Irma Kurtz (born September 3, 1935)[1] is an American-born UK-based writer and agony aunt.[2] She has worked in that capacity for Cosmopolitan magazine for over 40 years.[3][4][5] She lives in London's King’s Cross.[6]
Early life
Kurtz was born in New Jersey in 1935,[3] and grew up in Jersey City, New Jersey, and spent time in New York City growing up.[7] Her father was a dentist.[7] She has a bachelor's degree in English literature from Columbia University.[3]
Career
Journalism
After university, Kurtz undertook the Study Abroad program traveling to Europe in 1954 as an 18-year-old on the Castel Felice, an episode she recounts in Then Again : Travels in Search of My Younger Self.[8] She returned and worked as a journalist, travelling in Europe and living in Paris, before settling in London.[7] She worked for Nova magazine from its beginning in 1965, and joined Cosmopolitan in the United Kingdom in 1972.[5][7] Kurtz also wrote for the American edition for 10 years.[7]
Kurtz has written three self-help books, two novels and three travel books.[5]
Television
Kurtz was the writer and presenter of Mediterranean Tales, a 10-part series for BBC4.[7]
Bibliography
Grand Dragon (1981)
Loneliness (1983)
Beds of Nails and Roses (1983)
The Great American Bus Ride (1993)
Dear London (1998)
My Life in Agony: Confessions of a Professional Agony Aunt (2014)[9]
Personal life
She has a son, Marc, a television director, who is married with four children.[10]
References
^Randallwrites (2015-06-29). "AGE INSIDE: Irma Kurtz". A History of my Life in 100 Objects. Retrieved 2021-02-21.