Rick dipietro kids
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Joe DiPietro
American playwright and lyricist
Joe DiPietro (born 1961[1]) is an American playwright, lyricist and author.[2] He is best known for the Tony Award-winning musical Memphis, for which he won the Tony Awards for Best Book of a Musical and Best Original Score as well as for writing the book and lyrics for the long-running off-Broadway show I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change.[3]
Biography
Born in Teaneck, New Jersey,[4] DiPietro grew up in nearby Oradell,[5][6] the son of Lou and Jean DiPietro. He attended Oradell Public School and River Dell High School,[3] before graduating Phi Beta Kappa from Rutgers University in 1984 with a bachelor's degree in English.[7]
DiPietro is openly gay.[8]
Work
Following a run of Love Lemmings at the Top of the Village Gate in 1991, DiPietro's first produced work was I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change, written with composer Jimmy Roberts, which ran for twelve years (5,003 performances) off-Broadway at the West
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Antonio Di Pietro
Italian politician and lawyer
Antonio Di Pietro (Italian pronunciation:[anˈtɔːnjodiˈpjɛːtro]; born 2 October 1950) is an Italian politician, lawyer and magistrate. He was a minister in government of Romano Prodi, a Senator, and a Member of the European Parliament. He was a prosecutor in the Mani pulite corruption trials in the early 1990s.
Prosecutor
Di Pietro was born in Montenero di Bisaccia, a comune in the province of Campobasso, in the Southern Italian region of Molise, to a poor rural family. As a young man he travelled to Germany, in the city of Böhmenkirch (Baden-Württemberg), where he worked in a factory in the mornings and in a sawmill in the afternoons to pay for his studies. He graduated from night school in Italy[1] with a degree in law in 1978 and became a police officer. After a few years, he started a judicial career as a prosecutor.[2][3]
Mani pulite
See also: Mani pulite § Escalating conflict between Silvio Berlusconi and Antonio Di Pietro
In February 1992, Di Pietro be
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Lorenzo di Pietro
Born in the Val d’Orcia region of Tuscany, Francesco di Giorgio e di Lorenzo, called Vecchietta or Lorenzo di Pietro, was a Sienese painter, sculptor, goldsmith and architect. Much of his work may be found in Siena, particularly at the Hospital of Santa Maria della Scala, earning him yet another name: pittor dello spedale (or "painter of the hospital"). It is said that he trained under several artists such as Il Sassetta (1392 – 1450), Taddeo di Bartolo (1362 – 1422), as well as, Jacopo della Quercia (1374 – 1438).
In the Siena Hospital, now a museum complex, Vecchietta painted a series of frescoes, assisted by Domenico di Bartolo (1400 – 1445), a nephew of Taddeo Bartolo, including The Founding of the Spedale and The Vision of Santa Sorore, depicting a dream of the mother of the cobbler Sorore, the mythical founder of the Hospital. Later, around 1444, Vecchietta individually created the Cappella del Sacro Chiodo, also known as the Old Sacristy, as well as an enormous bronze ciborium for the hospital. He also executed frescos and sculptures for the Siena Cathe
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