Sherbrooke Record

Jerry Lewis telethons played ‘pivotal role,’ says MD Canada

- By Cassandra Szklarski THE CANADIAN PRESS

The passionate advocacy work of Jerry Lewis has left an indelible mark in Canada, says the head of Muscular Dystrophy Canada.

CEO Barbara Stead-coyle credits much of today’s research breakthrou­ghs to the tireless fundraisin­g efforts of the comic and telethon giant, who died Sunday.

“It is part of our DNA, it is part of our history and I hope that someday we can make him proud by saying that the work is done, we found the cures,” Stead-coyle said Monday.

Lewis’s star-packed telethons ran every Labour Day weekend from 1966 to 2010, a family viewing tradition for Steadcoyle and many others who caught a homegrown feed that included local content and pleas for funds that would support Canadian families.

It wasn’t clear how much money went to Canada, where firefighte­rs have also driven significan­t donations since 1954 and now raise about $3 million a year.

But the end-of-summer ritual — which revolved around emotional pitches from Lewis — went far beyond just raising dollars for research and advocacy work, says Stead-coyle.

She salutes him for raising awareness for a relatively rare condition, which in turn boosted her organizati­on’s efforts to lobby the government for access to education, jobs and clinical trials.

“It really played a pivotal role over and above just the dollars it generated. It gave our clients a platform to share their stories.”

Stead-coyle drew a direct line from Lewis’s work to new treatment possibilit­ies that offer “incredible hope.”

“I’m very privileged to see how that money was put to work and how the research breakthrou­ghs are now coming to the forefront like never before,” says Stead-coyle, whose sister and step-brother were diagnosed with neuromuscu­lar disorders as adults.

Lewis, who had battled the lung disease pulmonary fibrosis, heart issues, a debilitati­ng back problem, and addiction to pain killers, died of natural causes, according to his publicist.

He died at home in Las Vegas at age 91.

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