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The Big Book of American Trivia

Page 20

by J. Stephen Lang


  26. Milton Berle; he was not on the air for thirty years. [Back]

  27. Hee Haw [Back]

  28. The TV picture tube [Back]

  29. Roseanne Barr, who had plenty of success with Roseanne [Back]

  30. Bishop Fulton Sheen [Back]

  31. Pat Robertson [Back]

  32. Richard Nixon and John F. Kennedy [Back]

  33. David Brinkley, of Huntley-Brinkley fame [Back]

  Great Americans on Film // Answers

  1. George W. Bush; the title was W. [Back]

  2. Truman Capote, in the movie Truman [Back]

  3. Howard Hughes [Back]

  4. George S. Patton; Scott was Patton. [Back]

  5. Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash [Back]

  6. Ray Charles, in the movie Ray [Back]

  7. Jeff Bridges (son of Lloyd) [Back]

  8. Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow in Bonnie and Clyde [Back]

  9. Lon Chaney, who died in 1930 after making one sound movie [Back]

  10. Kevin Costner, who did not play Kennedy himself [Back]

  11. Nick Nolte [Back]

  12. Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942) [Back]

  13. Helen Keller; the movie was The Miracle Worker. [Back]

  14. Eliot Ness, played by Kevin Costner [Back]

  15. “Stonewall” Jackson [Back]

  16. Warren Beatty [Back]

  17. Julia Child, in the movie Julie and Julia [Back]

  18. Norma Rae [Back]

  19. Loretta Lynn [Back]

  20. Florenz Ziegfeld; the movie was The Great Ziegfeld. [Back]

  21. Pat Boone [Back]

  22. Evel Knievel [Back]

  23. David Carradine [Back]

  24. Raging Bull [Back]

  25. Spencer Tracy [Back]

  26. Babe Ruth, in The Babe [Back]

  27. Mickey Rooney [Back]

  28. Ronald Reagan, who played George Gipp [Back]

  29. Born Again (1978), the story of Charles Colson [Back]

  30. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid [Back]

  31. Calamity Jane [Back]

  32. Christopher Columbus; his wife, Florence Eldridge, played Queen Isabella. [Back]

  33. Davy Crockett; later, on TV, he played Daniel Boone. [Back]

  34. Bing Crosby [Back]

  Leading Men (On Screen, That Is) // Answers

  1. Harrison Ford [Back]

  2. Tom Hanks [Back]

  3. Humphrey Bogart [Back]

  4. Jim Carrey [Back]

  5. Tony Curtis [Back]

  6. Fred Astaire [Back]

  7. Gene Hackman [Back]

  8. Charlton Heston [Back]

  9. Dustin Hoffman [Back]

  10. Sylvester Stallone [Back]

  11. Ray Milland [Back]

  12. Robert Mitchum [Back]

  13. Gene Autry [Back]

  14. Paul Newman [Back]

  15. Jack Nicholson [Back]

  16. Donald O’Connor [Back]

  17. Robin Williams [Back]

  18. Gregory Peck [Back]

  19. Warren Beatty [Back]

  20. Wallace Beery [Back]

  21. Ernest Borgnine [Back]

  22. Marlon Brando [Back]

  23. Yul Brynner [Back]

  24. James Cagney [Back]

  25. Lionel Barrymore [Back]

  26. Nick Nolte [Back]

  27. Paul Muni [Back]

  28. William Powell [Back]

  29. Tyrone Power [Back]

  30. Elvis Presley [Back]

  31. Lon Chaney [Back]

  32. Charlie Chaplin [Back]

  33. Montgomery Clift [Back]

  34. Gary Cooper [Back]

  35. Nicholas Cage [Back]

  36. Bing Crosby [Back]

  37. Kirk Douglas [Back]

  38. Clint Eastwood [Back]

  39. Nelson Eddy [Back]

  40. W. C. Fields [Back]

  Cartoons, Moving and Nonmoving // Answers

  1. “Peanuts” [Back]

  2. Finding Nemo [Back]

  3. “Garfield” [Back]

  4. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, released on videotape in 1993 [Back]

  5. Mighty Mouse [Back]

  6. “Pogo,” by Walt Kelly [Back]

  7. Bill Clinton [Back]

  8. The Incredible Hulk (In the TV series he was David Banner.) [Back]

  9. “Pearls Before Swine,” by Stephan Pastis [Back]

  10. “Ripley’s Believe It or Not” [Back]

  11. Mickey Mouse; Walt pinched his nose when doing the Mickey voice. [Back]

  12. Little Orphan Annie’s [Back]

  13. The elephant and donkey symbols for the Republicans and Democrats [Back]

  14. New York [Back]

  15. Mel Blanc, who did the voices for Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and many others [Back]

  16. The Reuben Awards, named for cartoonist Reuben “Rube” Goldberg [Back]

  17. “The Far Side” [Back]

  18. Woody Woodpecker [Back]

  19. Spider-Man [Back]

  20. “L’il Abner,” by Al Capp [Back]

  21. “Beetle Bailey”; Beetle’s sister was Lois Flagston of “Hi and Lois.” [Back]

  22. “The Family Circus,” which Keane had wanted to name “Family Circle,” until the magazine of that name protested [Back]

  23. Dennis the Menace; the set also included Archie, Beetle Bailey, Garfield, and Calvin and Hobbes. [Back]

  24. Underdog [Back]

  25. “Mutt and Jeff” [Back]

  26. Popeye, who eventually dominated the strip and became an animated cartoon character [Back]

  Out Here in Radio Land // Answers

  1. Wolfman Jack [Back]

  2. Grand Ole Opry; Hay was spoofing the preceding program, a broadcast of grand opera. [Back]

  3. Michael Savage, host of The Savage Nation [Back]

  4. K, usually [Back]

  5. Internet radio [Back]

  6. Howard Stern [Back]

  7. New York [Back]

  8. Dick Clark, of course [Back]

  9. Dennis Miller [Back]

  10. Sears; the WLS stood for “World’s Largest Store.” [Back]

  11. Rush Limbaugh [Back]

  12. FM radio [Back]

  13. Clarence Thomas [Back]

  14. Transcriptions; as CDs came into vogue, transcriptions became a thing of the past. [Back]

  15. Dr. Demento, famous for playing novelty songs [Back]

  16. Baby Snooks [Back]

  17. Kasey Kasem, who also provided voices for cartoon characters such as Shaggy in Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! [Back]

  18. Amos and Andy, two supposedly black men played (on radio) by two whites [Back]

  More Great Americans on Film // Answers

  1. Richard Nixon [Back]

  2. Dances with Wolves [Back]

  3. Lou Gehrig [Back]

  4. The Doors [Back]

  5. Kris Kristofferson and Bob Dylan [Back]

  6. Wild Bill Hickok; the movie also featured the characters Calamity Jane and Buffalo Bill. [Back]

  7. Alan Freed, who coined (or at least popularized) the term rock and roll [Back]

  8. James Cagney [Back]

  9. Apollo 13 [Back]

  10. The James brothers and the Younger brothers [Back]

  11. Douglas MacArthur [Back]

  12. Mickey Rooney [Back]

  13. Warren Beatty [Back]

  14. Wyatt Earp [Back]

  15. Bob Hope [Back]

  16. Cole Porter [Back]

  17. Joan Crawford, played in the movie by Faye Dunaway [Back]

  18. Dropping the A-bomb on Japan [Back]

  19. Sam Houston [Back]

  20. Charles Lindbergh [Back]

  21. Raymond Massey [Back]

  22. The Right Stuff [Back]

  23. St. Louis Blues [Back]

  24. Eliot Ness [Back]

  25. Dustin Hoffman [Back]

  26. Thomas Edison; the film is Edison the Man. [Back]

  27. A Man Called Pe
ter, the story of Peter Marshall [Back]

  28. Frederic March [Back]

  29. 1776 [Back]

  30. John Philip Sousa [Back]

  31. Will Rogers; Will Jr. played him in The Story of Will Rogers. [Back]

  32. F. Scott Fitzgerald [Back]

  33. Jesse James; the two actors played brothers Jesse and Frank James. [Back]

  34. Debbie Reynolds [Back]

  America on Stage // Answers

  1. Oklahoma! [Back]

  2. The Hatfields and the McCoys [Back]

  3. Broadway, the theater district [Back]

  4. North Carolina, on Roanoke Island, site of the Lost Colony [Back]

  5. Kentucky, near the spot where Foster wrote the song “My Old Kentucky Home” [Back]

  6. 1776 [Back]

  7. The Cherokee; the drama is staged near Great Smoky Mountains National Park. [Back]

  8. The Mormons; the pageant takes place on the grounds of the Mesa Temple. [Back]

  9. Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons [Back]

  10. The Salem witch trials [Back]

  11. The Shirelles [Back]

  12. Gypsy Rose Lee [Back]

  13. Eugene O’Neill, the first American playwright to win the Nobel Prize for Literature, author of Anna Christie, Strange Interlude, and other classic dramas [Back]

  14. The Tonys, awarded for Broadway plays [Back]

  15. Native Americans [Back]

  16. Tecumseh [Back]

  17. Assassins [Back]

  18. North Carolina; it’s in Griffith’s hometown, Mount Airy. [Back]

  19. The Miracle Worker [Back]

  20. Jesus; the drama is The Great Passion Play. [Back]

  21. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn [Back]

  22. New York, back when it was called New Amsterdam; oddly, the play makes Stuyvesant a sympathetic character. [Back]

  23. Lincoln; the play is the perennially popular Abe Lincoln in Illinois. [Back]

  24. Davy Crockett; the play is at Davy Crockett State Park. “Gentleman from the Cane” was Crockett’s nickname when he served in Congress. “Cane” meant “the backwoods.” [Back]

  25. Ohio, in the town of New Philadelphia, near the play’s setting [Back]

  26. Titanic [Back]

  27. North Carolina, which has numerous productions every summer, including The Lost Colony, Horn in the West, The Sword of Peace, Worthy Is the Lamb, Unto These Hills, and several others [Back]

  28. The Music Man [Back]

  29. Elvis Presley; oddly, the play’s plot is based (loosely) on Shakespeare’s comedy Twelfth Night. [Back]

  30. Utah; it is held in the town of Salina. [Back]

  31. The sinking of the Titanic [Back]

  TV Record Holders // Answers

  1. The Super Bowl [Back]

  2. M*A*S*H [Back]

  3. Gone with the Wind [Back]

  4. The Fugitive [Back]

  5. The Ed Sullivan Show [Back]

  6. Bonanza [Back]

  7. Lassie [Back]

  8. Red Skelton [Back]

  9. Cheers [Back]

  10. I Love Lucy, naturally [Back]

  11. The Andy Griffith Show [Back]

  12. Dallas; this was the episode when America learned who shot J. R. Ewing. [Back]

  13. Lawrence Welk’s [Back]

  14. Dragnet [Back]

  The Fabulous Funnies // Answers

  1. “Beetle Bailey” [Back]

  2. “Hagar the Horrible” [Back]

  3. “Blondie” [Back]

  4. “The Family Circus” [Back]

  5. “Snuffy Smith” [Back]

  6. “Dennis the Menace” [Back]

  7. “Little Orphan Annie” [Back]

  8. “Li’l Abner” [Back]

  9. “The Wizard of Id” [Back]

  10. “Peanuts” [Back]

  11. “For Better or for Worse” [Back]

  12. “Calvin and Hobbes” [Back]

  13. “Foxtrot” [Back]

  14. “Garfield” [Back]

  15. “Tumbleweeds” [Back]

 

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