Annabelle Gurwitch
Annabelle Gurwitch has been a hostess on television and films for the past ten years. She has hosted Dinner and a Movie, as well as an active activist on secular and environmental questions. Annabelle Gurwitch was a critically-acclaimed actress and New York Times Bestseller Author. Her memoirs were published. You said Tomato but I said Shut Up! The comedy show on TBS was also produced by Annabelle Gurwitch. Gurwitch was the longest-running host of the TBS show Dinner & a Movie and television viewers remember her memorable appearances on various shows, including Better Things Boston Legal Seinfeld Dexter Murphy Brown as well as hosts of the sustainability series WA$TED, which aired on The Planet Green Network. She has regular appearances in PBS Newhour Real Time, on NPR and in The Hollywood Reporter. In addition to writing op eds she also produces satires, which are published in The New Yorker WSJ The Hollywood Reporter. As an actress, her performances onstage have earned her a place among the critics of the 'Top Ten performances for the year in The New York Times as in The Los Angeles Times. Annabelle shares wisdom and her humorous review of ageing in our youth obsessed culture. Annabelle has performed her highly acclaimed work in theater festivals worldwide and in the 1992 St Y Prevention Magazine AARP conferences and women groups across the United States. Annabelle speaks about the significance as well as the absurdity of our families, both the ones which we were raised in and the ones we join. She is a speaker for all ages at venues like The Now Generation Women's Philanthropy of Phoenix GoogleTalks, the Skirball for the Arts the Rancho Mirage Writers Conference. Gurwitch makes use of memoirs to bring meaning back to our history and put the stage for our future. Professor Gurwitch has delivered talks and lectures on her lecture series at the George Washington University Watermark Conference for Women and the performing arts centres and literary festivals. On PBS News Hour, she offers her perspective of binge-watching or reading. The viewer can discern which the other side she chooses to take.






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