Santa Fe New Mexican

Madcap comedia was patron of disabled children

- By Lindsey Bahr

LOS ANGELES — Jerry Lewis, the manic, rubber-faced showman who jumped and hollered to fame in a lucrative partnershi­p with Dean Martin, settled down to become a self-conscious screen auteur and found an even greater following as the tireless, teary host of the annual muscular dystrophy telethons, has died. He was 91.

Lewis died Sunday of natural causes in Las Vegas, Nev., with his family by his side, publicist Candi Cazau said.

Tributes from friends, co-stars and disciples poured in immediatel­y. Jim Carrey called him an, “Undeniable genius and an unfathomab­le blessing.” Carl Reiner said on Twitter that Lewis was, “A true comic icon.” In Las Vegas, Caesars Palace, where Lewis was once a headliner, featured a message honoring him on a marquee, and in Los Angeles, fans gathered at Lewis’s two Hollywood Walk of Fame stars — one of which was for television and one for film.

Lewis’ career spanned the history of show business in the 20th century, beginning in his parents’ vaudeville act at the age of 5. He was just 20 when his pairing with Martin made them internatio­nal stars. He went on to make such favorites as The Bellboy and The Nutty Professor, was featured in Martin Scorsese’s The King of Comedy and appeared as himself in Billy Crystal’s Mr. Saturday Night. In the 1990s, he scored a stage comeback as the devil in the Broadway revival of Damn Yankees.

In his 80s, he was still traveling the world, planning to remake some of his earlier movies and working on a stage version of The Nutty Professor. He was so active he would sometimes forget the basics, like eating, his associates would recall. In 2012, Lewis missed an awards ceremony thrown by his beloved Friars Club because his blood sugar dropped from lack of food and he had to spend the night in the hospital.

In an interview with The Associated Press from 2016, Lewis, at 90 and promoting the film Max Rose, said he still woke up every day at 4:30 or 5 in the morning to write, and had a handful of standup shows on the schedule.

“When the truth comes down to the truth, I am so grateful that I’m on that stage or in front of that camera. I still feel it like it’s the first day,” Lewis said. “To have a career that I had in film, I’m the luckiest Jew that ever lived. I’m so grateful for it. I don’t take advantage of it. I don’t use it improperly. And I love the fact that there’s nowhere I can go where people don’t know me.”

A major influence on Carrey and other slapstick performers, Lewis also was known as the ringmaster of the Labor Day Muscular Dystrophy Associatio­n telethon, joking and reminiscin­g and introducin­g guests, sharing stories about ailing kids and concluding with his personal anthem, the ballad “You’ll Never Walk Alone.” From the 1960s onward, the telethons raised about $1.5 billion, including more than $60 million in 2009. He announced in 2011 that he would step down as host, but he would remain chairman of the associatio­n he joined about 60 years ago.

His fundraisin­g efforts won him the Jean Hersholt Humanitari­an Award at the 2009 Oscar telecast, an honor he said “touches my heart and the very depth of my soul.” But the telethon was also criticized for being mawkish and exploitati­ve of children, known as “Jerry’s Kids.”

A 1960s muscular dystrophy poster boy, Mike Ervin, later made a documentar­y called The Kids Are All Alright, in which he alleged that Lewis and the Muscular Dystrophy Associatio­n had treated him and others as objects of pity rather than real people.

Responded Lewis: “You don’t want to be pitied because you’re a cripple in a wheelchair, stay in your house!”

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Jerry Lewis

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