By Tina Fey
Tina Fey is a woman with many titles attached to her name: screenwriter, producer, and Golden Globe and Emmy award-winning actress. Now, after the release of her highly anticipated book, Bossypants, New York Times Bestselling Author can be added to that already impressive list. Though many people recognize Fey for her iconic portrayal of former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin on Saturday Night Live, not many people know how she has reached such a level of success in an industry typically dominated by males. Bossypants is billed as a memoir, but it more so a mix of extremely humorous musings and a mostly chronological account of some of Fey’s most significant life experiences.
Born in 1970, Fey grew up in the Philadelphia suburb of Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, where she had her awkward years as a child that included such experiences as being mistaken for a boy in a supermarket due to her bowl haircut. During high school she developed a love for performing and joined a local summer theatre program where she took solace in a new group of friends, all of whom happened to be gay. “Like Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz, I was embraced by the gays. They loved me and praised me. I was so funny and so mean and so mature for my age,” she writes. Fey went on to study drama at the University of Virginia where she says her Greek heritage made her the most ethnic looking girl there. “What 19-year-old Virginia boy doesn’t want a wide-hipped, sarcastic Greek girl with short hair that’s permed on top?” asks Fey, using her signature brand of self-deprecation. “What’s that you say? None of them want that? You are correct. So I spent four years attempting to charm the uninterested.”
Then, in 1992, Fey moved to Chicago where she joined The Second City – a comedy troupe and breeding ground for SNL alums the likes of which include Gilda Radner and Bill Murray. After paying her dues performing around the country at gigs like high school proms, she finally got a job as