- - Play or game name
- - Old Testament greeting in play
- - Note the fellow stripped for play
- - The two litres consumed in rounds in play
- - Old timer initially greeting play
- - play with bianca
- - Shakespeare play set in Venice
- - Moor boat evenly, with cry for attention
- - To return a greeting from a Shakespearean play
- - moor's heart is filled with tension and torment — that's a tragedy
- - play around to torment coy insider
- - Old tragedian initially greeting play
- - welcome following about to play
- - Tragic hero cries out, 'To hell with love!'
- - Board game with a Shakespeare-inspired name
- - Shakespeare play featuring Iago
- - Shakespeare play about the Moor of Venice
- - Shakespeare play about a jealous husband
- - Play with Venetians
- - Play and opera role.
- - New play of 1603
- - Commercial game with disks
- - "If it were now to die, / 'Twere now to be most happy" speaker
- - Shakespearean play
- - Source of the words 'O, beware, my lord, of jealousy; / It is the green-ey'd monster ...'
- - Loves to involve the students in play
- - Play books set on top of celebrity magazine
- - Board game with black-and-white pieces
- - Books with greeting in Shakespeare play
- - Play set mostly in Cyprus
- - Job's welcome, perhaps, for player from Stratford
- - Play the fool ultimately in middle of monologue
- - Play with Iago
- - Old Testament greeting in Shakespeare play
- - Board game named after a Shakespeare play
- - Play seen by Pepys
- - Play taken from old scripture with eternal punishment ending in inferno
- - Board game with a Shakespearean-sounding name
- - Play with a traitor
- - Play that inspired an opera
- - Ducks around the lines in play
- - Game with a 64-square board
- - Loves absorbing temperature where it's hot in general in Venice
- - Play with frame removed from car, extreme difficulty cutting through it?
- - *Shakespeare play that inspired a Verdi opera
- - His opening line is "'Tis better as it is"
- - Whence the phrase "I will wear my heart upon my sleeve" comes from
- - Murderous Moor from Shakespeare
- - Play featuring Cassio
- - It was first performed at Whitehall Palace in 1604
- - Game with an annual world championship, first held in Tokyo in 1977
- - "Green-eyed monster" play
- - Play by Shakespeare
- - Shakespeare play
- - play 2
- - Venetian to rise with a greeting
- - Shakespeare play subtitled the Moor of Venice
- - shakespeare play inspired by a cinthio tale
- - Shakespearean character gets to return the greeting
- - How do books put over tragedy?
- - Shakespearean character to return greeting
- - Shakespeare's governor of Cyprus
- - Dramatic Moor
- - Shakespearean tragic hero
- - the shakespearian character to return a greeting
- - Game whose board is an 8x8 grid
- - Moorish general in a Shakespearean tragedy by the same name
- - Tragedy by Shakespeare which has characters like Iago and Desdemona
- - General, in Venice, to return greeting
- - Turned to source of celebrity gossip for tragic tale
- - he didn't trust his wife to return a greeting
- - Drama involving the Liberal Left in Oscars?
- - Famous Moor
- - Tragic Moor
- - Moor who suspected amour
- - Moor of Venice
- - Board game also called Reversi
- - Well-known Moor
- - Tragic Shakespeare character
- - Tragedy written in 1604
- - Title role for Robeson
- - The Moor.
- - Source of the phrase "pomp and circumstance"
- - Shakespeare title character played by Laurence Fishburne in 1995
- - Role for Paul Robeson
- - One who "lov'd not wisely but too well"
- - Murderous Moor
- - James Earl Jones role
- - Cassio's general
- - Board game like reversi
- - 1982 James Earl Jones role
- - "O curse of marriage ..." speaker
- - Work of 1604
- - Brabantio's son-in-law.
- - Shakespearean drama
- - Desdemona's husband
- - A strange hello to Shakespeare's Moor
- - Game whose dual-colored pieces are apt for this puzzle's theme
- - Whence the phrase 'wear one's heart on one's sleeve'
- - Hello to Shakespeare's Moor
- - Disc-flipping game
- - Desdemona's spouse
- - The lord in 'O, beware, my lord, of jealousy!'
- - Shakespearean Moor
- - 'Sweet revenge grows harsh' speaker
- - Shakespearean general
- - Shakespeare's Moor of Venice
- - Bardic off-Broadway role for David Oyelowo
- - Good books can be a conversation starter or a tragedy
- - Shakespeare role
- - More or less shut up upon greeting jealous husband
- - The lines at the heart of old, old tragedy
- - Shakespeare tragedy
- - Role for Laurence Olivier and Laurence Fishburne
- - Fictional general in the Venetian army
- - Shakespeare's Moor
- - "Moor over by the lakes, love"
- - Disc-flipping board game hinted at by a word ladder formed by the answers to the nine starred clues
- - Where eg Jezebel appears, suffering love for Venetian
- - 'Put out the light, and then put out the light' speaker
- - Shakespearean greeting to returning heads
- - What's this behind Biblical text's tragic hero?
- - Moor vessel finally round at back of foreign hotel?
- - 'The Moor of Venice', tragedy by Shakespeare
- - "... And when I love thee not / Chaos is come again" speaker
- - "Then must you speak / Of one that loved not wisely but too well" speaker
- - Cassio's commander
- - Desdemona's man
- - Literature's 'Moor of Venice'
- - Work set mostly in Cyprus
- - "I kissed thee ere I killed thee" speaker
- - Brand name for the board game Reversi
- - Black and white board game
- - Shakespearean tale of treachery
- - Desdemona's husband and murderer
- - "The Moor of Venice"
- - Husband of Desdemona
- - Moor on stage
- - Desdemona's killer
- - Noted Venetian army general
- - Victim of "hanky"-panky?
- - Iago's general
- - Game also called "reversi"
- - Trademarked version of reversi
- - Robeson Broadway role
- - 1995 role for Laurence Fishburne
- - Desdemona's hubby
- - Cassio's boss
- - Shakespearean title Moor
- - Desdemona's love
- - Cassio was one of his lieutenants
- - Shakespearean tragedy
- - Cassio's superior
- - "I kiss'd thee ere I kill'd thee" speaker
- - Jealous stage husband
- - "A minute to learn ... a lifetime to master" game
- - Shakespearean role.
- - Shakespearean hero.
- - Shakespearean title character
- - Moor returns to provide greeting
- - Moor of drama
- - Look after a new hotel for the Moor
- - Moor boat, regularly going "ahoy there!"
- - Shakespearean character
- - shakespeare drama
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