Are all of the thirds supposed to be played by the left hand?
As an interesting side note, a number of years ago, while his long time pianist busy recording his own solo project, I filled in as Rahsaan Roland Kirk's pianist for several concerts. Although Roland's style was far closer to John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins than Charlie Parker, Kirk knew many Parker solos and could play them fluently. One day, at a rehersal, he heard me playing "Donna Lee" and when he finished assembling one of his horns, joined me mid-stream. We played on it for awhile and then he started to pick up the tempo, faster and faster. He decided that he wanted to perform Donna Lee that evening and asked me how fast I could play it (the head and all the solos from the most famous recorded version we both happened to know). I told him, "as fast as you'd like to take it".
He started to play it at "Supersax"-like tempo (the 5-piece sax section that blazes all the Parker heads and solos). I couldn't keep up, the problem being that I would have needed a 10 fingered hand to play at the piano, what is possible at the sax, all 5 fingers of BOTH hands more or less FIXED spatially at the keys of the sax. The solo would have required too much lateral motion from one hand on the piano to make it feasible at the tempo Kirk wanted to play it. So I told him to give me about an hour with it, and we'll meet up at his room later on and run it down.
I worked the music out at the piano so that literally, I was using a 10-fingered "hand", same as a sax player does, both hands sharing the duty of playing the line as one unit, sometimes the hands positioned side by side, sometimes hands crossing over (like on a 15 note ascending run), sometimes even one hand offset over the other. Once I worked out the 2 hand fingering, I was ready to duplicate the line and match Kirk's sax line perfectly when we got together later in the day, phrasing intact as well.
We performed it that night as a duet and it smoked.
Sometimes you must resort to unconventionality. Although playable on the sax, it was unplayable at quarter = 230+ on the piano. The solution was a "10-fingered" hand in this case.