soul of blessed memory Jewish Funnyman Jerry Lewis Dies JORDAN HOFFMAN TIMES OF ISRAEL J ewish-American actor, comedian, director, inventor, philanthropist and one of the last links to vaude- ville Jerry Lewis has died at the age of 91. The world just got a little less funny. Lewis, born Joseph Levitch in Newark, N.J., grew up in a show busi- ness family. His father, Daniel Levitch, was a vaudeville entertainer and his mother, Rae, was a pianist who worked for the (still existent) WOR Radio. At the age of 5, so the legend goes, he made his stage debut singing “Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?” and acciden- tally kicked out one of the footlights. His surprised reaction got the audience to laugh, and this set him on his path toward comedy. By age 15, he had dropped out of high school and was honing his stage act. His best-known routine was a bit in which he’d put a phonograph on and give an exaggerated lip synch. Sounds simple, but if you’ve seen the way Jerry Lewis could contort his face, you can understand why this would become popular. He worked the Jewish “Borscht Belt” in the Catskills 60 August 24 • 2017 jn Jerry Lewis Mountains and, in 1945, at the age of 19, he hooked up with Dean Martin. The handsome Italian-American singer (born Dino Crocetti) was the perfect straight man to Lewis’ zany, anarchic man-child persona. Their stage show was built on improvisation in which Lewis would bring mayhem to an otherwise smooth Martin vocal performance. Martin and Lewis quickly became successful as a nightclub act, on radio, the early days of television and eventually in Hollywood in feature films. Their first movie appearances were as part of an ensemble (1949’s My Friend Irma) but very quickly they were the stars. They made 15 films during the 1950s and were one of the most profitable acts in Hollywood. They even had a DC comic book based on them. But Lewis’ antics so upstaged Dean Martin that it became inevitable the pair would split. But before the partnership ended in June 1956, they made “Artists and Models,” and “Hollywood or Bust.” That’s where Jerry Lewis met his second great collaborator, Frank Tashlin. Tashlin was a former Looney Toons animator and fellow New Jersey trans- plant to Hollywood. Once he began working with Tashlin, Lewis really did start creating extraordinary pieces of cinema, not just nightclub shtick. After a number of films with Tashlin, Lewis began directing his own movies. His first was The Bellboy, which he shot at the Fontainebleau Hotel in Miami as, essentially, a side project. (He was booked there at the nightclub.) During the days he shot this essentially plot- free collection of skits in which his character (a goofy bellboy) had virtually no dialogue. Next came Lewis’ first masterpiece: The Ladies Man. Shot in big, bright colors, Lewis’ infantile persona is set against a rooming house filled with young women. In 1963 came Lewis’ big- gest hit of all, The Nutty Professor. Throughout the 1960s, Lewis con- stantly appeared on television chat shows and hosted the Muscular Dystrophy Association telethon. This became a Labor Day weekend tradition from 1966 all the way through 2010. The term “Jerry’s Kids” was used to describe children aided by the program. Lewis first visited Israel in 1981, though claimed he had bought a plane ticket in 1967 but the Six-Day War had broken out. His work was rarely explic- itly Jewish but, like the Marx Brothers, is easily read that way. His awards include an Honorary Oscar, France’s Legion of Honor medal and an induction into the New Jersey Hall of Fame. He is survived by his wife, SanDee, and their daughter Danielle and five sons (including Gary Lewis of Gary Lewis and the Playboys) from a previous marriage. •