Xena did several role switches, as I recall—swapping bodies with Callisto and, in several instances, straight impersonations. (As I recall, the latter involved a waitress, a princess, and a lady of, er, easy virtue.) I think that there were some other body swaps and look-alike impersonations as well, with some other characters.
BE THIS GUY about 2 years ago
Jeremy is thinking of Twain, but the “P” probably comes from The Prince and the Pauper. The “C” can be for Clemens.
Last Rose Of Summer Premium Member about 2 years ago
Walt Whitman…Leaves of Grass, cause she is in the park.
Twocat about 2 years ago
sounds like an Eddie Murphy movie to me
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 2 years ago
Just hope it’s not a “K”; a lot of misery in that zone.
dadoctah about 2 years ago
Or maybe a version of “The Parent Trap”….
red_tape about 2 years ago
Wodehouse? Wordsworth?
FionaMessenger1 about 2 years ago
Actually it’s T. Mark Twain. I thought he was the second best seller next to the Bible.
VegaAlopex about 2 years ago
I recall back in 1966 a story in the Golden Magazine when two girls switched places as princess and commoner. Neither liked passing for the other.
sueb1863 about 2 years ago
Try Mark Twain, ‘The Prince and the Pauper’.
aerotica69 about 2 years ago
Twain.
Snolep about 2 years ago
T. Vintage Trudeau.
notmoving Premium Member about 2 years ago
It’s something out of Trump. Maybe she went to the rally.
Will_Scarlet about 2 years ago
Never the Twain shall meet…
vaughnrl2003 Premium Member about 2 years ago
I was leaning more towards Twain or Clemens, or both for that matter.
csmm7 about 2 years ago
How about Tom Wolfe? I wouldn’t be surprised to find out Elmont was one of the merry pranksters back in the day.
reedkomicks Premium Member about 2 years ago
You keep talking, so she can keep eating.
RadioDial Premium Member about 2 years ago
“Pearl” is the only sane one of the 4, isn’t she.
Roscoe about 2 years ago
Twain
mistercatworks about 2 years ago
“Begins with an ‘A’. Alphabet?”
GaryCooper about 2 years ago
Mark Twain, The Prince and the Pauper.
kathybear about 2 years ago
Twain, Mark Twain. The Prince and the Pauper was what they were thinking of.
erinurse2000 about 2 years ago
tWain
txmystic about 2 years ago
What cracks me up is that he went straight from Dickens to Hemingway…quite a stretch, there…
willie_mctell about 2 years ago
Mark Twain.
JP Steve Premium Member about 2 years ago
Gosh! Only twenty posts for Twain/Prince and the Pauper today. Doesn’t anybody read the posts before contributing?
Sir Isaac about 2 years ago
Kafka with overtones of Dickens.
Dragoncat about 2 years ago
I want to believe he’s trying to think of Mark Twain’s “The Prince and the Pauper”.
Emphasis on ‘trying’.
ChrisTrey about 2 years ago
I hope she’s stashing some food for Elmont somewhere?
cherns Premium Member about 2 years ago
Xena did several role switches, as I recall—swapping bodies with Callisto and, in several instances, straight impersonations. (As I recall, the latter involved a waitress, a princess, and a lady of, er, easy virtue.) I think that there were some other body swaps and look-alike impersonations as well, with some other characters.