Time for a Nelly Game!
Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 5:51 pm
Identify the 109 people, places, things, titles, and fictional characters below.
Arrange them into 47 trios and 1 quartet based on a Tangredi, or hidden principle, that you must discover for yourself. 21 answers will be used twice, 6 answers will be used three times, and 1 answer will be used four times.
Whenever you come across a quotation, bear in mind that I may be looking for a real person, a fictional character, or a title. It's up to you to work your way through the puzzle in order to determine what answers will allow everything to work out.
1. “Any man who wants to be President is either an egomaniac or crazy.”
2. This famous sitcom dad was born on the same date of the same year as his famous sitcom wife.
3. This famous artist was born on the same date of the same year as his famous artist wife.
4. He was the first left-handed quarterback inducted into the Pro Football Half of Fame.
5. “Ten more miles on his four-day run, a few more songs from the all-night radio, then he’ll spend the rest of his life with the one that he loves.”
6. The British monarch despised black funerals, so the city of London was festooned in purple and white during her own funeral.
7. He hypothesized that the sight of a green apple proves that all ravens are black.
8. One year after he received his second honorary Academy Award, he won his only competitive Academy Award for a film that didn’t premiere in Los Angeles until 20 years after its original release.
9. “I’ve always tried to do what’s right. That’s the code I live by. Do you understand that?”
10. One of the world’s most well-known wine-producing regions in the world, Barossa Valley is located in this country.
11. SEGA gave him his own video game in 1990 called “Supreme Court”.
12. Seth Green credits this actor as the inspiration the voice of his character on “Family Guy”.
13. Leonardo da Vinci’s “screw” is considered the forerunner to this.
14. The real-life inspiration for the character Belle Watling in “Gone With the Wind” began working in a brothel that also happened to be the house where, exactly 40 years earlier, this now-iconic female lived. (Hint: The former brothel has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1971.)
15. “Don’t worry, Mr. Simms. I look weird, but otherwise, I’m real normal. Everything’ll be cool.”
16. A native of this island is called a “Pescuense”.
17. In 1991, he was named the very first composer laureate of North Carolina.
18. This former San Diego Chargers cheerleader co-starred on two TV series with an actor who used to be a production assistant for the TV series based on the writings of a famous “Miami Herald” columnist.
19. His grandfather, who had the same name as he did, served as a bass singer in the court of the Elector of Cologne.
20. In the Bible, Jonah referred to it as an “exceeding great city of three days’ journey”.
21. “That is grade-A, 100% bull cookies!”
22. He wrote a total of 45 books over an incredible span of 65 years. Not bad for a plumber.
23. The cover of the second solo rap album by one-half of CIA and the County Police features what appears to be the corpse of this American icon.
24. His interest in politics began at age 11 when his father took him to the funeral of Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn.
25. Bill Clinton once said of this country, “In a world darkened by ethnic conflicts that tear nations apart, [this country] stands as a model of how people of different cultures can live and work together in peace, prosperity, and mutual respect.”
26. At age 12, this musician had an uncredited role in the film adaptation of the very first novel written by an ex-Catholic priest from Detroit.
27. “Relax, I have just the thing to cheer you up... we’re being sued!”
28. In a career spanning seven decades, he has produced nearly 150 films, most of them classics... but perhaps his biggest mistake was passing on “The Silence of the Lambs”.
29. Fort Qaitbey was built on the site, and constructed out of some of the ruins, of this more famous structure.
30. This former female U.S. senator’s father was a governor and a presidential runner-up. She served in the same state and at the same time as two U.S. senators who also ran for President--one lost in the primaries, one lost in the general election. She is currently married to another former U.S. senator, one who immediately preceded a previously mentioned U.S. senator as Senate Majority Leader and whose first wife was the daughter of a former Senate Minority Leader. Got it?
31. It’s the Dakota word for “water”.
32. “We all enjoy the riches of L.A., and we all need to make a commitment to helping others.”
33. Susan Butcher, who passed away in 2006 at age 51, won this race four times.
34. Before turning 19 years old, this comedian appeared on “Soul Train”, “Def Comedy Jam”, “Showtime at the Apollo”, and “A Different World”... and co-starred on a CBS series that was so bad, it was canceled after one episode.
35. The section of Interstate 44 that runs through Springfield, MO, is named in honor of him.
36. It has a population of roughly 2,000,000 people, it has only 1% surface water, its capital is Bestine, its points of interest include Mos Eisley and Mos Espa, and it’s home to Womp rats and Krayt dragons.
37. “If I never feel you in my arms again, if I never feel your tender kiss again, if I never hear ‘I love you’ now and then, will I never make love to you once again?”
38. Although it ran for only four episodes in March 1977, a program based in Columbus, OH, that was hosted by this man is considered to be TV’s very first cable game show.
39. The woman who hid this famous writer and this famous writer’s family and friends is still alive today at age 100.
40. It is the only country in the world that lies entirely above 1,000 meters in elevation. Its lowest point is over 4,500 feet above sea level!
41. “I don’t hate women, but I think they should be kept in cages.”
42. He was once considered for the roles of Clark Kent in “Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman” and Fox Mulder in “The X-Files”.
43. Just before her 17th birthday, she wrote, “God spoke to me and called me to His service”.
44. The quickest route between Whoopi Goldberg and Elvis Presley is through this historical figure.
45. Fanny could tell you that he is considered the most successful coach of the Denver Nuggets (outside of George Karl), putting together a 628-529 record and winning a Coach of the Year Award. Merry Man Carmelo Anthony could tell you that he’s currently a Denver Nuggets assistant coach.
46. “What I do is not mimicry or an impersonation, but more of an assimilation.”
47. Three well-known varieties of them are Atlas, Madagascan Sunset, and Emperor Gum.
48. Her first on-screen appearance was an uncredited role in a 3-D film that Howard Hughes claimed would “knock both your eyes out”.
49. Its many sister cities include Washington DC, Moscow, Beijing, Sydney, Budapest, and Bored favorite Fukuoka.
50. He is the only member of the “Gang of Seven” who is still in office today.
51. “I’m going to be playing a cop in a new TV show and I would love some pointers. The only cop things I’ve done is use handcuffs and say to someone, ‘Do you have any idea how fast you were going?’”
52. This actor/singer played a cop and a paramedic on two popular 1970s series. He was the son of a famous actor/singer and his three brothers–two of whom committed suicide by gunshot–were also singers.
53. According to a well-known legend, a beautiful young maiden, distraught by the infidelities of her lover, committed suicide by jumping off a steep rock (now named for her) and landing in here.
54. The woman who completes the following sequence: Sybil Bauer, Eleanor Holm, Lynn Burke, Cathy Ferguson, Kaye Hall, Melissa Belote, Theresa Andrews, Beth Botsford, __________.
55. While working in Jimmy Carter’s 1980 re-election campaign, he wrestled an eight-foot, 260-pound alligator for a $15,000 contribution.
56. It was released by Nutting Associates in November 1971. Even though it was a financial failure, just a few months later, its two creators formed a successful company whose name is Japanese for “hit the target”.
57. She was the first African-American woman to enter the line of succession to the U.S. Presidency.
58. It’s the only film in which five of its stars were nominated for Academy Awards for acting and none of them won. Incidentially, it’s also the only film in which three stars were nominated for the Best Supporting Actress Academy Award.
59. “New York is the biggest boobtown there is. They will buy any damned thing here.”
60. This veteran character actress who passed away in 2008 was perhaps best known for her supporting role on a TV series that had characters die in bizarre ways such as drowning in chicken soup.
61. Albert Ghiorso discovered it while examining the debris that resulted from Operation Ivy.
62. During the 2008 presidential campaign, this American socialite who is married into British royalty accused then-presidential candidate Barack Obama of being an elitist and later put her foot in her mouth when she referred to rural American voters as “rednecks” and “bitter”.
63. On an episode of “South Park”, Kenny G and Yoko Ono organized four million third-graders to perform this song on recorders, humorously causing the entire population of Earth to crap their pants.
64. In a classic 1940s print advertisement, an African-American mother is holding up this product as her son (who, years later, served in the U.S. Cabinet) tries to reach for it.
65. He was a drummer for no fewer than seven different metal bands before winning the “Get John’s Job” contest.
66. “Hustlers, grab your guns. Your shadow weighs a ton. Driving down the 101.”
67. In the film “Anchorman”, Ron Burgundy claimed that he was friends with this football legend to try to impress a woman that he met at a party.
68. “After considering other options like Hannibal, Timber, Flagg, and Raintree”, a television producer ultimately settled on this name for the lead character of the second (and successful) pilot of his iconic series.
69. In an infamous 2001 game, Marcus Camby tried to punch Danny Ferry in the face, but instead, accidentally punched this coach in the face.
70. A flag that has a 4x4 grid of alternating white and blue squares would represent this.
71. Obscure Foreign Actor Question: He was named the Best Supporting Actor for his country’s Academy Awards for his role in the remake of a film that, exactly 50 years earlier, was nominated for eight Academy Awards in this country.
72. Its Parliament is called the Folketinget.
73. “Suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem.”
74. Neil Sedaka’s first hit single, “The Diary”, was inspired by her diary.
75. In 1984, an Australian politician had to resign from Parliament when he was caught importing this toy without paying duty.
76. “I’m sick of portraits, and wish very much to take my viol-da-gam and walk off to some sweet village, where I can paint landskips and enjoy the fag end of life in quietness and ease.”
77. All three of his sons played college basketball. He was the coach for both his eldest and middle son, each at a different university. His middle son is now his assistant coach at his current coaching job, at yet another different university.
78. “He” was discovered in 1891 by Eugene Dubois at Trinil on the banks of the Bengawan Solo River.
79. He is the oldest person ever to win an MTV Movie Award.
80. “Starbucks says they are going to start putting religious quotes on cups. The very first one will say, ‘Jesus! This cup is expensive!’”
81. He was the most (in)famous resident of 2230 Ocean Parkway in Brooklyn, NY...
82. ... and he was his equally notorious cousin and brother-in-law.
83. Although when exactly they were invented is subject to debate by archaeologists and historians, their first documented use can be traced back to a 1564 treatise entitled “De Morbo Gallico”.
84. You could say that Thom Hartmann has brunch with him every Friday.
85. It’s the title shared by a 1930 painting, a 1942 photograph, a 1972 music album, a 1988 film, and a 1995 TV series.
86. He got his famous nickname because of his trademark long brown hair, but his nickname is ironic in that he is an atheist.
87. “Now I’m Doc Strange in the Range like ‘Whoa!’ Hundred miles an hour, switchin’ lanes like ‘Whoa!’”
88. When an Irish-born British admiral invented it in 1805, it used thirteen numbers (0-12). In 1946, it was extended to include numbers 13-17, but these numbers are used only in China and Taiwan.
89. He is the only NBA Rookie of the Year whose father was an NFL Rookie of the Year.
90. Two of the cast members of this ABC series went on to co-produce a Nickelodeon series starring two cast members of another Nickelodeon series and co-starring a third cast member of the aforementioned ABC series. Got it?
91. “Look, I’m a woman, so I like Hillary. I’m Black; I like Obama. But I’m also grumpy, so I like John McCain.”
92. If you want 3GB of storage space for your Angelfire-hosted website, you can upgrade your account to this for $8.95 per month.
93. This current manager has something in common with his immediate predecessor: They both used to be catchers for the St. Louis Cardinals.
94. As far as we know, this longtime comedian--still performing today at age 86--was the first door-to-door dance salesman.
95. He has tried out with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Houston Texans, and Tennessee Titans in the hopes of becoming a wide receiver while serving a four-year ban in the sport in which he achieved fame.
96. It was known as “The Emergency” during World War II.
97. A 5,000-year-old rock carving in Knowth (located in the answer to the previous question) is believed to have the earliest known depiction of this.
98. “That’s a lovely name--‘Angel’. But then, Satan was an angel.”
99. In 1954, this future Academy Award- and Emmy-winning cinematographer “crashed” the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus at Madison Square Garden on opening night.
100. He was one of the first celebrities to set up his own website at the advent of the Internet. In advertising his website, he dressed up as Queen Elizabeth II and said, “This Scottland has two Ts. My Scotland has one T.”
101. He was born in the same town as, and his university professor father taught, the man who deposed him just 3 months and 18 days after taking office.
102. G.K. Chesterton once referred to him as “the celebrated American comedian”.
103. She has drawn comparisons to Wassily Kandinsky and Jackson Pollock, despite the fact that she probably doesn’t yet know how to spell “Wassily Kandinsky”.
104. “It takes time to master your skills... and use will hone your technique. But take care to choose your new skills wisely.”
105. Its geological history is split into three main epochs: Noachian, Hesperian, and Amazonian.
106. He was the very first comedian to receive a standing ovation on a debut appearance on “The Tonight Show”.
107. Her grandmother’s recording of a folk song written in 1878 was the first celebrity recording by a classical musician to sell one million copies.
108. Comedian Artie Lange auditioned for a role in this film, but he described his audition as being so bad, it was “like a plumber who won a radio contest and got to try out for a movie”.
109. He was the co-commentator of the boxing match that inspired Sylvester Stallone to write the screenplay for a little film called “Rocky”.
Arrange them into 47 trios and 1 quartet based on a Tangredi, or hidden principle, that you must discover for yourself. 21 answers will be used twice, 6 answers will be used three times, and 1 answer will be used four times.
Whenever you come across a quotation, bear in mind that I may be looking for a real person, a fictional character, or a title. It's up to you to work your way through the puzzle in order to determine what answers will allow everything to work out.
1. “Any man who wants to be President is either an egomaniac or crazy.”
2. This famous sitcom dad was born on the same date of the same year as his famous sitcom wife.
3. This famous artist was born on the same date of the same year as his famous artist wife.
4. He was the first left-handed quarterback inducted into the Pro Football Half of Fame.
5. “Ten more miles on his four-day run, a few more songs from the all-night radio, then he’ll spend the rest of his life with the one that he loves.”
6. The British monarch despised black funerals, so the city of London was festooned in purple and white during her own funeral.
7. He hypothesized that the sight of a green apple proves that all ravens are black.
8. One year after he received his second honorary Academy Award, he won his only competitive Academy Award for a film that didn’t premiere in Los Angeles until 20 years after its original release.
9. “I’ve always tried to do what’s right. That’s the code I live by. Do you understand that?”
10. One of the world’s most well-known wine-producing regions in the world, Barossa Valley is located in this country.
11. SEGA gave him his own video game in 1990 called “Supreme Court”.
12. Seth Green credits this actor as the inspiration the voice of his character on “Family Guy”.
13. Leonardo da Vinci’s “screw” is considered the forerunner to this.
14. The real-life inspiration for the character Belle Watling in “Gone With the Wind” began working in a brothel that also happened to be the house where, exactly 40 years earlier, this now-iconic female lived. (Hint: The former brothel has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1971.)
15. “Don’t worry, Mr. Simms. I look weird, but otherwise, I’m real normal. Everything’ll be cool.”
16. A native of this island is called a “Pescuense”.
17. In 1991, he was named the very first composer laureate of North Carolina.
18. This former San Diego Chargers cheerleader co-starred on two TV series with an actor who used to be a production assistant for the TV series based on the writings of a famous “Miami Herald” columnist.
19. His grandfather, who had the same name as he did, served as a bass singer in the court of the Elector of Cologne.
20. In the Bible, Jonah referred to it as an “exceeding great city of three days’ journey”.
21. “That is grade-A, 100% bull cookies!”
22. He wrote a total of 45 books over an incredible span of 65 years. Not bad for a plumber.
23. The cover of the second solo rap album by one-half of CIA and the County Police features what appears to be the corpse of this American icon.
24. His interest in politics began at age 11 when his father took him to the funeral of Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn.
25. Bill Clinton once said of this country, “In a world darkened by ethnic conflicts that tear nations apart, [this country] stands as a model of how people of different cultures can live and work together in peace, prosperity, and mutual respect.”
26. At age 12, this musician had an uncredited role in the film adaptation of the very first novel written by an ex-Catholic priest from Detroit.
27. “Relax, I have just the thing to cheer you up... we’re being sued!”
28. In a career spanning seven decades, he has produced nearly 150 films, most of them classics... but perhaps his biggest mistake was passing on “The Silence of the Lambs”.
29. Fort Qaitbey was built on the site, and constructed out of some of the ruins, of this more famous structure.
30. This former female U.S. senator’s father was a governor and a presidential runner-up. She served in the same state and at the same time as two U.S. senators who also ran for President--one lost in the primaries, one lost in the general election. She is currently married to another former U.S. senator, one who immediately preceded a previously mentioned U.S. senator as Senate Majority Leader and whose first wife was the daughter of a former Senate Minority Leader. Got it?
31. It’s the Dakota word for “water”.
32. “We all enjoy the riches of L.A., and we all need to make a commitment to helping others.”
33. Susan Butcher, who passed away in 2006 at age 51, won this race four times.
34. Before turning 19 years old, this comedian appeared on “Soul Train”, “Def Comedy Jam”, “Showtime at the Apollo”, and “A Different World”... and co-starred on a CBS series that was so bad, it was canceled after one episode.
35. The section of Interstate 44 that runs through Springfield, MO, is named in honor of him.
36. It has a population of roughly 2,000,000 people, it has only 1% surface water, its capital is Bestine, its points of interest include Mos Eisley and Mos Espa, and it’s home to Womp rats and Krayt dragons.
37. “If I never feel you in my arms again, if I never feel your tender kiss again, if I never hear ‘I love you’ now and then, will I never make love to you once again?”
38. Although it ran for only four episodes in March 1977, a program based in Columbus, OH, that was hosted by this man is considered to be TV’s very first cable game show.
39. The woman who hid this famous writer and this famous writer’s family and friends is still alive today at age 100.
40. It is the only country in the world that lies entirely above 1,000 meters in elevation. Its lowest point is over 4,500 feet above sea level!
41. “I don’t hate women, but I think they should be kept in cages.”
42. He was once considered for the roles of Clark Kent in “Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman” and Fox Mulder in “The X-Files”.
43. Just before her 17th birthday, she wrote, “God spoke to me and called me to His service”.
44. The quickest route between Whoopi Goldberg and Elvis Presley is through this historical figure.
45. Fanny could tell you that he is considered the most successful coach of the Denver Nuggets (outside of George Karl), putting together a 628-529 record and winning a Coach of the Year Award. Merry Man Carmelo Anthony could tell you that he’s currently a Denver Nuggets assistant coach.
46. “What I do is not mimicry or an impersonation, but more of an assimilation.”
47. Three well-known varieties of them are Atlas, Madagascan Sunset, and Emperor Gum.
48. Her first on-screen appearance was an uncredited role in a 3-D film that Howard Hughes claimed would “knock both your eyes out”.
49. Its many sister cities include Washington DC, Moscow, Beijing, Sydney, Budapest, and Bored favorite Fukuoka.
50. He is the only member of the “Gang of Seven” who is still in office today.
51. “I’m going to be playing a cop in a new TV show and I would love some pointers. The only cop things I’ve done is use handcuffs and say to someone, ‘Do you have any idea how fast you were going?’”
52. This actor/singer played a cop and a paramedic on two popular 1970s series. He was the son of a famous actor/singer and his three brothers–two of whom committed suicide by gunshot–were also singers.
53. According to a well-known legend, a beautiful young maiden, distraught by the infidelities of her lover, committed suicide by jumping off a steep rock (now named for her) and landing in here.
54. The woman who completes the following sequence: Sybil Bauer, Eleanor Holm, Lynn Burke, Cathy Ferguson, Kaye Hall, Melissa Belote, Theresa Andrews, Beth Botsford, __________.
55. While working in Jimmy Carter’s 1980 re-election campaign, he wrestled an eight-foot, 260-pound alligator for a $15,000 contribution.
56. It was released by Nutting Associates in November 1971. Even though it was a financial failure, just a few months later, its two creators formed a successful company whose name is Japanese for “hit the target”.
57. She was the first African-American woman to enter the line of succession to the U.S. Presidency.
58. It’s the only film in which five of its stars were nominated for Academy Awards for acting and none of them won. Incidentially, it’s also the only film in which three stars were nominated for the Best Supporting Actress Academy Award.
59. “New York is the biggest boobtown there is. They will buy any damned thing here.”
60. This veteran character actress who passed away in 2008 was perhaps best known for her supporting role on a TV series that had characters die in bizarre ways such as drowning in chicken soup.
61. Albert Ghiorso discovered it while examining the debris that resulted from Operation Ivy.
62. During the 2008 presidential campaign, this American socialite who is married into British royalty accused then-presidential candidate Barack Obama of being an elitist and later put her foot in her mouth when she referred to rural American voters as “rednecks” and “bitter”.
63. On an episode of “South Park”, Kenny G and Yoko Ono organized four million third-graders to perform this song on recorders, humorously causing the entire population of Earth to crap their pants.
64. In a classic 1940s print advertisement, an African-American mother is holding up this product as her son (who, years later, served in the U.S. Cabinet) tries to reach for it.
65. He was a drummer for no fewer than seven different metal bands before winning the “Get John’s Job” contest.
66. “Hustlers, grab your guns. Your shadow weighs a ton. Driving down the 101.”
67. In the film “Anchorman”, Ron Burgundy claimed that he was friends with this football legend to try to impress a woman that he met at a party.
68. “After considering other options like Hannibal, Timber, Flagg, and Raintree”, a television producer ultimately settled on this name for the lead character of the second (and successful) pilot of his iconic series.
69. In an infamous 2001 game, Marcus Camby tried to punch Danny Ferry in the face, but instead, accidentally punched this coach in the face.
70. A flag that has a 4x4 grid of alternating white and blue squares would represent this.
71. Obscure Foreign Actor Question: He was named the Best Supporting Actor for his country’s Academy Awards for his role in the remake of a film that, exactly 50 years earlier, was nominated for eight Academy Awards in this country.
72. Its Parliament is called the Folketinget.
73. “Suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem.”
74. Neil Sedaka’s first hit single, “The Diary”, was inspired by her diary.
75. In 1984, an Australian politician had to resign from Parliament when he was caught importing this toy without paying duty.
76. “I’m sick of portraits, and wish very much to take my viol-da-gam and walk off to some sweet village, where I can paint landskips and enjoy the fag end of life in quietness and ease.”
77. All three of his sons played college basketball. He was the coach for both his eldest and middle son, each at a different university. His middle son is now his assistant coach at his current coaching job, at yet another different university.
78. “He” was discovered in 1891 by Eugene Dubois at Trinil on the banks of the Bengawan Solo River.
79. He is the oldest person ever to win an MTV Movie Award.
80. “Starbucks says they are going to start putting religious quotes on cups. The very first one will say, ‘Jesus! This cup is expensive!’”
81. He was the most (in)famous resident of 2230 Ocean Parkway in Brooklyn, NY...
82. ... and he was his equally notorious cousin and brother-in-law.
83. Although when exactly they were invented is subject to debate by archaeologists and historians, their first documented use can be traced back to a 1564 treatise entitled “De Morbo Gallico”.
84. You could say that Thom Hartmann has brunch with him every Friday.
85. It’s the title shared by a 1930 painting, a 1942 photograph, a 1972 music album, a 1988 film, and a 1995 TV series.
86. He got his famous nickname because of his trademark long brown hair, but his nickname is ironic in that he is an atheist.
87. “Now I’m Doc Strange in the Range like ‘Whoa!’ Hundred miles an hour, switchin’ lanes like ‘Whoa!’”
88. When an Irish-born British admiral invented it in 1805, it used thirteen numbers (0-12). In 1946, it was extended to include numbers 13-17, but these numbers are used only in China and Taiwan.
89. He is the only NBA Rookie of the Year whose father was an NFL Rookie of the Year.
90. Two of the cast members of this ABC series went on to co-produce a Nickelodeon series starring two cast members of another Nickelodeon series and co-starring a third cast member of the aforementioned ABC series. Got it?
91. “Look, I’m a woman, so I like Hillary. I’m Black; I like Obama. But I’m also grumpy, so I like John McCain.”
92. If you want 3GB of storage space for your Angelfire-hosted website, you can upgrade your account to this for $8.95 per month.
93. This current manager has something in common with his immediate predecessor: They both used to be catchers for the St. Louis Cardinals.
94. As far as we know, this longtime comedian--still performing today at age 86--was the first door-to-door dance salesman.
95. He has tried out with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Houston Texans, and Tennessee Titans in the hopes of becoming a wide receiver while serving a four-year ban in the sport in which he achieved fame.
96. It was known as “The Emergency” during World War II.
97. A 5,000-year-old rock carving in Knowth (located in the answer to the previous question) is believed to have the earliest known depiction of this.
98. “That’s a lovely name--‘Angel’. But then, Satan was an angel.”
99. In 1954, this future Academy Award- and Emmy-winning cinematographer “crashed” the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus at Madison Square Garden on opening night.
100. He was one of the first celebrities to set up his own website at the advent of the Internet. In advertising his website, he dressed up as Queen Elizabeth II and said, “This Scottland has two Ts. My Scotland has one T.”
101. He was born in the same town as, and his university professor father taught, the man who deposed him just 3 months and 18 days after taking office.
102. G.K. Chesterton once referred to him as “the celebrated American comedian”.
103. She has drawn comparisons to Wassily Kandinsky and Jackson Pollock, despite the fact that she probably doesn’t yet know how to spell “Wassily Kandinsky”.
104. “It takes time to master your skills... and use will hone your technique. But take care to choose your new skills wisely.”
105. Its geological history is split into three main epochs: Noachian, Hesperian, and Amazonian.
106. He was the very first comedian to receive a standing ovation on a debut appearance on “The Tonight Show”.
107. Her grandmother’s recording of a folk song written in 1878 was the first celebrity recording by a classical musician to sell one million copies.
108. Comedian Artie Lange auditioned for a role in this film, but he described his audition as being so bad, it was “like a plumber who won a radio contest and got to try out for a movie”.
109. He was the co-commentator of the boxing match that inspired Sylvester Stallone to write the screenplay for a little film called “Rocky”.