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April 17, 2001 | JANA J. MONJI, SPECIAL TO THE TIMES
When she was a teenager, Michelle Feynman remembers playing a very Hollywood game--casting the story of her life. She picked Alan Alda to play her father. Alda is doing just that in the world premiere of Peter Parnell's "QED" at the Mark Taper Forum. Michelle's father, Richard Feynman, wasn't an ordinary man--he had worked on the Manhattan Project and was awarded the Nobel Prize for physics in 1965 for his research in quantum electrodynamics, or QED.
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November 21, 2001 | Elaine Dutka
Brooks Testifies in Price-Fixing Trial Diana D. Brooks, the former chief executive of Sotheby's auction house, described herself Tuesday as a reluctant participant in a price-fixing scheme with rival Christie's, saying, "I was nervous about it, but I agreed to do it willingly." In her second day testifying at the New York City trial of her former boss, A.
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ENTERTAINMENT
November 21, 2001 | Elaine Dutka
Brooks Testifies in Price-Fixing Trial Diana D. Brooks, the former chief executive of Sotheby's auction house, described herself Tuesday as a reluctant participant in a price-fixing scheme with rival Christie's, saying, "I was nervous about it, but I agreed to do it willingly." In her second day testifying at the New York City trial of her former boss, A.
ENTERTAINMENT
April 17, 2001 | JANA J. MONJI, SPECIAL TO THE TIMES
When she was a teenager, Michelle Feynman remembers playing a very Hollywood game--casting the story of her life. She picked Alan Alda to play her father. Alda is doing just that in the world premiere of Peter Parnell's "QED" at the Mark Taper Forum. Michelle's father, Richard Feynman, wasn't an ordinary man--he had worked on the Manhattan Project and was awarded the Nobel Prize for physics in 1965 for his research in quantum electrodynamics, or QED.
ENTERTAINMENT
August 5, 2001 | DON SHIRLEY, Don Shirley is The Times' theater writer
Brent Crabb recently discovered one small advantage of seeing "The Lion King" from a wheelchair. Before the show started at Hollywood's Pantages Theatre, as he was shown to the wheelchair seating area, he was ushered through an aisle not visible from the main theater--and he got a sneak preview of the elaborate costumes that would soon be worn in the show's opening procession.
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