Jean kerr

Years ago when a man began to notice that if he stood up on the subway he was immediately replaced by two people, he figured he was getting too fat.

A lawyer is never entirely comfortable with a friendly divorce, anymore than a good mortician wants to finish his job and then have the patient sit up on the table.

Real men don't do pickup lines just to sweep off every girls' feet. They do and trust their own instincts knowing what the girls' wants and needs. Vying to win their hearts.

If you have formed the habit of checking on every new diet that comes along, you will find that, mercifully, they all blur together, leaving you with only one definite piece of information: french-fried potatoes are out.

I make mistakes; I'll be the second to admit it.

I will read anything rather than work.

In the beginning, we made the usual mistake of looking at houses we could afford. I am working on a proposition, hereafter to be known as Kerr's law, which states in essence: All the houses you can afford to buy are depressing.

Movie actors are just ordinary, mixed-up people - with agents.

People only call you 'my dear' when they are irritated with you.

You don't seem to realize that a poor person who is unhappy is in a better position than a rich person who is unhappy. Because the poor person has hope. He thinks money would help.

I think success has no rules, but you can learn a great deal from failure.

Man is the only animal that learns by being hypocritical. He pretends to be polite and then, eventually, he becomes polite.

I once truly believed that if I had to stand in line for twenty minutes to have a package gift-wrapped it actually gave the recipient more pleasure.

The average, healthy, well-adjusted adult gets up at seven-thirty in the morning feeling just plain terrible.

Don't be silly. I'm a mature, intelligent woman. Of course I'm afraid of my mother.

When the grandmothers of today hear the word 'Chippendales,' they don't necessarily think of chairs.

Being divorced is like being hit by a Mack truck. If you live through it, you start looking very carefully to the right and to the left.

An actor can remember his briefest notice well into senescence and long after he has forgotten his phone number and where he lives.

I thought we talked things out!' 'Yes, and you listened very carefully to every word you had to say.

It has been explained to me that toys are packaged in shards, to be assembled by the middle-aged and butter-fingered, because this makes it easier for the shippers. ... If they had to spend hours and hours putting handlebars onto bicycles ... they would repent their ways and deliver something that looked like a rocking horse and not like the result of a small street accident.

Even though a number of people have tried, no one has yet found a way to drink for a living.

Now the thing about having a baby - and I can't be the first person to have noticed this - is that thereafter you have it.

If you can keep your head when all about you are losing theirs, it's just possible you haven't grasped the situation.

Being on a ship is something like being pregnant. You can sit there and do absolutely nothing but stare at the water and have the nicest sense that you are accomplishing something.

I know all about improvisation and the free-form that mirrors the chaos of our time, but I do like to feel that the playwright has done some work before I got there.

... it's impossible to register any emotion without using some muscle which, in time, will produce a wrinkle. ... By the time she is thirty, a starlet has been carefully taught to smile like a dead halibut. The eyes widen, the mouth drops open, but the eye muscles are never involved.

I don't grasp things this early in the day. I mean, I hear voices, all right, but I can't pick out the verbs.

I have noticed that in plays where the characters on stage laugh a great deal, the people out front laugh very little.

The only reason that they say, 'Women and children first' is to test the strength of the lifeboats.

While in some quarters it is felt that the critic is just a necessary evil, most serious-minded, decent, talented theater people agree that the critic is an unnecessary evil.

Oh, wouldn't it be wonderful if some manufacturer would make a toy as tough, as staunch, as hard to crack open as the carton it comes in!

It takes at least one to make a marriage.

One of the most difficult things to contend with in a hospital is that assumption on the part of the staff that because you have lost your gall bladder you have also lost your mind.

To me having a party is something like having a baby. The fact that you got through the last one alive is not somehow sufficiently reassuring now.

I'm not so sure it's so civilized to be civilized all the time.

Women speak because they wish to speak, whereas a man speaks only when driven to speak by something outside himself like, for instance, he can't find any clean socks.

If you can keep your head when all about are losing theirs, it's just possible that you haven't grasped the situation.

Some people have such a talent for making the best of a bad situation that they go around creating bad situations so they can make the best of them.

You can't sleep until noon with the proper elan unless you have some legitimate reason for staying up until three (parties don't count).

Confronted by an absolutely infuriating review, it is sometimes helpful for the victim to do a little personal research on the critic. Is there any truth to the rumor that he had no formal education beyond the age of eleven? In any event, is he able to construct a simple English sentence? Do his participles dangle? When moved to lyricism, does he write "I had a fun time"? Was he ever arrested for burglary? I don't know that you will prove anything this way, but it is perfectly harmless and quite soothing.

Do you know how helpless you feel if you have a full cup of coffee in your hand and you start to sneeze?

I don't want to see the uncut version of anything.

Marrying a man is like buying something you've been admiring for a long time in a shop window. You may love it when you get it home, but it doesn't always go with everything else in the house.

Children are different - mentally, physically, spiritually, quantitatively, qualitatively; and furthermore, they're all a little bit nuts.

The real menace in dealing with a five-year-old is that in no time at all you begin to sound like a five-year-old.

Dearer to me than the evening star A Packard car A Hershey bar Or a bride in her rich adorning Dearer than any of these by far Is to lie in bed in the morning

I'm tired of all this nonsense about beauty being skin deep. That's deep enough. What do you want, an adorable pancreas?

Some enterprising youth should go from door to door on Christmas morning peddling batteries.

I think if you can write a play, or produce a play, the first step toward success [is] if people don't want to kill themselves in the lobby. Now there must be four or five other steps, but that's the first.

I know what I wish Ralph Nader would investigate next. Marriage. It's not safe, it's not safe at all.

I feel about airplanes the way I feel about diets. It seems to me that they are wonderful things for other people to go on.

There is this to be said about having money. You get rejected by a higher class of people.

I was always the last woman on the last down elevator as the store was closing.

Author details

Jean Kerr: Biography and Life Work

Jean Kerr was a notable Author. The story of Jean Kerr began on July 10, 1922 in Scranton, Pennsylvania, U.S.. The legacy of Jean Kerr continues today, following their passing on January 5, 2003 in White Plains, New York, U.S..

Jean Kerr (born Bridget Jean Collins ; July 10, 1922 – January 5, 2003) was an American author and playwright who authored the 1957 bestseller Please Don't Eat the Daisies and the plays King of Hearts in 1954 and Mary, Mary in 1961.

Legacy and Personal Influence

Personally, Jean Kerr was married to Walter Kerr.

Philosophical Views and Reflections

She wrote sketches for John Murray Anderson 's Almanac . Her book Please Don't Eat the Daisies was a big success, and it was made into a feature film in 1960 . NBC also produced a 58-episode situation comedy starring Pat Crowley from 1965 to 1967, based on the book She then wrote The Snake Has All the Lines in 1960.

The Kerrs bought a house in New Rochelle, New York , and later settled in Larchmont, New York in 1955. Their house in Larchmont was frequently characterized in her writings; it featured a two-story fireplace, turrets, a medieval courtyard, and a 32-bell carillon which played the duet from the opera Carmen at noon every day. The house was previously owned by Charles King , who test drove Henry Ford 's first car.

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