
Reflecting further on the fire/trigger thing (which I shouldn’t really), I suspect it’s a more accurate reflection of the way language actually works just to say that we associate the word ‘fire’ with some things (guns, mostly) and ‘trigger’ with others. We certainly don’t reflect on the finer meanings every time we use the words. What is interesting to me is that there doesn’t appear to be any overlap in usage when you might expect it for words with such close meanings.
I see what you mean about the trigger/fire non-overlap being just a little unique. We, here, quibble with some of the definitions sometimes (usually, I suspect, due to having been fooled by a clue), but someone can usually suggest at least one abstruse useage that is a like for like replacement. Not really this time, (triggering imagination probably comes closest, no?), but I think we’d still consider it a fair clue.
Don Petter (regular lurker)
terencep
All very quick (25mins or so), until I got to my last one… and, having confidently put in ‘elitist’ (‘lit’ kind of works for catch, doesn’t it, when talking about fire?) at 19ac, I was never going to find a -I-I- WHALE.
Ho hum.
Neither BAD HAT nor “bad egg” feature in my vocabulary, both striking me as drawing room rather than street corner phrases – rather like the whole puzzle
CLARENCE was the cross-eyed lion in Daktari, for those who want further evidence that this is a sixties period piece. And there’s more. ALEC DOUGLAS HOME was clearly based on Giles’ skeletal schoolmaster Chalkie, as this 1963 cartoon demonstrates.
REDSHIRTs may be communist supporters but they’re also the first crewmen to die in any of the 60’s incarnation of Star Trek (the original and best)
ELEANOR Bron’s first appearance as a GLAMOUR PUSS was surely in HELP! (1965) allegedly inspiring Paul to write Eleanor Rigby, though only the name matches. She was also the quintessential glamour puss in Bedazzled.
Quoting Grestyman, clearly I spent “my formative years in being too young for the drugs and sex but old enough for most of it to be still memorable.”
terencep
I always think of Douglas-Home as our last truly honourable Prime Minister, who did the job because he felt he ought to rather than because he wanted power. Shame he wasn’t much better at it; but if you are going to lead a den of thieves it helps to be one yourself, I suppose
As a counterpoint to Eleanor Rigby how about Elenore by The Turtles? Granted their spelling was off, but it’s a very cheery number.
Clarence and bad hat unknown, glamour puss, resort and orotund last in.
Having spent part of yesterday on the North-east coast I’ll throw Lindisfarne’s Lady Eleanor into the ring, along with Eleanor Put Your Boots On by Franz Ferdinand.
Well done to Pootle on the PB.
We numbered 3/4 today. I missed the start, but I reckon we were all done within 15 minutes. None of us had heard of a bad hat though…