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  1. Knights 230–3 And Cleon's Eyebrows.D. Welsh - 1979 - Classical Quarterly 29 (01):214-.
    With these words the ‘first slave’’ of the Knights , encourages the Sausage-seller to take up the cudgels against the Paphlagonian, confident that the actor playing this role will not be masked. The exception proves the rule and it is generally concluded from these lines that portrait masks were customary in Aristophanic comedy.
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  • Kleon's eyebrows (Cratin. fr. 228 K-A) and late 5th-century comic portrait-masks.S. Douglas Olson - 1999 - Classical Quarterly 49 (1):320-321.
    At Aristophanes, Equites 230–2, one of the slaves who speak the prologue informs the audience that, when the Paphlagonian appears onstage, his mask will not resemble him, for the σκεoπoιoí were afraid to make one that depicted him accurately. In an important article, K. J. Dover argued that it must in fact have been very difficult to create easily recognizable portrait-masks, and suggested that the joke in Eq. 230–2 may be that the Paphlagonian's mask is horribly ugly but allegedly still (...)
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  • Adnotationes Ad Aeschyliisthmiastas.J. C. Kamerbeek - 1955 - Mnemosyne 8 (1):1-13.
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  • Aischylos' Isthmiastai.Bruno Snell - 1956 - Hermes 84 (1):1-11.
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