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The Central New York
Affiliate
of the
Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation
cordially invites you to attend the
Fifteenth Annual Luncheon
Friday,
October 7, 2005
Registration and Book Signing 11:00 am
Luncheon - Noon
Keynote Speaker:
Marcia Wallace
"Don't Look Back, We're Not Going That Way"
Breast Cancer Survivor, Actress and Comedian
Best known as "Carol" from the Bob Newhart Show
Wyndham
Syracuse 6301 Route 298
East
Syracuse, NY
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About Marcia
Wallace
Marcia Wallace has been
making people laugh on television for thirty years and while her
career includes the long running role as ‘Carol' the
receptionist on The Bob Newhart Show and an Emmy winning role as
Ms. Krabappel on The Simpsons –
4
of TV Guide's funniest episodes in television history have
featured Marcia – her greatest success has been weathering her
own stormy life. Note the title, please! This is a life lived
out to the edges, dominated by a powerful life force and her big
personality.
She's
been through it all, can share her turbulent life and make us
laugh and cry with her along the way. She's a likely successor
to the late Erma Bombeck, a down-to-earth wit who can use the
stuff of her own experiences to reach American women and become
a fixture in their homes. Erma did just that, selling millions
of books, writing 4,500 newspaper columns and Marcia Wallace has
that same voice. She's another great dame with an eye and ear
for our common experience.
Marcia was met
with some formidable challenges at birth. She was born to an
unloving mother, an abusive father and not pretty or popular in
the Midwest of the 50's. But she was gifted with talent,
tenacity and a big heart. And, most importantly, an almost
congenital inability to feel sorry for herself. She tells her
story – a story with more than its fair share of sadness – with
acceptance and humor. She's learned a lot and learned it the
hard way and her story has a meaning for all women but
‘Girlfriends of a Certain Age' will feel especially inspired by
Marcia's lack of self-pity and resilience.
The early
chapters of the book paint a colorful portrait of growing up in
small town Iowa in the 1950's, being the fat and brainy
offspring of two alcoholic parents. She suffered physical abuse
from her father, mental abuse from her mother and even sexual
abuse at the hands of a local Dairy Queen employee. Yet, and
this is one of Marcia's greatest gifts, she manages to forgive
them all and find the humanity in the less than commendable
adults that peopled her childhood. She turns tragedy into
comedy without a drop of sappiness … she's an optimist with an
edge. Her story continues to New York where her drive and talent
lead from improvisational theatre to the Merv Griffin Show to
discovery by CBS legend Bill Paley who cast her (sans audition)
in the role of ‘Carol' on the Bob Newhart Show. With a
succession of creepy boyfriends and a stint in a mental
hospital, which Marcia refers to as ‘the bin'. After ‘the bin'
came crazy psychiatrists, loopy sex therapists and more creepy
boyfriends. She recovered thanks to psychotherapy, friends, and
her spiritual journey leads to redemption in her adopted
religion, Buddhism. At the age of 43, Marcia finally meets the
love of her life and to her astonishment, he loves her back. On
the eve of her wedding, in yet another perverse twist in her
life, she is diagnosed with breast cancer and goes on to be a
“blushing Buddhist bride”. When she and her husband, Denny,
fail to get pregnant, they go on the dramatic pilgrimage of love
called adoption and end up in the delivery room coaching the
birth mother. Finally: Marcia, happy at last. However, when
their child is 5, Denny is diagnosed with pancreatic cancer,
suffers for 8 months and dies. The latter part of her tale deals
with grieving, getting out of debt, menopause, single
motherhood, widowhood and all at the same time!
Marcia starts to put her new life together only
to be sidetracked by a fire that destroys her home. There's
also a walk on the underbelly of show biz – dinner theater
(“opening night roses came out of my first paycheck”) and films
including an opus called “Space Sluts in the Slammer”. But she
hangs in there and at 50, a widow and a single mom in menopause,
Marcia wins an Emmy for her tender and hilarious portrayal of
Bart Simpson's 4th grade teacher, Mrs. Krabappel. More
importantly, she becomes a national spokesperson for breast
cancer awareness, going on the road to tell her story of
survival and hope.
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