Word: bickfords
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Hayes-Bickford Cafeteria, which has since been replaced by the Chinese restaurant Yenching, she said: “It was great fun. It was stimulating, you could hang out in for hours. You could always bet that there was an argument going on of some kind...
...grille was a staple/aspect/representation/whatever of freshman life,” he wrote. Before Redline and before the Grille, another type of business thrived in the Square: all-night eateries. When Frietzche was an undergraduate, three all-night diners sat within walking distance of his dorm. One favorite was Hayes Bickford, a 24-hour cafeteria. Frietzche remembers one particularly impressive characteristic of the diner: the presence of interracial couples. “”I remember a lot of interracial dating at those places, people out getting coffee and talking,” he says. This phenomenon—impressive...
According to Black, who has written and produced numerous television shows including “The Education of Max Bickford,” “Miami Vice,” and “Law & Order,” breaking into Hollywood as a writer is a matter of persistence...
...Baines (James Cromwell) loses an election; his existence as the ultimate alpha male over, he must search his soul and remake his life, largely by reconnecting with his three grown daughters. (Al Gore, are your ears burning?) Why are men becoming so open? In a way, they're not. Bickford and Baines were created by women (just as men created Mary, Ally, Maude et al.), and like many "relationship" dramas they're expected to draw female viewers in particular. Baines creator Lydia Woodward believes the story transcends Mars-Venus issues, but says, "A man's emotional life is every...
...other words, a liberal humanist whom circumstance is threatening to turn into an angry white male. But while Bickford often seems whiny--the angst of the tenured baby boomer doesn't ring tragic to many folks--at least it promises to take Max into new emotional territory for a man. And then some. Dreyfuss, Yorkin says, "is not afraid to be shown looking at his own paunch in the mirror and feeling...