Online 117.
ROUND ONE. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE.
Q1) Ramblin’ Syd Rumpo, Lady Beatrice Counterblast and Julian and Sandy, were characters in which radio comedy series?
A1) Round the Horne
Q2) What type of wine is described by the term, frizzante?
A2) Semi-sparkilng.
Q3) Marlon Brando, Clack Gable and Mel Gibson have all played which mutinous historical character.
A3) Fletcher Christian
Q4) Which Agatha Christie novel was the first to feature Hercule Poirot?
A4) The Mysterious Affair at Styles.
Q5) Who’s the four legged hero of The Wrong Trousers?
A5) Gromit.
Q6) What word links male rabbits and US dollars?
A6) Bucks
Q7) Similarly, what word links a metal container and also means ‘able to’?
A7) Can.
Q8) Which fishy sounding Captain features in the Tintin stories?
A8) Captain Haddock.
Q9) What’s on the end of a Lacrosse stick?
A9) A net.
Q10) Trevor Smith is better known as which rapper?
A10) Busta Rhymes.
ROUND TWO. CLASSICAL MUSIC & LIGHTS.
Q11) Which one’s the real opera: The Crying Dutchman, the Flying Dutchman, or The Frying Ditchman?
A11) The Flying Dutchman.
Q12) Which composer had the first names of Johann Sebastian?
A12) Bach.
Q13) Edward Elgar was from which country of the UK?
A13) England.
Q14) What is Tosca: an opera, a symphony or a concerto?
A14) An opera.
Q15) How do you get a sound out of a saxophone?
A15) Blow it.
Q16) There are, of course, Three Tenors: name any them.
A16) Luciano Pavarotti, José Carreras, and Placido Domingo.
Q17) Charlotte Church comes from which country of the UK?
A17) Wales.
Q18) In the title of the famous opera, what word follows Madame?
A18) Butterfly.
Q19) Which opera singing Andrea had a hit album, with Romanza
A19) Andrea Bocelli.
Q20) In which European city is La Scala?
A20) Milan.
ROUND THREE. TV DINNERS.
Q21) Which John played Kavannah, QC?
A21) John Thaw.
Q22) What was the profession of medieval detective, Cadfæl?
A22) Monk.
Q23) In which series did Hyacinth try and impress Emmet?
A23) Keeping Up Appearances.
Q24) Which Robbie found acclaim as Cracker?
A24) Robbie Coltrane.
Q25) All Creatures Great & Small was set in which English county?
A25) Yorkshire.
Q26) What shape is the medallion, on a Jim’ll Fix It badge?
A26) Square.
Q27) Which 1970’s sitcom was set on The Avenue, in Surbiton?
A27) The Goode Life.
Q28) How many Goodies were there? (Bonus point for naming one of them.)
A28) Three. (Graeme Garden, Bill Oddie and Tim Brook–Taylor)
Q29) Who fronted The Frost Report?
A29) David Frost.
Q30) Which American sitcom was all about six New York based chums?
A30) Friends.
ROUND FOUR. ROUND BRITAIN.
Q31) Which port was the birthplace of both Charles Dickens and Isambard Kingdom Brunel?
A31) Portsmouth.
Q32) The Cathedral Church of Saint Michael was consecrated in 1962. In which English city is it?
A32) Coventry.
Q33) Which Roman Road shares its name with a type of fur?
A33) Ermine Street.
Q34) Which sea separates St George’s Channel, from the North Channel?
A34) The Irish Sea.
Q35) Which body of water separates the Isle Of Wight from mainland Englan
A35) The Solent.
Q36) In which London square is the US Embassy?
A36) Grosvenor Square.
Q37) What is England’s second largest cathedral?
A37) York Minster.
Q38) Which Womble was named after a town on the Isle of Mull?
A38) Tobermoray.
Q39) Which Channel Island is famous for having no cars?
A39) Sark.
Q40) What is the nearest seaside resort, to London?
A40) Southend-On-Sea.
Round 5. Food and Drink.
Q41) What colour wine is Beaujolais Nouveau?
A41) Red.
Q42) The outside of a stick of rock is traditionally what colour?
A42) Pink.
Q43) How many snails does the average French person eat, in a year?
A43) 500.
Q44) What’s the oldest recorded type of manmade food?
A44) Cheese.
Q45) Which fruit is usually eaten at Wimbledon?
A45) Strawberries and cream.
Q46) If you were eating ‘al fresco’ would you be indoors or outdoors?
A46) Outdoors.
Q47) What is the usual shape of a Camembert cheese?
A47) Circular.
Q48) What name is given to a single slice of bacon?
A48) A rasher.
Q49) True, or false: Red wine should be drunk chilled.
A49) False, it should be drunk at room temperature.
Q50) A zombie is a cocktail containing copious amounts of which spirit?
A50) Rum.
ROUND SIX. GENERAL IGNORANCE.
Q51) What would stum be added to, in order to give it more strength, wine, steel, or concrete?
A51) Wine.
Q52) Who was the first British female singer to have three UK number 1s: Sandie Shaw, Dusty Springfield, or Charlotte Church?
A52) Sandie Shaw.
Q53) Hattie McDaniel was the first black woman to do what, win an Oscar, fly to the moon, or sit in the US Senate?
A53) Win an Oscar; – she played the maid in “Gone With The Wind”
Q54) George the 2nd’s eldest son died after being by what, a bullet, a cricket ball or a flying marrow?
A54) A cricket ball.
Q55) Lassa Fever was was first identified in which African nation?
A55) Nigeria.
Q56) Who was the first US President to appear on colour television?
A56) Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Q57) In which year of the 1980’s did the pound note cease to be legal tender, in the UK?
A57) 1988
Q58) Shah Huang Ti was famed for the building of what?
A58) The Great Wall of China.
Q59) What was the first planet to be discovered by telescoope?
A59) Uranus.
Q60) Mr Ashwell, of Herne Hill, invented which famous sign?
A60) The Engaged/vacant sign, in toilets.
Hollywood is definitely a strange place. It's one reason I've chosen to write books instead of screenplays. Mostly, anyway. :)
ReplyDelete1. Gaius Octavius Thurinus
2. Augustus Caesar
3. Mikhail Gorbachev
4. Jubilee
5. President Slobodan Milosevic
6. Saint Nicholas