| Burl. signifies | Burlesque. | |
| Burl. panto. | „ | Burlesque Pantomime. |
| Burl, extrav. | „ | Burlesque Extravaganza. |
| Burl. op. | „ | Burlesque Opera. |
| N.D. | „ | No date. |
Abon Hassan; or, The Hunt after Happiness. By Francis Talfourd. St. James’s. December 26, 1854. J. L. Toole and Miss Eleanor Bufton.
Abon Hassan; or, An Arabian Knight’s Entertainment. By Arthur O’Neil. Charing Cross. December 11, 1869. Published by Phillips, Regent Circus, London.
Abou; or, The Sleeper Awakened, burlesque, by Joseph Tabrar. T. R. Coventry. August 3, 1885.
Acis and Galatea, paraphrased, by W. H. Oxberry. Adelphi. February 8, 1842. Wright & Paul Bedford.
Acis and Galatea, burlesque, by F. C. Burnand.
Acis and Galatea, by T. F. Plowman. Oxford, Dec. 1869.
Adonis. An “American Eccentricity,” by Gill and Dixey. Gaiety. May 31, 1886. Performed by an American company, and damned by the London press, as a noisy, stupid and meaningless production. Mr. Henry E. Dixey, the leading performer, as “Adonis,” gave some imitations (not in the best taste) of Henry Irving.
L’Africaine; or, the Belle of Madagascar, by Captain Arbuthnot.
L’Africaine, burl. By F. C. Burnand. Strand, Nov. 18, 1865, and revived in 1876. Edward Terry, Harry Cox and Marius.