Possible Questions:
- Parody
- Film genre
- Mockery
- Burlesque
- Literary genre
- Stage offering
- Literary form
- Travesty
- Exaggerated comedy
- Satire
- Madcap comedy
- Forcemeat
- Wilde forte
- Slapstick comedy
- Absurd comedy
- Satirical work
- Ridiculous sham
- Molière's forte
- Ludicrous comedy
- A kind of play
- You can't take it seriously
- Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest," e.g.
- STUFFING
- Satirical comedy
- Play genre
- It's a travesty
- Door-slamming play
- Broad comedy
- Bedroom ___
- "S.N.L." specialty
- "Noises Off," for one
- TV's "Fawlty Towers," for one
- Slapstick vehicle
- Samuel Foote's forte
- Ridiculous comedy
- Poor play choice for a tragedian
- Outrageous comedy
- Oscar Wilde genre
- Obvious pretense
- Monty Python's "Spamalot," for one
- Molière's "Tartuffe," e.g.
- Marx Brothers' specialty
- Marx Brothers movie, e.g.
- Marx Brothers genre
- Low comedy
- Light, witty play
- Light stage fare
- Knockabout comedy
- It's not to be taken seriously
- It's absurd
- It often involves slamming doors
- Humorous play
- French stage forte
- Frayn's "Noises Off," e.g.
- France's gift to the stage
- Feydeau specialty
- Comic absurdity
- Broad humor
- Bedroom comedy, say
- Bedroom comedy, often
- Absurd sham
- "What's Up, Doc?" is one
- "Tartuffe," for one
- "Some Like It Hot," for one
- "Comedy of Errors," e.g.
- "Charley's Aunt" is one