- FARCE
- Light dramatic work
- Mockery
- Spoof
- Tomfoolery
- Feydeau specialty
- Kooky comedy
- Off-the-wall comedy
- Tartuffe, for one
- It's absurd
- Ridiculous comedy
- Marx Brothers' specialty
- Screwball production
- Show for laughs
- Feydeau's genre
- Satirical work
- The Royal Canadian Air ___
- The Royal Canadian Air ___ (CBC comedy show)
- Typical Wodehouse novel
- Many a Marx work
- It has a ridiculous story
- Sitcom's stock in trade
- Absurd comedy
- Burlesque
- Oscar Wilde forte
- Type of comedy
- Madcap comedy
- Parody
- Absurdity
- Humorous play
- What a joke!
- Slapstick humor, e.g.
- Travesty
- The Comedy of Errors, for one
- Moliere genre
- Monty Python's "Spamalot," for one
- Molière's "Tartuffe," e.g.
- Some Like It Hot, for one
- Absurd sham
- Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest," e.g.
- Many a Wilde play
- La Cage aux Folles, for one
- It isn't meant to be taken seriously
- Absurdist comedy
- Charley's Aunt, for one
- Foolish show
- Dumb and Dumber, for one
- Low comedy
- Monty Python specialty
- Marx Brothers genre
- Literary form
- Film genre
- Literary genre
- Slapstick comedy
- Satirical comedy
- Coward's specialty
- Broad comedy
- 30 Rock, for one
- Comedic category
- Form of parody
- Show of mockery
- Comedic genre
- Light work?
- What's Up, Doc? is one
- Poor play choice for a tragedian
- Charley's Aunt is one.
- Abbott & Costello's specialty.
- Ludicrous comedy.
- Broadway offering.
- Light entertainment on Broadway.
- Broad humor on Broadway.
- Frayn's "Noises Off," e.g.
- Obvious pretense
- Stuffing
- Comedy of errors
- Comedy of Errors, for example.
- Broad humor.
- Type of play.
- Kind of comedy.
- Ridiculous show.
- Comedian's forte.
- Kind of play.
- Comedy.
- Empty show.
- Laugh-in, on stage.
- Stage offering
- France's gift to the stage
- Bedroom ___
- French stage forte
- Molière's forte
- Light stage fare
- Samuel Foote's forte
- Forcemeat
- Exaggerated comedy
- Slapstick vehicle
- Comedy of Errors, e.g.
- Marx Brothers movie, e.g.
- Ridiculous sham
- Knockabout comedy
- You can't take it seriously
- S.N.L. specialty
- Oscar Wilde genre
- Play genre
- TV's "Fawlty Towers," for one
- Outrageous comedy
- Shakespeare's "The Comedy of Errors," e.g.
- Broad City, for one
- Many a Monty Python skit
- Wacky comedy
- Complete travesty
- Ludicrous display
- Duck Soup, for one
- Ridiculous display
- Trial, sometimes
- Slapstick drama
- It's not to be taken seriously
- Moliere's forte
- Satiric comedy
- Silly comedy
- Satire
- Moli re product
- Feydeau forte
- Molière's specialty
- Light, witty play
- Wilde forte
- Comic absurdity
- Any of the "Scary Movie" movies
- Three Stooges genre
- Seinfeld genre
- Absurd situation
- Zany comedy
- Slapstick, e.g.
- Wilde work
- Noises Off, for one
- It often involves slamming doors
- Tom Stoppard's "On the Razzle," for one
- Comedy with much door-slamming
- Broad comedy with an improbable plot
- Noises Off, e.g.