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Showing posts with label Lewis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lewis. Show all posts

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Comedy club announces Jerry Lewis Award, Web-athon (AP)

LOS ANGELES – Comedians who think Jerry Lewis was unceremoniously dumped from his post as chairman of the Muscular Dystrophy Association and face of its annual telethon are holding a Web-athon of their own.

Laugh Factory owner Jamie Masada said his club will hold a fundraiser on Monday featuring comedians such as Norm Crosby and Dave Chappelle. Fans can watch the performances online and make donations.

Proceeds of the event will be presented to those working toward a cure for muscular dystrophy as the Jerry Lewis Award. Masada said the event will be held annually on Labor Day until a cure is found.

The MDA announced last month that it was parting ways with Lewis after 45 years but offered no explanation for the split. Days after the announcement, Masada and comedians including Paul Rodriguez and Larry Dreesen gathered in support of the 85-year-old comedian.

In a letter dated Aug. 19, Lewis thanked Masada and the "funny men" for their efforts and expressed his "deepest appreciation and pride."

Lewis has not commented on what led to his departure from the MDA.

The MDA's annual telethon will be held Sunday.

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Online:

http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_en_ce/storytext/us_jerry_lewis_award/42800644/SIG=10up06io7/*http://www.laughfactory.com/


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Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Jerry Lewis a no show at Telethon after 45 years (AP)

NEW YORK – No one would sniff at all the dollars Jerry Lewis raised for muscular dystrophy: a couple of billion during his 45-year reign as host of the Muscular Dystrophy Association Telethon.

But what kind of TV did he offer in exchange? The short answer: Jerry put on a show like no other.

Labor Day this year promises to be bland by comparison, with the 85-year-old Lewis now banished from the annual rite he built from scratch and molded in his image.

As if deflated by the absence of its larger-than-life host, "The 46th Annual MDA Labor Day Telethon" will fill just six hours (Sunday from 6 p.m. to midnight in each of the United States' four time zones), rather than the grueling 21 1/2-hour endurance contest that Lewis used to churn through with his viewers in tow.

On this year's broadcast (which, ironically, will no longer be airing on Labor Day), a quartet of lightweights are standing in for Jerry: Nigel Lythgoe ("So You Think You Can Dance"), Nancy O'Dell ("Entertainment Tonight"), Alison Sweeney ("The Biggest Loser") and Jann Carl (billed as "an Emmy-winning journalist").

Celebrities will include Celine Dion, Jennifer Lopez, Lady Antebellum, Richie Sambora and Jordan Sparks.

It may be entertaining. It may spur contributions. But as a media event, this year's telethon can hardly match the display of wretched excess Jerry Lewis guaranteed, especially in his epic, unbridled prime.

"Jerry is a ferociously contradictory personality, and that's what makes him fascinating to watch," says satirist-actor-writer Harry Shearer, a Jerry-watcher for a half-century. He noted just two of Lewis' clashing identities: "the inner 9-year-old, set loose" and the would-be deep thinker "who fancies himself something of an autodidact."

"It all makes for psychodrama of a high order," Shearer marvels.

Year after year, Lewis bounced between the polarities of smarmy sentimentalism and badgering lunacy as if in a weightless environment. He put his multiple identities on raw display, each constantly jostling for the spotlight.

Hear him on a circa-1970s telethon introducing singer Julius LaRosa with syntax-butchering effusiveness as "the kind of human being that is wonderful to get close to and near, and then you pray that it's contagious" and as "what the literal translation of the word `professional' means," in possession of "probably the best singing voice I think anyone has ever heard, when you listen to the heart that goes into it."

It was fascinating, ridiculous, cringe-worthy and spellbinding to see how Jerry held court for the parade of entertainers, the checks-bearing civic leaders and corporate sponsors, and the adorable, afflicted kids.

The Jerry Lewis telethon was a reality show decades before the term or genre had been invented. It was video retailing, years before QVC. It was round-the-clock TV companionship long before cable news and the Weather Channel.

For nearly a full day, it was a spectacle of show-biz glitz, heart-tugging emotion and suspense: Would Jerry make it to the end without unraveling? Would the level of pledges do justice to his efforts at soliciting them?

There was a perfect symbiosis of the telethon and Lewis. He made muscular dystrophy as big a star as he had once been. Meanwhile, aligning himself with the search for its cure gave him the gravitas he had always sought. He branded the disease with himself, and vice versa.

He was not only the host of the telethon and chairman of the Muscular Dystrophy Association (a job he would hold for 60 years), but the central figure in a massive enterprise as the self-styled avenging angel of a dread disease.

The contradictions, though, were legion, breathtaking to behold. Shearer covered the 1976 telethon during its heyday for Film Comment magazine.

"The telethon combines the hysterical mystique of the (Las Vegas) Strip superstar with equally hysterical desperation of the downtown lounge act," he wrote. "It mixes the glib disinterest of a TV star taping a thirty-second public-service spot with the glib agony of a comedian on a crusade."

There was the unresolvable question of Lewis' motives; he has famously refused to say why he poured so much of his life into MDA. How much of what he did was prompted by humanitarian urges? How much is explained by the voracious appetites of an attention hog?

And how to explain the choice of theme songs by Lewis for his righteous cause: the piteousness of "Smile (Though Your Heart Is Aching)," and, of course, the riotously inappropriate "You'll Never Walk Alone" with which Lewis, overcome by emotion, ended each telethon, daring his audience to consider it a cruel joke.

Lewis found a perfect counterbalance for his excesses and vanities in the purity and urgent need of "his" kids. Everything he did he was doing in their service, which, in his mind, absolved him of his carte blanche life-or-death extravagance.

It made him, at last, a success on TV. He was a comedian-singer-writer-actor-director-producer-movie star who, after splitting with his partner Dean Martin in the mid-1950s, had failed to match his other triumphs with any real television inroads. But on the telethon each year, for 21 1/2 hours, he was the unquestioned boss of the Love Network.

It is not as if his TV acceptance was not a mixed blessing, as Shawn Levy observed in his Lewis biography, "King of Comedy."

On the one hand, Lewis was the star of a hit show "for which the nation not only dropped all else on a summer holiday weekend but actually opened its wallets." On the other hand, Lewis could never be certain "that it was to him and not his cause that the American public was responding with its support."

This has long since become moot, all the more so since Aug. 3, when, with no elaboration, MDA announced that Lewis had "completed his run" as national chairman, and that he would not be appearing on the telethon, as promised earlier.

Lewis has provided no insight into the matter. But it is hard to imagine how wronged he must feel after bonding with the telethon for so long. As Levy writes in "King of Comedy," Lewis "had conflated America's charitable instincts with love for himself as a public figure and even as one more lonely child."

The telethon will be on again this Labor Day weekend, in some faint version of what Lewis wrought. But for those who watch, and remember it with Jerry, it is likely to feel like a lonely affair.

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Online:

http://www.mda.org/telethon

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EDITOR'S NOTE — Frazier Moore is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. He can be reached at fmoore(at)ap.org and at http://www.twitter.com/tvfrazier


Yahoo! News

Monday, August 22, 2011

Jerry Lewis not reinstated at telethon: spokeswoman (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Comedian Jerry Lewis will not be back next month to host the annual muscular dystrophy telethon that he has headlined since 1966 despite a media report to the contrary, his spokeswoman said on Sunday.

A story from a gossip columnist for the Las Vegas Review-Journal that was posted online at the newspaper's website cited an unnamed source close to the comedian as saying Lewis had been reinstated to the Labor Day weekend telethon.

Earlier this month, the Muscular Dystrophy Association had said Lewis would not appear at all in the telethon, and on Sunday the comedian's spokeswoman said that had not changed.

"Him being reinstated as the host of the MDA telethon is not accurate," said Candi Cazau, a publicist for Lewis.

Norm Clarke, the author of the Review-Journal article who writes under the banner "Vegas Confidential," said on Sunday in a Twitter post, "A source told Vegas Confidential that Lewis had been 'reinstated.' The source clarified that today, saying he meant reconciled."

A spokesman for the MDA did not return calls.

The 85-year-old Lewis has starred in over 40 films and is best known for the popular 1963 movie "The Nutty Professor." In the 1940s and 1950s, he performed on stage, in television and on film in a wildly popular comedy duo with singer Dean Martin.

Lewis has hosted the telethon since 1966, but in May he said he was retiring from that job. He had nevertheless been expected to make a final appearance in the September 4 telethon and sing his signature song "You Never Walk Alone."

Those plans were scrapped earlier this month when the MDA said Lewis would not be appearing on the show. The organization has since released a list of performers that includes singers Jennifer Lopez, Celine Dion and Steven Tyler.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis: Editing by Cynthia Johnston)


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Monday, August 8, 2011

Comedians gather to support ousted telethon host Lewis (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap) – Jerry Lewis' fellow comedians rallied to express their support of him and to criticize his removal as host of the annual Muscular Dystrophy Association Telethon.

News came Wednesday that the Tucson-based MDA had relieved the 85-year-old comedian of his duties as host, despite Lewis' assertion that the upcoming Labor Day telethon would be his last.

Comedians including Paul Rodriguez, Larry Miller, Tom Dreesen and Norm Crosby held a press conference Friday at Hollywood's famous Laugh Factory club to reprimand the MDA for dropping a man they see as a member of the family.

"If this is the way we're going, we should also tell Grandpa we don't need him for Thanksgiving," joked Miller to reporters.

Laugh Factory owner Jamie Masada told TheWrap that his club is holding a petition to present to the MDA. "The charity should have a better, bigger heart," he said.

The comedians demand that Lewis at the very least should attend the telethon and be given a proper send-off to commemorate his 45 years as host. They have established a petition that has already accumulated more than 10,000 signatures, but Masada is hoping for 100,000 signers.

"We don't want to boycott the charity of the kids," Masada continued. "We want to raise money (for the cause), but they didn't have to be coldhearted."

While the MDA's reasoning for replacing Lewis has not been announced, Laugh Factory owner Jamie Masada says he and the comedians support Lewis regardless of the reasons for his dismissal.

"He's not dead," said Rodriguez at the press event. "He's very much alive."

Preparations for the 46th annual telethon are under way at the South Point Hotel, Casino and Spa in Las Vegas.

MDA's new host has not yet been announced.

The veteran actor, who struggles with a debilitating back condition, heart issues and pulmonary fibrosis, will appear in the documentary "Method to the Madness of Jerry Lewis," airing on October 22 on Encore. The special features rare footage of Lewis in action, as well as comments from the likes of Jerry Seinfeld, Eddie Murphy, Quentin Tarantino and Alec Baldwin, sharing appreciation for the legend.

MDA did not respond for a request for comment.


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Lewis, MDA mum on reasons for comedian's exit (AP)

LAS VEGAS – For decades, Jerry Lewis has played the key role in the Muscular Dystrophy Association's annual telethon, helping to raise more than $1 billion. Now the two sides are parting ways, but no one is explaining why.

The 85-year-old comedian told reporters last week that he plans to hold a press conference the day after this year's telethon to talk about what he thinks is important. When pressed by a reporter about his role with the telethon, Lewis said: "It's none of your business."

The Tucson, Ariz.-based association announced this week that after 45 years, the comedian was no longer its national chairman and he would not appear on the telethon this year.

Association spokesman Jim Brown declined to say what prompted the decision. And Lewis publicist Candi Cazau of Las Vegas also declined to comment, telling The Associated Press Thursday that comedian was traveling outside his home state of Nevada.

In May, Lewis said in a statement issued through the association that he would make his final appearance on the telethon this year and sing "You'll Never Walk Alone" during a six-hour primetime broadcast scheduled for Sept. 4.

But during a session with reporters last week at a Television Critics Association press tour to promote an upcoming TV documentary, "Method to the Madness of Jerry Lewis," Lewis hinted that his involvement in raising money for muscular dystrophy research wasn't finished.

"Who told you that?" Lewis asked a reporter who asked him how he felt about this year being his last telethon. "I never read it."

"Do you remember when the New York Times printed, `Dewey wins'? I rest my case, pal," Lewis said. "Anything you read, read it twice."

In 1948, the Chicago Tribune famously printed the headline "Dewey defeats Truman" the day after Harry Truman beat Thomas Dewey in the presidential election.

Lewis also harshly criticized reality television shows that include heavy involvement from telethon co-hosts Nigel Lythgoe and Alison Sweeney. Lythgoe is executive producer of "American Idol," which Lewis called a singing competition of "McDonald's wipeouts," while Sweeney hosts weight-loss show "The Biggest Loser."

"You just have to be bad. The business is scrounging around for what to do," Lewis said when asked how comedic actors can become great today. "And the first thing a good comic must do is let them know he hasn't changed.

"He can bring that same veracity and that same performance to a medium that's running around, knocking their brains out trying to see how we beat the fat lady at 375 pounds, and in four months she's going to be 240. Who (cares)," Lewis said. "It's ridiculous."

When asked what he'd have to do to be satisfied with his life, Lewis said: "Get the cure for muscular dystrophy, then I'm fine."

Lewis later said he would hold a press conference Sept. 5 to clarify his plans.

"I will have plenty to say about what I think is important. And that's the future, not the past," he said.

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Associated Press writer Jacques Billeaud in Phoenix contributed to this report.

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Oskar Garcia can be reached at http://twitter.com/oskargarcia.


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Sunday, July 24, 2011

American boxing promoter Butch Lewis dies (AFP)

PHILADELPHIA, USA (AFP) – Muhammad Ali's former boxing promoter Butch Lewis has died. He was 65.

The colourful American promoter also worked with Joe Frazier, Mike Tyson and Leon and Michael Spinks, and was known for the snappy tuxedos he wore to fights.

Lewis's family is making funeral arrangements at a funeral home in Wilmington, Delaware. Funeral home owner Sammy Congo said he did not know the details of Lewis' death.

Lewis promoted the Michael Spinks-Tyson fight 23 years ago that was won by Tyson with a first round knockout.


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Saturday, June 25, 2011

Jerry Lewis briefly hospitalized in Sydney (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Veteran entertainer Jerry Lewis canceled a benefit show in Australia on Friday when he fell ill and was taken to a hospital, but he has since returned to his normal routine, his publicist said.

Lewis, 85, arrived in Australia on Monday for a two-week fund-raising tour for the Muscular Dystrophy Foundation of Australia. But a sold-out show scheduled for Friday at the Rooty Hill RSL, an entertainment and dining club in the Sydney suburbs, was canceled because of "poor health," the foundation said in a statement on its website.

Candi Cazau, the entertainer's Las Vegas-based publicist, said Lewis was "just feeling a little under the weather" on Friday night, possibly as a result of the 17-hour time difference between Sydney and Los Angeles.

"He went to the hospital but was released shortly thereafter," she added. "He's back at his hotel and back to his normal routine."

She called the whole episode "nothing serious."

Although beset for years by numerous ailments, including heart attacks, an inflammatory lung disorder and chronic back pain caused by pratfalls earlier in his career, Lewis remains highly vigorous for his age, Cazau said.

"I don't know where he gets the energy," she said. "He's nonstop."

The Muscular Dystrophy Foundation said Lewis' itinerary in Australia includes appearances in Melbourne and in Brisbane, where he performed on Wednesday at a gala dinner for 250 people.

The zany comic-actor, a veteran of over 45 films during a career spanning five decades, is due back in the United States on July 4, she said.

Lewis announced in May that he was retiring this year as host of the annual Labor Day holiday telethon for the U.S.-based Muscular Dystrophy Association, of which he remains national chairman. The group is separate from the Australian foundation.

He is slated to make what he said would be a final appearance on that show in September.

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)


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Comedy icon Jerry Lewis ill in Australia (AFP)

SYDNEY (AFP) – Veteran US comedian Jerry Lewis has had to cancel a sell-out Sydney tour after collapsing from exhaustion as he prepared to take the stage, promoters said Saturday.

The 85-year-old was due to perform before a packed house in western Sydney Friday night to raise money for muscular dystrophy but the event was called off at the last minute after he fell ill.

Lewis has cancelled the remainder of his Sydney tour to rest and will return to the stage on Thursday for a Melbourne performance if his health permits.

"He is extremely disappointed for his fans that he was unable to perform last night, but a combination of a long flight from the US and a busy few days on the start of his national tour led to his exhaustion," said David Jack, head of Australia's Muscular Dystrophy Foundation.

A doctor had attended to the comedy star but he had not been hospitalised and was "feeling much better" after resting in his hotel overnight, added Jack.

"He wanted me to give a very important message just to quash any rumours: `I'm not pregnant'," he joked.

"Understandably, Jerry's health is our primary concern throughout this period and we want to ensure he's able to travel home healthy."

Many people in the 700-strong audience for Friday's event had elected to donate the cost of their ticket rather than seek a refund and Jack said he had been "overwhelmed" when they rose to give the absent star a standing ovation.

Staff at the club where Lewis had been due to perform said the comedy legend had been unable to get out of the car when he arrived Friday and looked "extremely unwell".

"On meeting Mr Lewis he was very pale, looked quite frail and was unable to communicate very well," the club's general manager, Ian Lowe, told ABC Radio.

Lewis had been scheduled to do a dinner engagement on Saturday night and another event on Sunday, both of which were called off.

Known for his legendary 1940s comedy partnership with Dean Martin, Lewis has also achieved success as a film producer, screenwriter, director and singer and was awarded a humanitarian Oscar in 2009.

Poor health saw him hospitalised in Australia once before, in 1999, when he fell ill with viral meningitis.

A diabetic, Lewis has also undergone heart surgery following a number of heart attacks and battled prostate cancer and lung problems.


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Friday, June 24, 2011

Jerry Lewis cancels Australia show due to health (AP)

SYDNEY – Jerry Lewis has canceled a show in Australia due to poor health.

The Muscular Dystrophy Foundation Australia said the comedian's show Friday night in Sydney had been sold out.

Foundation CEO David Jack apologized in a statement, saying the 85-year-old was "not well enough to take the stage." It didn't give details.

Lewis was touring the country to raise funds for the Australian foundation. The statement said he arrived in Australia on Monday and had performed Wednesday in Brisbane.

He has in recent years battled a debilitating back condition, heart issues and pulmonary fibrosis.

Lewis is the longtime chairman of the U.S. Muscular Dystrophy Association. He announced last month he was retiring as host of its Labor Day telethon that is synonymous with him.


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Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Jerry Lewis to quit hosting annual telethon (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Veteran entertainer Jerry Lewis said on Monday he is retiring as host of the annual Labor Day telethon for muscular dystrophy research after 45 years and will make his final appearance on the U.S. show in September.

Lewis, 85, the zany comedian and actor who starred in more than 45 films in a career spanning five decades, made the announcement in a statement posted by the Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA), on its website.

"As a labor of love, I've hosted the annual telethon since 1966, and I'll be making my final appearance on the show this year by performing my signature song, "You'll Never Walk Alone,'" he said in the statement.

Lewis has turned the ballad from the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical "Carousel" into an anthem for MDA by performing it at the conclusion of each telethon over the years.

Lewis did not say why he was retiring at this stage, but an MDA spokesman said the comedian's departure coincided with a change in the program's format from a 21 1/2-hour telethon to a six-hour broadcast centered around prime time.

"We needed to change the format for our show, and we're creating a new telethon era now," the spokesman, Jim Brown, told Reuters.

"We're very, very thankful that Jerry Lewis is performing 'You'll Never Walk Alone,'" he said. "He is a world-class humanitarian, and no-one rivals him in terms of his commitment to the cause."

Lewis said he would continue to serve as national MDA chairman, adding, "I'll never desert MDA and my kids."

The program has raised in excess of $2 billion for the fight against muscular dystrophy through 900 hours of live broadcasts over the years, and has become an annual Labor Day weekend institution on U.S. television.

(Reporting and writing by Steve Gorman and Dan Whitcomb)


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