| KATHLEEN | I'll Take You Home Again ___, song written in 1875 loosely based on an Irish folk song (8) |
| GLADRAGS | Handbags And _, song written in 1967 by Mike d'Abo (8) |
| ANNIE | 1950 musical film, loosely based on an American frontierswoman who appeared in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show (5,3,4,3) |
| GUN | 1950 musical film, loosely based on an American frontierswoman who appeared in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show (5,3,4,3) |
| GETYOUR | 1950 musical film, loosely based on an American frontierswoman who appeared in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show (5,3,4,3) |
| GULLIVERSTRAVELS | 2010 film, starring Jack Black, loosely based on an 18th-century novel by Jonathan Swift |
| SLEEPYHOLLOW | 1999 Tim Burton film starring Johnny Depp, loosely based on an 1820 short story by Washington Irving |
| GERMANY | Despite popular belief, the writer of the song "I'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen" pined for which country? (7) |
| OCEAN | "I'll take you home again, Kathleen; Across the ... wild and wide" |
| INTHEJAR | Where the Whiskey was, in an Irish folk song (with classic metal covers by Thin Lizzy and Metallica) |
| DANNYBOY | Irish folk song with lyrics written by English lawyer Frederic Weatherly in 1910 (5,3) |
| BASEPATH | It may take you home |
| WALTZING | Australian folk song written in 1895 by Banjo Patterson (8,7) |
| GIRLTALK | Song described by Michael Feinstein as the "last great male chauvinistic song written in the 60's" |
| ROBINSON | Mrs ___, song written for the film The Graduate (8) |
| OSOLEMIO | Well-known Neapolitan song written in 1898 by Giovanni Capurro and Eduardo di Capua |
| MYOLDMAN | British music hall song written in 1919 (2,3,3) |
| MOLLY | - Malone; purveyor of cockles and mussels in an Irish folk song of an same name which is recognised as Dublin's unofficial anthem (5) |
| MALONE | Molly, heroine of an Irish folk song who sold cockles and mussels on the streets of Dublin (6) |
| NORA | Is Maggie the subject of an Irish folk song, or an alternative one? (4) |