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         Plautus:     more books (100)
  1. Social and Private Life at Rome in the Time of Plautus and Terence, Volume 81,&Nbsp;Issue 1 by Georgia Williams Leffingwell, 2010-01-10
  2. The Rudens of Plautus by Titus Maccius Plautus, 2009-08-16
  3. Casina. The Casket Comedy. Curculio. Epidicus. The Two Menaechmuses (Loeb Classical Library) by Plautus, 1917-01-01
  4. Shakespeare, Plautus and the Humanist Tradition by Wolfgang Riehle, 1991-01-24
  5. The Comedies Of Plautus V1: Containing The Trinummus, Miles Gloriosus, Bacchides, Stichus, Pseudolus, Menaechmi, Aulularia, Captivi, Asinaria, And Curculio (1852) by Titus Maccius Plautus, 2008-12-22
  6. Cena and Prandium in Plautus by Barry H. Cerf, 2010-02-13
  7. Plautus' Aulularia (Reihe A, Altertumswissenschaftliche Reihe) (German Edition) by Eckard Lefevre, 2001
  8. The Miles Gloriosus of T. Maccius Plautus: A Revised Text, with Notes by Titus Maccius Plautus, 2010-03-09
  9. A Grammar of the Latin Language from Plautus to Suetonius, Part 1 by Henry John Roby, 2010-02-12
  10. Satiric Advice on Women and Marriage: From Plautus to Chaucer
  11. Roman Readings: Roman Response to Greek Literature from Plautus to Statius and Quintilian (Beitrage Zur Altertumskunde) (German Edition)
  12. Plautus: Amphitryo (Focus Classical Commentaries) by Plautus, 2004-06
  13. The Complete Roman Drama: All the Extant Comedies of Plautus and Terence, and the Tragedies of Seneca, in a Variety of Translations, by George Eckel, Ed. Duckworth, 1942-01
  14. T. Macci Plauti Aulularia: In Usum Scholarum (Latin Edition) by Titus Maccius Plautus, Peter Langen, 2010-02-11

61. Plautus - Acapedia - Free Knowledge, For All
plautus. plautus's comedies, which are the earliest surviving intact works in Latinliterature, are all adaptations of Greek models for a Roman audience.
http://acapedia.org/aca/Plautus
var srl33t_id = '4200';

62. Plautus - Quotes And Quotations
Quotes Authors A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z. Author plautus,
http://www.jokemonster.com/quotes/authors/p/a130872.html
Quotes Authors: A B C D ... Z Author: Plautus Get great jokes and fun in your email! First Name
Last Name
Email Address
Valentine's Day

Sweet Valentine

Is it Love?

Love Machine

Top 10 Jokes
Wedding Vows

Definitions

God Created Eve
Dust to Dust ... There's no such thing, you... Jokes Jokes Jokes Heaven's Gate Act of Charity Blonde Behaviors Brain Transplant ... Terms

63. Tribute To Plautus
Tribute to plautus Think Seinfeld is funny, read plautus. If that doesn't makeyou want to go to the library and find a plautus book to read, what will?
http://www.rpu.com/tribute_to_plautus.htm
RPU Home Page
The Deep Purple:
RPU ...
Advice
from Tina
The Answer Page

Institute for Silly

Silly Hall of Fame

Silly Movie Reviews
What is RPU
RPU
Athletics
Fred, the
... Biography
Tribute to Plautus
Think Seinfeld is funny, read Plautus Read this: (From: The 1997 Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia) If that doesn't make you want to go to the library and find a Plautus book to read, what will? (If you have come to this page from outside the university,
click here to go to the RPU Main Page Back to: Hall of Fame Back to: Classic Books

64. The San Antonio College LitWeb Plautus Page
The plautus Page ( 254? 184 BC ) Works of plautus There is a completetranslation of plautus in The Complete Roman Drama. Edited
http://www.accd.edu/sac/english/bailey/plautus.htm
The Plautus Page
( 254? - 184 B. C. )
Works of Plautus
There is a complete translation of Plautus in The Complete Roman Drama . Edited, and with an introduction, by George E. Duckworth. Random House, 1942. There are also translations of all the plays in the Loeb Classics. These too are quite old.
Plautus is available in the following recent collections:
  • The Pot of Gold and Other Plays . Translated by E.F. Watling. Penguin, 1965.
  • The Rope and Other Plays . Translated by E.F. Watling. Penguin, 1964.
  • The Comedies, Volume I . Edited by David R. Slavitt and Palmer Bovie. Johns Hopkins, 1995. Amphitryon . Translated in 2 and 3 above.
    The Comedy of Asses
    The Pot of Gold
    . Translated in 1 above.
    The Two Bacchides
    The Captives
    . Translated in 1 above as The Prisoners and in 3 as Captivi
    Casina
    . Translated in 3 above.
    The Casket Curculio . Translated in 3 above. Epidicus The Twin Menaechmi . Translated in 1 above as The Brothers Menaechmi The Merchant The Braggart Warrior . Translated in 1 above as The Swaggering Soldier and in 3 as Miles Gloriosus The Haunted House The Persian Girl The Carthaginian Pseudolus . Translated in 1 above. The Rope . Translated in 2 above. Stichus The Three Penny Day . Translated in 2 above. Truculentus About Plautus Plautus Page from Perseus Project.
  • 65. CL 334-01: Plautus & Terence
    CL 33401. Latin Reading Course. plautus Terence. Return to Classics Home Page.Contents. Return to top. Syllabus. CL 334-01 plautus Terence Spring 2003.
    http://fmwww.bc.edu/CL/CL33401.html
    BOSTON COLLEGE DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICAL STUDIES
    COURSE PAGE
    CL 334-01
    Latin Reading Course
    Return to Classics Home Page
    Contents
    Return to top
    Announcements
    • JANUARY 18 : the syllabus, and the page as a whole, is still under construction, but has been spruced up: a schedule of Latin readings up through the spring break is now in place, and a start has been made on useful books.
    • MARCH 9 : the test on Tuesday will include questions on the text of Casina (identifications, grammar, translation) and an essay question touching all the three plays we have read.
    • MARCH 9 : on March 13-14-15 a student group at Harvard will be staging a production of Plautus' Menaechmi , which we should all try to see. Details via email and in class on Tuesday.
    • MARCH 9 : on Thursday, Marth 27th, Professor Denis Feeney will be visiting Boston College. He will be lecturing at 4:30 PM on the topic "Barbarians Meet the Muses: The Invention of Roman Literature." He will also be our guest in class that day; class will meet in Devlin 111 ( a seminar room in the Admissions Office) rather than in the usual room. Again, details via email and in classwe'll have an open, wide ranging discussion rather than an ordinary class.
    Return to top
    Syllabus
    CL 334-01:
    Spring 2003 Charles Ahern
    Carney 123
    Voice: 552-3662 Internet: ahern@bc.edu

    66. Drama: Plautus
    Back to list plautus (254184 BC) LINKS plautus, Terence, and Cicero http//www.san.beck.org/EC26-Cicero.html 1A brief summary of eighteen plays.
    http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/litlinks/drama/plautus.htm
    MM_preloadImages('../images/m_research_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_related_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_literary_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_essays_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_critical_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_poetry_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_fiction_o.gif');
    Plautus (254-184 B.C.)
    LINKS
    Plautus, Terence, and Cicero

    http://www.san.beck.org/EC26-Cicero.html#1
    A brief summary of eighteen plays. Titus Maccius Plautus
    http://www.imagi-nation.com/moonstruck/clsc21.html
    This site offers a biography and a short list of academic studies on the Roman playwright. Roman Comedy
    http://www.uakron.edu/classics/IVARI/
    Created by student Kirsten Ivari, this site has information on the development of Roman comedy, the Plautine theatre, actors and audience, and a helpful bibliography. Roman Theater
    http://lupus.northern.edu:90/wild/th100/CHAPT10.HTM#romantheatre
    This list of questions and answers will help provide some background information on Roman theater. BIOGRAPHY
    All surviving Roman comedy shows the influence of Greek originals. Plautus (254-184 B.C.) is among Rome's most famous playwrights and may have been a member of a troupe that performed Atellan comedy. His middle name is Maccius (a form of Maccus, the clown of the farces), possibly alluding to the role he had habitually played. Tradition has it that he was in the theater for a good while before he began writing comedies. His first plays date from 205 B.C., about thirty-five years after Livius introduced Greek drama to the Romans. No one knows how many plays he wrote, and it has been common to assign many unauthenticated titles to him. About twenty-one plays exist that are thought to be his, the most famous of which are

    67. Plautus, Amphitryo Comoedia
    Translate this page plautus, Amphitryo comoedia. ACTUS III 890-937. ALCUMENA die Juppiternicht sieht Ich kann nicht im Haus bleiben. Ich so von meinem
    http://www.kreienbuehl.ch/lat/latein/uebersetz/plautus.html
    Plautus, Amphitryo comoedia ACTUS III 890-937 ALCUMENA: [die Juppiter nicht sieht] Ich kann nicht im Haus bleiben. Ich so von meinem Mann des Ehebruchs, der Schande und der Schamlosigkeit angeklagt! [Sie erblickt Juppiter] Aber dort sehe ich den, der mich Unglückliche eben der Schamlosigkeit und des Ehebruchs angeklagt hat, (Juppiter geht zu Alcumena, diese wendet sich von ihm ab) JUPPITER: Ich will mit dir sprechen, Frau. Warum hast du dich von mir abgewandt? ALCUMENA: Das ist mein Charakter: Ich hasse es immer, meine Feinde anzuschauen. JUPPITER: Was "Feinde"? ALCUMENA: So ist es, ich verkünde die Wahrheit - wenn du nicht behaupten willst, dass auch dies falsch gesagt wird? JUPPITER: [die Hand ausstreckend] Du bist zu aufbrausend. ALCUMENA: Ist es möglich, dass du die Hand zurück nimmst ?Es ist nämlich sicher, wenn du geistig gesund oder weise genug wärst, würdest du nicht mit dieser, von welcher du glaubst und verkündest, dass sie schamlos sei, ein Gespräch weder im Ernst noch im Scherz führen, wenn du nicht der Dümmste der Dummen wärst. JUPPITER: Wenn ich es gesagt habe, bist du es um nichts mehr und ich glaube nicht, dass du es bist und deshalb bin ich hierher zurückgekehrt um mich bei dir zu entschuldigen, Denn niemals missfiel (meinem Geiste) mir etwas so sehr als ich hörte, dass du wütend auf mich bist, "Warum hast du das gesagt?" fragst du. Ich werde es dir erklären: Beim Edepol bei welchem ich glaube, dass du nicht schamlos bist. Aber ich habe dich geprüft, was du machst und wie du dich entschliesst diese Situation zu ertragen. Ich meinerseits sagte dies vorher zu dir im Scherz, um des Spasses willen. Frag nur Sosia!

    68. Plautus The Cat And Friends
    plautus the Cat and Friends. An important character in 'Mother and Son'(1955). Why do you call him 'plautus'? said Miss Burke ..
    http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/malcolmi/plautus.htm
    Plautus the Cat and Friends
    An important character in 'Mother and Son' (1955). It is surprising that Ivy Compton-Burnett writes so perceptively about felines. In real life she disliked domestic animals, and detested cats, and was observed to push them firmly with her foot, and perhaps even kick them when the opportunity arose!
    "Why do you call him 'Plautus'?" said Miss Burke..........
    "Oh, because he is Plautus," said Miss Wolsey. "Because the essence of Plautus is in him. How could he be called anything else?"
    "Who was Plautus in real life?"
    "Who could he have been but the person to give this Plautus his name?"
    "He was a Latin writer," said Miss Greatheart, as Miss Burke left a second question unanswered. "I think he wrote plays; not very good ones."
    "Why did you call the cat after him?"
    "Well, he has not written any good plays either," said Miss Wolsey, holding out her hand to Plautus, who came and considered it, as if in the hope of some offering.
    "You think we are a silly trio, don't you dear?" said Miss Greatheart.
    Miss Burke took a moment to determine the third member of the group.

    69. The Slavery That Was Rome. Plautus, Terence, And Petronius
    The slavery that was Rome (in plautus, Terence, and Petronius). The mostpopular plays of plautus and Terence focus on the role of slaves.
    http://www.samizdat.com/isyn/slavery.html
    The slavery that was Rome (in Plautus, Terence, and Petronius)
    a book review by Richard Seltzer, seltzer@samizdat.com www.samizdat.com The most popular plays of Plautus and Terence focus on the role of slaves. In Prisoners of War by Plautus, the prisoners face a moral dilemna: because they were captured they are now slaves and it would be cheating to try to escape rather than to wait to be ransomed/bought back by their families. In The Rope by Plautus, the beautiful young girl that the hero is in love with is a slave, who he seeks to buy from her owner. It then turns out that she had been born free but was kidnapped as a child and sold into slavery. In The Brothers and Phormio by Terence, once again the love interest centers around slave girls and the challenge is not that of winning hearts but rather bargaining with the procurers who own them. While Plautus and Terence both borrowed their plots from Greek sources, they modified them in accordance with Roman slave laws, and legal niceties are often key to the resolution. So from the context of the plays what are these laws?

    70. Bibliographie Plautus, Mostellaria
    Translate this page Auswahl-Bibliographie plautus, Mostellaria Bibliographien JD Hughes,A bibliography of scholarship on plautus, Amsterdam 1975.
    http://www.uni-regensburg.de/Fakultaeten/phil_Fak_IV/Klass_Phil/BibliographiePla
    Auswahl-Bibliographie Plautus, Mostellaria Bibliographien: J. D. Hughes, A bibliography of scholarship on Plautus, Amsterdam 1975. Frank Bubel, Bibliographie zu Plautus 1976-1989, Bonn 1982.
    Plautus, Il fantasma. Hrsg. von Adriana Q. Moreschini, Torino 1970. (Testi e crestomazie.) Plautus, Mostellaria. La commedia del fantasma. Hrsg. von Ettore Paratore, Roma 1972.
    Lexikon: Gonzalez Lodge, Lexicon Plautinum I/II, Leipzig 1924/1933 (ND Hildesheim 1962).
    Allgemeines zu Plautus: William S. Anderson, Barbarian play. Plautus' Roman comedy, Toronto 1993. Erich Segal, Roman laughter. The comedy of Plautus, Cambridge 1970. (Harvard studies in comparative literature.; 29.) Niall W. Slater, Plautus in performance. The theatre of the mind, Princeton, N.Y. 1985.
    Spezialliteratur zur Mostellaria D. Averna, Un monologo plautino, Pan 1977, Nr. 5, 79-89. F. della Corte, La commedia della fantasma, Dioniso 15, 1952, 49-55. E. W. Leach, De exemplo meo ipse aedificato: an organizing idea in the Mostellaria, Hermes 97, 1969, 318-332. J. C. B. Lowe, Plautine innovations in Most. 529-857, Phoenix 39, 1985, 6-26.

    71. Plautus Prayers To Various Deities
    From the works of plautus, prayers to various gods and goddesses.Category Society History Ancient Roman Texts and Rituals......Prayers to Various Deities from the Plays of plautus. PRAYER TO APOLLO.Apollo, quaeso te, ut des pacem propitius, salutem et sanitatem
    http://www.novaroma.org/religio_romana/plautus_prayers_to_various_deities.html
    Prayers to Various Deities
    from the Plays of Plautus
    PRAYER TO APOLLO
    Apollo, quaeso te, ut des pacem propitius, salutem et sanitatem nostrae familiae, meoque ut parcas gnato pace propitius (Apollo, I beseech you, graciously grant peace, safety and sound health to our family, and spare my son by your gracious favour) (Mercator, 678-680)
    TO SPES BONA (GOOD HOPE)
    Spes Bona, obsecro, subventa mihi, exime ex hoc miseram metu (Good Hope, please hear and aid me, and help me out of my misfortune) (Rudens, 231-2)
    PRAYER TO THE LAR FAMILIARIS AND THE DI PENATES
    Di Penates meium parentum, familiai Lar pater, vobis mando, meum parentum rem bene ut tutemini (Divine Penates of my parents, Lar father of the family, I commend to you the good fortune of my parents, (and ) that you guard them well) (Mercator, 834-5) Larem corona nostrum decor(o)... venerare ut nobis haec habitatio bona fausta felix fortunataque evenat (I... adorn our Lar with a garland, so that we and our house may have good fortune, happiness and prosperity) (Trinummus, 39-41) Di, obsecro vostram fidem (Gods, keep faith, I beg you) (Cistellaria, 663)

    72. Plautus At The Mad Cybrarian's Library
    Titus Maccius plautus. c. 254 185 BC. ROMAN COMEDY plautus and Terenceby WILLIAM HARRIS; plautus, Terence, and Cicero by Sanderson Beck;
    http://www.fortunecity.com/victorian/richmond/88/Plautus.html
    web hosting domain names email addresses related sites
    The Mad Cybrarian's Library
    Titus Maccius Plautus
    c. 254 - 185 BC
    About Plautus
    The
    Mad Cybrarian's

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    The ... domain names
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    73. Komödienszene (wahrscheinlich Plautus)
    Translate this page Mosaik in der römischen Provinz Africa Komödienszene Komödienszene,uU plautus 3. Jhd. n.Chr., Mus. Sousse zurück zur Gesamtübersicht
    http://home.t-online.de/home/mosaiken/mos-31.htm
    3. Jhd. n.Chr., Mus. Sousse eine Liste aller hier versammelten Bildergalerien und Kunstseiten domum/ Index links ... Seitenanfang

    74. Antenati: Plautus

    http://www.girodivite.it/antenati/-iisec/_plautus.htm
    Plautus
    Plautus
    Bibliografia: Plautus
    - Amphitruo
    - Asinaria
    - Aulularia
    - Bacchides
    - Captivi
    - Casina
    - Cistellaria
    - Curculius
    - Epidicus
    - Menaechmi
    - Mercator - Miles gloriosus - Mostellaria - Persa - Poenulus - Pseudolus (191-) - Rudens - Stichus (200-) - Trinummus - Truculentus - Vidularia
    Fortuna di un autore
    Indice del -II secolo Homepage Dizionario autori Autori aree linguistiche ... an opensource project

    75. Plautus / Terence - Methuen Publishing
    Search Methuen Methuen Home Full Catalogue plautus / Terence. AuthorBiography. plautus / Terence. Four Roman
    http://www.methuen.co.uk/authorpages/plautusterence.html
    Home Catalogue Coming Soon Ordering ...
    Browse Methuen:
    Methuen General Anthologies Children's Books Cultural Studies Fiction Gay Interest History Humour Monty Python Poetry Screen Sport Travel Methuen Drama Bertolt Brecht Contemporary Dramatists Modern Plays Performance Play Anthologies Screenplays Student Editions Theatre Studies Theatre Workshop World Classics Search Methuen: Methuen Home Full Catalogue Plautus / Terence
  • Author Biography
  • Plautus / Terence

    76. Four Roman Comedies By Plautus / Terence
    Book information on Four Roman Comedies plautus The Haunted House / Casina,or A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Wedding; Terence The Eunuch
    http://www.methuen.co.uk/fourromancomediesplautus.html
    Home Catalogue Coming Soon Ordering ...
    Browse Methuen:
    Methuen General Anthologies Children's Books Cultural Studies Fiction Gay Interest History Humour Monty Python Poetry Screen Sport Travel Methuen Drama Bertolt Brecht Contemporary Dramatists Modern Plays Performance Play Anthologies Screenplays Student Editions Theatre Studies Theatre Workshop World Classics Search Methuen: Methuen Home Drama World Classics ... Plautus / Terence Four Roman Comedies
    Four Roman Comedies by Plautus / Terence
    Plautus: The Haunted House / Casina, or A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Wedding; Terence: The Eunuch / Brothers
    J. Michael Walton (ed)J. Michael Walton (intro)
    Four essential classic plays with an introduction by the editor The comedies of Plautus and Terence are all that survive to us of a great age of Roman comedy theatre. Collected here are four important plays that offer a unique insight into everyday life in ancient Rome, whilst maintaining a pivotal influence over the theatre of the present day. In The Haunted House the intrigues of a clever slave are played out in a virtuoso comic role; Plautus's Casina is a fast-moving romp through the sexual mores of the Roman upper classes; Terence's more sophisticated The Eunuch, and The Brothers are perhaps closer in sentiment to the attitudes of modern comedy and reflect situations with universal appeal. The volume is edited and introduced by J.Michael Walton, Professor of Drama at the University of Hull.
    Order On-Line

    77. Plautus
    Translate this page plautus. Titus Maccius plautus (250 - 184 v.Chr.) gilt als der bedeutendsterömische Komödiendichter. Urwüchsige Komik und kühner
    http://www.comedix.de/lexikon/db/plautus.htm
    Plautus
    Er wird als konservativer Dichter von Eleonoradus
    Neue Suche
    19.April 1999
    Deutsches Asterix Archiv

    78. Mostellaria / Die Gespensterkomödie Neue Rechtschreibung (Lernmaterialien) Plau
    Translate this page Mostellaria / Die Gespensterkomödie Neue Rechtschreibung (Lernmaterialien)plautus. Neue Rechtschreibung. (Lernmaterialien) Autor plautus.
    http://www.easybuchdirekt.de/Plautus-Mostellaria-Die-Gespens-3525716214.html
    Mostellaria / Die Gespensterkomödie Neue Rechtschreibung (Lernmaterialien) Plautus
    Titel: Mostellaria / Die Gespensterkomödie. Neue Rechtschreibung. (Lernmaterialien)
    Autor: Plautus
    Rubrik: Lektüren Interpretationen Latein
    Kategorie: Belletristik
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    79. Plautus' Menaechmi
    plautus’ MENAECHMI Prologue (pp. 8084) Note that plautus often makes his charactersin this play enter singing as Menaechmus I does here (lines 110-126).
    http://depthome.brooklyn.cuny.edu/classics/course/twins.html
    PLAUTUS’ MENAECHMI Prologue (pp. 77-79)
    It is important to the plot to understand why both twins have the same name. Note how the speaker of the prologue breaks the dramatic illusion in lines 1-16 and 72-76. This is an example of metatheater. Monologue of the Parasite Peniculus (pp. 79-80)
    Why is Peniculus so devoted to Menaechmus I ? His dependence on Menaechmus I will be important for the plot later. Menaechmus I and Peniculus (pp. 80-84)
    Note that Plautus often makes his characters in this play enter singing as Menaechmus I does here (lines 110-126). Erotium, Menaechmus I, Peniculus, and Cylindrus (pp. 84-86)
    Comic devices: 1) double-entendre joke (line 193); 2) hyperbole: Menaechmus I (lines 199-201): Aside: Peniculus (line 195) Menaechmus II and Messenio (pp. 86-88)
    Why does Messenio ask the unnecessary question: why have we come to Epidamnus? Messenio, like Palaestrio, is a loyal slave, but he is not a trickster. Word play (lines 263-264): ‘undamaged’ and ‘Epidamnus’ (in Latin ‘damnum’ (‘loss’) and Epidamnus. Cylindrus, Menaechmus II, and Messenio (pp. 88-91)

    80. Plautus
    Gloriosus . Con. Giancarlo Gori. Loredana Rossi Regoli. Giancarlo Martini.
    http://www.artemideverde.it/plautus.htm
    Plautus ( Miles Gloriosus) Nella commedia PLAUTUS si sviluppano parallelamente sulla scena Il Soldato Spaccone e la vicenda umana di Tito Maccio Plauto, in un momento particolare della sua vita: quando si trovò schiavo di un rozzo mugnaio. Ma anche nella condizione di schiavo, T. M. Plauto trovò la forza e l’ironia per ridere del mondo, e continuare la sua attività di commediografo. Nell’azione scenica del PLAUTUS , il protagonista, T. M. Plauto, veste anche i panni del personaggio del Soldato Spaccone , Pirgo Colinice. Plauto, mentre scrive la commedia, coinvolge nel suo gioco scenico anche il parassita della casa in cui egli è schiavo; e con la lusinga di farlo diventare un attore e dargli del denaro, lo invia a Roma, dove consegnerà la commedia finita, al suo impresario teatrale.
    Plautus
    Di Tito Maccio Plauto e N. Lemercier da "Miles Gloriosus"
    Con
    Giancarlo Gori
    Loredana Rossi Regoli Giancarlo Martini Maria Grazia Bordone Antonio Lunedì Regia di Giancarlo Gori

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