 Thank you, thank you very much. Recognition and gratitude is due to both the cast and I and the audience salute you. It is now time for me to say good night and thank you and on behalf of the cast, President, once upon a time late Al Jolson stood on a stage after a great benefit performance of some of the greatest stars of show business, a benefit that's where the actors perform free. And he sent the unforgettable line, you ain't heard nothing yet. I must tell you that after the way we've been entertained tonight, anyone who would stand on this stage and say that would happen. If that's not the maybe think about getting into show business. I'm sure you'll be able to make it. They all make it seem so easy and of course that's part of the hardest work, what they do. Someone once asked Fred to stare at why Howie was such a marvelous dancer, he said I just put my feet in the air and move them around. But it's a little tougher than that. Everybody here at the scene deserves thanks. These wonderful performers, musicians back there in the orchestra, and in this case the audience too, it was without you and there wouldn't be this support for the fourth theater. It was a hundred years of great tragedy that took place in that box. Then for a hundred years this theater was dark and silent. Now it is open to this field with creative life, performance, art. And I think that the victim of that tragedy, I think he would have preferred it the way it is now. Alive again and filled with what we've seen here tonight. Now all of these stars have performed and you've heard, Angie Marshall has told you about the backstage stars that made this a success and had to be a part of this or wouldn't be here, but for two that I think should come up here and since they're seated with performers that performed in the show tonight, Joey would you bring Howard? Millie would you bring Tiff and come on up here? Tiff, I've been married for more than 40 years now and I've been wanting to ask Millie, Millie could you give me some hints as to how I could make Tiff happy? When I said these people jokingly said going to show business, believe me I would offer the first engagement in the Oval Office to David Copperfield. I've got a few things I'd like to have him make disappear. Middle East, the deficit, all I could go on with quite a little bit. But to all of you and to all of them, for them to be so wonderfully kind, entertain us as we've been entertained here tonight and for all of you to do what you've done. You know I've been told that here in this country of ours we support with voluntary contributions more opera, more symphony, more theater, non-profit theater, more ballet, more things of the creative arts that way that all the rest of the world put together. And when you see what has happened here with this this particular project I believe it. In that tradition we have just formed and they have held their first meeting this last week. Presidential Commission of the Arts and Humanities and the honorary chairman there is Nancy and I assure you she didn't get appointed because of who she knows. But I think it's time now we've come to the end of a very wonderful evening. Americans support things they believe in and you've improved. Oh how you've improved. You support the Ford Theater. And we'll just all of us have to declare in our hearts that when we leave the stage another generation will pick up and this theater will be here as a part of American history open and alive forever.