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Morgan James And More Broadway Stars Set For The Bridge Benefit Concert

By: Mar. 04, 2011
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Morgan James (The Addams Family, Wonderland) will join a slate of outstanding artists from the worlds of Broadway, television, film and other mediums for "The Bridge: Where Hope and Respect Come Together," a benefit concert celebrating the work of the Crime Victims Treatment Center starting at 8:00pm on Monday, April 11, 2011 at New World Stages (340 West 50th Street between 8th and 9th Avenues). Performers and volunteers for this amazing evening will come together to ensure that the Crime Victims Treatment Center (CVTC)-located at St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center-can continue its groundbreaking work empowering survivors of violent crimes including sexual assault, childhood sexual abuse and domestic violence. The event was conceived of and organized by former clients of CVTC who were moved to give back to the program that helped them heal.


Broadway Cares / Equity Fights AIDS -one of the nation's leading industry-based, nonprofit AIDS fundraising and grant-making organizations-will co-sponsor the event along with New World Stages and private philanthropists Angela Myers and Lawrence Stock.

"This concert embodies the power of healing; people who were hurt and came to CVTC for services are now creating this event," said Susan Xenarios, director of the Crime Victims Treatment Center at St. Luke's and Roosevelt Hospitals. "It is a true testament to resilience and personal strength."

Wayne Barker (Dame Edna: Back with a Vengeance; After the Night and Music) will serve as musical director for the evening. In addition to James, confirmed performers include Antuan Raimone (In the Heights), Christopher Jackson (In the Heights, The Lion King), Kevin Massey (Tarzan, Memphis) and Mykal Kilgore (Freckleface Strawberry, Hair). Other notable members of the program confirmed for the evening include April Hernandez (Freedom Writers, Dexter) and acclaimed social photographer Donna Ferrato.

Violent crime affects millions of Americans throughout the course of their lifetimes. One in six women in the U.S. has been or will be a victim of sexual assault; seven percent of men in the U.S. are sexually assaulted in their lifetime and up to 10 million children witness some form of domestic violence annually. Established in 1977, the Crime Victims Treatment Center of St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital is now the largest and most comprehensive hospital-based victim assistance program in New York State. CVTC has provided a model for other health care institutions in the United States and around the world in the respectful treatment of survivors of family and intimate partner violence, sexual assault, childhood sexual abuse, and other forms of violence and crime. In 2010, CVTC provided 5,876 individual therapy sessions to 933 survivors; the program is hopeful that donations from this benefit will allow them to expand these numbers to offer services to an even greater number of survivors in need.

Ticket prices are $75 and $150 and all proceeds for "The Bridge: Where Hope and Respect Come Together" will benefit CVTC. Members of the public can purchase tickets or, if unable to attend but still wishing to contribute, make an electronic donation by visiting the event's website at www.thebridge-cvtc.org.

About the Crime Victims Treatment Center

The Crime Victims Treatment Center (CVTC) of St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center began as a small, grassroots program and has grown into New York State's largest and most comprehensive hospital- based victim treatment center. CVTC has a long and proud history of developing innovative programs, many of which have since been replicated by most or all of the victims treatment programs in New York City. At a time when hospitals did not have standards of care for sexual assault, CVTC pioneered the development of treatment protocols for survivors, evidence collection systems and after-care support services. At a time when Volunteer Rape Crisis Counselors were looked upon with suspicion, CVTC ensured that trained Volunteer Advocates became an integral part of the treatment of rape survivors in the emergency room. CVTC was the first program in New York City to address male sexual assault by recruiting and training male rape crisis advocates, and St. Luke's-Roosevelt was one of the first hospitals in the city to implement a Sexual Assault Forensic Examiner Program, providing trained nurses and doctors to deliver expert care to survivors of rape. Crime Victims Treatment Center staff provides crisis counseling, advocacy and individual and group therapy to survivors of all forms of violent crime free of charge.







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