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Jerry Lewis 1926 - 2017

Jerry Lewis was born on March 16, 1926 in Newark, New Jersey United States. He married Patti Lewis on October 3, 1944 and they later divorced on January 27, 1983. They had children Gary Lewis, Ronald Lewis, Scott Lewis, Christopher Lewis, Anthony Joseph Lewis, and Joseph Lewis. Jerry's partner was Lynn Dixon and they later separated. They had a child Suzan Lewis. He and SanDee Pitnick married on February 13, 1983, and they were married until Jerry's death on August 20, 2017. They had a child Danielle Lewis.
Jerry Lewis
Joseph Levitch
March 16, 1926
Newark, New Jersey, United States
August 20, 2017
Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Male
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Jerry Lewis' History: 1926 - 2017

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  • Introduction

    Jerry Lewis was born Joseph Levitch Jewish parents Daniel "Danny" Levitch (1902–1980), and Rachael "Rae" (Brodsky) Levitch (1903–1983). Both of his parents were in the entertainment industry, Danny as a vaudevillian and Rae was his musical director. There are varying records as to Jerry's first name, some reporting that it was Joseph, some said it was Jerome. Whichever was correct, he later called himself "Jerry" saying that he didn't want to be confused with "Joe Louis" or "Joe E. Lewis". Like his partner Dean Martin, Jerry dropped out of high school in the 10th grade. Neither seems to have been affected by their lack of higher education, since both went on to become a huge success as a team and individually. Jerry met Dean Martin in 1945 and they became a comedy team. Jerry had worked the "Borscht Belt" and vaudeville previously, but it was together that they hit "the big time." Dean Martin was the "straight man" and Jerry was the goofy comedian and together they went on to perform in night clubs and eventually, several successful movies. Due to personality differences, Jerry and Dean broke up their duo in 1956. After ending his partnership with Dean, Jerry and his wife Patty took a vacation in Las Vegas to consider the direction of his career. He ended up recording some records, singing in public for the first time since he was five years old. He again had successes in live performances, but it was with his comedic talents that his solo career took off and he made a string of popular movies. Jerry's reputation and stature increased after a contract with Paramount , when he began to exert total control over all aspects of his films. His involvement in directing, writing, editing and art direction coincided with the rise of auteur theory in French intellectual film criticism and the French New Wave movement. This led to his being a huge success in France, where he was hailed as a King of Comedy. He also hosted an MDA telethon on Labor Day weekend for decades until his health declined and he was no longer able to host what was truly a marathon in television. Jerry was married twice: first to Patti Palmer for 36 years and then to SanDee Pitnick from 1983 until he died. He had 7 children in total. He had some decades-long heart problems, prostate cancer, type 1 diabetes, and pulmonary fibrosis, as well as problems caused by the nature of his physical comedy. He died at home in Las Vegas, Nevada of end-stage cardiac disease and peripheral artery disease. He was cremated. Jerry Lewis: Obituary In his final will, Jerry left his estate to his second wife of 34 years, SanDee Pitnick, and their daughter, and explicitly disinherited his children from his first marriage and their children.
  • 03/16
    1926

    Birthday

    March 16, 1926
    Birthdate
    Newark, New Jersey United States
    Birthplace
  • Ethnicity & Family History

    Jerry was of Ukrainian-Jewish ethnicity. He was born as Joseph Levitch to parents of Jewish descent. His father, Daniel Levitch, was a vaudeville entertainer and actor, while his mother, Rae Levitch (née Brodsky), was a pianist and a radio host. Jerry Lewis grew up in a Jewish household, and his family had a strong influence on his early interest in entertainment. His comedic talents were nurtured as he watched and learned from his parents, who were also involved in the entertainment industry.
  • Nationality & Locations

    Jerry Lewis was born on March 16, 1926, in Newark, New Jersey, USA, and and as an entertainer, lived in many places. Lewis's career in entertainment took him to various locations across the country. He began his career in the world of vaudeville and comedy clubs, performing in cities like New York City and Los Angeles. However, he gained widespread fame through his work in Hollywood, where he starred in numerous films and television shows. Some of his most iconic work was created in the heart of the American entertainment industry, including his partnership with Dean Martin and his solo career in comedy and filmmaking. He died at home in Las Vegas Nevada.
  • Early Life & Education

    He attended Irvington High School in New Jersey but didn't graduate. He attended thorough the 10th grade. Instead, he focused on his burgeoning career in comedy and show business. His education, in many ways, came from the real-world experiences and the mentorship he received while working in the entertainment industry.
  • Military Service

    During World War II, Jerry Lewis, whose birth name was Joseph Levitch, enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1944 at the age of 18. His service coincided with the final stages of the war. Lewis was initially assigned to Special Services, where he used his entertainment talents to entertain troops. Notably, he didn't see combat during his military service, but his comedic skills were put to use in staging shows for the troops, which provided much-needed morale boosts to the soldiers. His ability to make people laugh was evident even in these challenging circumstances. Jerry Lewis's time in the Army allowed him to further develop his comedic talents, which would later become the foundation of his successful entertainment career. After his honorable discharge from the Army in 1945, he returned to civilian life with a sharpened sense of humor and a determination to pursue a career in show business. While his military service may not have involved combat, it played a pivotal role in shaping his path toward becoming one of the most iconic comedians and entertainers of his generation.
  • Professional Career

    Jerry Lewis began his career as a comedian at a young age, performing in vaudeville and nightclubs. He honed his comedic skills and developed a distinctive slapstick style that would become his trademark. Lewis achieved fame as a film actor, particularly during his partnership with Dean Martin in the 1950s. Their comedic duo was immensely popular and led to numerous successful films like "The Caddy" and "Artists and Models." Lewis ventured into directing and made a significant impact in this role. He directed many of his own films, including classics like "The Bellboy" and "The Nutty Professor." His innovative approach to filmmaking and his control over all aspects of production were notable. Jerry Lewis contributed to the writing of many of his comedy routines and scripts. His creative input was integral to the success of his comedy acts and films. Beyond comedy, Lewis was a talented singer and performer. He often incorporated singing into his nightclub acts and films, showcasing his versatility as an entertainer. Jerry Lewis was renowned for his dedication to philanthropy, primarily through his involvement in the Muscular Dystrophy Association's annual telethon. He served as the national chairman of the association for many years and raised significant funds for research and patient support. He hosted the annual Muscular Dystrophy Association Telethon for several decades, raising awareness and funds for the cause. Jerry Lewis's career was marked by innovation, versatility, and a tireless work ethic. He made a lasting impact on comedy and entertainment and left behind a rich legacy in the industry.
  • Personal Life & Family

    Jerry Lewis was married twice. His first marriage was to Patti Palmer in 1944, with whom he had six sons. They divorced in 1980. He later married SanDee Pitnick in 1983, and they remained together until his death. SanDee was not involved in show business and kept a lower profile compared to her famous husband. Throughout his life, Jerry Lewis faced various health issues. He battled heart disease and had open-heart surgery in the 1980s. He also struggled with chronic pain due to back problems, which affected his mobility later in life. One of the most significant aspects of Jerry Lewis's personal life was his dedication to philanthropy. He was deeply committed to raising funds and awareness for the Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA). His annual Labor Day Telethon became an iconic event and raised billions of dollars for muscular dystrophy research and support. Lewis had a large family, including his six sons from his first marriage: Gary, Ronald, Scott, Christopher, Anthony, and Joseph. Despite his busy career, Lewis was involved in his children's lives and was known to be a loving father. Jerry Lewis's career had its share of ups and downs. He faced criticism for his sometimes abrasive and controversial remarks. His business relationships, including his split from Dean Martin, were marked by both success and tension. Jerry Lewis left an indelible mark on the world of entertainment, with his unique brand of physical comedy and his philanthropic efforts. His legacy is celebrated not only in his work but also in the funds he raised for muscular dystrophy research.
  • 08/20
    2017

    Death

    August 20, 2017
    Death date
    End-stage cardiac disease and peripheral artery disease.
    Cause of death
    Las Vegas, Nevada United States
    Death location
  • Gravesite & Burial

    mm/dd/yyyy
    Funeral date
    cremated
    Burial location
  • Obituary

    By Dave Kehr Aug. 20, 2017 Jerry Lewis, the comedian, actor, and filmmaker who was adored by many, disdained by others, but unquestionably a defining figure of American entertainment in the 20th century, died on Sunday morning at his home in Las Vegas. He was 91. His death was confirmed by his publicist, Candi Cazau. Mr. Lewis knew success in movies, on television, in nightclubs, on the Broadway stage, and in the university lecture hall. His career had its ups and downs, but when it was at its zenith there were few stars any bigger. And he got there remarkably quickly. Barely out of his teens, he shot to fame shortly after World War II with a nightclub act in which the rakish, imperturbable Dean Martin crooned and the skinny, hyperactive Mr. Lewis capered around the stage, a dangerously volatile id to Mr. Martin’s supremely relaxed ego. After his break with Mr. Martin in 1956, Mr. Lewis went on to a successful solo career, eventually writing, producing, and directing many of his own films. As a spokesman for the Muscular Dystrophy Association, Mr. Lewis raised vast sums for charity; as a filmmaker of great personal force and technical skill, he made many contributions to the industry, including the early adoption of a device — the video assist, which allowed directors to review their work immediately on the set — still in common use. A mercurial personality who could flip from naked neediness to towering rage, Mr. Lewis seemed to contain multitudes, and he explored all of them. His ultimate object of contemplation was his own contradictory self, and he turned his obsession with fragmentation, discontinuity, and the limits of language into a spectacle that enchanted children, disturbed adults, and fascinated postmodernist critics. Jerry Lewis was born on March 16, 1926, in Newark. Most sources, including his 1982 autobiography, “Jerry Lewis: In-Person,” give his birth name as Joseph Levitch. But Shawn Levy, author of the exhaustive 1996 biography “King of Comedy: The Life and Art of Jerry Lewis,” unearthed a birth record that gave his first name as Jerome. His parents, Danny and Rae Levitch were entertainers — his father a song-and-dance man, his mother a pianist — who used the name "Lewis" when they appeared in small-time vaudeville and at Catskills resort hotels. Danny and Rae Levitch were frequently on the road and often left Joey, as he was called, in the care of Rae’s mother and her sisters. The experience of being passed from home to home left Mr. Lewis with an enduring sense of insecurity and, as he observed, a desperate need for attention and affection. An often bored student at Union Avenue School in Irvington, N.J., he began organizing amateur shows with and for his classmates, while yearning to join his parents on tour. During the winter of 1938-39, his father landed an extended engagement at the Hotel Arthur in Lakewood, N.J., and Joey was allowed to go along. Working with the daughter of the hotel’s owners, he created a comedy act in which they lip-synced to popular recordings. By his 16th birthday, Joey had dropped out of Irvington High and was aggressively looking for work, having adopted the professional name Jerry Lewis to avoid confusion with the nightclub comic Joe E. Lewis. He performed his “record act” solo between features at movie theaters in northern New Jersey and soon moved on to burlesque and vaudeville. In 1944 — a 4F classification kept him out of the war — he was performing at the Downtown Theater in Detroit when he met Patti Palmer, a 23-year-old singer. Three months later they were married, and on July 31, 1945, while Patti was living with Jerry’s parents in Newark and he was performing at a Baltimore nightclub, she gave birth to the first of the couple’s six sons, Gary, who in the 1960s had a series of hit records with his band Gary Lewis and the Playboys. The couple divorced in 1980. Between his first date with Ms. Palmer and the birth of his first son, Mr. Lewis had met Dean Martin, a promising young crooner from Steubenville, Ohio. Appearing on the same bill at the Glass Hat nightclub in Manhattan, the skinny kid from New Jersey was dazzled by the sleepy-eyed singer, who seemed to be everything he was not: handsome, self-assured, and deeply, unshakably cool. When they found themselves on the same bill again at another Manhattan nightclub, the Havana-Madrid, in March 1946, they started fooling around in impromptu sessions after the evening’s last show. Their antics earned the notice of Billboard magazine, whose reviewer wrote, “Martin and Lewis do an afterpiece that has all the makings of a sock act,” using showbiz slang for a successful show. Mr. Lewis must have remembered those words when he was booked that summer at the 500 Club in Atlantic City. When the singer on the program dropped out, he pushed the club’s owner to hire Mr. Martin to fill the spot. Mr. Lewis and Mr. Martin cobbled together a routine based on their after-hours high jinks at the Havana-Madrid, with Mr. Lewis as a bumbling busboy who kept breaking in on Mr. Martin — dropping trays, hurling food, cavorting like a monkey — without ever ruffling the singer’s sang-froid. The act was a success. Before the week’s end, they were drawing crowds and winning mentions from Broadway columnists. That September, they returned to the Havana-Madrid in triumph. Bookings at bigger and better clubs in New York and Chicago followed, and by the summer of 1948, they had reached the pinnacle, headlining at the Copacabana on the Upper East Side of Manhattan while playing one show a night at the 6,000-seat Roxy Theater in Midtown. The phenomenal rise of Martin and Lewis was like nothing show business had seen before. Partly this was because of the rise of mass media after the war when newspapers, radio, and the emerging medium of television came together to create a new kind of instant celebrity. And partly it was because four years of war and its difficult aftermath were finally lifting, allowing America to indulge a long-suppressed taste for silliness. But primarily, it was the unusual chemical reaction that occurred when Martin and Lewis were side by side. Mr. Lewis’s shorthand definition for their relationship was “sex and slapstick.” But much more was going on: a dialectic between adult and infant, assurance and anxiety, bitter experience, and wide-eyed innocence that generated a powerful image of postwar America, a gangly young country suddenly dominant on the world stage. Among the audience members at the Copacabana was the producer Hal Wallis, who had a distribution deal through Paramount Pictures. Other studios were interested — more so after Martin and Lewis began appearing on live television — but it was Mr. Wallis who signed them to a five-year contract. He started them off slowly, slipping them into a low-budget project already in the pipeline. Based on a popular radio show, “My Friend Irma” (1949) starred Marie Wilson as a ditsy blonde and Diana Lynn as her levelheaded roommate, with Martin and Lewis providing comic support. The film did well enough to generate a sequel, “My Friend Irma Goes West” (1950), but it was not until “At War With the Army” (1951), an independent production filmed outside Mr. Wallis’s control, that the team took center stage. “At War With the Army” codified the relationship that ran through all 13 subsequent Martin and Lewis films, positing the pair as unlikely pals whose friendship might be tested by trouble with money or women (usually generated by Mr. Martin’s character), but who were there for each other in the end. The films were phenomenally successful, and their budgets quickly grew. Some were remakes of Paramount properties — Bob Hope’s 1940 hit “The Ghost Breakers,” for example, became “Scared Stiff” (1953) — while other projects were more adventurous. “That’s My Boy” (1951), “The Stooge” (1953), and “The Caddy” (1953) approached psychological drama with their forbidding father figures and suggestions of sibling rivalry; Mr. Lewis had a hand in the writing of each. “Artists and Models” (1955) and “Hollywood or Bust” (1956) were broadly satirical looks at American popular culture under the authorial hand of the director Frank Tashlin, who brought a bold graphic style and a flair for wild sight gags to his work. For Mr. Tashlin, Mr. Lewis became a live-action extension of the anarchic characters, like Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck, he had worked with as a director of Warner Bros. cartoons. 10 Great Jerry Lewis Movies to Stream This group of films demonstrates the breadth of Lewis’s talent as an actor, comedian and director. Mr. Tashlin also functioned as a mentor to Mr. Lewis, who was fascinated with the technical side of filmmaking. Mr. Lewis made 16-millimeter sound home movies and by 1949 was enlisting celebrity friends for short comedies with titles like “How to Smuggle a Hernia Across the Border.” These were amateur efforts, but Mr. Lewis was soon confident enough to advise veteran directors like George Marshall (“Money From Home”) and Norman Taurog (“Living It Up”) on questions of staging. With Mr. Tashlin, he found a director both sympathetic to his style of comedy and technically adept. But as his artistic aspirations grew and his control over the films in which he appeared increased, Mr. Lewis’s relationship with Mr. Martin became strained. As wildly popular as the team remained, Mr. Martin had come to resent Mr. Lewis’s dominant role in shaping their work and spoke of reviving his solo career as a singer. Mr. Lewis felt betrayed by the man he still worshiped as a role model, and by the time filming began on “Hollywood or Bust” they were barely speaking. After a farewell performance at the Copacabana on July 25, 1956, 10 years to the day after they had first appeared together in Atlantic City, Mr. Martin and Mr. Lewis went their separate ways. For Mr. Lewis, an unexpected success mitigated the trauma of the breakup. His recording of “Rock-a-Bye Your Baby With a Dixie Melody,” belted in a style that suggested Al Jolson, became a Top 10 hit, and the album on which it appeared, “Jerry Lewis Just Sings,” climbed to No. 3 on the Billboard chart, outselling anything his former partner had released. Reassured that his public still loved him, Mr. Lewis returned to filmmaking with the low-budget, semi-dramatic “The Delicate Delinquent” and then shifted into overdrive for a series of personal appearances, beginning at the Sands in Las Vegas and culminating with a four-week engagement at the Palace in New York. He signed a contract with NBC for a series of specials and renewed his relationship with the Muscular Dystrophy Association — a charity that he and Mr. Martin had long supported — by hosting a 19-hour telethon. Mr. Lewis made three uninspired films to complete his obligation to Hal Wallis. He saved his creative energies for the films he produced himself. The first three of those films — “Rock-a-Bye Baby” (1958), “The Geisha Boy” (1958), and “Cinderfella” (1960) — were directed by Mr. Tashlin. After that, finally ready to assume complete control, Mr. Lewis persuaded Paramount to take a chance on “The Bellboy” (1960), a virtually plotless hommage to silent-film comedy that he wrote, directed, and starred in, playing a hapless employee of the Fontainebleau Hotel in Miami Beach. It was the beginning of Mr. Lewis’s most creative period. During the next five years, he directed five more films of remarkable stylistic assurance, including “The Ladies Man” (1961), with its huge multistory set of a women’s boardinghouse, and, most notably, “The Nutty Professor” (1963), a variation on “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,” in which Mr. Lewis appeared as a painfully shy chemistry professor and his dark alter ego, a swaggering nightclub singer. With their themes of fragmented identity and their experimental approach to sound, color, and narrative structure, Mr. Lewis’s films began to attract the serious consideration of iconoclastic young critics in France. At a time when American film was still largely dismissed by American critics as purely commercial and devoid of artistic interest, Mr. Lewis’s work was held up as a prime example of a personal filmmaker functioning happily within the studio system. “The Nutty Professor,” a study in split personality that is as disturbing as it is hilarious, is probably the most honored and analyzed of Mr. Lewis’s films. (It was also his personal favorite.) For some critics, the opposition between the helpless, infantile Professor Julius Kelp and the coldly manipulative lounge singer Buddy Love represented a spiteful revision of the old Martin-and-Lewis dynamic. But Buddy seems more pertinently a projection of Mr. Lewis’s darkest fears about himself: a version of the distant, unloving father whom Mr. Lewis had never managed to please as a child, and whom he both despised and desperately wanted to be. “The Nutty Professor” transcends mere pathology by placing that division within the cultural context of the Kennedy-Hefner-Sinatra era. Buddy Love was what the midcentury American male dreamed of becoming; Julius Kelp was what, deep inside, he suspected he actually was. “The Nutty Professor” was a hit. But the studio era was coming to an end, Mr. Lewis’s audience was growing old, and by the time he and Paramount parted ways in 1965 his career was in crisis. He tried casting himself in more mature, sophisticated roles — for example, as a prosperous commercial artist in “Three on a Couch,” which he directed for Columbia in 1966. But the public was unconvinced. He seemed more himself in the multi-role chase comedy “The Big Mouth” (1967) and the World War II farce “Which Way to the Front?” (1970). But his blend of physical comedy and pathos was quickly going out of style in a Hollywood defined by the countercultural irony of “The Graduate” and “MASH.” After “The Day the Clown Cried,” his audacious attempt to direct a comedy-drama set in a Nazi concentration camp, collapsed in litigation in 1972, Mr. Lewis was absent from films for eight years. In that dark period, he struggled with an addiction to the pain killer Percodan. “Hardly Working,” an independent production that Mr. Lewis directed in Florida, was released in Europe in 1980 and in the United States in 1981. It referred to Mr. Lewis’s marginalized position by casting him as an unemployed circus clown who finds fulfillment in a mundane job with the post office. For Roger Ebert, writing in The Chicago Sun-Times, “Hardly Working” was “one of the worst movies ever to achieve commercial release in this country,” but the film found moderate success in the United States and Europe and has since earned passionate defenders. A follow-up in 1983, “Smorgasbord” (also known as “Cracking Up”), proved a misfire, and Mr. Lewis never directed another feature film. He did, however, enjoy a revival as an actor, thanks largely to his powerful performance in a dramatic role in Martin Scorsese’s “The King of Comedy” (1982) as a talk-show host kidnapped by an aspiring comedian (Robert De Niro) desperate to become a celebrity. He appeared in the television series “Wiseguy” in 1988 and 1989 as a garment manufacturer threatened by the mob, and was memorable in character roles in Emir Kusturica’s “Arizona Dream” (1993) and Peter Chelsom’s “Funny Bones” (1995). Mr. Lewis played Mr. Applegate (a.k.a. the Devil) in a Broadway revival of the musical “Damn Yankees” in 1995 and later took the show on an international tour. Although he retained a preternaturally youthful appearance for many years, Mr. Lewis had a series of serious illnesses in his later life, including prostate cancer, pulmonary fibrosis, and two heart attacks. Drug treatments caused his weight to balloon alarmingly, though he recovered enough to continue performing well into the new millennium. He was appearing in one-man shows as recently as 2016. Through it all, Mr. Lewis continued his charity work, serving as national chairman of the Muscular Dystrophy Association and, beginning in 1966, hosting the association’s annual Labor Day weekend telethon. Although some advocates for the rights of the disabled criticized the association’s “Jerry’s Kids” campaign as condescending, the telethon raised about $2 billion during the more than 40 years he was the host. For reasons that remain largely unexplained but were apparently related to a disagreement with the association’s president, Gerald C. Weinberg, the 2010 telethon was Mr. Lewis’s last — he had been scheduled to make an appearance on the 2011 telethon but did not — and he had no further involvement with the charity until 2016 when he lent his support via a promotional video. (The telethon was shortened and eventually discontinued.) During the 1976 telethon, Frank Sinatra staged an on-air reunion between Mr. Lewis and Mr. Martin, to the visible discomfort of both men. A more lasting reconciliation came in 1987 when Mr. Lewis attended the funeral of Mr. Martin’s oldest son, Dean Paul Martin Jr., a pilot in the California Air National Guard who had been killed in a crash. They continued to speak occasionally until Mr. Martin died in 1995. In 2005, Mr. Lewis collaborated with James Kaplan on “Dean and Me (A Love Story),” a fond memoir of his years with Mr. Martin in which he placed most of the blame for their breakup on himself. Among Mr. Lewis’s other books was “The Total Film-Maker,” a compendium of his lectures at the film school of the University of Southern California, where he taught, beginning in 1967. In 1983, Mr. Lewis married SanDee Pitnick, and in 1992 their daughter, Danielle Sara, was born. Besides his wife and daughter, survivors include his sons Christopher, Scott, Gary, and Anthony, and several grandchildren. Although the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences never honored Mr. Lewis for his film work, he received the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award for his charitable activity in 2009. His many other honors included two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame — one for his movie work, the other for television — and an induction into the Légion d’Honneur, awarded by the French government in 2006. In 2015, the Library of Congress announced that it had acquired Mr. Lewis’s personal archives. In a statement, he said, “Knowing that the Library of Congress was interested in acquiring my life’s work was one of the biggest thrills of my life.” Mr. Lewis was officially recognized as a “towering figure in cinema” at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival. The festival’s tribute to him included the screening of a preliminary cut of “Max Rose,” Mr. Lewis’s first movie in almost 20 years, in which he starred as a recently widowed jazz pianist in search of answers about his past. The film did not have its United States premiere until 2016 when it was shown as part of a Lewis tribute at the Museum of Modern Art. Also in 2016, he appeared briefly as the father of Nicolas Cage’s character in the crime drama “The Trust.” In 2012, Mr. Lewis directed a stage musical in Nashville based on “The Nutty Professor.” The show, with a score by Marvin Hamlisch and book and lyrics by Rupert Holmes, never made it to Broadway, but Mr. Lewis relished the challenge of directing for the stage, a first for him. “There’s something about the risk, the courage that it takes to face the risk,” he told The New York Times. “I’m not going to get greatness unless I have to go at it with fear and uncertainty.’’
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4 Memories, Stories & Photos about Jerry

Betty Hutton, Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin.
Betty Hutton, Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin.
Comedy shot.
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Fred Willard
Fred Willard
This is a photo of Fred Willard added by Amanda S. Stevenson on May 16, 2020.
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Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin
Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin
A photo of Jerry Lewis, born Joseph Levitch, with his comedy act partner Dean Martin - who was born Dino Paul Crocetti.

Jerry was born in Newark, New Jersey to Russian Jewish parents - both performers. His father was in vaudeville and his mother played piano for a radio station. He began performing at a young age - 5 years old - with his parents.

He dropped out of high school and because of a heart murmur was rejected for service in World War II. His show business career really took off when he partnered with Dean Martin in the act "Martin and Lewis" in 1946. Dean was the straight man and Jerry was the goofy sidekick - they often made up their act on the spot, playing off of each other. Success followed quickly - on radio, tv, and movies.

They were good friends, as well as show business partners, but the success and constant togetherness began to wear on their friendship. In 1956, the act broke up and they both began successful careers of their own. They really didn't reconcile until 1976 - shortly after, Dean made a surprise appearance at Lewis's Labor Day telethon for the Muscular Dystrophy Association.

For decades, raising money for the Muscular Dystrophy Association was also a famous part of Lewis' career. It is estimated that he raised almost 2 billion dollars for the organization.

Married twice, he had 6 sons - 1 of whom was adopted - and 1 daughter, also adopted. He had a lot of health problems - some arising from his very physical comedy style and some of them throughout his life: ongoing heart issues, prostate cancer, and diabetes, along with health problems associated with some of the medications used to treat the illnesses. He died at home in Las Vegas, Nevada, at the age of 91 (9:15am PDT on August 20, 2017).
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Do you remember Dean Martin or Jerry Lewis? If you are of the "Boomer" generation, these men were huge hits in your childhood. And throughout his life, Jerry Lewis was a comedy King in France.

Jerry was born Joseph Levitch (Jerry Lewis) to Jewish immigrant parents in Newark New Jersey, and Dean was born Dino Paul Crocett (Dean Martin) in Steubenville Ohio to an Italian Immigrant father and a mother of Italian heritage. Only in America could two such diverse men from widely different backgrounds come together and create a wildly successful career.

Does this photo bring back memories? Learn about Dean & Jerry's partnership and the story around this photo.
May you now RIP Jerry Lewis we were proud over the years of watching your shows and being the funniest guy every where . You will never be forgotten our Hero of Comedy & Laughs
Robert Ivers
Robert Ivers
A photo of Robert Ivers in The Delicate Delinquent . He became an instant star with this movie but he felt the studio wasn't going to use him enough despite starring roles and lots of fan mail. I was a fan and pen pal.
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Jerry Lewis' Family Tree & Friends

Jerry Lewis' Family Tree

Parent
Parent
Partner
Child
Sibling
Marriage

Patti Lewis

&

Jerry Lewis

October 3, 1944
Marriage date
Divorce
Cause of Separation
January 27, 1983
Divorce date
Marriage

SanDee Pitnick

&

Jerry Lewis

February 13, 1983
Marriage date
Jerry's Death
Cause of Separation
August 20, 2017
Jerry's death date
Partnership

Lynn Dixon

&

Jerry Lewis

Separated
Cause of Separation
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Friendships

Jerry's Friends

Friends of Jerry Friends can be as close as family. Add Jerry's family friends, and his friends from childhood through adulthood.
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5 Followers & Sources
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