Andy's partner in an old radio sitcom / WED 2-11-26 / One-named singer with the 2017 platinum album "Melodrama" / Matchmaking site with a "synagogue attendance" filter / ___ pear (applelike fruit) / Hoped-for prognosis for an election incumbent / 1957 rock 'n' roll classic suggested by this puzzle's circled letters / "Then, window, let day in, and let ___ out": Juliet / Glasses sans glass
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Constructor: Joseph Gangi
Relative difficulty: Easy
Theme answers:
"GOODNESS GRACIOUS" (18A: "Oh, for heaven's sake!") [this is the line that immediately precedes "GREAT BALLS OF FIRE" in the chorus of the song]
DEFIES
GRIND
(34A: Openly resists)
(38A: Arduous routine)
DOGBREED
LIFE
(29A: Newfoundland or Labrador retriever)
(36A: "Then, window, let day in, and let ___ out": Juliet)
MIRE
SAFESEAT
(42A: Swampy land)
(45A: Hoped-for prognosis for an election incumbent)
SOFIA
CATERS
(40A: "Priscilla" director Coppola)
(43A: Does the dishes?)
"Great Balls of Fire" is a 1957 popular song recorded by American rock and roll musician Jerry Lee Lewis on Sun Records and featured in the 1957 movie Jamboree. It was written by Otis Blackwell and Jack Hammer. The Jerry Lee Lewis 1957 recording was ranked as the 96th-greatest song ever by Rolling Stone. It is written in AABA form. It sold one million copies in its first 10 days of release in the United States, making it one of the best-selling singles at that time.
• • •
I wonder how well younger solvers know this song. It's a classic, but I don't know if "classics" from the '50s still factor into younger people's store of songs. The song is well before my time (came out 12 years before I was born), but I know it very well—rock music simply hadn't been around *that* long when I was a kid, and so the store of "oldies" seemed finite and you could still hear them all over the place. Also, Jerry Lee Lewis was a ... let's say, colorful figure. Frequently in the news (and, after the '50s, usually not for music—he had many wives, many personal tragedies, many tax problems). "GREAT BALLS OF FIRE" came out in November of 1957, the month before he married his 13-year-old cousin (who eventually left him, stating that she had been "subject to every type of physical and mental abuse imaginable" (wikipedia)). He lost two children very young in separate accidents (car, pool), At least two of his wives died young (drugs, pool). But as an artist, he is best known for his wild, energetic playing style. Here's Elton John from a 2013 interview:
"[Until 'GREAT BALLS OF FIRE'], the piano playing that I had heard had been more sedate. My dad collected George Shearing records, but this was the first time I heard someone beat the shit out of a piano. When I saw Little Richard at the Harrow Granada, he played it standing up, but Jerry Lee Lewis actually jumped on the piano! This was astonishing to me, that people could do that. Those records had such a huge effect on me, and they were just so great. I learned to play like that." (wikipedia)
The overall grid was easy and a bit dull. Lots of 3-4-5s, esp. through the middle—gotta really divide and control that physical space in order to make all the "balls" work out right. But the "balls" themselves aren't interesting from a solving perspective (since they aren't directly connected to clues at all), and the fill drags a little as a result. You do get a few nice longer answers around the edges. I'm thinking about "YOU LOST ME" and BEST OF ALL, and even SAT IN FOR, but the other longer answers are a little on the meh side, and the short gunk gets a little gunkier than it should, probably (EEN EEO EINS EERIE ELS ELA ESS ERAT ... that's just the "E"s). I admire the architecture of this puzzle more than I enjoyed solving it.
Bullets:
- 1A: Lewis Carroll's "The ___ and the Carpenter" ("WALRUS") — I got this easily enough, but only because, if you solve crosswords long enough, you'll learn a weird lot about Alice in Wonderland, whether you want to or not. Think of it like the Star Wars of the olden days—a seemingly endless well of trivia for the crossword to draw from. I don't know that I've ever read Alice in Wonderland (or Through the Looking Glass) all the way through. Maybe I saw the cartoon? Anyway, I don't actually remember the WALRUS, but I think I've seen that WALRUS in at least one other (maybe cryptic?) puzzle just this week. Anyway, you'll see the cake message "EAT ME" or stray words from "Jabberwocky" and a lot of other Carroll-related stuff if you solve long enough.
- 45A: Hoped-for prognosis for an election incumbent (SAFE SEAT) — something about the wording of this clue seems off. SAFE SEAT is not a "hoped-for" thing; it's usually a structural thing, built into the seat itself. A district that contains an overwhelmingly "blue" or "red" voting bloc is considered a SAFE SEAT (for D or R, respectively). An "incumbent" obviously "hopes for" re-election," so they hope their seat is "safe" in that sense, but that's not really what SAFE SEAT means.
- 9D: Taylor Swift's "___ Song" ("OUR") — OK, there's no need to go to Taylor Swift for the simple word "OUR." That's back-to-back Swift days. It's getting worse than Star Wars. Don't make me break out a Swift counter. The puzzle has got to me more imaginative than this. Returning to the Swift well over and over, even when you absolutely don't have to, is a little exhausting.
- 53D: Actress Fanning (ELLE) — would've loved to have seen some mention here of her recent Academy Award nomination for her performance in Sentimental Value (my favorite movie of last year). I don't think I ever paid much attention to Fanning's work before that, but she is perfect as the superstar American actress (mis-)cast in the comeback film of a highly regarded older director (played by Stellan Skarsgård). The director's own daughter (also an actress) turned the role down, and so ELLE Fanning gets cast instead and ends up in a kind of surrogate daughter relationship with the director, while the real daughter (who has a lot of justifiable anger toward her father) looks on from the outside. It's all very touching and remarkably funny, and my wife and I both marveled at Fanning, who has to play an actress who is *wrong* for the part—not broadly, obviously, over-the-top wrong. Just ... wrong. It's a subtle, beautiful performance.
That's all. See you next time.
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