My Fair Lady, A Chorus Line, Rent, Chicago, Cats, Mamma Mia, Jersey Boys, The Sound of Music...
*Just an updated, because the only of these currently on Broadway are Mamma Mia and Jersey Boys. Currently (as of August 2010): Addams Family, Next to Normal, Fela!, Memphis, The Million Dollar Quartet, Everyday Rapture, In The Heights, Billy Elliott, American Idiot, Come Fly Away, A Little Night Music, Phantom of the Opera, Promises, Promises.
Chicago,Fame,Jersey boys,Guys and dolls,Wicked
That will depend on the style manual being followed. It is used for Broadway shows in some of them, others use italics or underlines.
In comedies, particularly farce, satire, and to some extent screwball comedies.
The Muppets. I remember this from the movie "The Muppets Take Manhattan".
some madea movies
FX is mostly dramas (although it airs some comedies) and FXX is mostly comedies.
Cymbeline and Pericles, although these are often called romances. Troilus and Cressida also has characters' names in the title.
It depends what you mean by "romantic comedies". Most of Shakespeare's comedies are romantic in nature and end in weddings all around. Some of his late comedies are called "romances" and they end in reconciliations and reunifications all around instead of weddings.
There are many British comedies on television. Some popular Britisch comedis on television are: "Only Fools And Horses", "Blackadder" and "The Vicar Of Dibley".
They are called comedies. Some comedies are funnier than others. Comedies that are based on a lot of people moving very quickly, usually with multiple misunderstandings, are called farces.
Comedies are films that emphasize humor. While traditional comedies have happy endings, many dark comedies have ambiguous or even unhappy endings. Some examples of famous film comedies include "Airplane," "Bringing Up Baby," "Young Frankenstein," "The Life of Brian" and many others.
happy comedies, problem plays, romantic comedies.