Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging
THEME: HEXAGON (40A: Figure that shares a property with this puzzle) — there are six SIDEs in this puzzle, all of them arranged along the SIDEs of the grid, as part of answers that feature 90-degree turns

Word of the Day: TOVAH Feldshuh (3D: Feldshuh of "Brewster's Millions") —
Tovah Feldshuh (born December 27, 1952) is an American actress, singer and playwright. [...] Feldshuh appeared on the stage under the name Terri Fairchild before deciding to incorporate her Hebrew name and her original surname as her professional name Tovah Feldshuh. She made her Broadway debut in the short-lived 1973 musical Cyrano starring Christopher Plummer. She appeared in the title role in Yentl both off-Broadway at the Chelsea Theater Center and later on Broadway. Both productions are detailed in the book, Chelsea on the Edge: The Adventures of an American Theater, which describes tensions between Feldshuh and director Robert Kalfin over the play's interpretation. [...] Feldshuh has a recurring role as defense attorney Danielle Melnick on Law & Order. Feature film appearances have included The Triangle Factory Fire Scandal, A Walk on the Moon, Happy Accidents, Brewster's Millions, The Idolmaker, The Blue Iguana, A Day in October, The Believer, Just My Luck, and Kissing Jessica Stein. (wikipedia)
This is an exemplary puzzle. OK, maybe it would have been something closer to perfect if the SIDEs had *actually* formed a perfect HEXAGON (with an Across at the top, an Across at the bottom, and the remaining four sides on diagonals), but I'm not even sure that's physically possible. Having six SIDEs, On The SIDEs (!) of the grid, is good enough for me. The theme density is startling, especially considering rotational symmetry is maintained throughout. It's hard to go a few squares in any direction without running into a theme answer. Often, in theme-dense puzzles, fill suffers, but not here. TOVAH makes me cringe (sorry, she's no one to me, and "Brewster's Millions?!" Even my 1985 teenage self wouldn't watch that movie), but with the exception of an overly familiar abbrev. here and there, this grid is solid. One thing: I don't think ROEPER is "a real thumb-body" anymore, is he? Looks like he's giving letters grades now. I hear "At the Movies" is starting up again in '11, though, with different critics (and Ebert involved somehow, with his wife producing), so that's good for movie fans. Aha, found the show announcement in Ebert's Journal, here. . . where was I? Oh, right. Puzzle = Awesome.Theme answers:
- 1D: Outdoor retail promotion (SIDEWALK SALE)
- 7A: Cartoon featured in 23 best-selling books ("THE FAR SIDE")
- 30A: In America (STATESIDE)
- 34D: Graze, in way (SIDESWIPE)
- 58A: Where marmots and chamois live (MOUNTAINSIDE)
- 55D: Southwestern rattler (SIDEWINDER)
Got a slow start, mostly because of TOVAH, but also because of SLEWS ("a slew of something," yes; "SLEWS," awkwarder); oh, and that point I hadn't figured out the theme, so a four-letter word for outdoor retail promotion just made no sense. Meandered through middle of grid (got HEXAGON before I knew how the theme was supposed to play out), and then finally, after struggling a bit in the east, I picked up the theme at STATESIDE. Puzzle went down quickly after that, and I thought it felt fairly easy overall, but my time was definitely higher than normal for me for a Thursday. Checked at the NYT site and some very fast solvers had some not-so-fast times, so ... I guess it did play on the tough side, though in retrospect, I don't really understand why (beyond the initial "WTF is the theme?" delay).Bullets:
- 4A: Chinese dynasty at the time of Christ (HAN) — This was a guess based on knowing HAN as a Chinese ethnicity.
- 14A: 1983 Randy Newman song ("I LOVE L.A.") — Hated it. Loved "Short People," though:
- 38A: "Star Wars" surname (KENOBI) — I had no idea "Star Wars" characters had surnames and given names or family names or whatever. It all just sounds so made up. I figured OBI-WAN KENOBI was like JAR-JAR or YODA. I mean ... what's Yoda's "surname?"
- 6D: Nimbus launcher of 1964 (NASA) — Most of your "launcher" clues are gonna be NASA.
7D: Number that looks like the letter yogh (THREE) — hey, my specific grad school training finally got me a crossword answer. About time.- 10D: Carrier overseer, for short (FAA) — first thought was that "carrier" had something to do with the post office. Oh, and I messed up the postal clue at first too (65D: Rural env. abbr.). I had RPO and then RFD before realizing that the "R" stood for "rural," which is in the damned clue (answer is RTE). Also, RPO is an initialism that I apparently made up. If anyone asks you, it stands for "rural post office."
- 40D: Uto-Aztecan language (HOPI) — "UTO" is an word part you (mercifully) rarely if ever see in the grid. Let's hope it stays in the clues, where it belongs (if it belongs anywhere).
- 57D: Palio di ___ (Italian race horse) (ASTI) — tough clue; thankfully, I never saw it. SW was my fastest section.
- 60D: "The ___ Game" (1965 Shirley Ellis hit) ("NAME") — one last musical interlude
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter]

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