Annabelle Gurwitch
Annabelle Gurwitch was an American actress, comedian and television host. Her most famous work is her character as hostess on Dinner and a Movie (TBS) as well as an environmentalist who is associated with secular humanism and environmental concerns. Annabelle Gurwitch, a New York Times bestseller and critically acclaimed actress is the New York Times's Bestselling Author for her memoirs: In the Place You Are Then I'm Sure That You Did An Effort Said Tomato You say I'm fired, and you say Shut Up and Fired. The show also featured the Showtime Comedy Special. Gurwitch was the host of Dinner & a Movie on TBS throughout the years. TV viewers may be familiar with her appearances on programs like Better Things Boston Legal Seinfeld Dexter Murphy Brown as well as the sustainability program WA$TED which was broadcast through The Planet Green Network. Regular TV appearances are on 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 satires as well for The New Yorker & McSweeneys. The work she does as an actor on stage has earned her place in the annual critics Best Ten Best Performances of the Year in the both The New York and Los Angeles Times. Annabelle offers wisdom as well as a hilarious review of ageing in our youth obsessed culture. She's presented this material in front of audiences across the globe, including the 92nd St Y Prevention Magazine, AARP and Women's Nights. Annabelle will speak about how families matter and how crazy. She'll discuss the tribes and families are yours to choose. Talks for audiences of all ages include the following venues: Now Generation Women's Philanthropy of Phoenix GOOGLE Talks, The Skirball Center for the Arts and the Rancho Mirage Writers Conference. Gurwitch employs memoirs as a means to reclaim the significance of the past, and to set us on a path for our future. Literature festivals and performing arts centers are among them. George Washington University Watermark Conference for Women. In the PBS News Hour, she gives her opinion on binge-watching versus reading. The viewer can discern which her side of the argument is on.






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