He won the Best Actor Oscar for playing both Kid Shelleen and his desperado twin | 80 |
He won the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for "The Godfather Part II" | 76 |
He won the Pulitzer for Drama the same year that Hemingway won for Fiction | 74 |
He wrote "A first sign of the beginning of understanding is the wish to die" | 86 |
He wrote "A man cannot be too careful in the choice of his enemies" | 77 |
He wrote "I have the true feeling of myself only when I am unbearably unhappy" | 88 |
He wrote "If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him" | 78 |
He wrote "In the country of the blind the one-eyed man is king" | 73 |
He wrote "It's certain that fine women eat / A crazy salad with their meat" | 89 |
He wrote "Jupiter from on high laughs at lovers' perjuries" | 73 |
He wrote "Life has no meaning the moment you lose the illusion of being eternal" | 90 |
He wrote "The heart has its reasons which reason knows nothing of" | 76 |
He wrote "The only way to a woman's heart is along the path of torment" | 85 |
He wrote "There was an old man of Thermopylae / Who never did anything properly ..." | 94 |
He wrote "Three Pear-Shaped Pieces" to answer criticism that his music lacked form [SEE NOTE ABOVE] | 110 |
He wrote "War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength." | 77 |
He wrote the best sellers "Couplehood" and "Babyhood" | 73 |
He wrote the theme for and appeared in 1962's "The Longest Day" | 77 |
He wrote the words and music for Johnny's "A Boy Named Sue" | 73 |
He wrote, "God moves in a mysterious way, His wonders to perform" | 75 |
He's #1 on baseball's all-time list of games played ahead of Carl, Hank, Rickey, and Ty | 95 |
He's called Chico, Fabio, Bingo, Harpo, and Elmo by the forgetful fish Dory | 79 |
He's famous for the words "There's a sucker born every minute" | 80 |
He's on the cover of Kevin Clash's "My Life as a Furry Red Monster" | 85 |
He's the "A" to Jerry Moss's "M" in A&M records | 79 |
Head of the Catholic Church when Luther's "95 Theses" was posted | 78 |
Headline about the failing health of a former Velvet Underground member? | 72 |
Healing technique that's Japanese for "universal life energy" | 75 |
Heartbreaker who's "back in town" in a 1980 Carly Simon hit | 73 |
Heavy metal band with the triple-platinum album "Out of the Cellar" | 77 |
Helen Mirren's real-life role in the upcoming drama "Hitchcock" | 77 |
Helpful track off "Get Behind Me Satan" (with "The") | 72 |
Helping hand that's been "lent" to the four longest answers | 73 |
Henry Ford: "People can have the ___ in any color, as long as it's black" | 87 |
Her "Can't Be Tamed" video made Yahoo! Music's "The Least Awesome Videos of 2010" list | 114 |
Her "May It Be" featured lyrics in the Tolkien language of Quenya | 75 |
Her "Orinoco Flow" has a macabre role in "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" | 94 |
Her first solo recording ("Ringo, I Love You") was released under the pseudonym Bonnie Jo Mason | 105 |
Her full name has just one vowel repeated four times (aaaaand this entry officially jumps the shark) | 100 |
Her name is Norwegian for "beautiful woman who leads you to victory" | 78 |
Her white dress billowed over a subway grate in "The Seven Year Itch" | 79 |
Heroine who declares "I have always depended on the kindness of strangers" | 84 |
Heyward, Stone or Nelson, as each signed the Declaration of Independence | 72 |
Highest-rated movie quote on AFI's top 100 list not spoken by a human character | 83 |
Highly successful Hollywood actor James presently on "General Hospital" | 81 |
Hill staffer [sign up to get the AVCX celebrity puzzle series--avxwords.com] | 76 |
Hipster magazine that seems, despite its protestations, persistently conservative | 81 |
His "Crouching Woman" is in the Hirshhorn's sculpture garden | 74 |
His "Dance With My Father" won the 2003 Grammy for Song of the Year | 77 |
His "Goblet of Fire" was Amazon.com's #1 best-selling book of 2000 | 80 |
His "Ode to Joy" was adapted for use as the European Union's anthem | 81 |
His "Parade" included parts for typewriter, foghorn and rattle | 72 |
His "Seeking Major Tom" made Pitchfork's "Worst Album Covers of 2011" list | 98 |
His "The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao" was on Publishers Weekly's Best Fiction of 2007 list | 109 |
His best-known song includes ''Thee haughty tyrants ne'er shall tame'' | 90 |
His death prompted Georges Pompidou to say "France is a widow" | 72 |
His dying words were "What an artist the world is losing in me!" | 74 |
His film debut was as a subway thief in "Heartburn" (1986), with Meryl Streep and Jack Nicholson | 106 |
His film debut was as Billy Crystal's son in "City Slickers" (1991) | 81 |
His film debut was as the Dog-Faced Boy in "Big Top Pee-wee" (1988) | 77 |
His film debut was as Woody Allen's college-aged son in "Manhattan Murder Mystery" (1993) | 103 |
His film debut was in "Curly Sue" (1991) as a sort of villain out to get the title girl | 97 |
His last line in a 1987 film is "I think I'll have a drink" | 73 |
His last words were "What an artist the world is losing in me!" | 73 |
His mystery admirer didn't appear graveside to toast his birthday in 2010 for the first time since 1949 | 107 |
His number 23 is retired by the Miami Heat even though he never played for them | 79 |
His only line in "Clerks" ends in "Most of 'em just cheat on you" | 89 |
His poem "Fleas" reads, in its entirety, "Adam / Had 'em" | 81 |
His right arm was severed in a light saber duel before he became Darth Vader | 76 |
His second book is subtitled "Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream" | 82 |
His statue (minus its head) can be found in Arlington's Freedom Park | 72 |
His tenure was set to end in 2009, to the delight of many, though he's reported to be reconsidering | 103 |
His tombstone in Montmartre Cemetery has a statue of him as the puppet Petrushka | 80 |
His tombstone reads "Cast a cold Eye / On Life, on Death. / Horseman, pass by" | 88 |
His version of "Othello" holds the record for longest-running Shakespeare production on Broadway | 106 |
Hispanic MLB star whose nickname is a Hispanic cartoon character spelled backward (COINCIDENCE?!?) | 98 |
Historian Kearns Goodwin whose work was adapted into the movie "Lincoln" | 82 |
Historic figures disputed in a "Seinfeld" Trivial Pursuit question | 76 |
Historic symbol whose shape can be found hidden in this completed puzzle | 72 |
Historical character in John Ford's "My Darling Clementine" | 73 |
Historical figure in Isabel Allende's novel "Inés of My Soul" | 78 |
Historical figure kidnapped in "Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure" | 83 |
History class: F -- “The professor ignored my attendance record and class participation, judging me entirely on ___” | 124 |
Hit Broadway musical with the song "I'm Not Wearing Underwear Today" | 82 |
Hit series whose pilot was the TV movie "Panic at Malibu River" | 73 |
Hit single from Carole King's "Rhymes & Reasons" album | 72 |
Hit song from 2000 ... and a hint to 10 symmetrically arranged Across answers | 77 |
Hit song from Alanis Morissette's "Jagged Little Pill" album | 74 |
Hit song of 1973 and 1996 with the lyrics "I heard he sang a good song / I heard he had a style" | 106 |
Hit song with the line "When she squeezed me tight she nearly broke my spine" | 87 |
Hitchcock film that has uncredited appearances by Fidel Castro and Che Guevara | 78 |
Hockey legend with the record for most shots on goal in one season, for short | 77 |
Hodges who called "The Giants win the pennant! The Giants win the pennant!" | 85 |
Hodges who called baseball's "shot heard 'round the world" | 76 |
Hoe or rake (like one might use to tend plants after losing one's job) | 74 |
Holder of the Guiness World Record for most bone fractures in one lifetime (433) | 80 |
Holder of the world record for the longest ovation on the operatic stage (80 minutes) | 85 |
Holiday movie with the repeated line "You'll shoot your eye out!" | 79 |
Holiday song that begins "The sun is shining, the grass is green" | 75 |
Holiday when children are given red envelopes containing money from their elders | 80 |