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August 20, 2017

Jerry Lewis, comedian and filmmaker, dies at 91

Jerry Lewis, the Jewish slapstick comedian, singer, actor, film producer and director, screen writer and humanitarian, died Sunday morning at his home in Las Vegas. He was 91 and had been in poor health for some years.

Lewis was born in Newark into a show business family, as the son of Daniel Levitch, an all-around performer, and mother Rachel (“Rae”), a pianist and her husband’s musical director.

As with many other aspects of their son’s life, even his first name is a matter of controversy. According to his birth certificate, he was born Jerome Levitch, but in his autobiography, he gave his fist name as Joseph.

During a professional career spanning some seven decades, Lewis appeared in and directed at least 46 films, and made innumerable radio, television and stage appearances.

He made his debut as a five-year old, singing “Brother, Can You Spare a Dime,” in a Borscht Belt resort in New York state’s Catskill Mountains.

In 1946, he teamed up with crooner Dean Martin in what was often lauded as the most successful comedy duo in history. Within a few months, the duo’s earnings went from $250 a week to $5,000.

Lewis himself described the collaboration between the handsome, singing Martin and himself as a “sex and slapstick” collaboration.

Together, Lewis and Martin made 16 films together, including “My Friend Irma Goes West,” “The Stooge,” and “Hollywood or Bust.”

The duo separated, with considerable acrimony, after 10 years, and though embittered, Lewis went on to a hugely successful and lucrative solo career. In the mid-fifties, his solo album “Jerry Lewis Just Sings,” sold a phenomenal 1.5 million copies.

His movie career also hit new highs, and in 1959, Lewis signed a pathbreaking new contract with Paramount, which paid him $10 million up front and 60 percent of box office profits. Among his most successful movies during the 1960s was “The Nutty Professor” and “Three on a Couch.”

Unlike many Jewish comedians and celebrities, Lewis rarely talked, or made jokes, about his Jewish heritage. The closest he came was in the 1972 film  The Day the Clown Died.”

The film was about a non-Jewish German circus clown, played by Lewis, who is imprisoned in a bar for mocking Hitler. In the camp, he insists on performing for Jewish children and the SS guards use the clown to lead the children to the Auschwitz gas chambers.  He insists on joining them as they are killed.

First passionate about the project, Lewis eventually hid all the footage, saying he was too embarrassed to show it. “ “I was ashamed of the work,’ he said. “It was bad, bad, bad.”

Lewis began hosting the annual Labor Day weekend Muscular Dystrophy Association telethon in 1966, remaining as host of the telethon and his beloved “Jerry’s Kids” until 2010, raising more than $2 billion during those years.

He received the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences’ Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award for his charitable activity in 2009. He has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame — one for his movie work, the other for television.

Lewis, whose comedy style remained popular in France, was inducted by the French government into the Légion d’Honneur 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,” according to the New York Times.

Lewis had two heart attacks, prostate cancer and pulmonary fibrosis. He also had suffered from a painkiller dependency in the 80s.

He had six sons with his first wife Patty Palmer, Gary, Ronnie, Scott, Anthony, Christopher and Joseph, who died in 2009.  He is survived by his second wife, SanDee Pitnick, and their daughter.

 

JTA contributed to this report.

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The Man and the Monster

Once there was a little boy who suspected that there was a monster in his closet.  Even after his parents assured him that there was not, he would hear strange sounds from behind his closet door.  His closet was dark and deep, and he could never see all the way to the farthest corner in the back.

One night, he awoke to the sounds and ran downstairs to grab a flashlight.  He reentered his room and slowly opened the door of his closet.  He pushed all of the clothes to the side and pointed the bright flashlight toward the deep darkness.  The strong beam of light revealed a scary monster huddled in the back corner.

“Why do you do this to me?”  The young boy asked.

Fangs clenched, the monster offered no comprehendible response.  The monster just loudly roared and tried to lash out.  Quickly, the boy slammed the door and rushed to wake up his parents.  Not believing his story at all, his parents placated him by pushing his dresser in front of the closet door.  The boy grew up without a closet, but never had to face the monster again.

Years later, the boy grew into a man and married and had children of his own.  He lived in his own big house.  Then, one night he woke up to familiar sounds coming from inside his closet.  He slowly approached the closet and carefully peeked inside.

There, crouched inside the darkness, sat the monster.  It was foaming from its clenched jaw.  The man hesitated to confront the monster as he had done as a boy.  He worried about the monster getting past him, and about the safety of his wife and children.  He had more reasons to be cautious than when he was a young boy.  He immediately slammed the door and insisted on moving.

He and his wife found a new home.  In the new house, he removed all of the closets from their master bedroom.

One night, his daughter came rushing into their room, complaining about scary sounds in her closet.  Immediately, he got out of bed, and he followed her into her room.  With his daughter trembling behind him, he opened the door and gazed into her closet at the familiar sight.  Sure enough, there sat the same monster, totally unchanged.  In that moment, he realized that the monster might never go away.

Now, it was his responsibility to confront the monster when needed and protect his family.  From that night on, he slept next to his daughter’s closet door, and his family slept peacefully knowing that he was always there to protect them.

 

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Sunday Reads: Bannon is ‘going nuclear’, Watching Charlottesville from Jerusalem

U.S.

Rosie Gray reports that sources close to Steve Bannon believe “he’s going nuclear”:

“Steve is now unchained,” said a source close to Bannon. “Fully unchained.”

“He’s going nuclear,” said another friend. “You have no idea. This is gonna be really fucking bad.”

And Bannon himself uses similar language to describe his future plans in an interview with The Weekly Standard’s Peter Boyer:

“I feel jacked up,” he says. “Now I’m free. I’ve got my hands back on my weapons. Someone said, ‘it’s Bannon the Barbarian.’ I am definitely going to crush the opposition. There’s no doubt. I built a f***ing machine at Breitbart. And now I’m about to go back, knowing what I know, and we’re about to rev that machine up. And rev it up we will do.”

Bannon tells The Weekly Standard that he can be more effective without the constraints of the White House. “I can fight better on the outside. I can’t fight too many Democrats on the inside like I can on the outside.”

Israel

Daniel Gordis shares his impressions of Charlottesville from Jerusalem:

The tiny, embattled country our family now calls home has raised a generation of young people to understand that ultimately, the only people who can be fully trusted to safeguard the safety of the Jews are the Jews. For having afforded our children a chance to grow up with no sense of the vulnerability that we knew growing up in America, we owe Israel and its founders a profound debt of gratitude. It is a debt that I don’t believe we fully appreciated until Charlottesville and its disgraceful aftermath.

Shimon Shiffer discusses the Netanyahu couple’s ongoing legal trouble:

Fortunately for Prime Minister and Mrs. Netanyahu, the law in Israel does not permit the publication of the disputes discussed in family court. As such, one can only hint that if the public were to be exposed to the court discussions between Sara Netanyahu and her brother Hagai Ben Artzi, it would add new meaning to the concept of shame. The odor that wafts up from the conduct of the Netanyahus with their own family members was, at the very least, supposed to obligate them to behave more modestly. So it is not all about a cup of tea, food deliveries, or the persecution of the Netanyahu family, but about their behavior, whose repercussions will, as it stands today, be decided by the court.

Middle East

Nicholas Danforth believes that Turkish Democracy is dead but that things can get even worse:

But it would be a mistake to assume that Turkey’s fate will now be a stifling but stable form of civilian authoritarianism. The fragmentation of institutions such as the military, coupled with the erosion of Erdogan’s democratic legitimacy and the ongoing assault on Turkey’s veneer of parliamentary democracy, have left the country unprepared for the shocks it is likely to face in the year ahead. If the situation in the country spirals out of control, the result could easily be violence and chaos rather than a resurgence of democracy.

Shlomi Eldar writes about how Hamas, Egypt and Israel have been cooperating in the fight against ISIS:

The situation is clear to both sides: To the extent that Hamas proves that it is indeed acting against the groups threatening Egypt’s security, Gaza will enjoy the “fruits of its war against terror.” At the same Cairo meeting, the sides also agreed to establish a joint headquarters for Egyptian intelligence and Hamas’ security apparatus to cooperate in real time.

Meanwhile, Sinwar committed in his meetings with Dahlan to arrest wanted men living in Gaza based on lists supplied by the Egyptians. It can be assumed that some of the names on the list, associated with Salafi groups in Gaza, originate in Israel, which knows that the information will be passed on to Hamas. Thus, there is apparently indirect intelligence cooperation between Israel, Egypt and Hamas in the war against the common enemy — IS. Given the attack at the Rafah border crossing, it seems Hamas might now welcome indirect cooperation with the “Zionist enemy.”

Jewish World

Ron Kampeas assesses Steve Bannon’s record with the Jews:

Watercooler chat plus: Bannon brought into the White House a host of staffers, among them Jewish Breitbart alumni like Julia Hahn, who is a special assistant. He reportedly is close to Ezra Cohen-Watnick, who was the National Security Council staffer responsible for coordination with the intelligence community. McMaster removed Cohen-Watnick from the NSC, reportedly in part because his views on Iran were too hawkish.

Watercooler chat minus: Bannon clashed with Jared Kushner, Trump’s Jewish son-in-law and a senior adviser, reportedly calling him a “globalist” — seen in some quarters (see above) as coded language for Jews. Ditto Trump’s senior economic adviser, Gary Cohn. Breitbart, still believed to be influenced by Bannon, has recently taken to surrounding Cohn’s name with globes in its headlines.

Bret Stephens takes a look at Trump’s remaining Jewish supporters, who have a lot of thinking to do:

The president’s Jewish supporters are left to wonder why the Iran deal remains in force, the United States Embassy is still in Tel Aviv, Bashar al-Assad is stronger than ever, the Israeli government is outraged by the deals the administration has cut with Russia at Israel’s strategic expense, and Jared Kushner has not proved a worthy strategic heir to Henry Kissinger. What’s the mystery? A man whose word is worthless when it comes to his legal contracts will have no compunction breaking his political promises, no matter whom his daughter married.

 

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In Tel Aviv, a lesson for Charlottesville

Whenever an ugly display of racism or bigotry occurs in America, it’s commonplace to hear politicians and leaders say things like, “This has no place in America.” Even President Donald Trump, in his infamous reaction to the Charlottesville, Va., clashes, said, “[T]his egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence … has no place in America.”

Really? No place for hatred and bigotry in a free and open society?

During my visit to Israel last week, I saw how this somewhat naïve and utopian view is so far from the Israeli approach.

On the free and open streets of nighttime Tel Aviv, the atmosphere was like Burning Man meets Greenwich Village meets the French Riviera. It was hard to imagine a more visceral celebration of life.

What really got me was the utter absence of fear. How could that be? Here we are in a country that is under the constant threat of terror, and everybody just wants to party.

Since Sept. 13, 2015, according to the Israel Minister of Foreign Affairs website, Israel has suffered 184 stabbing attacks, 129 attempted stabbings, 161 shootings, 60 vehicular ramming attacks and one bus bombing, resulting in a total of 55 people killed and 812 injured. In terms of casualties, that’s the American equivalent of a few hundred Charlottesvilles.

And yet, Israelis are living it up. Are they that reckless?

Actually, I think they’re just hard-nosed realists who love life. I doubt you’ll ever hear an Israeli say, “There’s no place for hatred and bigotry in a free society.” They know the truth is quite the opposite — the price you pay for a free society is that there will always be space for the dark and ugly.

This sober realization was evident on the government website that listed the terror attacks: “The recent series of attacks is the direct result of incitement by radical Islamist and terrorist elements, calling on Palestinian youth to murder Jews.”

Yes, it seems there’s always space for some Jew-hatred, especially in Israel’s neighborhood.

In a global poll commissioned a few years ago by the Anti-Defamation League, 12 percent of Americans said “Jews had too much power over the global media.” In Gaza and the Palestinian territories, that number was 88 percent.

What really got me was the utter absence of fear. How could that be? Here we are in a country that is under the constant threat of terror, and everybody just wants to party.

Anti-Semitism of any kind is serious business, whether it comes from the left or the right. There’s no need to argue about which is worse: Neo-Nazis have a lineage that puts them on a whole other level of evil. On college campuses, Jew-hatred comes mostly from the left. In Israel, it comes mostly from Islamists. The point is: We need to fight it all, without politics, without hysterics and with smart policing.

Smart policing was missing in Charlottesville. There was a report on CNN.com that described the tragic police failure to prevent the violent clashes, even though local authorities had plenty of time to prepare. As I read the report, I couldn’t help wonder how Israeli police would have fared under the same conditions. Actually, I didn’t wonder. I knew the answer.

Maybe it’s not fair to compare the two countries. After all, since its birth, Israel has been obsessed with security. By now, it probably knows all the tricks. But if we’re not going to compare, let’s at least learn some lessons from Israelis on how to deal with the violence that comes out of hatred.

One lesson is not to let fear dominate our consciousness. That’s what the haters want. They want to take over our conversations. The neo-Nazis of Charlottesville must be delighted to see the near hysteria in the Jewish community since they so nakedly revealed their evil colors.

On the security front, it’s imperative to have policing that anticipates and prevents dramatic clashes, not just to save lives but to deprive the bigots of the media coverage they so crave.

This craving for attention is the craving of losers. The more hysterical and fearful we come across, the more we embolden those losers. Conversely, the more we can suffocate their striving for public attention, the more we’ll shrink their place in society.

By all means, let’s expose the haters and isolate them, but let’s not glorify them. Let’s fight them the Israeli way — with ice in our veins and fire in our hearts.


David Suissa is president of TRIBE Media Corp./Jewish Journal and can be reached at davids@jewishjournal.com.

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