| WODEHOUSE | P. G. - - -, English comic novelist who created Jeeves and Wooster (9) |
| OSULLIVAN | Richard ___, English comic actor who played Robin Tripp in the 1970s sitcoms Man About the House and Robin's Nest |
| MCINTOSH | Name of Aunt Agatha's dog in a story by P. G. Wodehouse that was adapted into the Jeeves and Wooster episode Tuppy and the Terrier (8) |
| LAUGHING | - Gas; non Jeeves and Wooster novel by P. G. Wodehouse (8) |
| ERNIEWISE | Els, we follow, is into old English comic (5,4) |
| TERRIER | Breed/type of dog with fictional examples including McIntosh in a Jeeves and Wooster story and Snowy in The Adventures of Tintin (7) |
| BERTIE | Hugh Laurie's character in 'Jeeves and Wooster' (6) |
| THEMANWITHTWOLEFTFEET | Collection of PG Wodehouse short stories in which Jeeves and Wooster first appear |
| SPODE | Brand of fine porcelain a or an antihero in the Jeeves and Wooster novels (5) |
| FRY | 'Jeeves and Wooster' actor Stephen |
| LAURIE | 'Jeeves and Wooster' actor Hugh |
| PELHAM | Whig prime minister from 1743-54; a type of bit; or, the first name of the author of the Jeeves and Wooster stories (6) |
| HUGO | Laurie of "Jeeves and Wooster" |
| BALLARD | J.G., English author and satirist who wrote the wartime novel Empire of the Sun (7) |
| GRACE | W.G., English cricketer who died in 1915 (5) |
| AMIS | Poet and comic novelist Kingsley who was married to Elizabeth Jane Howard for some 18 years (4) |
| AUNTS | - Aren't Gentlemen; one of the Jeeves and Bertie comic novels by P. G. Wodehouse (5) |
| FAULKS | Author of the French trilogy consisting of The Girl at the Lion d'Or, Birdsong and Charlotte Gray who also penned Jeeves and the Wedding Bells and the James Bond continuation novel Devil May Care (6) |
| ROOSTER | Jeeves and -, P G Wodehouse duo Cockerel (7) |
| STERNE | Comic novelist invested in Wooster next |