Sunday, March 16, 2014

Jerry Lewis















Jerry Lewis
by Live Music Head

On this day, Jerry Lewis turns 88.
And so I remember growing up
watching the Labor Day Muscular Dystrophy Telethon
that he hosted and founded over fifty years ago;
a program that entertained us for two days straight 
while raising money for charity and marked the end of summer; 
a program that warmed our hearts, 
and saw us off into a brand new school year, 
for years. 
It was also a program that, 
if memory serves, 
was my first exposure to Jerry Lewis. 
Years later, I was fascinated to see him play 
opposite Robert De Niro in Martin Scorsese’s 1982 film 
The King of Comedy. 
What an amazing little film that is. 
I was also fascinated to read the interview he did 
with Amy Wallace in GQ Magazine in 2011. 
Look it up. 
It’s a great read. 
Also a great read is 
We’ll Be Here for The Rest of Our Lives, 
a book written by Paul Shaffer (Letterman’s sidekick) in 2009. 
Shaffer grew up watching the Telethon as well, 
and counts Jerry Lewis as a major idol. 
Shaffer told the story in the book 
of how excited he got to meet his idol, 
over brunch with their mutual friend Richard Belzer 
(stand-up comedian aka Det. Munch on Law & Order), 
and his disappointment over not impressing his idol 
when he interjected their conversation 
with tidbits from his life-long accumulation 
of Jerry Lewis minutiae
No matter how much Shaffer tried, 
all Lewis wanted to talk about was 
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, 
of which he guest-starred in 2006 
and gave an absolutely brilliant performance 
as a depressed, homeless man caught up in 
the investigation of a brutal rape. 
The dramatic work of Jerry Lewis is amazing. 
But Lewis is best known as a genius slapstick comedian. 
And it will likely be his work 
as a genius slapstick comedian in a duo with Dean Martin 
that will be widely remembered.
For theirs was one of the most popular comedy duos in history, 
beginning in 1946 and ending, 
not on the best of terms, 
ten years later. 
I also grew up with The Rat Pack. 
So when Frank Sinatra instigated a reunion between 
Jerry and Dean
on the Telethon in 1976, 
it was a big moment in television...