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Rosita Sokou

Rosita Sokou[1] (Greek: Ζωή Μαρία (Ροζίτα) Σώκου, Zoi Maria (Rozita) Sokou; 9 September 1923 – 14 December 2021) was a Greek journalist,[2] author, playwright and translator.

Sokou was one of the first women journalists in Greece and started her career as a film critic in 1946. She moved to Rome, Italy after marrying an Italian journalist and author, Manlio Maradei. Having difficulty adjusting to life and career in Italy, she moved back to Greece with her daughter to resume her work.[3] From 1977–1983 she became a celebrity as part of a panel in the TV Show Na I Efkeria. In 1992–1993 she went on to host her own TV show at New Channel called Visitors at Night.

She translated work for many authors. She was also very involved with theatre and wrote plays, adaptations and more. She also wrote books, and won awards from the French government and from Greece for her Greek journalism.

Early life and studies edit

Her father, Georgios Sokos, was a journalist, editor and playwright from Aitoliko who died at the age of 44, just before World War II. Her mother Titika Michailidou came from Smyrna. Sokou was born in Plaka, Athens, Greece, on 9 September 1923, growing up in Psychiko. Her maternal grandfather, Fotis Michailidis, was a cinema and theatre fan and made her see all films and plays available every week, and Rosita started writing reviews of what she saw while in high school. Fotis Michailidis was also the co-founder of Greek pasta manufacturer MISKO in 1927.[4][5] Rosita Sokou graduated from the Arsakeio School in Psychiko. During the war and the Axis occupation she perfected her French at the Institut Français under Roger Milliex and English at the British Council (Cambridge Diploma of English Studies). She attended the State School of Fine Arts which she left to study with painter Yannis Tsarouchis – who later discouraged her from becoming a painter – and also attended the Vassilis Rotas Drama School for the purpose of general knowledge, while working from a tender age as a translator and a foreign language teacher. After the end of the Axis occupation and the Civil War, in 1947, she attended a summer course on 20th century literature at Lady Margaret Hall College of the University of Oxford.[6]

Film critic edit

One of the first women journalists in Greece, she started her career as a film critic. From 1946 she wrote in newspapers such as Vradini, Kathimerini, Mesimvrini, Ethnos, Acropolis, Apoghevmatini and the English-language Athens News, as well as for numerous magazines and regularly attended film festivals in Cannes, Venice, Berlin, Moscow, Taormina, Houston (Texas), Thessaloniki, as well as the “Festival dei Due Mondi” in Spoleto, Italy.[7] From the 70s, she expanded to theatre criticism and various other columns.

After her marriage to Italian journalist and author Manlio Maradei, she lived in Rome, Italy, from 1957 to 1961, but had difficulties with the life of a housewife. Her attempts to start a new career in Italian newspapers and magazines, writing in the Italian language, and to adapt to the bourgeois mentality of Italian society of the times were only moderately successful; she then decided to come back to live in Greece with her daughter, resuming her job in "Kathimerini" (morning paper) as well as the new "Mesimvrini" (evening paper) and "Eikones" (weekly magazine) of editor Eleni Vlachos (sometimes also spelled Vlakhos).

In 1967, after the onset of the military dictatorship, Eleni Vlachou closed her media, in protest against the suppressed freedom of the press, and flew to London where she stayed for the whole duration of the dictatorship. Rosita was left jobless, and with a small child to provide for. Nevertheless, she was one of the only two people (the other one was Freddie Germanos) who refused to sue Vlachou and ask for damages asking for a financial compensation – for this she faced the disciplinary board of the Journalists' Union and was threatened to be expelled from the Union. She held fast: accepting to sign the lawsuit meant to recognize that Vlachou's claim (that it was impossible to have press worthy of its name in the current situation) was unsubstantial. These were difficult years, in which she worked editing encyclopaedias, translating, collaborating with magazines and finally ended up, in 1969, working for the Botsis newspapers, Acropolis and (from 1970) Apoghevmatini. There, she expanded to other subjects, also writing theatre, ballet and TV reviews. On the next decade, after becoming a well-known TV persona, she had her own full page where, every Sunday, she wrote on whatever stuck her fancy. At the end of the 7-year dictatorship, Eleni Vlachou came back to Greece and opened "Kathimerini" again, and Rosita collaborated sporadically under the pseudonym of Irene Stavrou until 1987 when the newspaper was sold to the Koskotas group. Apogevmatini eventually turned her out in 2005, after 35 years, as part of the newspaper's policy to prefer young newbie (and low-paid) journalists.

Television edit

During the period 1977–1983 she became a celebrity as part of the panel in the TV show "Na I Efkeria" ("Here's your chance", a Greek version of "Opportunity knocks"). These were the early days of TV, and the audience response was unprecedented. In 1992–93 she hosted her own TV show at New Channel, "Visitors at Night". She welcomed the guests in her own living room, and chatted with them in an informal way, something unprecedented in the history of Greek TV.

Translations edit

She translated many authors – Aldous Huxley, Ingmar Bergman, Isaac Asimov and Stanisław Lem[8] – reflecting her own tastes and interests, as well as comics such as the "Corto Maltese" series by Hugo Pratt. She translated, edited and updated the two-volume "Cinema", an encyclopedia by Georges Charensol, and was for many years co-responsible for the foreign language edition of the Athens Festival programme.[9]

Theatre – adaptations and translations edit

Since 1974 she started her deeper involvement with the theatre, writing the play The Portrait of Dorian Gray (based on Oscar Wilde's novella), and adapting Georg Büchner's Lenz for Dimitri Potamitis' Theatre of Research. Later on, she translated Sam Shepard’s Shock and Edward Albee’s Sea View for Yorgos Messalas' company. Together with her daughter, she translated Manjula Padmanabhan’s Harvest which was awarded 1st prize at the Onassis International Theatre Competition in 1998 and Jean Anouilh’s Jesabel for Jenny Roussea’s troupe in 1999.

Original writings edit

She was spurred to write a book by her chance encounter and subsequent decade-long friendship[10] with Rudolf Nureyev. It started with an impassioned account of their meeting and a biography, in the book Nureyev (1982).
The life of the late Greek ballet dancer Anastassios Vitoros inspired the little book Anastassios (1985).
The book on Nureyev was followed, almost ten years later, by the play Quai Voltaire (1991) inspired by her experiences in the ballet scene – Quai Voltaire being the address of Nureyev's Paris flat.

After the artist's death, Rosita, with the help of her daughter, greatly expanded that first work in Nureyev – as I knew him (2003), which not only updated the contents of the first book, but also included Rosita's day-by day diaries when she travelled to London, Paris and Vienna for the rehearsals and first production of his main works there: a fascinating behind-the scenes glimpse of the people -artists and technicians- responsible for these grand performances.
In 2005 she wrote "Mario and I", a biography of Greek singer Mario Frangoulis and account of her long-time friendship with him. It was published by Kastaniotis editions.[11]

In 2018 she published her 2-volume autobiography, titled "Rosita's Century" (O aionas tis Rositas), ranging from her grandparents' eloping in Smyrna to the present day. Volume 1[12] covers the first half of the 20th century, roughly until her marriage and moving to Italy and volume 2[13] the years of her marriage, motherhood, return to Greece and most of her career as a journalist, including the many people, famous or not famous, she met in her long life.

The book was compiled from chapters and pages written by her in the past 20 years or so, integrated with info from her articles and interviews given, the whole thing checked and edited by her daughter Irene Maradei, who also wrote the preface. A revised and expanded edition is planned for the end of 2021.

Teaching edit

In the years before her death, she taught Theatrical History at the "Melissa" Drama School created by Elda Panopoulou and at the Piraeus Union Drama School. Not so much a formal history, the one found in books, as her own behind-the-scenes experiences of Greek theatre and its artists, with whom she has lived side by side for the better part of a century.[6]

Awards edit

She has been given the medal "Chevalier de l' Ordre des Arts et des Lettres" by the French government (1986), and awarded by the Botsis Foundation (1988) for her contribution to Greek journalism.

Personal life and death edit

Sokou died from COVID-19 in Athens on 14 December 2021, at the age of 98.[14][15]

Works edit

Articles edit

Newspapers

  • Oi kairoi (1948–50)
  • Anexartisia (1949)
  • Vradini (1949–1955)
  • Athens News (1952–1960)
  • Kathimerini (1953–1957 and 1960–1967, 1974–1987)
  • Mesimvrini (1961–1965)
  • Acropolis (1969-
  • Apoghevmatini (1970–2005)
  • Ethnos tis Kyriakis
  • Kosmos tou ependyti

Magazines

  • Hollywood (1946)
  • Eikones (1953–1957 and 1961–1967)
  • Ekloghi (1955–1961)
  • Epikaira (1967)
  • Proto (1967–68)
  • Paidi kai Neoi goneis
  • Tilerama (1984–2005)

TV and radio shows edit

Radio

  • "Lithoi kai keramoi" – with Kostas Ferris
  • "Episkeptes tis nichtas" – with various guests

TV

  • "Na i efkairia" (Here is your chance) (1977–1983) member of the panel
  • "Oneira sto fos : Na i efkairia – new version" 1997 at Channel 5
  • "Oi episkeptes tis nychtas" (The night visitors) (1992–1993) New Channel

Films

  • Pros tin eleftheria (by Haris Papadopoulos) 1996

Translations edit

Books and comics

  • Bergman: The trilogy of silence (3 screenplays) Ed. Galaxias
  • Bergman: Three screenplays “Wild strawberries”, “The seventh seal” Ed. Galaxias, reprinted by ed. Hermias, ISBN 960-216-039-X
  • Aldous Huxley: The genius and the goddess
  • Stanislaw Lem: Cyberiad (1979) ed. Kaktos
  • Stanislaw Lem: Solaris (1961) ed. Kastaniotis
  • Isaac Asimov: I, robot ed. Galaxias
  • Fantastika diighimata (Anthology of Science Fiction short stories) Ed. Galaxias, 1961
  • Chanel la solitaire Ed. Galaxias
  • Charensol: Histoire du cinema Ed. Papyros-Larousse
  • Corto Maltese (many titles) for Mammouth Comics editions

Theatre

  • Shock – by Sam Shepard 1995
  • Sea View – by Edward Albee 1996
  • Harvest – by Manjula Padmanabhan (with I. Maradei) – 1988
  • Jesabel – by Jean Anouilh (with I. Maradei)- 1999

Theatrical adaptions edit

  • Lenz, from the work of Georg Büchner
  • The Portrait of Dorian Gray – from Oscar Wilde's novella 1977, for Dimitri Potamitis, also produced in 2000 with Stratos Tzortzoglou in the leading role

Original writings edit

  • The encephalopod – S.F. short story, first published in “Italia domani” magazine (Rome, 1960) and, in Greek, in the “Ekloghi” magazine #183 (19-6-1960)
  • Nureyev – about her first meeting with the famous dancer/choreographer Ed. Kaktos, Athens, 1982
  • Anastassios – a profile of the late ballet dancer Anastasios Vitoros Ed. Kaktos, Athens, 1985
  • Nureyev – as I knew him – expanded version, a full biography, with the collaboration of Irene Maradei Ed. Kaktos, Athens, 2003 ISBN 960-382-503-4
  • Quai Voltaire – theatrical play Ed. Hatzinikoli, Athens, 1990–91
  • Mario and I, about singer Mario Frangoulis Ed. Kastaniotis, December 2005 ISBN 960-03-4126-5
  • Rosita's Century, a 2-volume autobiography edited by her daughter Irene Maradei. Ed. Odos Panos, November 2018 ISBN 9789604773039

References edit

  1. ^ Vrasidas Karalis, History of Greek Cinema, Continuum, 2012, p. 48.
  2. ^ "Ροζίτα Σώκου: "Σιχαίνομαι τις πικραμένες μετριότητες"". 19 June 2011.
  3. ^ "Τα δύο πρόσωπα της Ροζίτας Σώκου". 2013-09-12.
  4. ^ "MISKO: 86 χρόνια παρουσίας στο ελληνικό τραπέζι". 2013-05-14.
  5. ^ . June 20, 2014. Archived from the original on December 17, 2021. Retrieved September 13, 2019.
  6. ^ a b "Τι κάνει σήμερα η Ροζίτα Σώκου". 2012-03-21.
  7. ^ Karalis, Vrasidas (2012-02-02). A History of Greek Cinema. A&C Black. ISBN 978-1-4411-3500-1.
  8. ^ "Cyberiad Greek Kaktos 1979 – Lemopedia".
  9. ^ Sokou, Rosita. Athens Festival 1977 – via Amazon.
  10. ^ . 2013-09-07. Archived from the original on 2013-09-10.
  11. ^ Εκδόσεις Καστανιώτη: "Ο Μάριος κι εγώ"
  12. ^ Ο αιώνας της Ροζίτας, βιβλίο πρώτο (1900-1950)/
  13. ^ Οδός Πανός: Ροζίτα Σώκου "Ο αιώνας της Ροζίτας Βιβλίο Δεύτερο (1957-2017)"/
  14. ^ "Τέλος εποχής: Εφυγε η Ροζίτα Σώκου - FLIX". flix.gr (in Greek). Retrieved 2021-12-14.
  15. ^ "Esteemed journalist Rosita Sokou, 98, passes away". Ekathimerini. 14 December 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2021.

External links edit

  • Bibliography

rosita, sokou, greek, Ζωή, Μαρία, Ροζίτα, Σώκου, maria, rozita, sokou, september, 1923, december, 2021, greek, journalist, author, playwright, translator, sokou, first, women, journalists, greece, started, career, film, critic, 1946, moved, rome, italy, after,. Rosita Sokou 1 Greek Zwh Maria Rozita Swkoy Zoi Maria Rozita Sokou 9 September 1923 14 December 2021 was a Greek journalist 2 author playwright and translator Sokou was one of the first women journalists in Greece and started her career as a film critic in 1946 She moved to Rome Italy after marrying an Italian journalist and author Manlio Maradei Having difficulty adjusting to life and career in Italy she moved back to Greece with her daughter to resume her work 3 From 1977 1983 she became a celebrity as part of a panel in the TV Show Na I Efkeria In 1992 1993 she went on to host her own TV show at New Channel called Visitors at Night She translated work for many authors She was also very involved with theatre and wrote plays adaptations and more She also wrote books and won awards from the French government and from Greece for her Greek journalism Contents 1 Early life and studies 2 Film critic 3 Television 4 Translations 5 Theatre adaptations and translations 6 Original writings 7 Teaching 8 Awards 9 Personal life and death 10 Works 10 1 Articles 10 2 TV and radio shows 10 3 Translations 10 4 Theatrical adaptions 10 5 Original writings 11 References 12 External linksEarly life and studies editHer father Georgios Sokos was a journalist editor and playwright from Aitoliko who died at the age of 44 just before World War II Her mother Titika Michailidou came from Smyrna Sokou was born in Plaka Athens Greece on 9 September 1923 growing up in Psychiko Her maternal grandfather Fotis Michailidis was a cinema and theatre fan and made her see all films and plays available every week and Rosita started writing reviews of what she saw while in high school Fotis Michailidis was also the co founder of Greek pasta manufacturer MISKO in 1927 4 5 Rosita Sokou graduated from the Arsakeio School in Psychiko During the war and the Axis occupation she perfected her French at the Institut Francais under Roger Milliex and English at the British Council Cambridge Diploma of English Studies She attended the State School of Fine Arts which she left to study with painter Yannis Tsarouchis who later discouraged her from becoming a painter and also attended the Vassilis Rotas Drama School for the purpose of general knowledge while working from a tender age as a translator and a foreign language teacher After the end of the Axis occupation and the Civil War in 1947 she attended a summer course on 20th century literature at Lady Margaret Hall College of the University of Oxford 6 Film critic editOne of the first women journalists in Greece she started her career as a film critic From 1946 she wrote in newspapers such as Vradini Kathimerini Mesimvrini Ethnos Acropolis Apoghevmatini and the English language Athens News as well as for numerous magazines and regularly attended film festivals in Cannes Venice Berlin Moscow Taormina Houston Texas Thessaloniki as well as the Festival dei Due Mondi in Spoleto Italy 7 From the 70s she expanded to theatre criticism and various other columns After her marriage to Italian journalist and author Manlio Maradei she lived in Rome Italy from 1957 to 1961 but had difficulties with the life of a housewife Her attempts to start a new career in Italian newspapers and magazines writing in the Italian language and to adapt to the bourgeois mentality of Italian society of the times were only moderately successful she then decided to come back to live in Greece with her daughter resuming her job in Kathimerini morning paper as well as the new Mesimvrini evening paper and Eikones weekly magazine of editor Eleni Vlachos sometimes also spelled Vlakhos In 1967 after the onset of the military dictatorship Eleni Vlachou closed her media in protest against the suppressed freedom of the press and flew to London where she stayed for the whole duration of the dictatorship Rosita was left jobless and with a small child to provide for Nevertheless she was one of the only two people the other one was Freddie Germanos who refused to sue Vlachou and ask for damages asking for a financial compensation for this she faced the disciplinary board of the Journalists Union and was threatened to be expelled from the Union She held fast accepting to sign the lawsuit meant to recognize that Vlachou s claim that it was impossible to have press worthy of its name in the current situation was unsubstantial These were difficult years in which she worked editing encyclopaedias translating collaborating with magazines and finally ended up in 1969 working for the Botsis newspapers Acropolis and from 1970 Apoghevmatini There she expanded to other subjects also writing theatre ballet and TV reviews On the next decade after becoming a well known TV persona she had her own full page where every Sunday she wrote on whatever stuck her fancy At the end of the 7 year dictatorship Eleni Vlachou came back to Greece and opened Kathimerini again and Rosita collaborated sporadically under the pseudonym of Irene Stavrou until 1987 when the newspaper was sold to the Koskotas group Apogevmatini eventually turned her out in 2005 after 35 years as part of the newspaper s policy to prefer young newbie and low paid journalists Television editDuring the period 1977 1983 she became a celebrity as part of the panel in the TV show Na I Efkeria Here s your chance a Greek version of Opportunity knocks These were the early days of TV and the audience response was unprecedented In 1992 93 she hosted her own TV show at New Channel Visitors at Night She welcomed the guests in her own living room and chatted with them in an informal way something unprecedented in the history of Greek TV Translations editShe translated many authors Aldous Huxley Ingmar Bergman Isaac Asimov and Stanislaw Lem 8 reflecting her own tastes and interests as well as comics such as the Corto Maltese series by Hugo Pratt She translated edited and updated the two volume Cinema an encyclopedia by Georges Charensol and was for many years co responsible for the foreign language edition of the Athens Festival programme 9 Theatre adaptations and translations editSince 1974 she started her deeper involvement with the theatre writing the play The Portrait of Dorian Gray based on Oscar Wilde s novella and adapting Georg Buchner s Lenz for Dimitri Potamitis Theatre of Research Later on she translated Sam Shepard s Shock and Edward Albee s Sea View for Yorgos Messalas company Together with her daughter she translated Manjula Padmanabhan s Harvest which was awarded 1st prize at the Onassis International Theatre Competition in 1998 and Jean Anouilh s Jesabel for Jenny Roussea s troupe in 1999 Original writings editShe was spurred to write a book by her chance encounter and subsequent decade long friendship 10 with Rudolf Nureyev It started with an impassioned account of their meeting and a biography in the book Nureyev 1982 The life of the late Greek ballet dancer Anastassios Vitoros inspired the little book Anastassios 1985 The book on Nureyev was followed almost ten years later by the play Quai Voltaire 1991 inspired by her experiences in the ballet scene Quai Voltaire being the address of Nureyev s Paris flat After the artist s death Rosita with the help of her daughter greatly expanded that first work in Nureyev as I knew him 2003 which not only updated the contents of the first book but also included Rosita s day by day diaries when she travelled to London Paris and Vienna for the rehearsals and first production of his main works there a fascinating behind the scenes glimpse of the people artists and technicians responsible for these grand performances In 2005 she wrote Mario and I a biography of Greek singer Mario Frangoulis and account of her long time friendship with him It was published by Kastaniotis editions 11 In 2018 she published her 2 volume autobiography titled Rosita s Century O aionas tis Rositas ranging from her grandparents eloping in Smyrna to the present day Volume 1 12 covers the first half of the 20th century roughly until her marriage and moving to Italy and volume 2 13 the years of her marriage motherhood return to Greece and most of her career as a journalist including the many people famous or not famous she met in her long life The book was compiled from chapters and pages written by her in the past 20 years or so integrated with info from her articles and interviews given the whole thing checked and edited by her daughter Irene Maradei who also wrote the preface A revised and expanded edition is planned for the end of 2021 Teaching editIn the years before her death she taught Theatrical History at the Melissa Drama School created by Elda Panopoulou and at the Piraeus Union Drama School Not so much a formal history the one found in books as her own behind the scenes experiences of Greek theatre and its artists with whom she has lived side by side for the better part of a century 6 Awards editShe has been given the medal Chevalier de l Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French government 1986 and awarded by the Botsis Foundation 1988 for her contribution to Greek journalism Personal life and death editSokou died from COVID 19 in Athens on 14 December 2021 at the age of 98 14 15 Works editArticles edit Newspapers Oi kairoi 1948 50 Anexartisia 1949 Vradini 1949 1955 Athens News 1952 1960 Kathimerini 1953 1957 and 1960 1967 1974 1987 Mesimvrini 1961 1965 Acropolis 1969 Apoghevmatini 1970 2005 Ethnos tis Kyriakis Kosmos tou ependytiMagazines Hollywood 1946 Eikones 1953 1957 and 1961 1967 Ekloghi 1955 1961 Epikaira 1967 Proto 1967 68 Paidi kai Neoi goneis Tilerama 1984 2005 TV and radio shows edit Radio Lithoi kai keramoi with Kostas Ferris Episkeptes tis nichtas with various guestsTV Na i efkairia Here is your chance 1977 1983 member of the panel Oneira sto fos Na i efkairia new version 1997 at Channel 5 Oi episkeptes tis nychtas The night visitors 1992 1993 New ChannelFilms Pros tin eleftheria by Haris Papadopoulos 1996Translations edit Books and comics Bergman The trilogy of silence 3 screenplays Ed Galaxias Bergman Three screenplays Wild strawberries The seventh seal Ed Galaxias reprinted by ed Hermias ISBN 960 216 039 X Aldous Huxley The genius and the goddess Stanislaw Lem Cyberiad 1979 ed Kaktos Stanislaw Lem Solaris 1961 ed Kastaniotis Isaac Asimov I robot ed Galaxias Fantastika diighimata Anthology of Science Fiction short stories Ed Galaxias 1961 Chanel la solitaire Ed Galaxias Charensol Histoire du cinema Ed Papyros Larousse Corto Maltese many titles for Mammouth Comics editionsTheatre Shock by Sam Shepard 1995 Sea View by Edward Albee 1996 Harvest by Manjula Padmanabhan with I Maradei 1988 Jesabel by Jean Anouilh with I Maradei 1999Theatrical adaptions edit Lenz from the work of Georg Buchner The Portrait of Dorian Gray from Oscar Wilde s novella 1977 for Dimitri Potamitis also produced in 2000 with Stratos Tzortzoglou in the leading roleOriginal writings edit The encephalopod S F short story first published in Italia domani magazine Rome 1960 and in Greek in the Ekloghi magazine 183 19 6 1960 Nureyev about her first meeting with the famous dancer choreographer Ed Kaktos Athens 1982 Anastassios a profile of the late ballet dancer Anastasios Vitoros Ed Kaktos Athens 1985 Nureyev as I knew him expanded version a full biography with the collaboration of Irene Maradei Ed Kaktos Athens 2003 ISBN 960 382 503 4 Quai Voltaire theatrical play Ed Hatzinikoli Athens 1990 91 Mario and I about singer Mario Frangoulis Ed Kastaniotis December 2005 ISBN 960 03 4126 5 Rosita s Century a 2 volume autobiography edited by her daughter Irene Maradei Ed Odos Panos November 2018 ISBN 9789604773039References edit Vrasidas Karalis History of Greek Cinema Continuum 2012 p 48 Rozita Swkoy Sixainomai tis pikramenes metriothtes 19 June 2011 Ta dyo proswpa ths Rozitas Swkoy 2013 09 12 MISKO 86 xronia paroysias sto ellhniko trapezi 2013 05 14 H Rozita Swkoy kai ta proswpa poy th shmadepsan June 20 2014 Archived from the original on December 17 2021 Retrieved September 13 2019 a b Ti kanei shmera h Rozita Swkoy 2012 03 21 Karalis Vrasidas 2012 02 02 A History of Greek Cinema A amp C Black ISBN 978 1 4411 3500 1 Cyberiad Greek Kaktos 1979 Lemopedia Sokou Rosita Athens Festival 1977 via Amazon Rozita Swkoy O Noyregief den htan 8hlyprephs adelfh 2013 09 07 Archived from the original on 2013 09 10 Ekdoseis Kastaniwth O Marios ki egw O aiwnas ths Rozitas biblio prwto 1900 1950 Odos Panos Rozita Swkoy O aiwnas ths Rozitas Biblio Deytero 1957 2017 Telos epoxhs Efyge h Rozita Swkoy FLIX flix gr in Greek Retrieved 2021 12 14 Esteemed journalist Rosita Sokou 98 passes away Ekathimerini 14 December 2021 Retrieved 14 December 2021 External links editBibliography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rosita Sokou amp oldid 1210582507, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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