| ZIEGFELDFOLLIES | From 1907 these New York revues based on the Folies-Bergere were called after the theatre manager wh |
| ZIEGFELD | From 1907, the New York revues based on the Folies-Bergere were called, after the theatre manager wh |
| MANET | Artist who painted A Bar at the Folies-Bergere, Music in the Tuileries and The Luncheon on the Grass (5) |
| RASTAFARI | Religious movement started in Jamaica in the 1930s, so called after the former name of Haile Selassie I (9) |
| MAORI | The Treaty of Waitangi formed the basis of constitutional rights for these New Zealanders |
| DELFONT | Lord -; theatrical impresario brother of Lew and Leslie Grade who brought the Folies Bergere to Britain (7) |
| CHEVALIER | French film star Maurice ____ was Mistinguett's dancing partner at the Folies Bergere, 1909-1913 |
| TREASON | Disloyalty from a male offspring after the theatre finishes |
| POSTOP | Work on correspondence after the theatre (4-2) |
| ETOILE | Star, at the Folies Bergere |
| EDOUARDMANET | Painter of A Bar at the Folies-Bergere, d.1883 (7,5) |
| BONSOIR | A good evening in the Folies Bergere? (7) |
| ABAR | Manet's "___ at the Folies-Bergere" |
| MANETS | 1882's A Bar at the Folies-Bergere et al. |
| CANCAN | Seen at the Folies-Bergere |
| VESPUCCI | America is called after the Florentine navigator (8) |
| NAMESAKE | 2 benefit - one called after the other? (8) |
| THESTAGE | Period after the theatre (3,5) |
| OMC | "How Bizarre" that these New Zealanders appear in the Bottom comedy (3) |
| BIRTHS | Accommodation on ship, we hear, for these new arrivals |