| EDITHMACARTHUR | Scottish actress best known as the Lady Laird in Take The High Road (5,9) |
| BONNET | Be it blue, for Easter, heraldically velvety, tied under the chin, Tudor or worn by a girl, lady, laird or maid, it's a beret, cap, hat or tam, named for the cloth from which it was first made (6) |
| MOOLA | What Woody wanted in Take the Money and Run & Small Time Crooks. |
| RABIDLY | Moved by laird in a zealous way (7) |
| ANNIE | See 22 Across Scottish actress, best known for playing Sally St. Claire in Channel 4's Cheshireset Hollyoaks; she is the first transgender person to portray a regular character in a British soap opera |
| CASHES | ___ in (takes the money) |
| TICKET | No lairds in Lake District will give access to concert (6) |
| HORSEFERRYROAD | London street best known as the site of the City of Westminster Magistrates' Court |
| WARRENMITCHELL | Actor best known as the bigoted Cockney Alf Garnett (6,8) |
| LOMOND | Though you take the high road and I take the low road, my true love and I may never meet on the bonn |
| GLENDARROCH | The fictional village which was the setting for the TV series, ' Take the High Road' (11) |
| IDIOMS | "Get the show on the road" and "take the high road," for two |
| LUSS | Village on Loch Lomond, the setting for STV'S Take the High Road (4) |
| SOAPOPERA | Show such as 'River City' or 'Take the High Road' (4,5) |
| NIGHTINGALE | Founder of modern nursing known as the Lady with the Lamp; or, a bird used as a personification or metaphor in an ode by John Keats (11) |
| GARNOCKWAY | Soap opera which was replaced by 'Take the High Road' (7,3) |
| STOOP | You shouldn't ___ to their level (Take the high road) |
| GLEN | Take the High Road to this Loch Gardner resort (11) |
| DARROCH | Take the High Road to this Loch Gardner resort (11) |
| LAMP | In post Crimean War times, Florence Nightingale was known as the Lady with this illuminating device |