a comic vers is simply a collection of comic books
A limerick is a form of trivial and light-hearted comic verse with a specific rhyming pattern (AABBA) and rhythm.
Limerick
No, the villanelle is not typically considered a form of comic verse. It is a structured poetic form known for its lyricism and repetition of specific lines, often used to explore themes of reflection, love, and loss.
In Shakespeare, verse is usually used by important and serious characters, whereas the less important and comic characters use prose. This is not invariably the case (The play Much Ado About Nothing is almost all in prose) but usual.
Diction. The diction of comedy is the common, popular language. The comic poet must endow his personages with his own native idiom, but must endow an alien with the alien idiom.
Harold Trevor Baker has written: 'Ben Jonson's Every man in his humour (Act 1. Sc. 4.) tr. into comic Iambic verse'
Just about everybody speaks in unrhymed verse called blank verse. Some minor characters never do, and many characters switch to ordinary prose from time to time, but most of them use blank verse as a rule.
Mungo has written: 'The padlock open'd: or, Mungo's medley. Being a choice collection of the miscellaneous pieces in prose and verse, serious and comic, of Mungo the padlock-keeper of Drury Lane'
The use of blank verse, iambic pentameter, and the portrayal of morally ambiguous characters were elements of Elizabethan tragedy that were not typically found in Greek tragedy.
Shakespeare's plays are written primarily in blank verse, with common or comic character speaking prose. His sonnets are fourteen lines of iambic pentameter, with a rhyme scheme of ABAB CDCD EFEF GG.
The cast of ComiXspotlight - 2003 includes: Mat Crain as Comic Jon Goodwin as Comic Tom Herskowitz as Comic Tim Howell as Comic Zach Lebowitz as Comic Ken Mathias as Comic Vince Quick as Comic Bobby Ritchie as Comic Lisa Spradlin as Comic Bob Strange as Comic
The form of the song is called Verse-Chorus-Verse-Chorus-Bridge-Verse-Chorus.