| SATCHMO | Nickname of US jazz trumpeter Louis Armstrong (1901- 71) used as the title of an autobiography published in 1954 (7) |
| FORENSIC | Relating to publi debate or argument (8) |
| ECCEHOMO | Title of an autobiography by Friedrich Nietzsche |
| LOUISARMSTRONG | Legendary jazz trumpeter, 1901-71 (5,9) |
| PEGGYLEE | Stage name of US jazz and pop singer Norma Deloris Egstrom (1920-2002) (5,3) |
| CARMICHAEL | Surname of US jazz musician Hoagy (10) |
| PEARL | Nickname of US rock singer Janis Joplin (1943-70), used as the title of her posthumous second album (1971) (5) |
| SCANDAL | Word for an event causing public outrage that was used as the title of a film based on the Profumo affair (7) |
| ETINARCADIAEGO | Latin phrase used as the title of two paintings by Nicolas Poussin, one of which is also called Les bergers d'Arcadie |
| NIGHTANDDAY | Popular Cole Porter song that was used as the title of his 1946 biopic (5,3,3) |
| ANNIE | Find a new name, that's used as the title of a musical (5) |
| MOANA | Word for 'ocean' in various Polynesian languages, used as the title of a 2016 Disney film (5) |
| QED | Abbreviation of a Latin phrase for "which was to be demonstrated or proved", used at the end of a formal proof and as the title of a former BBC science documentary series (1,1,1) |
| RIDERSONTHESTORM | Classic 1971 track from The Doors album LA Woman, used by their drummer John Densmore as the title of his autobiography |
| WAYDOWN | ___ In The Hole, Tom Waits song used as the title music for crime drama series The Wire (3,4) |
| ENNUI | Word for boredom used as the title of a sonnet by Sylvia Plath, a painting by Walter Sickert and a song by Lou Reed (5) |
| BUTCH | Nickname of US criminal Robert Leroy Parker (born 1866), founder of the gang the Wild Bunch (5) |
| CASSIDY | Nickname of US criminal Robert Leroy Parker (born 1866), founder of the gang the Wild Bunch (7) |
| ICLZZZZUS | Classic 1934 novel written in the form of an autobiography |
| OMOO | Polynesian for an island-hopper or rover, used by Herman Melville as the title of his sequel to Typee (4) |