Two one-act Greek Comedies presented in one performance. 'The Grocer's Daughter' is the story of a dreamy girl who has graduated from 'Arsakeio', knows French, read romances, and waits to marry the prince of the fairy-tale. Finally, she is fascinated by the garish uniform of a man, falls into his arms, without knowing that he is the servant of a foreign Embassy struggling to conquer her, having an eye on her big dowry. When her father, the grocer, decides to marry her with a merchant, she accepts but the prospect groom understands her whim and refuses. In the second one-act play 'Pericles's Death', the ancient democrat of Athens, and whether he had benefited or harmed the Athenian democracy, becomes the pretext of a fierce fight breaking out between the groom and the father-in-law. It is about a typical family Greek fight..for nothing and about nothing. Neither of them cares for the ancient politician, but about how they will impose on each other their views whichever they may be.