| ETHELMERMAN | She was a singer with a powerful voice and a star of stage and screen who sang I Got Rhythm and Alex |
| HELDENTENOR | Singer with a powerful voice suited to singing heroic roles, especially in Wagner (11) |
| ASTON | Jay ____ was a singer with Bucks Fizz |
| DAYNE | She was a singer before Swift |
| RICHARDSON | Sir Ralph David -; actor of stage and screen who starred in films including Doctor Zhivago and Oh! What a Lovely War (10) |
| SHER | Actor of stage and screen who wrote the plays I.D. and Primo (4) |
| CROCE | Jim who sang "I Got a Name" |
| SONNYANDCHER | Duo who sang I Got You Babe in 1965: 3 wds. |
| BASSOPROFONDO | A singer with a deep voice (5,8) |
| MINDYKALING | "Mork & ___" (sitcom about a man from outer space and a star of "The Office"?) (2 wds.) |
| BASSOPROFUNDO | A singer with a very low range (5,8) |
| CLINTEASTWOOD | "Gran Torino" director, and a star of the film hinted at in 20-, 25- and 44-Across |
| SHELTON | As a teenager she was accepted as a singer with Ambrose %26 His Orchestra and was the first to sing the English version of Lili Marlene; she was Anne ... |
| EXMOOR | With a flag bearing a depiction of a stag's head and a star, a former royal hunting ground, site aro |
| CLARABUTT | Elgar's song cycle Sea Pictures was composed for this English contralto with a powerful voice |
| STRACHEY | A tall willowy bespectacled Bloomsbury Group co-founder and eminent post-Victorian writer with a high-pitched falsetto voice and a long red beard - considered by some to be eccentric, fascinating or p |
| ALTO | From the Italian for "high", a high falsetto male voice, equal in compass to the lowest female voice; or, a singer with such a range |
| FLORAROBSON | Dame --, English actress and star of stage and screen (1902-84) (5,6) |
| LAUGHTON | Bit of mischief to name old star of stage and screen (8) |
| ALMAGEST | A work on astronomy, compiled by Ptolemy in the 2nd century AD, containing a description of the geocentric system of the universe and a star catalogue |