An Evening with Fran Lebowitz

An Evening with Fran Lebowitz Comedy

Hunter Center

“Success didn’t spoil me, I’ve always been insufferable.” – Fran Leibowitz

In a cultural landscape filled with endless pundits and talking heads, Fran Lebowitz stands out as one of our most insightful social commentators. This evening with the forthright, irascible, and unapologetically opinionated author, actor, and social commenter brings her sardonic wit to the Hunter Center stage.

Lebowitz’s essays and interviews offer her acerbic views on current events and the media – as well as pet peeves including tourists, baggage-claim areas, aftershave lotion, adults who roller-skate, children who speak French, or anyone who is unduly tan. The New York Times Book Review calls Lebowitz an “important humorist in the classic tradition.” Purveyor of urban cool, Lebowitz is a cultural satirist whom many call the heir to Dorothy Parker.

About the Artist:
By turns ironic, facetious, deadpan, sarcastic, wry, wisecracking, and waggish, Lebowitz’s prose is wickedly entertaining. Her two books are collected in The Fran Lebowitz Reader, with a new preface by the author. Lebowitz is also the author of the children’s book, Mr. Chas and Lisa Sue Meet the Pandas.

Lebowitz can be seen in various documentary films including Mapplethorpe: Look at the Pictures (2016), Regarding Susan Sontag (2014), and Superstar: The Life and Times of Andy Warhol (1990), among others. In 2010, Martin Scorsese directed a documentary about Lebowitz for HBO titled Public Speaking. A limited documentary series, Pretend It’s a City, also directed by Martin Scorsese, premiered on Netflix in 2021, and was nominated for the 2021 Emmys in the Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series category. In 2021 she was awarded the Satira di Forte dei Marmi Lifetime Achievement Award and was a 2021 Foreign Press Honorary Awardee – an award given by the Foreign Press Correspondents Association & Club USA.

Lebowitz was named to Vanity Fair’s International Best Dressed List Hall of Fame in 2008. She remains a style icon. She lives in New York City, as she does not believe that she would be allowed to live anywhere else.

Photo: © Bridgette Lacombe