Ancient Greece and Rome 1200 B.c.e.-476 C.e.: Theater - Research Article from Arts and Humanities Through the Eras

This encyclopedia article consists of approximately 87 pages of information about Ancient Greece and Rome 1200 B.c.e.-476 C.e..

Ancient Greece and Rome 1200 B.c.e.-476 C.e.: Theater - Research Article from Arts and Humanities Through the Eras

This encyclopedia article consists of approximately 87 pages of information about Ancient Greece and Rome 1200 B.c.e.-476 C.e..
This section contains 246 words
(approx. 1 page at 300 words per page)
Buy the Ancient Greece and Rome 1200 B.c.e.-476 C.e.: Theater Encyclopedia Article

c. 70 B.C.E.–Late 1st century B.C.E.

Mime actress
Prostitute

Mime and Mistress.

"Lycoris" was the pseudonym of Volumnia Cytheris, a freed slave, perhaps originally a Greek, who became a famous mime performer and prostitute. Lycoris was the mistress of some of Rome's most famous men in the Republican era: Cornelius Gallus, poet and colleague of Catullus and first prefect of Egypt; Brutus, a well-known conspirator in the assassination of Julius Caesar in 44 B.C.E.; and Marcus Antonius, lover of Cleopatra and the unsuccessful opponent of Augustus in the war for control of Rome in 31 B.C.E. She is mentioned in the poetry of Ovid, Vergil, and the fragments of Gallus's works, and unflatteringly in Cicero's letters. It is commonly believed that Roman actors on the "legitimate" stage were all male, and that respectable women were forbidden to act on the stage, but...

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This section contains 246 words
(approx. 1 page at 300 words per page)
Buy the Ancient Greece and Rome 1200 B.c.e.-476 C.e.: Theater Encyclopedia Article
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