On this day in history, August 20, 2017, legendary comedian Jerry Lewis dies at 91

On this day in history, Aug. 20, 2017, 91-year-old Jerry Lewis died of natural causes at his home in Las Vegas, Nevada.

One of the most well-known American comedians of the 1950s, ’60s and well beyond, Lewis was born as either Jerome or Joseph Levitch in Newark, New Jersey in 1926, according to various sources.

The comedian and actor rose to stardom partly due to his early mimicking talents, which ultimately led to a successful career all over the world.

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Lewis was born into an entertainment family. His father, known as Danny Lewis, was a musical arranger, while his mother, Rachel, played piano. 

He started performing at age five. When he was just 12 years old, he began miming music that he heard. The unique talent led him to drop out of high school to perform, according to Britannica.

Upon his arrival in New York City, Lewis met singer and actor Dean Martin in 1946.

Martin “would provide the songs and be straight man to Lewis [the] manic comic,” noted The Los Angeles Times. 

The two soon became a popular team.

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The duo successfully performed in theaters, including the famous New York City Copacabana nightclub, and ultimately signed a deal with Paramount Pictures, as IMDb reported.

“They were hits on radio, on TV, especially as hosts of the NBC’s ‘The Colgate Comedy Hour,’ in live appearances and in a series of comedy features for Paramount Pictures, including ‘The Caddy and ’The Stooge,'” The LA Times also said. 

They enjoyed massive success and remained a popular comedic team throughout the mid-1950s.

Others memorable films included “My Friend Irma” and “Living It Up.”

The partnership did not last, however. Lewis and Martin ended up having a falling out after they did a film called “Pardners” in 1956. 

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Afterward, Lewis continued his career as a solo performer, according to Britannica.

He went on to become writer and director of his own films. Lewis was responsible for some of the greatest slapstick gags in history, including those in “The Nutty Professor,” “The Bellboy,” “The Errand Boy,” “Cinderfella” and “The Ladies Man,” according to multiple sources.

In Europe, he was named Best Director of the Year eight times beginning in 1960. 

French film critic Robert Benayoun even wrote, “I consider Jerry Lewis, since the death of Buster Keaton, to be the foremost comic artist of the time,” as the Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA) noted in a biography of Lewis.

One of his most notable efforts, however, had nothing to do with comedy or acting. Rather, it was that charity for which he became well-associated.

MDA is a voluntary health organization in the United States for people living with muscular dystrophy or neuromuscular diseases such as ALS, according to the group. 

Lewis was its national chair for over five decades. 

“Jerry won the admiration and respect of millions for providing help and hope to people of all ages, races and backgrounds living with neuromuscular diseases,” the group noted on its website.

Over the years, Lewis made it his mission to raise money for, and awareness of, muscular dystrophy. 

The MDA Telethon was broadcast each Labor Day weekend for 45 years, according to MDA. Lewis hosted the event for 44 of those years, until 2010; he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for those efforts.

He is also credited with inventing the video assist system in cinematography, according to multiple sources. 

He won numerous awards for his work over the years, and has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, according to that organization’s website. In 2005, he was awarded the Governors Award of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Board of Governors, considered the highest Emmy Award that’s presented. 

In 2012, Lewis was hospitalized for two nights in New York after collapsing with what was reportedly a low blood sugar problem, as Fox News Digital reported.

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In the years leading up to his death, he suffered from a back condition, which was linked to a fall from a piano during a comedy routine, plus health issues. 

He reportedly suffered two heart attacks.

Lewis was married twice — once to Patti Palmer for over 36 years and once to SanDee Pitnick for 34 years until his death.

He was a father of six sons and one daughter.

When he died at age 91, he was at home, according to his publicist via AP.

Jerry Lewis “was perhaps the last in a line of … great clowns,” Fox News Digital reported previously. 

“He created an indelible character — a sort of outlandish man-child who couldn’t be controlled, not even by the laws of physics.”

Martin Amis, British writer of dark comedic novels, dies at 73

Martin Amis, a British writer of dark comedic novels, has died at the age of 73, his publisher said Saturday on Twitter.

Penguin Books said Amis “leaves a towering legacy and an indelible mark on the British cultural landscape, and will be missed enormously.”

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Amis died Friday at his home in Lake Worth, Florida, the New York Times reported earlier, quoting his wife, Isabel Fonseca, as saying the cause was esophageal cancer.

Amis, the author of 14 novels including “Money: A Suicide Note,” “London Fields” and “Time’s Arrow,” in 2008 was named one of 50 best British writers since 1945 and listed for the Booker Prize twice.

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Amis, often called one of the most innovative voices of his generation, was the son of the late British author Kingsley Amis, the subject of his 2000 memoir “Experience.” He moved to the United States in 2011.

Amis’ first novel “The Rachel Papers” was published when he was 23. He worked as an editor at The Times Literary Supplement and later the literary editor of The New Statesman.

Amis told Reuters in 2012 he was happiest with his most recent novel at the time “Lionel Asbo: State of England” and less happy with its more celebrated predecessors “all the way down the line.”

He said over time, “what happens is your genius gets weaker and your talent gets stronger.”

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In a 2020 interview with the New York Times, Amis said “we read literature to have a good time. Not an easy time, necessarily, but not a hard time and not a bad time.”

American soccer journalist Grant Wahl dies while covering FIFA World Cup in Qatar

Famed American soccer journalist Grant Wahl died while covering the FIFA World Cup in Qatar. He was 48. Wahl reportedly collapsed while covering the Argentina-Netherlands quarterfinal. After paramedics performed CPR for several minutes at the scene, he was taken to a hospital. Wahl’s brother, Eric, announced his death on Instagram and made an emotional plea … Continue reading American soccer journalist Grant Wahl dies while covering FIFA World Cup in Qatar