| SHEDDED | Stored for the night, as a bus |
| ROOST | Make a home for the night, as a bird might |
| TOO | Send elsewhere for the night, as a roommate, in modern lingo |
| SEXILE | Send elsewhere for the night, as a roommate, in modern lingo |
| SLEEPOVER | Remain for the night as a result of 25? |
| ENCAMP | Stop for the night, as soldiers |
| SLAYS | Has a great night, as a stand-up comic |
| WATCHFIRE | Conflagration kept alight at night as a signal (5,4) |
| BUTCHERAJOKE | Mess up at open mic night, as a comedian might |
| STOPPEDOVER | Spent the night, as vet proposed new treatment (7,4) |
| STARRY | Describing certain nights as a celebrity? (6) |
| CELLAR | A place where the wine is stored for a vendor, one might say |
| TIM | He achieved EGOT the same night as partner Andrew (2018) |
| ENDSTOP | Poetic conclusion is as far as a bus goes (3-4) |
| PULLIN | Arrive at a stop, as a bus |
| RODE | Took a trip on, as a bus |
| STARLESS | Such a night as when no top-line performers are on? (8) |
| FIELDOFVISION | Where shepherds watched their flock by night, as far as one can see (5,2,6) |
| EQUINOX | Almost horsy beast of burden makes night as long as day (7) |
| BANKHEAD | Critic John Mason Brown advised of her performance in 1937, "Tallulah ... barged down the Nile last night as Cleopatra - and sank" |