Daily Quiz Daily

Our daily general knowledge quiz

Quiz Archive Archive

A complete history of our quiz challenges

By Subject Subjects

Choose from seven quiz categories

Personalised Personalised

Build a quiz by subject and difficulty

Entertainment Quiz #708

Film, Arts, Music & Entertainment Quiz for 11 August 2022

A new entertainment quiz is available each week. Try our daily general knowledge quiz or work through our archive of daily and themed quizzes.

0 out of ?
1

Q1. The fictional town of Hartley in Lancashire was the setting for which of these British TV series?

A
Midsomer Murders
B
Inspector Morse
C
A Touch of Frost
D
Juliet Bravo
Select from the options above.
2

Q2. What award is the television equivalent of the Oscars?

A
Grammys
B
Tonys
C
Emmys
D
BAFTAs
Select from the options above.
3

Q3. Whose final words, on 8 April 1973, were reported to be “Drink to me, drink to my health, you know I can't drink any more”?

A
Ernest Hemingway
B
Salvador Dali
C
Pablo Picasso
D
Charlie Chaplin
Select from the options above.
4

Q4. Which of these was the title of an album released by U2?

A
Rattle and Hum
B
Raggle and Hop
C
Rubble and Hops
D
Ruder and Hopeless
Select from the options above.
5

Q5. Which 1946 song did Ethel Merman introduce, which was almost immediately covered by Betty Hutton and Dinah Shore?

A
I Get a Kick Out of You
B
Let's Have Another Cup of Coffee
C
I Got Rhythm
D
Doin' What Comes Natur'lly
Select from the options above.
6

Q6. What was the title of a 1996 American disaster film starring Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton as "storm chasers"?

A
Typhoon
B
Twister
C
Tempest
D
Tornado
Select from the options above.
7

Q7. What was the fictional family with children called Greg, Peter, Bobby, Marcia, Jan and Cindy, that first came to US TV screens in 1969?

A
The Cowsills
B
The Partridge Family
C
The Waltons
D
The Brady Bunch
Select from the options above.
0%
There are 0 questions in this quiz.
You've completed 0 questions.
You've answered 0 questions correctly.
You've answered 0 questions incorrectly.