| Canal with a "low bridge" ("ev'rybody down!") | 69 |
| Canal mentioned in the song “Low Bridge, Everybody Down” | 64 |
| ___ Railroad Co. v. Tompkins (1938 Supreme Court decision) | 58 |
| The Seneca Chief was the first vessel to travel its entire length | 65 |
| The Seneca Chief was the first to travel its full length | 56 |
| "Albany to Buffalo" waterway celebrated in song | 57 |
| Senta's suitor in "The Flying Dutchman" | 53 |
| Christine's lover in "The Phantom of the Opera" | 61 |
| Christine's lover, in "Phantom of the Opera" | 58 |
| "The Devil in the White City" author Larson | 53 |
| "___ the Viking," 1989 film starring Tim Robbins | 58 |
| ''Phantom of the Opera'' title character | 56 |
| Eleniak of ''The Beverly Hillbillies'' (1993) | 61 |
| Eleniak of ''The Beverly Hillbillies'' | 54 |
| Costar of Pamela and Yasmine on "Baywatch" | 52 |
| Officer Frank Poncherello portrayer of '70s-'80s TV | 59 |
| She played Joanie on "Joanie Loves Chachi" | 52 |
| Seán O'Faoláin's "Come Back to ___" | 59 |
| Scott's costar on "Joanie Loves Chachi" | 53 |
| Place name before and after "Oh" in a Thomas Moore title | 66 |
| Girl's name (or a hint to this puzzle's theme) | 54 |
| Ellie Kemper's character on "The Office" | 54 |
| Burnett of CNBC's "Squawk On the Street" | 54 |
| "Central" Ireland found in four puzzle answers | 56 |
| "____ Go Bragh" ("Ireland Forever") | 55 |
| Largest dwarf planet almost named the tenth planet in 2003 | 58 |
| Country once under the purview of Emperor Haile Selassie | 56 |
| Verdi aria that translates to "It was you" | 52 |
| Song from Verdi's "Un Ballo in Maschera" | 54 |
| "House of Frankenstein" director ___ C. Kenton | 56 |
| Character in Trollope's "Phineas Finn" | 52 |
| Name on the cover of "The Case of the Lucky Loser" | 60 |
| "The Ghost of Frankenstein" director Kenton | 53 |
| ___ P. Halliburton, founder of the Halliburton company | 54 |
| "Family: The Ties That Bind...and Gag!" author Bombeck | 64 |
| Bombeck who said, "God created man, but I could do better" | 68 |
| "Motherhood: The Second Oldest Profession" author Bombeck | 67 |
| "Here's ___!: The Bombecking of America" (1982 book) | 66 |
| "Forever, ___" (1997 humor anthology bestseller) | 58 |
| ___ Franklin, Grammy-nominated gospel/R&B singer | 52 |
| Bermuda ___ (extinct bird in "Breakfast of Champions") | 64 |
| Northern Ireland river that shares its name with a bird | 55 |
| First name of ''The Texas Troubadour'' | 54 |
| Borgnine who did voice work in "SpongeBob SquarePants" | 64 |
| "When Irish Eyes Are Smiling" songwriter Ball | 55 |
| "Hey Vern, It's ___!" (short-lived 1988 TV series) | 64 |
| "___ Goes to Camp" (1987 Jim Varney comedy) | 53 |
| "Journey to ___" ("Sesame Street" feature) | 62 |
| Banks famous for saying "Let's play two!" | 55 |
| Inspiration for the "Avenue Q" character Nicky | 56 |
| Comic strip retitled "The Piranha Club" in 1998 | 57 |
| Children's character originally voiced by Jim Henson | 56 |
| Ballplayer Banks with the catchphrase "Let's play two" | 68 |
| Actor Sabella who voiced Pumbaa in "The Lion King" | 60 |
| "The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland" host | 53 |
| "Rubber Duckie" singer of children's TV | 53 |
| "I Don't Want to Live on the Moon" singer | 55 |
| "How to Build a Classic Golf Swing" author Els | 56 |
| ___ Davis, first African-American to win the Heisman Trophy | 59 |
| Rubik who was the first famous puzzlemaker I remember | 53 |
| Resistance leader in Woody Allen's "Sleeper" | 58 |
| Dohnányi who composed "Ruralia Hungarica" | 54 |
| Physicist Mach who coined the term "Mach number" | 58 |
| "Two Children Are Threatened by a Nightingale" artist | 63 |
| ''Din'' or ''ranch'' ending | 59 |
| Work first publicly performed at the Theater an der Wien in 1805 | 64 |
| Symphony on Norman Bates's phonograph in "Psycho" | 63 |
| Musical work that Berlioz called "a heavenly sweetness" | 65 |
| Beethoven's "valiant" Vienna debut of 1805 | 56 |
| Slangy ending for "smack" or "switch" | 57 |
| ''Switch'' or ''buck'' add-on | 61 |
| Suffix with ''smack'' or ''switch'' | 67 |
| Slangy suffix with "smack" or "sock" | 56 |
| Oldest of the gods, in Plato's "Symposium" | 56 |
| Magazine for which publisher Ralph Ginzburg went to jail | 56 |
| London statue originally called the Shaftesbury Monument | 56 |
| Antony's faithful aide, in "Antony and Cleopatra" | 63 |
| "__ Turannos": E.A. Robinson poem about a complex marriage | 68 |
| Madonna album that came out simultaneously with "Sex" | 63 |
| Earn the right to say ''My mistake'' | 52 |
| Use the salad fork while eating one's entrée, say | 56 |
| "The wisest of the wise may __": Aeschylus | 52 |
| "Do they not ___ that devise evil?": Proverbs 14:22 | 61 |
| Mailing a letter or picking up a quart of milk, e.g. | 52 |
| They may be listed on a slip of paper included with a book | 58 |
| Crossed one's i's and dotted one's t's? | 55 |
| "Standard Operating Procedure" director Morris | 56 |
| One of the Weasleys' owls in "Harry Potter" | 57 |
| Kicker Mann who played for the Lions and Raiders in the 1970s | 61 |
| Greer's co-star in "That Forsyte Woman" | 53 |
| "The Unknown Known" documentary director Morris | 57 |
| He killed Anthony Quinn in "Against All Flags" | 56 |
| Bad Religion guitarist Gurewitz' electro-hardcore band | 58 |
| Writes ''hiar'' for ''hair,'' e.g. | 66 |
| Types "public" without an "L," for example | 62 |
| Guesses "true" when the answer is "false" | 61 |
| Where you might see a lot of chest-pumping, for short? | 54 |
| Language which gives us "clan" and "bard" | 61 |
| "Plaid" and "spunk" derive from it | 54 |
| "Step the meek fowls where ___ they ranged": Emerson | 62 |