Bits that Kill: the Rise and Fall of Jewish Comedy
Adam Gopnik
APRIL 22, 2007 1:00 PM
FREUD PLAYHOUSE, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES
"The first time I had a sense of Jewishness as a desirable state," writes Adam Gopnik, "was when I was thirteen and, turned on to the idea of New York, saw that it was made up of Jewish comedians; of jokes." Gopnik talks about growing up in the golden age of Jewish comedyHenny Youngman, Myron Cohen, the young Woody Allenand how that comedy lost its zing even as performers like Paul Reiser and Jerry Seinfeld rose to stardom.

ADAM GOPNIK is a writer for
The New Yorker and editor of the collection
Americans in Paris. He is author of the bestselling memoir
Paris to the Moon and
The King in the Window, a fantasy novel for young people. Gopnik has written for
The New Yorker since 1986, and his work for the magazine has won both the National Magazine Award for Essay and the George Polk Award for Magazine Reporting. His most recent book is
Through the Children's Gate.