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===Family===
===Family===
Jerry Lewis parents were:
Lewis is the father of 1960s pop musician [[Gary Lewis (musician)|Gary Lewis]], who had a string of hits with his group [[Gary Lewis and the Playboys]]. He has five other sons, Joseph, Ronald, Scott, Christopher and Anthony, and an adopted daughter, Danielle (b. 1992). Lewis currently resides in [[Las Vegas, Nevada]].

*Father: Daniel Levitch (Danny Lewis), vaudeville singer and comedian
*Mother: Rae Brodsky, singer and pianist

He has been married twice::
*First Wife: Patti Palmer; married October 3, 1944, divorced September 1980
She was a singer.
*Second Wife: SanDee Pitnick; married February 13, 1983 to Present
They were married in Key Biscayne, FL; at the time she was 32-year old Las Vegas dancer.


Key Biscayne, Fla., Feb. 13, 1983. Lewis married 32-year-old SanDee Pitnick, a Las Vegas dance
Jerry Lewis is the father of 1960s pop musician [[Gary Lewis (musician)|Gary Lewis]], who had a string of hits with his group [[Gary Lewis and the Playboys]]. He has six sons and one daugher:

*Gary Harold Lee Lewis was born on July 31st, 1946 with Patti Palmer
*Ronald Lewis; adopted July 1950 with Patti Palmer
*Scott; born February 1956 to Patti Palmer
*Christopher Joseph; born October 1957 to Patti Palmer
*Anthony; born October 1959 to Patti Palmer
*Joseph; born January 1964 to Patti Palmer
*Danielle Sarah (daughter); adopted March 1992 with SanDee Pitnick

[http://digilander.libero.it/comedian/whois.htm Who is Jerry Lewis]]
[http://www.classicbands.com/garylewis.html Gary Lewis and the Playbys]]
[http://www.cbsnews.com/elements/2005/03/03/in_depth_showbiz/photoessay677877_0_13_photo.shtml Jerry Lewis Photos]

Lewis currently resides in [[Las Vegas, Nevada]].


===Concealed weapon===
===Concealed weapon===

Revision as of 02:27, 30 July 2008

Jerry Lewis
Born
Joseph Levitch
Other namesThe King of Comedy
Le Roi du Crazy
Picchiatello
Occupation(s)Comedian, actor, film producer, writer and director
Years active1931-present
Spouse(s)SanDee Pitnick (1983-present)
Patti Palmer (1944-1982)
AwardsHollywood Walk of Fame
6150 Hollywood Boulevard
6801 Hollywood Boulevard
Websitehttp://www.jerrylewiscomedy.com

Jerry Lewis (born March 16, 1926)[1] is an American comedian, award-winning actor, film producer, writer and director, known for his slapstick humor and his charity fund-raising telethons for the Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA). Lewis has won several awards for lifetime achievements from The American Comedy Awards, The Golden Camera, Los Angeles Film Critics Association, The Venice Film Festival and he has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. In 2005, he received the Governors Award of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Board of Governors, the highest Emmy Award presented.[2]

Lewis was originally paired up in 1946 with Dean Martin, and formed the comedy team of Martin and Lewis. In addition to the team's popular nightclub work, they starred in a successful series of comedy films for Paramount. The act broke up ten years later.

Early life

Lewis was born in Newark, New Jersey, the son of Jewish parents Rachel "Rae", who played the piano for the radio station WOR and performed musical arrangements, and Danny Levitch, a master of ceremonies and vaudeville performer.[3][4][5] His birth name is usually reported as Joseph Levitch, though Shawn Levy's biography, "King of Comedy", claims this is untrue and that Lewis' name at birth was Jerome Levitch,although Jerry Lewis has stated that it was Joseph, named after his grandfather. His father, however, didn't like the name so he called him Jerry. Lewis started performing at the age of five and by the age of fifteen developed his Record Act, in which he mimed lyrics of operatic and popular songs to a phonograph.

Career

Martin and Lewis

Lewis gained initial fame with singer Dean Martin, who served as a straight man to Lewis's manic, zany antics as the Martin and Lewis comedy team. They distinguished themselves from the majority of comedy acts of the 1940s by relying on the interaction of the two comics instead of pre-planned skits. In the late 1940s, they quickly rose to national prominence, first with their popular nightclub act and then as film stars in a string of movies for Paramount Pictures as well as hosting their own radio program. They also appeared on live television, particularly as co-hosts of The Colgate Comedy Hour.

The partnership strained as Martin's roles in their films became less important. Martin's diminished participation became an embarrassment in 1954, when Look magazine used a publicity photo of the team for the magazine cover, but cropped Martin out of the photo. The partnership finally ended in 1956.

Attesting to the team's popularity, DC Comics published the best selling "The Adventures of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis" comic books from 1952-57. The series continued a year after the team broke up as DC Comics then featured Jerry solo, until 1971, in "The Adventures of Jerry Lewis" comic books. In this latter series, Jerry was sometimes featured with Superman, Batman, and various DC comic heroes and villains.

Both Martin and Lewis went on to successful solo careers, but for years neither would comment on the split, nor consider a reunion. The next time they were seen together in public was a surprise appearance by Martin on Lewis's muscular dystrophy telethon in 1976, arranged by Frank Sinatra. Lewis wrote of his kinship with Martin (who died in 1995) in the 2005 book Dean and Me (A Love Story). Although the pair eventually reconciled in the late 1980s after the death of Martin's son, Dean Paul Martin, the two men never held another public reunion.

Comedy acting star

Lewis, animated in the Animaniacs episode, Hello Nice Warners.

After the split, Lewis remained at Paramount and became a major comedy star with his debut film The Delicate Delinquent in 1957. Teaming with director Frank Tashlin, whose background as a Looney Tunes director suited Lewis's brand of humor, he starred in five more films, and even appeared uncredited as Itchy McRabbitt in Li'l Abner (1959).

Lewis tried his hand at singing in the 1950s, having a chart hit with the song "Rock-A-Bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody" (a song originated by Al Jolson and popularized by Judy Garland) as well as the song, "It All Depends On You" in 1958. He released his own album right after the split titled, Jerry Lewis Just Sings.

By the end of his contract with producer Hal Wallis, Lewis had several productions of his own under his belt. His first three efforts, The Delicate Delinquent, Rock-a-Bye Baby and The Geisha Boy, were all efforts to move away from Wallis, who Lewis felt was hindering his comedy. In 1960, Lewis finished his contract with Wallis with Visit To A Small Planet, and wrapped up work on his own production, Cinderfella.

But with Lewis shelving Cinderfella for a Christmas release, Paramount needed a quickie feature film to fill its summer release schedule, and held Lewis to his contract to produce one. Lewis came up with The Bellboy. Using the Fontainebleau Hotel in Miami as his setting, on a small budget, a very tight shooting schedule, and no script, Lewis shot the film by day and performed at the hotel in the evenings. Bill Richmond collaborated with him on the many sight gags. During production, Lewis developed the technique of using video cameras and multiple closed circuit monitors, allowing him to view scenes while he was filming them. This allowed him to review his performance instantly. Later, he incorporated videotape, and as more portable and affordable equipment became available, this technique would become an industry standard known as video assist.

Lewis followed The Bellboy by directing several more films which he co-wrote with Richmond including The Ladies Man, The Errand Boy, The Patsy and his iconic film, The Nutty Professor, which was later remade starring Eddie Murphy. Lewis handed reins occasionally to his favorite director, Frank Tashlin, who directed several of his productions, including It's Only Money and Who's Minding the Store?.

By 1966, Lewis, now 40, was no longer an angular juvenile and his routines seemed more labored. His box office appeal waned, to the point where Paramount Pictures' new executives felt no further need for the Lewis comedies. Undaunted, Lewis packed up and went to Columbia Pictures, where he made several more comedies.

Lewis taught a film directing class at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles for a number of years, mentoring such students as George Lucas. In 1968, he screened Steven Spielberg's early film Amblin' and told his students, "That's what filmmaking is all about".[6]

Lewis starred in and directed the unreleased The Day The Clown Cried in 1972. The film was a drama set in a Nazi concentration camp. Lewis rarely discusses the experience, but did once explain why the film has not been released by suggesting litigation over post-production financial difficulties. However, he recently admitted during his book tour for Dean and Me that a major factor for the film's burial is that he is not proud of the effort.

Lewis returned to the screen in 1981 with Hardly Working, a film he both directed and starred in. Despite being panned by the critics, the film did eventually earn $50 million. He followed this up with a critically acclaimed performance in Martin Scorsese's 1983 film The King of Comedy in which Lewis plays a late-night TV host plagued by obsessive fans (played by Robert De Niro and Sandra Bernhard). The role had been based on and originally offered to Johnny Carson. Lewis continued doing work in small films in the 1990s, most notably his supporting roles in Arizona Dream and Funny Bones. He is scheduled to star in The Nutty Professor 2: Facing the Fear, his first animated film.

Lewis and his popular movie characters were animated in the cartoon series, Will the Real Jerry Lewis Please Sit Down. It first aired on ABC and lasted two seasons from 1970 to 1972. The show was produced at Filmation in partnership with Lewis. It starred David Lander (later of Laverne and Shirley fame) as the voice of the animated Jerry character.

The actor was portrayed by Sean Hayes ("Will and Grace") in the 2002 made-for-TV movie "Martin and Lewis".

Lewis' motion picture star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6801 Hollywood Blvd.

Lewis has long remained popular in Europe: he was consistently praised by some highbrow French critics in the influential Cahiers du Cinéma for his absurd comedy, in part because he had gained respect as an auteur who had total control over all aspects of his films, comparable to Howard Hawks and Alfred Hitchcock. In March 2006, the French Minister of Culture awarded Lewis the Légion d'honneur, calling him the "French people's favorite clown".[7] Liking Lewis has long been a common stereotype about the French in the minds of many Americans, Australians, Canadians, and Brits, and is often the object of jokes in Anglosphere pop culture.

Charitable work

Lewis helped establish the Muscular Dystrophy Association in 1952, and has organized a Labor Day telethon to help raise money for the Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA) since 1966. His efforts have helped raise approximately US$2 billion for neuromuscular patient care and research. In the early years it was Martin and Lewis raising money for MDA, and then Lewis continued on when he went solo. The International Association of Fire Fighters is the largest single sponsor of the Muscular Dystrophy Association, starting in 1954, and has donated over $250 million dollars to date. Lewis has served as National Chairman of the association since 1952.[2] Lewis is one of few fundraisers who brings in more than is actually pledged. This is because many donors as they write a check add extra money to help "Jerry's Kids" given his generosity and no-pressure appeal. [citation needed] In 1985, he received a US Department of Defense Medal for Distinguished Public Service. In September 2005 Lewis was slated to receive the Governor's Award from the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, honoring his long-running telethons.

The telethons are typically star-studded: among Lewis's co-hosts through the years were Ed McMahon and Casey Kasem. A frequent performer in the 1970s and 1980s was Frank Sinatra, who surprised Lewis by reuniting him with Dean Martin on the telethon in 1976.

On his 40th Labor Day telethon in 2005, Lewis added Salvation Army fundraising (for Hurricane Katrina) to his usual MDA fundraising, though he also encouraged viewers to give to the American Red Cross. He has also hosted the 1987 and 1991 editions of the French Muscular Dystrophy Téléthon, where he is known for his work against this disease.

Honorary Ambassador of Peace for the Harvey Ball Foundation along with Jackie Chan, Brooke Shields, A. V. T. Shankardass, Prince Albert of Monaco, Jack Nicklaus, Greg Norman, Phil Collins, Jimmy Buffett, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Darrell Waltrip, Heather Mills, Yoko Ono, Patch Adams, Sergei Khrushchev and Winnie Mandela.

Controversy

Jerry Lewis has been criticized by members of the disability rights community. In 1990, he wrote a first-person essay entitled "If I Had Muscular Dystrophy" for Parade magazine, in which he characterized those with muscular dystrophy as "being half a person".[8] Many in the disabled community viewed his remarks as prejudicial, contributing to the idea that disabled people are "childlike, helpless, hopeless, non functioning and noncontributing members of society".[9]

In February of 2000, Jerry Lewis stunned an audience gathered to honor his work at the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival by saying he doesn't like female comics. Lewis said, "I don't like any female comedians. A woman doing comedy doesn't offend me, but sets me back a bit. I, as a viewer, have trouble with it. I think of her as a producing machine that brings babies in the world."

On May 20, 2001, he responded to his critics in an interview on CBS News Sunday Morning: "If you don't want to be pitied for being a cripple in a wheelchair, don't come out of the house." Again, disability rights activists blasted him for characterizing disabled people as helpless and homebound. As recently as 2006, he has continued to ignore the criticism, characterizing them as "inconsequential troublemakers" whose numbers are tiny in comparison to the millions of people his charity has supported.[10]

During the 2007 Labor Day Telethon, Lewis almost let slip the offensive slur "faggot" while live on air. While talking to a cameraman, he joked: "Oh, your family has come to see you. You remember Bart, your oldest son, Jesse, the illiterate fag--no...", at which point he aborted the joke and turned away from the camera.[11][12] He later apologized.[13]

Personal life

Health concerns

Lewis has suffered years of back pain due to a failed slapstick stunt on an Andy Williams television special in 1966 that almost left him paralyzed. In April 2002, Lewis had a "Synergy" neurostimulator, developed by Medtronic, implanted in his back, which has helped reduce the discomfort. He is now one of Medtronic's leading spokesmen. Lewis has battled prostate cancer, diabetes, pulmonary fibrosis, and has had two heart attacks. Medical treatment for the fibrosis using prednisone in the early 2000s caused the comedian to experience weight gain and bloating that noticeably changed his appearance and rendered him unable to perform, in September 2001, at what would have been a return to the London Palladium for the star, a charity event produced by comedian Steven Alan Green. (Green's take on the event was turned into a one-person show, I Eat People Like You For Breakfast, which Green performed at the 2003 Edinburgh Festival). Lewis some months thereafter began an arduous, months-long rehab, which weaned him off the prednisone steroids that had so altered his appearance and enabled him to get back to work.

Lewis suffered a serious heart attack in the 1980s, and second minor heart attack on June 11, 2006 at the end of a cross-country commercial airline flight en route home from New York City.[14] It was later found that he had pneumonia. Lewis had two stents inserted into an artery in his heart that was 90% blocked, and it restored full blood flow to his heart. This has allowed him to continue his rebound from the lung issues he suffered from 2001 to 2005 and his health has improved. While it meant cancelling several major events for Lewis, he recuperated in a matter of weeks.

Family

Jerry Lewis parents were:

  • Father: Daniel Levitch (Danny Lewis), vaudeville singer and comedian
  • Mother: Rae Brodsky, singer and pianist

He has been married twice::

  • First Wife: Patti Palmer; married October 3, 1944, divorced September 1980
    She was a singer.
  • Second Wife: SanDee Pitnick; married February 13, 1983 to Present
  They were married in Key Biscayne, FL; at the time she was 32-year old Las Vegas dancer.


Key Biscayne, Fla., Feb. 13, 1983. Lewis married 32-year-old SanDee Pitnick, a Las Vegas dance Jerry Lewis is the father of 1960s pop musician Gary Lewis, who had a string of hits with his group Gary Lewis and the Playboys. He has six sons and one daugher:

  • Gary Harold Lee Lewis was born on July 31st, 1946 with Patti Palmer
  • Ronald Lewis; adopted July 1950 with Patti Palmer
  • Scott; born February 1956 to Patti Palmer
  • Christopher Joseph; born October 1957 to Patti Palmer
  • Anthony; born October 1959 to Patti Palmer
  • Joseph; born January 1964 to Patti Palmer
  • Danielle Sarah (daughter); adopted March 1992 with SanDee Pitnick

Who is Jerry Lewis] Gary Lewis and the Playbys] Jerry Lewis Photos

Lewis currently resides in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Concealed weapon

Lewis was cited for carrying a concealed weapon without a permit on July 25, 2008 at McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, Nevada.[15] Lewis' manager told the Associated Press that the gun was a hollowed-out prop gun that couldn't fire.[16]

Bibliography

  • The Total Film-Maker by Jerry Lewis. New York: Random House, 1971, ISBN 0-394-46757-4
  • Jerry Lewis: In Person by Jerry Lewis with Herb Gluck. New York: Atheneum, 1982, ISBN 0-689-11290-4
  • Dean & Me (A Love Story) by Jerry Lewis with James Kaplan. New York: Doubleday, 2005, ISBN 0-7679-2086-4
  • The Jerry Lewis Films by James L. Neibaur and Ted Okuda (Lewis is quoted throughout). Jefferson, SC: McFarland, 1994, ISBN 0-8995-0961-4

References

  1. ^ according to most sources
  2. ^ a b The Associated Press (11 September 2005). "Jerry Lewis Honored By TV Academy, Comedian To Get Award For His Work On Behalf Of Muscular Dystrophy". CBS News. Retrieved 2008-05-14.
  3. ^ Jerry Lewis Biography (1926-)
  4. ^ The Official Jerry Lewis Comedy Museum and Store
  5. ^ Jerry Lewis on Dean Martin: 'A Love Story' : NPR
  6. ^ Joseph McBride, Steven Spielberg - A Biography (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1997), pg. 168
  7. ^ Staff writers (16 March 2006). "Jerry Lewis in Top French Honour". BBC News. Retrieved 2008-05-14.
  8. ^ The Infamous Parade Magazine Article
  9. ^ Jerry Lewis, Jerry's Orphans and the Telethon: Disability Rag Classics
  10. ^ AAPD-News: AAPD in the News
  11. ^ Staff writers (4 September 2007). "Jerry Lewis Drops F-Bomb During Telethon". TMZ. Retrieved 2008-05-14.
  12. ^ YouTube - Broadcast Yourself
  13. ^ Steve Gorman (4 September 2007). "Jerry Lewis Apologizes for Anti-Gay Slur". Reuters. Retrieved 2008-05-14.
  14. ^ Jerry Lewis suffers Heart Attack - /FILM
  15. ^ "Jerry Lewis Cited For Concealed Weapon". Retrieved 2008-07-29.
  16. ^ "Vegas police: Jerry Lewis cited for gun in luggage". Associated Press. 2008-07-29. Retrieved 2008-07-29.

External links


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