Duettist with Sheryl Crow in the song "Picture" | 57 |
"Don't Go Breaking My Heart" duettist, 1976 | 57 |
Fields who played Tootie on "The Facts of Life" | 57 |
Rock band whose makeup has stayed the same over the years | 57 |
Cereal that's "Kid-tested, mother-approved" | 57 |
Kind of meeting in "O Brother, Where Art Thou?" | 57 |
"Twittering Machine" artist (no, not Biz Stone) | 57 |
No-longer-anonymous "Primary Colors" author Joe | 57 |
Airline whose name is consecutive letters of the alphabet | 57 |
Measures when driving on the left side of the road: Abbr. | 57 |
Jimmy Barnes & Dallas Crane "Sit On My ___" | 57 |
Beatles "I thought I ___ you, what did I know?" | 57 |
Billionaire/liberal bogeyman David or his brother Charles | 57 |
"The Bridge on the River __": 1957 Best Picture | 57 |
"Chantilly ___" (The Big Bopper's 1958 hit) | 57 |
Tony-winning actor in the musical "Foxy" (1964) | 57 |
"The ___ of the White Worm" (Bram Stoker novel) | 57 |
Diane that played a singer in "Streets of Fire" | 57 |
Charles G. Finney's "The Circus of Dr. ___" | 57 |
Bolivian capital that translates to "the peace" | 57 |
Wyoming city nicknamed "Gem City of the Plains" | 57 |
Pitcher who threw the only perfect game in a World Series | 57 |
Major-league manager who won World Series in both leagues | 57 |
Food whose name means, literally, "cooking pot" | 57 |
He managed the U.S. to its first Olympic gold in baseball | 57 |
One in a big ''General Hospital'' wedding | 57 |
Chip brand that comes in a KC Masterpiece barbecue flavor | 57 |
Pitcher Charlie who got the win at the 1984 All-Star Game | 57 |
Best-selling author who once worked for Britain's MI6 | 57 |
Surname of two signers of the Declaration of Independence | 57 |
Jason who starred in TV's "My Name Is Earl" | 57 |
___ Lawrence Orchestra (British big band since the 1960s) | 57 |
"Nothing beats a great pair of ___" (ad slogan) | 57 |
Soprano role in Bizet's "The Pearl Fishers" | 57 |
Actor Lesser who played Uncle Leo on "Seinfeld" | 57 |
He said "A lie told often enough becomes truth" | 57 |
He was involved in a hosting controversy with O'Brien | 57 |
Comedian whose repertoire includes "Jaywalking" | 57 |
Celebrity who testified at the 2005 Michael Jackson trial | 57 |
___ Getz ("Lethal Weapon 2" role for Joe Pesci) | 57 |
Fifth-century pope known as ''the Great'' | 57 |
Trapeze artist whose name was given to skintight clothing | 57 |
Word mistakenly substituted for ''fewer'' | 57 |
". . . ___ faith turn to despair" (Shakespeare) | 57 |
River that all travelers forget about after going down it | 57 |
"___ Get It On" (1973 Marvin Gaye chart-topper) | 57 |
Asian city whose name means "place of the gods" | 57 |
"Said I Loved You ... But I ___" Michael Bolton | 57 |
Co-star of Denzel in "The Manchurian Candidate" | 57 |
Word that can follow the ten starred words in this puzzle | 57 |
The "it" in "He likes it! Hey Mikey!" | 57 |
Home of the oldest university in the continental Americas | 57 |
Like the watches in "The Persistence of Memory" | 57 |
"In the Heights" Tony winner ___-Manuel Miranda | 57 |
Landmark where King proclaimed "I have a dream" | 57 |
Scientist James who discovered citrus fruits cured scurvy | 57 |
"Hot ---" Houlihan ("MASH" character) | 57 |
Actress whose last name is a New York school's inits. | 57 |
___ Phair with the 2003 tune "Why Can't I?" | 57 |
''Me and You and a Dog Named Boo'' artist | 57 |
Ricky Martin's hit "Livin' la Vida ___" | 57 |
Raccoon ___, "The Honeymooners" fraternal group | 57 |
Creedence Clearwater Revival song about a California city | 57 |
Whom Tony and Rico fought over, in "Copacabana" | 57 |
Name repeated in "Whatever ___ wants, ___ gets" | 57 |
1970 hit about a girl with "a dark brown voice" | 57 |
"Steady Eddie" of the '40s-'50s Yankees | 57 |
Marion ___, Emmy-winning actress on "Bewitched" | 57 |
Raskolnikov portrayer in "Crime and Punishment" | 57 |
Isabel Allende's "La Casa de ___ Espiritus" | 57 |
2006 Beatles mashup album used in a Cirque du Soleil show | 57 |
Party that the Hawaii 5-0 might break up if it gets rowdy | 57 |
"March of the Penguins" writer/director Jacquet | 57 |
"Little ___" (Marjorie Henderson Buell cartoon) | 57 |
Alison who won a Pulitzer for "Foreign Affairs" | 57 |
2022's Super Bowl (if they keep using Roman numerals) | 57 |
Bonkers ... or an overlapping word in four themed answers | 57 |
They're attractive, but not necessarily to each other | 57 |
"When ___ Flew" (Academy Award-winning cartoon) | 57 |
Yum-Yum, Peep-Bo and Pitti-Sing in "The Mikado" | 57 |
"Don't Tell ___" ("Cabaret" song) | 57 |
TravoltaÂ’s "Saturday Night Fever" character | 57 |
"Hath no __ dagger here a point for me?": Shak. | 57 |
One is either a "rumpy" or a "stumpy" | 57 |
Jacques-Louis David painting "The Death of ___" | 57 |
French revolutionary Jean-Paul stabbed in his own bathtub | 57 |
Marley ___ ("Mama Said Knock You Out" producer) | 57 |
His epitaph begins "Workers of all lands unite" | 57 |
Run-D.M.C. song that asks "Why ya buggin'?" | 57 |
"¡No __!": Mexican's "Enough!" | 57 |
His 1959 album "Heavenly" was #1 for five weeks | 57 |
"Not to Be Removed Except by the Consumer" item | 57 |
"You ready to let a real expert give it a try?" | 57 |
"That time of year thou __ in me behold": Shak. | 57 |
"Dilbert" cartoonist Scott Adams has one: Abbr. | 57 |
"Me and Bobby ___" (posthumous Janis Joplin #1) | 57 |
"One man's ___ is another man's poison" | 57 |
Member of an extensive empire of the seventh century B.C. | 57 |
"Say hello to your average asphalt contractor"? | 57 |
Gibson who directed "The Passion of the Christ" | 57 |