| CHER | Her first solo recording ("Ringo, I Love You") was released under the pseudonym Bonnie Jo Mason |
| SELENA | Her 1995 album 'Dreaming of You' was released posthumously |
| LAYLA | Which Eric Clapton classic was released under the name Derek and the Dominos? (5) |
| DOLLYPARTON | Her 1974 song "I Will Always Love You" was covered by Whitney Houston in 1992 |
| WHITNEYHOUSTON | US vocalist whose version of I Will Always Love You was UK No 1 for ten weeks |
| JESSGLYNNE | Her first solo UK No 1 hit was Hold My Hand in 2015 (4,6) |
| IMEVERYWOMAN | Ashford and Simpson song that gave Chaka Khan her first solo hit single in 1978 (2,5,5) |
| EDDIE | Pub rock band from Essex whose biggest hit, Do Anything You Wanna Do, was released under a shortened version of their name |
| EDDIEANDTHEHOTRODS | Pub rock band from Essex whose biggest hit, Do Anything You Wanna Do, was released under a shortened version of their name |
| LINDARONSTADT | US singer who collaborated on albums released under the Trio name (1987-2016) |
| FATCHANCE | Debut solo album by Paul Heaton, released in 2001 under the pseudonym Biscuit Boy aka Crackerman (3,6) |
| COWBOY | After 14 years of solo recording, what was Glen Campbell's first US number one? (10,6) |
| RHINESTONE | After 14 years of solo recording, what was Glen Campbell's first US number one? (10,6) |
| ROBINHOODPRINCEOFTHIEVES | 1991 film for which "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" was the theme song (4,5,6,2,7) |
| CHOPSTICKS | 1877 piano piece by Euphemia Allen under the pseudonym Arthur de Lulli also known as The Celebrated Chop Waltz (10) |
| HEIGHTS | Emily Bronte's only novel, first published under the pseudonym Ellis Bell, Wuthering ... |
| SILKWORM | The ___ 2014 crime fiction novel by J.K. Rowling published under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith |
| ALICE | The heroine of two books by Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, written under the pseudonym Lewis Carroll (5) |
| FINAL | & 18D The -, 1926 novel by H C McNeile under the pseudonym Sapper (5,5) |
| COUNT | See 14Ac, The -, 1926 novel by H C McNeile under the pseudonym Sapper (5,5) |