Posted on 08/20/2017 12:32:47 PM PDT by Jim W N
Jerry Lewis, the brash slapstick comic who teamed with Dean Martin in the 1950s and later starred in The Nutty Professor and The Bellboy before launching the Muscular Dystrophy telethon, has died in Las Vegas. He was 91.
The Las Vegas Review-Journal columnist John Katsilometes reported that he died at his home at 9:15 a.m. Sunday morning. Lewis agent has since confirmed the news to Variety.
Over the past ten years of his life, the cranky icons reputation soured slightly as he was forced to apologize for making a gay slur on camera during the 2007 telethon, continued to make racist and misogynistic jokes into his 90s, and didnt hesitate to share his right-wing political views.
In addition to his most famous films, Lewis also appeared in a number of notable works, such as Martin Scorseses The King of Comedy, but was largely offscreen from the late 60s on and was more active with his annual Labor Day Muscular Dystrophy telethon. Through the charity, he raised more than $2.45 billion before being relieved of his role as leader of the telethon in 2011. As late as 2016, Lewis continued to perform in Las Vegas, where he first debuted his comedy routine back in 1949.
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The high regard in which his comic abilities were held in France he received the Legion of Honor award in 1983 became a running joke in the U.S. long after Lewis style of broad physical comedy fell out of fashion. His final film, Max Rose, screened at Frances Cannes Film Festival in 2013.
The telethon, like other aspects of Lewis life, was beset by controversy. The comics offstage persona was anything but humorous. He was, by his own admission, an impatient man, and over the years battled numerous illnesses and a prescription drug dependency. His parting with Martin in 1956 after 10 years as a duo was acrimonious. And the telethons were awash in claims that there was a disparity between the money pledged and the money collected.
Lewis pairing with Martin, featuring their improvisatory backbiting and physical chicanery, was an instant hit in 1946. When producer Hal Wallis saw them performing at the Copacabana and at Slapsie Maxies in Hollywood, he saw the potential for a new Bob Hope and Bing Crosby and signed them to a Paramount Pictures contract.
For the next 10 years, Martin and Lewis turned out one silly film after the next starting with My Friend Irma in 1949 and including The Caddy, The Stooge, Artists and Models and Pardners. None of their films grossed less than $5 million, a handy sum in those days.
The premises of the films grew tired, and the more Martin and Lewis worked together, the more disparate they appeared. In 1956, after their film Hollywood or Bust, they made their last dual appearance at the Copacabana.
By the time of their breakup, Martin had a prosperous career as a recording artist and actor. And soon Lewis, too, was a hot solo ticket.
Shortly after they broke up, Lewis filled in for an ailing Judy Garland in Las Vegas. Over the next five years Lewis developed a slicker, more sophisticated stage persona and would continue to play Vegas until 2016.
Onscreen he made a go of it in such films as The Delicate Delinquent and Rock-a-Bye Baby. Lewis even had a million-selling single in the Rock-a-Bye Your Baby title track, which led to several albums on Decca Records.
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He then extended his efforts into writing, producing and directing films. The first two, 1961s The Ladies Man and 1962s The Errand Boy, showed him at his best. His talents also dovetailed with director Frank Tashlins style in films such as Cinderfella and The Disorderly Orderly.
The Nutty Professor (1963) was his biggest success ever, grossing $19 million. But by then his mugging and exaggerated body gyrations had become out of control, as had the syrupy moments in his films.
Lewis signed a nonexclusive deal with Columbia that resulted in several uninspired films such as Three on a Couch, The Big Mouth and Dont Raise the Bridge, Lower the River. Even Lewis had to admit, Jerry Lewis is never just OK or adequate; hes either very funny or hes awful.
While Americans largely dismissed him, Lewis had developed a following at French film journals Cahiers du Cinema and Positif.
He was born Joseph Levitch in Newark, N.J. Both his parents were in show business and, at the age of 5, Lewis made his debut at a Borscht Belt hotel singing Brother Can You Spare a Dime?
Perhaps because his parents spent a great deal of time on the road, Lewis was demanding attention through humor by the time he was attending Irvington High School in New Jersey. By age 15 he was pantomiming operatic and popular songs and was booked into a burlesque house in Buffalo.
In 1942 he tried out his comic pantomiming at Browns Hotel in upstate New York, where he was also working the summer as a bellboy. Comic Irving Kaye was sufficiently impressed to land Lewis some bookings and became his road manager.
Lewis met the young singer Dean Martin at New York nightclub the Glass Hatt and was first paired with him in 1946. Afters years of rupture, Martin made a surprise appearance on the Muscular Dystrophy Telethon in 1976, and the pair reconciled after the death of Martins son in the late 1980s. (Martin died in 1995.)
In the early 70s he continued to direct uninspired fare such as Which Way to the Front? and then tried a serious film, The Day the Clown Cried, though he famously shelved the completed work (some footage of it finally surfaced in 2013). He attempted a live TV variety show that failed, as did an attempt at a Broadway musical, Feeling No Pain; it was followed by the acrimonious Hellzapoppin, which was ditched out of town in Boston at a loss of $1.25 million.
In 1972 he lent his name to a string of 200 movie theaters for Network Cinema Corp., which led to bankruptcy proceedings in 1974. His heavy schedule also brought him to the verge of a nervous breakdown, serious ulcer problems and painkiller drug dependency. In 1982 he had double-bypass heart surgery and gave up his four pack-a-day smoking habit.
Lewis was offscreen until 1979s low-budget Hardly Working, which he also directed; it did not reverse his fortunes. But in 1982, director Martin Scorsese harnessed the brash, cynical side of Lewis persona for the role of a kidnapped latenight talkshow host in The King of Comedy. Though he reportedly resented being upstaged by Robert De Niro and Sandra Bernhard, the film represented some of Lewis finest work. Another high point was a similarly caustic appearance as a lethal underworld figure on the TV series Wiseguy.
Most of his later film work, however, failed to impress, such as Slapstick of Another Kind, Cookie and 1992s American Dreamer.
In 1995, he appeared in Peter Chelsoms film Funny Bones and took over the role of the devil in a Broadway revival of Damn Yankees, which he took on tour in the U.S.; he then appeared in a London production of the musical.
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In 2003 he provided a guest voice on an episode of The Simpsons; in 2006 he did an episode of Law and Order: SVU in which he played the insane, morally befuddled but bizarrely benevolent uncle of Det. John Munch (Richard Belzer).
Lewis long sought to create a sequel to The Nutty Professor; eventually, Imagine Entertainment produced and Universal released the 1996 remake starring Eddie Murphy on which Lewis was credited for the screenplay to the 1963 version and as an executive producer.
Lewis also hoped to bring a musical adaptation of The Nutty Professor to Broadway. By summer 2012 an ailing but still enthusiastic Lewis made his stage helming debut with such a musical, with a score by Marvin Hamlisch and a book and lyrics by Rupert Holmes, in Nashville, where it played for seven weeks.
In 2013 Lewis starred in the long-gestating project Max Rose, written and directed by Daniel Noah and also starring Claire Bloom, Kevin Pollak, Kerry Bishe and Mort Sahl. Lewis played a jazz pianist who recently became a widower.
In 2009, Lewis received the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences Jean Hersholt Award for his charitable work. In May 2014, he added his footprints to those of other screen luminaries at the Chinese Theatre.
In 1944 Lewis married former band singer Patti Palmer, with whom he had six sons, Gary, Ronnie, Scott, Anthony, Christopher and Joseph, who died in 2009. Gary for a time had a rock career as the lead singer of Gary Lewis & the Playboys. The marriage ended in divorce.
He is survived by his second wife, SanDee Pitnick, with whom he adopted a daughter.
One of my brother’s favorite movies. Hadn’t heard that title in a long time.
What a riot. I really liked Mark Lindsay and Paul Revere & the Raiders. I saw them live in S.F. in 1965 with the Rolling Stones. PR&R put on an incredible show as did Mick Jagger and the Stones. Pretty cool stuff. I actually went to a private party once in La Honda, CA where the Turtles played. That was also pretty cool.
I would have liked to have seen some of that Happy Together tour.
I wonder what Gary Lewis’ relationship was like with his dad Jerry Lewis.
Yeah, smoke four packs a day that killed him, drank himself silly all day long. Yup. I simply wasn’t a fan of his.
Yeah, smoke four packs a day that killed him, drank himself silly all day long. Yup. I simply wasnt a fan of his.
You disliked him so much because he smoked a lot of cigarettes? In any case, the excessive drinking persona apparently was more part of his routine, a "shtick", than reality.
“Yeah, smoke four packs a day that killed him,”
How on earth would you possibly know that?
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I have a CD of that movie and never get tired of watching it. Funny from start to finish. Actor Raymond Burr is funny as a villain in the movie, who then went on to play Perry Mason on TV series.
Have you seen Lewis & Martin in movie “you were never too young”?
Probably clips, but not the whole thing.
“It was the French dubber who was a great comic... In French !”
very interesting! makes total sense when you think about it.
Read it some place after his death. He was a heavy smoker.
you must be king of his fan club. go away I don’t have time for whine bags.
IIRC he quit when someone promised a huge donation to the MDA if he quit.
Nevermind, I see now you were referring to Dean Martin.
“Read it some place after his death. He was a heavy smoker.”
—
And he made it to age 78,which is a good,long life——more years than many get.
.
Death:
Martin, a heavy smoker, was diagnosed with lung cancer at Cedars Sinai Medical Center in September 1993, and was told that he would require surgery to prolong his life, but he rejected it. He retired from public life in early 1995 and died of acute respiratory failure resulting from emphysema at his Beverly Hills home on Christmas Day, 1995 at the age of 78.[
http://articles.latimes.com/2010/sep/03/entertainment/la-et-0903-jerry-lewis-20100903
...he also has suffered a litany of health problems, many related to his extreme lifestyle.
Besides prostate cancer, diabetes and open-heart surgery, there’s the nasty case of viral meningitis Lewis got performing in Australia, pulmonary fibrosis thanks to his longtime five-pack-a-day smoking habit (Lewis ballooned up to 280 pounds for several years consequent to a medicine he took for the condition), chronic back pain from chipping his spine during a pratfall at the Sands Casino, as well as accompanying bouts of addiction to prescription painkillers and even suicidal depression...
Thanks.
Interesting that he refused surgery-—and lived 2 more years and then emphysema took him,not cancer.
.
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Hmmm. That Burr part sounds intriguing. Might have to look into it.
“I couldnt stand him.”
Same here, and felt the same way about Bob Hope, but greatly respected Jerry’s MD work, and Bob’s devotion to our armed forces.
LAAAAADDDYYYYYYY
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