Join the Center for Accessibility for an in-person screening and discussion of this groundbreaking documentary with Liz Carr and other panelists:
Friday, September 20, 10:30am – 2:00pm, Registration
Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library – Central Library,
901 G Street NW, WASHINGTON, D.C.
Start the morning with a screening of the acclaimed 2024 BBC Documentary Better Off Dead?, followed by a panel discussion with English actress and international disability rights activist Liz Carr. Refreshments will be served after the discussion.
Film running time: 58 minutes
NOTE: Registration is strongly recommended.
*Accessibility notes: ASL interpretation will be provided throughout the event. Open captions will display on screen for the film. CART will be provided for the panel discussion.
For any other reasonable accommodations, please include details in the registration form, or contact the Center for Accessibility at DCPLaccess@dc.gov or 202-727-2142.
This program is presented with support from the Patients Rights Action Fund, National Council on Independent Living, Not Dead Yet, United Spinal Association, and the American Association of People with Disabilities.
About Liz:
Liz Carr is an English actress and international disability rights activist who lives in London, England with her wife Jo and her 19 year old cat, Ella Fitzgerald. A lead actor in the BBC’s flagship forensic drama Silent Witness for 8 seasons, Liz is also known for the regular characters she portrays in the Prime Video series Good Omens, Netflix’s The Witcher,and the Marvel series Loki. She can be seen alongside Mark Wahlberg in Infinite, the Paramount thriller by the renowned director Antoine Fuqua. On stage, in 2022 Liz won an Olivier award (The UK equivalent of the Tony awards) for her performance in critically acclaimed, The Normal Heart at the National Theatre.
In May 2024, Liz authored a highly anticipated BBC documentary, Better Off Dead? exploring why she and many other disabled people oppose legalising assisted suicide and euthanasia. She is not religious but instead, her objections are based on a disability rights and social justice perspective, a perspective that Liz and others believe has been ignored by the media. Until now.
This documentary is the culmination of over 15 years of activism; in 2012 Liz visited all the countries where assisted suicide was then legal for a two part BBC World Service radio documentary called, When Assisted Death is Legal. She wrote and performed in the sold out show, Assisted Suicide: The Musical and she has spoken on this subject on radio, in TV debates and at events all over the world. Better Off Dead? has already been nominated for a prestigious UK documentary award, a ‘Grierson,’ for best science documentary.