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Cleveland

Question: Cleveland native Halle Berry won an Oscar for her performance in which film?
Answer: Before she won the Academy Award for best actress in 2002 for her performance in Monster’s Ball, Halle Berry—who grew up in Cleveland and suburban Bedford—starred as Cleveland-born singer-actress Dorothy Dandridge in an HBO biopic.
Question: Which Cleveland mayor was the first African American mayor of a major U.S. city?
Answer: As mayor from 1967 to 1971, Carl Stokes sought to improve Cleveland’s declining economy and to create racial unity with his signature program Cleveland Now. He is vividly portrayed in Mark Winegardner’s novel Crooked River Burning (2001).
Question: Which of these pro football teams was founded in Cleveland?
Answer: The Rams began playing in Cleveland in 1936 and moved to Los Angeles in 1946 rather than compete with the new Cleveland Browns franchise, which in turn relocated to Baltimore in 1996, becoming the Ravens. In 1999 the NFL awarded Cleveland an expansion team that assumed the Browns’ name, uniforms, and history.
Question: Which of these movies is not set in Cleveland?
Answer: Major League (1989), Kill the Irishman (2011), and Stranger than Paradise (1984) all are set wholly or partly in Cleveland; Gross Pointe Blank (1997) unfolds in a Detroit suburb.
Question: For what is Cleveland’s Cuyahoga River famous?
Answer: “Burn on, big river, burn on,” Randy Newman famously sang about the June day in 1969 when oil and debris in the then deeply polluted Cuyahoga River, which flows through downtown Cleveland, caught fire (not the first time it happened: the image that accompanied a Time magazine cover story about the fire was actually from a much worse blaze in 1952).
Question: Which U.S. president is buried in Cleveland?
Answer: James Garfield, the 20th U.S. president, who was assassinated in 1881, is buried beneath a quarter-million-dollar, 165-foot (50-meter) monument in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland, not far from the family obelisk that marks the final resting place of John D. Rockefeller.
Question: Which millionaire industrialist started in Cleveland?
Answer: Sensing the commercial potential of the expanding oil production in western Pennsylvania in the early 1860s, John D. Rockefeller built his first oil refinery in 1863 near Cleveland, where he founded the Standard Oil Company in 1870.
Question: Which of these is not a nickname for Cleveland?
Answer: In the 1940s Cleveland was America's sixth largest city; it was also once an area of plentiful woodlands and still has a chain of parks called the Emerald Necklace. Call the city the “Mistake by the Lake,” as some have, and you’re in for fight in Cleveland. Dayton, farther south in Ohio, is the “Gem City.”
Question: Which poet’s father created Life Savers candy in Cleveland?
Answer: Although primarily a chocolate maker, Hart Crane’s father, Clarence, first marketed Crane’s Peppermint Life Savers in 1912. Ironically, Crane fils died at sea, having jumped from a ship into the Caribbean and drowned.
Question: Which of these comic-book characters operates in Cleveland?
Answer: After being transported from the planet Duckworld to the Florida Everglades on Earth, Howard the talking duck ends up in Cleveland, where he does his best to his make his way while “trapped in a world that he never made.”
Question: Which Clevelander created the American Splendor comics?
Answer: Compared by some to Anton Chekhov, Harvey Pekar took readers on a emotional roller-coaster ride through the minutiae of his blue-collar but erudite life in his autobiographical comic book series American Splendor, which inspired the movie of the same name, in which Paul Giamatti played Pekar.
Question: Who is Cleveland’s most famous Olympian?
Answer: Jesse Owens was born in Alabama and in 1922 moved with his family to Cleveland, where as a senior in East Technical High School, he equaled the world record of 9.4 seconds in the 100-yard dash, a fitting prelude to his becoming a thorn in Adolf Hitler’s Aryan-supremacist side at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, at which Owens won four gold medals.
Question: Which Cleveland DJ popularized the term rock and roll?
Answer: Beginning in 1951, Alan Freed reigned as the “King of the Moon Doggers” on WJW radio Cleveland. Freed didn’t coin the phrase rock and roll, but, by way of his radio show, he popularized it and redefined it.
Question: In which Cleveland suburb did actor Paul Newman grow up?
Answer: Paul Newman grew up in Shaker Heights and had his first role at age 10 in a production of St. George and the Dragon at the Cleveland Play House, the renowned regional theater that also gave Alan Alda and Joel Grey their starts.