JERRY Lewis, who died on Sunday at age 91, delighted millions with his slapstick antics, earning a devoted following and propelling him to dizzying heights of fame at a young age.
He influenced the likes of Richard Pryor, trailblazed movie-making techniques and raised more than a billion dollars for charitable causes.
He also became a polarising figure, one who was notoriously difficult during interviews and with audiences, made disparaging comments about women and gays, and faced criticism about his approach to fundraising.
Few entertainment figures were as divisive as Lewis, who enjoyed such public adoration but also endured scorn.
Kliph Nesteroff, author of The Comedians, a history of American comedy, said Lewis’s “influence cannot be overstated” and added that he serves as one of our best examples of the comedic mind.
“The comic neuroses, the good and bad side, the happy, funny, smiling side and the brooding, angry, depressed side — Jerry Lewis had both of those,” Nesteroff continued. “Whether he was aware of it or not, we frequently saw both sides of him on display.”
Alongside partner Dean Martin in the late 1940s, Lewis, then in his teens, became a sensation, experiencing the kind of early comedic success that remained unparalleled until Eddie Murphy’s rise in the 1980s.
“‘Martin and Lewis’ is the closest thing we’ve ever had in comedy to Beatlemania,” Nesteroff said.
Lewis had a prolific film career, both with Martin and after the duo’s acrimonious 1956 split, churning out hit after hit.