Well known for his slapstick comedic style, Jerry Lewis has also
delighted worldwide movie audiences with a directing career spanning
five decades. One of American cinema's great innovators, Lewis made
unmistakably personal films that often focused on an ideal masculine
image and an anarchic, manic acting out of the inability to assume this
image. Films such as The Bellboy, The Errand Boy, Three on a Couch, and
The Big Mouth present a series of thematic variations on this tension,
in which such questions as how to be a man, how to be popular, and how
to maintain relationships are posed within frameworks that set up a
liberating and exhilarating confusion of roles and norms. The Nutty
Professor and The Patsy are especially profound and painful examinations
of the difficulty experienced by Lewis's character in reconciling loving
himself and being loved by others.
With sharp, concise observations, Chris Fujiwara examines this visionary
director of self-referential comedic masterpieces. The book also
includes an enlightening interview with Lewis that offers unique
commentary on the creation and study of comedy.