Annabelle Gurwitch
Annabelle Gurwitch has been a television and film hostess from the time of Dinner and a Movie, and is also an activist on secular and environmental concerns. Annabelle Gurwitch was a critically-acclaimed actor, as well as a New York Times Bestseller Author. She wrote the memoirs You Didn't Say Tomato but I said Shut Up! Showtime Comedy Special. Gurwitch is best known for her long tenure hosting TBS Dinner & a Movie. She also has been featured in shows like Better Things Boston Legal Seinfeld Dexter Murphy Brown. She is a regular guest in PBS Newhour Real Time Bill Maher as well as on NPR. She also writes Op-eds to the New York Times WSJ The Hollywood Reporter. The New York Times has praised her for being a stage actor, and has included it as part of its annual list the critics' Top Ten Actors. Annabelle is a wise woman who shares her insights regarding aging, and also how to laugh at it in a youth-obsessed society. Annabelle has performed her renowned material at theater festivals around the globe, as well as at the 92nd St Y Prevention Magazine AARP Conventions as well as ladies night for women's groups nationwide. Annabelle speaks to the audience about families and their importance. The tribes in which our children grow up, and the ones into which we decide to be. To audiences of any age Annabelle has spoken at her Now Generation Women's Philanthropy of Phoenix GoogleTalks' Skirball Center for the Arts The Rancho Mirage Writers Conference. Gurwitch speaks about how memoir can help us uncover, reclaim and gain meaning in the past. It also provides the direction we need for our lives. Festivals of literature and the performing arts centers are among them. George Washington University Watermark Conference for Women. In the PBS News Hour, she gives her opinion about binge-watching and reading. It is possible to see which her side of the argument takes.






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