
“Who is your favorite humor writer of the 20th century?”
Your mind goes blank. Humor? You remember humor. You may, if you’re lucky, blurt out Dorothy Parker and J. S. Perelman. They were famous, and they wrote for The New Yorker.
But, honestly, are they your favorites? Well, no. I am a great aficionado of women’s humor columns, the kind published in the Ladies’ Home Journal and the Saturday Evening Post in the 20th century.
My favorite is Jean Kerr (1922-2003), a playwright, humorist, and the wife of Walter Kerr the drama critic. She was, and is, one of the wittiest American humor writers.
First, let me say I am a great fan of the film version of Kerr’s play, Mary, Mary.
And I am mad about her humor books. I recommend How I Got to Be Perfect, a collection of essays, most from her previous books, Please Don’t Eat the Daisies, The Snake Has All the Lines, and Penny Candy.


In the introduction to How to Be Perfect, Kerr reflects wittily on reading and writing.
“As a matter of fact, I will read anything rather than work. And I don’t mean interesting things like the yellow section … The truth is that, rather than put a word on paper, I will spend a whole half hour reading the label on a milk of magnesia bottle.”
I was fascinated to learn that she does “about half” of her writing in the car, where there is nothing to read except Chevrolet manuals.
I have tried writing on mass transit, to no avail. I tried to write an essay on a train once, but there was no room to spread out the necessary books. I have, however, read widely on planes. Recommendations: E. M. Forster’s A Room with a View or Gerald Heard’s mystery, A Taste for Honey.
Reading in public is possible, though not without its hair-raising moments. On a recent bike ride, I carried three books in my panniers, because I might require three reading choices when I sat down to take a break. And then suddenly a woman yelled repeatedly at me, “Stop, stop! There’s an eagle.”
I am not interested in eagles. I saw one once. It was enough.
When I stopped reluctantly, she put her hand firmly on my arm and attempted to pull me off my bike. Something was off: no stranger has ever gripped my arm before – and then there was the undeniable fact that there was no eagle. I left, despite her repeated orders: “Turn around. Here, here.” I biked away.. Captain Nemo suggested she was after my billfold.
Anyway, it was a forgettable, if unpleasant, incident. I took refuge in Kerr’s humor columns, as I often do, because nothing is ever too awful in her world. and if it is, she makes fun of it.
I laughed aloud over “Mirror, Mirror, on the Wall, I Don’t Want to Hear a Word from You,” in which she wittily recounts her husband’s skepticism about beauty products.
“He is always trying to explain to me that dermatologists have proven that lard, or even bacon drippings, will do just as much or just as little to lubricate the human skin as any cosmetic invented…. When I consider the dreadful samples of lumbering humor I am subjected to when I apply the merest dab of Formula 22 (“Oh, you’re coming to bed? With all that grease, I thought you were getting ready to swim the Channel”) I can’t bring myself even to contemplate the low-comedy scenes we’d have if I came to bed covered with bacon fat.”
I’d love to live in Jean Kerr’s world. She turns disappointments and irritations into funny, charming episodes. There’s nothing quite comparable to Jean Kerr’s columns today. There’s plenty of humor, but this is a different time.















