Dora Mazzone (born as Dora Paula Mazzone León on 2 June 1961) is a Venezuelan actress.
Dora began her career in theater by performing stage readings. In 1984 she entered the School of Arts at the Central University of Venezuela. During the course of her studies, she participated in various stage plays in English, French, Italian and Spanish.
Her first acting breakthrough was in 1990 when she was selected to participate in the film by Román Chalbaud titled Cuchillos de fuego.
Dora hasa daughter named Graziella Simancas Mazzone from her marriage with actor Jean Carlo Simancas.
Dora may stand for:
Australia
United States
Other countries
Dora is the pseudonym given by Sigmund Freud to a patient whom he diagnosed with hysteria, and treated for about eleven weeks in 1900. Her most manifest hysterical symptom was aphonia, or loss of voice. The patient's real name was Ida Bauer (1882–1945); her brother Otto Bauer was a leading member of the Austromarxism movement.
Freud published a case study about Dora, Fragments of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria (1905 [1901], Standard Edition Vol. 7, pp. 1–122; German: Bruchstücke einer Hysterie-Analyse), the first, and subsequently the most controversial, of his published case-studies.
Dora lived with her parents, who had a loveless marriage, but one which took place in close concert with another couple, Herr and Frau K. The crisis that led her father to bring Dora to Freud was her accusation that Herr K had made a sexual advance to her, at which she slapped his face — an accusation which Herr K denied and in which her own father disbelieved.
Dora was a sternwheel steamboat that was operated on the Coquille River on the southern coast of Oregon from 1912 to 1923. This vessel should not be confused with a number of other craft of the same name operating at the same time in other parts of North America.
Dora was built at Randolph, Oregon in 1910 by the Herman Brothers The steamer was 70.3 ft (21.43 m) long, with a beam of 15.8 ft (4.82 m) and depth of hold of 4.1 ft (1.25 m). The overall size of the vessel was 77 gross and 64 registered tons. Power was furnished by twin steam engines, each driving a pitman arm connected to a crankpin on the sternwheel, with 55 total indicated horsepower for both combined. Total required crew was shown as two. Dora was built for Russell Panter, who named the vessel after his daughter. Panter was doing business as the Myrtle Point Transportation Company.
Dora was intended to be used for passenger service on the Coquille River.Dora was placed on a route running from Bandon on the coast, to the county seat at Coquille and then upriver to Myrtle Point.Dora served this route in conjunction with the smaller sternwheeler, Myrtle, also owned by the Myrtle Point Transportation Company. Typical service included: