Annabelle Gurwitch
Annabelle Gurwitch has been a television and film hostess for the past ten years. She has hosted Dinner and a Movie, as well as an active 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 said Tomato but I said Shut Up! Showtime Comedy Special. Gurwitch is a regular host on TBS Dinner & a Movie. Her unforgettable television shows are Better Things Boston Legal Seinfeld Dexter Murphy Brown in addition to as hosting WA$TED which is a show about sustainability that airs on The Planet Green Network. Her appearances are regularly for PBS Newhour Real Time with Bill Maher and on NPR in addition to writing Op-eds in the New York Times WSJ The Hollywood Reporter and satire pieces for The New Yorker and McSweeeneys. The New York Times has praised her for being a stage actor, and has included it on its annual list of reviewers' top Ten Performances. Annabelle shares her knowledge as well as her hilarious take on the aging process within our society that's so focused on youth. The material has been presented in theatre festivals across the globe, including the The 92nd St Y Prevention Magazine AARP Conventions and Ladies Nights for Women's Clubs across the nation. Annabelle addresses audiences on families and their importance. The tribes that our children grow up, and the ones we choose to fit. She is a speaker for everyone of any age at events like her speaking at the Now Generation Women's Philanthropy of Phoenix GoogleTalks, the Skirball for the Arts the Rancho Mirage Writers Conference. Gurwitch talks about the power memoir can help us reclaim our past, reclaim its purpose and offer an orientation for the future. Literature festivals and performing arts centers are among them. George Washington University Watermark Conference for Women. Check out the PBS News Hour opinion piece on reading books or binge watching. Find out which side she is on.






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