Tina Fey started as a writer and performer with an eternal bad hair day in Chicago improv. She then retreated backstage at S.N.L., and gained weight writing jokes and eating junk food. She worked with Tina Fey husband, the musician-director Jeff Richmond, and fell in love with him quickly, soon after an afternoon spent together at a museum. The two dated for seven years before getting hitched.

With a flick of her wand, she then she lost 30 pounds, fixed her hair, and put on a pair of glasses. Her first movie was "Mean Girls," and her first own show, "30 Rock." Her name then exploded imitating another hottie-in-glasses, Sarah Palin, the charming but unprepared Alaska governor, who bounded out of the woods to become the first Republican woman to run on a national ticket while doubling as God's gift to comedy and journalism. Thus, Tina Fey husband quickly became the envy of all gentlemen who read with their lips closed.

Their marriage is boring, but in a good way. Of course, Tina Fey husband has come to accept that his wife is a rules girl. She doesn't like assertions of status, nor does she tolerate line cutting. She drinks sparingly, has never taken drugs, and is disgusted by her husband's ex-smoking habit. Her true vice is cupcakes.

What many people do not know about the woman who's too pretty to be smart is that she favors her right side. That's because a scar runs across her left cheek, the result of a violent attack by a stranger. Tina Fey husband shares that it happened right in front yard of her house. Five-year-old Tina simply thought that somebody just came up to mark her with a pen.

Now in her forties, the scar does make Fey lovelier, like a hint of glamour in a good girl heroine. Her manager, David Miner, has no doubt that wherever she goes, she'll continue to call on the way up to his office and get a coffee for his assistant. Tina Fey husband agrees.