In 1996, McGarr was appointed by President Bill Clinton to the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts's Board of Trustees for a six-year term.[9] During that time, McGarr helped create the inaugural Mark Twain Prize ceremony in 1998 honoring Richard Pryor.[10] McGarr then served as an executive producer on subsequent Mark Twain Prize ceremonies, extending after his term on the Kennedy Center board was complete.[11]
For his work on the Kennedy Center Mark Twain Prize ceremony honoring George Carlin, McGarr received an Emmy Award nomination in 2009 in the category of Outstanding Special Class Programs.[13] He was also nominated for a 2010 NAACP Image Award in the Outstanding Variety category for the 2009 Mark Twain Prize.[14]
President Barack Obama re-appointed McGarr to the Kennedy Center board in 2011, making McGarr one of only two people at the time to receive that appointment from multiple presidents.[15]
In 2021, McGarr published a memoir about his life and the founding of the Mark Twain Prize titled The Man Who Made Mark Twain Famous: Stories from the Kennedy Center, the White House, and Other Comedy Venues.[20]
Personal life
McGarr married Janie Strauss in 1978, and they live together in Dallas, Texas.[21] They have two children, Elizabeth McGarr McCue and Kathryn McGarr, as well as two grandchildren.[22]
Works
A Texas-Size Health Care Failure (The New York Times, 2009)[23]
^Wilonsky, Robert (October 12, 2007). "Get to Know Cappy McGarr!". Dallas Observer. Archived from the original on 2020-09-27. Retrieved September 8, 2001.