Annabelle Gurwitch
Annabelle Gurwitch has been a television and film hostess from the time of Dinner and a Movie, and is also an advocate for secular and environmental concerns. Annabelle Gurwitch a New York Times Bestseller author, actor and critic of her autobiography, Wherever You Go There They Are: I See you Made an Effort. It's Tomato. I say Shutup and Fired. It also appeared in a Showtime Comedy Special. Gurwitch hosts Dinner & a Movie on TBS for many years. Television viewers are likely to be familiar with her appearances on programs such as Better Things Boston Legal Seinfeld Dexter Murphy Brown, and the program on sustainability WA$TED that was broadcast through The Planet Green Network. Her regular TV appearances comprise PBS Newhour Real Time Bill Maher as well as NPR. She also has written op eds, which appear in the New York Times WSJ The Hollywood Reporter and satires for The New Yorker & McSweeneys. As an actress, her performances onstage have earned her a place among the critics of the 'Top Ten performance in The New York Times as well as The Los Angeles Times. Annabelle's wisdom and witty story of aging within our teen-obsessed society is widely shared. This piece has been performed at theatre festivals all over the globe, including the 1992nd St Y Prevention Magazine AARP Women's Nights and Conventions for women's groups across the country. Annabelle talks about the insanity and significance of family, those families that we were born into as well as the tribes we decide to belong to. Annabelle's talk for any audience include: the Now Generation Women's Philanthropy of Phoenix The Skirball Center for the Arts, the Rancho Mirage Writers Conference. Gurwitch speaks about the importance in using memoirs to discover meaning from our pasts and to guide us into our futures. Lectures, talks, and performances are included. George Washington University Watermark Conference for Women literary festivals and performance arts centers. On the PBS News Hour, she offers her perspective on binge-watching versus reading. The viewer can discern which her side of the argument takes.






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