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Jean Kerr
Born Bridget Jean Collins
July 10, 1922(1922-07-10)
Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA
Died January 5, 2003 (aged 80)
White Plains, New York, USA
Occupation Author
Playwright
Nationality American
Notable award(s) Tony Award (1961, for King of Hearts)
Spouse(s) Walter Kerr

Jean Kerr (July 10, 1922[1] – January 5, 2003) was an American author and playwright born in Scranton, Pennsylvania and best known for her humorous bestseller, Please Don't Eat the Daisies, and the plays King of Hearts and Mary, Mary. She was married to drama critic Walter Kerr and was the mother of six children. She died of pneumonia in 2003.

Contents

Personal life

Born Bridget Jean Collins in Scranton, Pennsylvania to Tom and Kitty Collins, Kerr grew up on Electric Street in Scranton, and attended Marywood Seminary, the topic of her humorous short story "When I was Queen of the May." She received a Bachelor's Degree from Marywood College in Scranton and later attended The Catholic University of America, where she received her Masters' Degree and met then-professor Walter Kerr. She later married Kerr, who went on to become a well-known New York drama critic, and they had six children—Christopher, twins Colin and John, Gilbert, Gregory, and Kitty. The Kerrs bought a home in New Rochelle, New York, where Jean wrote 'King of Hearts'.[2] She died in White Plains, New York, of pneumonia.

Career

With her husband, Kerr wrote Goldilocks (1958), a short-lived Broadway musical comedy about the early days of silent film. She wrote several highly successful plays, including the Tony Award-winning King of Hearts, as well as the comedy Mary, Mary, which ran for over 1,500 performances and, for a time, held the record for the longest-running non-musical play on Broadway.

She also wrote many humorous magazine essays, typically about her family. Several collections of these were later made in book form and became best-sellers. Her best-known book was Please Don't Eat the Daisies (1957), a humorous look at suburban life. The book was a national bestseller, later adapted for the screen as a vehicle for Doris Day and David Niven, and subsequently made into a sitcom.

Books

Plays

Notes

  1. ^ Some sources cite 1923, but the Social Security Death Index gives her date of birth as 1922.
  2. ^ The Theater: New Play in Manhattan, April 12, 1954

External links


Quotes

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From Wikiquote

Jean Kerr (1922-07-102003-01-05) was an American author and playwright.

Unsourced

  • Children are different — mentally, physically, spiritually, quantitatively, qualitatively; and furthermore, they're all a bit nuts.
  • Hope is the feeling you have that the feeling you have isn't permanent.
  • If you can keep your head when all about are losing theirs, it's just possible that you haven't grasped the situation.
  • I'm tired of all this nonsense about beauty being only skin-deep. That's deep enough. What do you want—an adorable pancreas?
  • Movie actors are just ordinary mixed-up people — with agents.
  • When the grandmothers of today hear the word Chippendales, they don't necessarily think of chairs.

External links

Wikipedia
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