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The strange case of the Jewish private eye

Writer Jonathan Ames has created one of the few kosher sleuths to make it on to TV

November 10, 2011 10:49
Jonathan Ames on the streets of Brooklyn. \"We all have many selves. One of mine is to be a good Jewish boy,\" he says

By

Brigit Grant,

Brigit Grant

4 min read

Fictional Jewish detectives are a rare breed. There is Harry Kemelman's 1960s creation, Rabbi David Small, who solves crimes using the Talmud, while on TV there is Sergeant John Munch (Richard Belzer), the Yiddisher cop who has appeared for 17 years on everything from Law and Order to The Wire.

The homicide detective in a kippah may be a pitch too far, but an amateur sleuth of the faith seems to have mileage; hence the second series of Bored to Death on Sky Atlantic.

Those who missed Series One will have no trouble acquainting themselves with the protagonist, Jonathan Ames (played by Jason Schwartzman), a romantically challenged, nebbish writer who, in a fit of pique after breaking up with his live-in girlfriend, advertises his services as a private eye.

Be under no illusion - Ames is not up there with Philip Marlowe, what with having to fit clients around his other job as a diarist on a Vanity Fair-like magazine. We are left in no doubt about his ethnicity; as in so many US-based comedies, the dialogue is unapologetically peppered with Jewish references. Take the first episode in which Ames looks on as a team of macho Israeli removal men pack up his girlfriend's belongings. "What are you?" asks one, "another self-hating New York Jew?"