Las Vegas Review-Journal

Time with Lewis made magical memories

- JOHN KATSILOMET­ES

Acouple of years ago, I had dinner with Jerry Lewis at one of his favorite Las Vegas haunts, Piero’s Italian Restaurant. Lewis was very close with the owner of Piero’s, Freddie Glusman, who says there are two Jerrys responsibl­e for the restaurant’s long success: Jerry Lewis and Jerry Tarkanian.

When I sat down, the King of Comedy was holding a wine cork from the bottle opened and waiting for his arrival. We said hello, and Lewis bounced the cork off a salad plate. He did this a couple of times, then held the cork up, with dramatic aplomb.

Then, Lewis let the cork drop again. It bounced, then landed perfectly on its end.

We stared momentaril­y at this unlikely moment, then he said, “I could try that a thousand times, and never make it happen again.”

“I don’t know about that,” I said. “You’re magic!”

It was one of many magic moments with Jerry Lewis, who died Sunday morning at age 91.

It took many years, and many working hours, to genuinely understand and appreciate Jerry Lewis. I covered his final two years of the MDA Labor Day Telethon in 2009 and 2010, though we hadn’t realized then they would be his final two years. I was there when he broke down, sobbing, during a 2009 rehearsal of “Dormi, Dormi, Dormi,” the aching lullaby that reminded him of MDA’S cause and “Jerry’s Kids.”

His emotions ran free again in 2010. After closing with, “You’ll Never Walk Alone,” Lewis again cried. His face was streaked with tears as he was assisted offstage. He took oxygen before taking several minutes to even speak.

“I couldn’t handle it,” he said later. “I was falling apart in that last number. When I bent over, I was able to say, ‘Dear God, let me finish this song.’ I had the awareness, on the air, to do that.”

Lewis once told me he felt the spirit of Dean Martin, his partner for a decade, in the Lewis household. “I still feel Dean at times. … When I start to write, in my office at home, I play classical music at a very low level, just so I hear it. Over in the corner is a chair, and I swear to God, when I was writing, ‘Dean and Me,’ I felt his presence.”

But we had terse moments, too. I once asked Lewis about reports that a copy of the film “The Day the Clown Cried” had been sent to the Library of Congress and might be viewed publicly one day. In the never-released 1972 film. Lewis portrayed a German circus clown sent to a Nazi death camp who led Jewish children to the gas chambers.

“I need to ask you about ‘The Day the Clown Cried,’ ” I started.

“What? Why” Lewis responded, his eyes narrowing.

“Because we’ve never talked about it,” I said.

“Well, we’re not gonna talk about it again!” he said. I finally explained the reports that the film might be made public. He settled down, and said, “That film will never be seen by any human, ever. It’s upstairs (in his house). Nobody can touch it. I’ve got it in a safe, and there’s nothing to talk about.”

“Fair enough!” I said. I then turned the conversati­on to the next show we’d see, which would be “Mystere” at Treasure Island, where Lewis would meet 85-year-old circus clown Brian Dewhurst, who had seen Martin and Lewis perform at the London Paladium in London in 1953.

Lewis enjoyed the show immensely, telling Dewhurst, “I loved watching you work.”

If there was a benefit to him through our time together, it was visiting some of the great production­s and artists in Las Vegas. He relished “Absinthe” at Caesars Palace, taking a shine to Melody Sweets and tappers Sean and John Scott. We had great nights with Jennifer Lopez at Axis theater and Celine Dion at Caesars Palace. Lewis and Celine recalled Celine’s appearance­s on the MDA Telethon as a kid.

“You did not introduce me as ‘Celine,’” she said to Lewis before the show. “It was, ‘Dion!’ Nobody introduces me with my last name. Only you. I’ll never forget it.”

Later that night, during Celine’s performanc­e, I caught Jerry blowing kisses to his wife, Sam. He loved her so much, and his daughter, Danielle, too. During dinner before “Mystere,” he put his hand over mine and talked of her.

“When she laughs, even in an audience full of people, I hear it,” he said. “It makes me proud to be a comedian.”

I remember these moments, and his rendition of “Smile,” and I do the same. He famously referred to his age — 90 at the time — as “a monster number,” saying, “It means it’s almost over. It means I won’t see my friends, my family, much longer. But I’ve seen enough, I really have. I don’t know how else to look at it.”

In his passing, I toast Jerry Lewis, the man who brought so much magic to my life.

John Katsilomet­es’ column runs daily in the A section. Contact him at jkatsilome­tes @reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @johnnykats on Twitter, @Johnnykats­1 on Instagram. As of 9 p.m. Sunday:

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 ??  ?? Sandee Lewis Las Vegas Review-journal Columnist John Katsilomet­es is shown at South Point Showroom with entertainm­ent legend Jerry Lewis after Lewis’ final show Oct. 2.
Sandee Lewis Las Vegas Review-journal Columnist John Katsilomet­es is shown at South Point Showroom with entertainm­ent legend Jerry Lewis after Lewis’ final show Oct. 2.
 ??  ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Raiders quarterbac­k Derek Carr places his hand on defensive end Khalil Mack.
Las Vegas Review-journal Raiders quarterbac­k Derek Carr places his hand on defensive end Khalil Mack.
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