Stevie Wonder to Accept Award at AAPD Gala

Music Legend Stevie Wonder to Accept Award at AAPD Gala



Singer, Musician, Composer, Songwriter and recently appointed UN Messenger of Peace to be presented with first ever Image Award

WASHINGTON, Feb. 22
/PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The American Association of People with
Disabilities (AAPD), the country’s largest cross-disability membership
organization, is honored to announce music legend Stevie Wonder will be the first recipient of the AAPD Image Award.

Wonder will be presented with the award at the 2010 AAPD Leadership Gala on March 10 at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center in Washington, DC.
This is the first time the organization has honored an entertainer
whose personal example helps to improve the way people with
disabilities are perceived by society.

Stevie Wonder is a global leader who has used his extraordinary talents to be an ambassador for civil rights and social justice,” said Andrew J. Imparato, President and CEO of AAPD. “We’re thrilled to be able to recognize his achievements with this inaugural award.”  

Wonder,
who has been blind since infancy, has helped define the sound of
R&B and Pop music. A 25 time Grammy Award winner as well as the
recipient of an Academy Award, Wonder is a member of the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame. His advocacy work is
well known ranging from the anti-apartheid movement to work in the
disability community. Most recently, he was chosen as the United
Nations Messenger of Peace on International Day of Persons with
Disabilities in 2009.

Wonder’s
catalogue of classic hits from such albums as “Innervisions,”
“Fulfillingness’ First Finale,” “Songs In The Key Of Life,” etc.,
include “Uptight (Everything’s All Right),” “For Once In My Life,”
“Signed, Sealed, Delivered, I’m Yours,” “You Are The Sunshine Of My
Life,” “I Just Called To Say I Love You,” and the rallying song, “Happy
Birthday,” that helped make Martin Luther King Day
a national holiday. In 2008 Wonder received the Library of Congress
Gershwin Prize for Popular Song and in 2009 performed his Library of
Congress musical commission, “Sketches Of A Life.”

In addition to the presentation of the AAPD Image Award at the event, Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-MD) will be presented with the Spirit of the ADA award, emerging disability rights leaders Don Dew and Lawrence Carter-Long will be presented with AAPD’s 2010 Paul G. Hearne Award and AAPD board member Ted Kennedy, Jr. will present Connie Garner, longtime Policy Advisor to his father, the late Sen. Ted Kennedy, with a Justice for All Award for 15 years of service to Senator Kennedy and the disability community in the U.S. Senate.

Fashion designer Betsey Johnson, who lent her unique design to the event logo and décor, will also be on hand to support the organization at the event.

For additional information about the event, visit the AAPD Web site: www.AAPD.com

The
American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD), the country’s
largest cross-disability membership organization, organizes the
disability community to be a powerful voice for change – politically,
economically, and socially.  AAPD was founded in 1995 to help unite the
diverse community of people with disabilities, including their family,
friends and supporters, and to be a national voice for change in
implementing the goals of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). To
learn more, visit the AAPD Web site:  
www.aapd.com

American Association of People With Disabilities