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Word: sancho (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...first, I was kind of attracted by the notion of a non-party politician" Sancho said, complaining about the "bankrupt political platitudes" of other candidates...

Author: By Brain D. Ellison, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Campus Support for Perot Dwindling | 5/20/1992 | See Source »

Julia alternates between the roles of the author and his character. As Quixote, he rides around on his donkey with his sidekick Sancho (Tony Martinez), attempting "to right the unrightable wrong...

Author: By Amanda Silber, | Title: Star-Studded Cast Big Draw For Man of La Mancha at the Colonial Theater in Boston | 3/20/1992 | See Source »

There are many excellent performances in Man of La Mancha. Tony Martinez, who recently celebrated his two-thousandth performance as Sancho, is indeed a Sancho among Sanchos. He sings a charismatic version of the humorous "I Really Like Him." The Padre (David Wasson) gives a beautiful rendition of "To Each His Dulcinea," expressing unerringly the simplistic ideal of the show: "How lovely life would seem if every man could weave a dream to keep him from despair...

Author: By Amanda Silber, | Title: Star-Studded Cast Big Draw For Man of La Mancha at the Colonial Theater in Boston | 3/20/1992 | See Source »

...becomes the drama of a mediocrity, a sort of imposter, presuming to take over. Or so it always seems. The vice presidency almost by definition enforces an expectation of the second rate: the man is inherently a loser (he was not the President, after all) or at best a Sancho Panza. In the case of Andrew Johnson following Abraham Lincoln, the fear of mediocrity was fulfilled. When Franklin Roosevelt died, a god of the era gave place, it seemed, to democracy's least common denominator, a barking, weightless little haberdasher from Independence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Strange Destiny Of a Vice President | 5/20/1991 | See Source »

Worst of all is Quaid, who plays a Sancho Panza to Murray's Don Quixote. Quaid seems to have forgotten that successful slapstick requires a great deal more than simply acting clumsy, and the audience soon grows as weary of his character's stumbling, bumbling and foot-dragging as Grimm and Phyllis do. By the last third of the movie, he has been reduced to a wheezing, red-faced wreck, and one wishes that his accomplices would simply turn him in to the cops and get on with their escape...

Author: By Adam K. Goodheart, | Title: Does This Film Sound Familiar to You? | 7/27/1990 | See Source »

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