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Bill Maher to Perform at BEA Book Industry Foundation Benefit
March 03, 2005
Comedian
and author Bill Maher will perform for an audience of booksellers and other
book industry professionals at this year's BookExpo America Book Industry Foundation
Benefit. The exclusive, "closed" appearance on Saturday, June 4, at
New York City's The Town Hall will benefit the American Booksellers Foundation for
Free Expression (ABFFE) and the Association of American Publishers Get Caught
Reading Campaign.
Maher last performed in New York City on December 3 before a sold-out audience
at Carnegie Hall. He will be at BEA to promote his new book, New Rules,
which will be published by Rodale in the fall. New Rules is based
on segments from Maher's television show, Real Time, on HBO.
ABFFE President Chris Finan told BTW, "We are delighted that Bill
Maher has agreed to help raise funds for ABFFE. He's a comedian who makes robust
use of his First Amendment rights, and he will be appearing in a theater that
is a civil liberties landmark as well as an architectural gem."
"No person, party, phenomenon, or institution is immune from Bill's signature
combination of intelligence and incisiveness," said Leigh Haber, Maher's editor
at Rodale, in a press statement. "I'm confident that the audience of booksellers
at BEA will appreciate his frank remarks and will delight in his candid humor."
Maher joins a list of notable celebrities, including George Carlin, Ellen DeGeneres,
and Wynton Marsalis, who have performed at past BEA Book Industry Foundation
benefits.
Tickets for the performance may be purchased in advance via the BEA registration
form or at the trade show, which will be held from June 2 - 5 at the Jacob Javits
Convention Center. Subject to availability, tickets may be purchased at The
Town Hall the evening of the performance. Open to BEA badged participants and
their guests. Tickets are $25 for one ticket, $45 for two, and $100 for five.
The Town Hall, which was designed by the famous architectural firm of McKim,
Mead, and White, has long been a New York City cultural landmark. An appropriate
setting for a free expression and literacy fundraiser, it was built in 1921
by suffragettes as a forum for their views. It was the site of birth control
advocate Margaret Sanger's arrest later that year, and, in 1927, protesters
used Town Hall to mark the second anniversary of the execution of the anarchists
Sacco and Vanzetti after they had been denied use of Boston's Fanueil Hall.
Singer Marian Anderson, who had been denied use of other concert halls because
she was African American, made her New York debut there in 1935. More recently,
in addition to being the venue for music and dance performances from modern
to classical, it was where the Folksmen made their comeback in Christopher Guest's
2003 film, A Mighty Wind.
For more about BEA and ABA educational programming, special events, and hotel
accommodations, go to www.bookweb.org/aba/convention/.
Topics: People, News - Bookselling, BookExpo, Free Expression,
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