Where can a person find a collection of pictures from The Wizard of Oz?”
The arrival of world-class tennis at the O2 arena in south-east London is just another small event for the man who likes to keep an iron control of everything, especially his privacy. He bought and brought David Beckham to Los Angeles and reconvened Led Zeppelin, before this year’s most celebrated death intervened in his coup to bring Michael Jackson to London for 50 performances. Now he brings a cluster of tennis stars for the first gala of its kind to the place with which Philip Anschutz is synonymous in London: the O2. Except that the O2, for all its importance to the British entertainment business these days, is but a speck in the empire – spanning many industries – built by America’s most private and mysterious tycoon. He’s the man who once reached number six on the Forbes’ rich list, but does not use email or own a mobile; who wears western gear rather than suits and runs unnoticed in local marathons. He settles any legal dispute – and there have been many – with whatever money i