Character Study

Character Study

After the Reign

Anne Davis Mulford—better known as Princess Anne—has long loved the limelight. She’s famous for her big personality, the crowns she wears at parties, her work in the arts community and her role as a gay-rights activist. Now she’s ready to leverage her theatrical streak into an acting career. Read more »

Character Study

The Body Mechanic

Late last month, Vincent Edwards flipped a tassel and put on a white lab coat. He was one of 25 graduates of the first doctor of physical therapy class at Henderson’s Touro University. But this isn’t the first time he’s changed uniforms. Read more »

Character Study

It’s a Doll’s Life

In 2009, Morgan Lynn got a boob job that changed her life. As a single mother, Lynn, then 23, had been too busy supporting and raising her children to waste time Web-surfing. Then, while healing from her surgery, still in bandages and incapable of doing strenuous housework, she discovered YouTube and quickly decided to join the party. And so, Las Vegas Barbie was born. Read more »

Character Study

The Cornerman

If you’ve watched a championship fight in the last 50 years, you’ve seen Las Vegas’ Rafael Garcia in the corner. In his trademark Kangol cap, adorned with pins symbolizing the many countries to which the sport has taken him, the diminutive 83-year-old stands out in any entourage. But it’s the unsung work of the cut man that has made Garcia invaluable to such champions as Roberto Duran, Alexis Arguello, Wilfredo Gomez, Edwin Rosario, James Toney, Iran Barkley, and his current famous client, Floyd Mayweather Jr. Read more »

Character Study

The Justice

After eight hours quizzing high school students on their knowledge of the Constitution, you’d think a man wouldn’t want to sit down with a reporter and talk about it more. But to Justice Michael Douglas, 64, Nevada’s first black Supreme Court Justice, any opportunity to talk about what matters most to him—the Constitution, justice, race and equality—is a chance to share what he’s observed from his side of the bench in the last three decades. Read more »

Character Study

Animal Magnetism

Tara Gearin grew up riding on her parents’ Christmas tree farm in eastern Oregon. It was her love of horses that sent her to Oregon State University on the pre-veterinary track. She’d planned to be a horse trainer when an oceanography course led to an even greater passion for sea creatures. But even with a degree, aquarium work is hard to come by without experience, so when Mandalay Bay’s Shark Reef had an opening for an education assistant in 2006, Gearin packed her bags for Las Vegas. Read more »

Character Study

The Seed Sower

On any given Sunday morning, Don Fabbi trades his suburban northwest Valley home for a patch of desert in one of the most economically depressed areas of northeast Las Vegas. There, at the Doolittle Senior Center Community Garden, Fabbi can be found doing a little tilling, reflecting on a long life and enjoying the sounds of the neighborhood. Read more »

Character Study

The Climber

As Stephanie Forte sits in her townhome just minutes from the Red Rock National Conservation Area, only her sinewy hands hint at her avocation as an elite sport climber. She is a fierce competitor, having once been named among the top 10 American women in the sport. Last year, at age 43, she became the first woman to complete the “Don’t Call Me Coach” route in the Virgin River Gorge. Read more »

Character Study

The Publicist

Wayne Bernath got his start as a newsman for the Las Vegas Review-Journal in the 1970s, but in the ’80s, as entertainment editor for the Las Vegas Sun and Showbiz magazine, he took a hard turn into the world of celebrities. Soon he was writing pseudonymous tabloid copy for the National Enquirer, starting national teapot-tempests over such matters as Oprah Winfrey’s weight or Magic Johnson’s time with the Crazy Girls. Later still, he was one of the Strip’s busiest publicists, including a 15-year stint as right-hand man to magician Lance Burton. Read more »

Character Study

The Reverse Snowbird

The mountains were always there for Kailee Gielgens; it just took her awhile to see them. Now, she can’t imagine her life without them. Gielgens was in high school when a friend first invited her to take a drive up to Lee Canyon for a day of snowboarding. It didn’t take long for her interest in the sport to escalate into a full-blown passion. Read more »

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