Tue, Jul 08, 2008
Merl Reagle, who was a Catalina High School student when he sold his first puzzle to The New York Times, is featured in the documentary "Wordplay," in which he designs a puzzle in front of the camera. Reagle, now living in Tampa, says he might move back to Tucson someday.
Burke Uzzle

Accent

Puzzlin' star

Former Tucsonan in new documentary
By Phil Villarreal
ARIZONA DAILY STAR
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 07.21.2006
These are fast times for crossword-puzzle designer Merl Reagle. Reagle, a syndicated designer whose puzzles appear weekly in the Star's Caliente section, is featured in "Wordplay," the Patrick Creadon-directed documentary that opens today.
The former Tucsonan (he worked at the Star from 1973 to 1976) appears in the quirky film along with Will Shortz, crossword editor of The New York Times.
Reagle designs a puzzle for the camera, taking the audience through his process of crafting a puzzle he sells to The Times. Reagle says he did the puzzle strictly for the sake of the film, which is getting nearly universal praise.
Reagle was a 16-year-old student at Catalina High School in the mid-1960s when he sold his first puzzle to The Times. His puzzles appeared in the Daily Wildcat when he attended the University of Arizona. He left Tucson in 1976 and pursued his career as a puzzle-maker. Now 56, Reagle lives in Tampa, and his puzzles are published in 20 papers nationwide, including Sunday puzzles for the Los Angeles Times and San Francisco Chronicle.
These days he shies away from the Gray Lady because The New York Times doesn't allow the puzzles it buys to be reprinted in other papers. "It's sort of enough work each week just to make the Sunday puzzle," Reagle said.
Right now he's also squeezing in interviews in support of the film, but it's tough to get him on the phone — even if you're with a television talk show.
"I was just on the phone with the Jay Leno people," Reagle said, sounding a bit flattered. "They're trying to get me on the show, but I don't know if I want to do it. I'm sure they'll want me to do the anagram trick I used to do."
Reagle is referring to his uncanny ability to unjumble six six-letter words within 20 seconds. "They'll probably want me to do 10 words in 15 seconds," Reagle groaned, speaking with the wistfully intelligent lilt of Paul Giamatti.
This is not Reagle's first brush with show business. In the late 1980s he wrote for the television game show "Crosswits."
Reagle usually works at home, but he's on the road a lot these days, promoting the movie.
"There's something in the way Patrick Creadon does this movie that's just amazing. It makes what would seem like watching paint dry become a really interesting movie. It's such a perfectly done ensemble piece. I hate to say we're all parts of the puzzle, but we are. It's sort of like we're all different acts in a variety show."
Other performers in the "variety show" include Jon Stewart, who provides comic relief, and former President Bill Clinton, who recalls doing crossword puzzles on lunch breaks at the White House. New York Yankees pitcher Mike Mussina talks about the mental intensity it takes to solve a crossword puzzle.
Reagle is partial to using baseball analogies to describe what it takes to make them.
"I know readers want a challenge. They don't want a lot of softballs, but they do want a couple of them," Reagle said. "I toss in a couple of soft ones, some curves, some sliders and some hard ones. The thing I want to do is pitch it just right, find the sweet spot. Not so hard they can't solve it, but just hard enough."
● Contact reporter Phil Villarreal at 573-4130 or pvillarreal@azstarnet.com.