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| The ventriloquist, puppeteer, musician and actress and entertainer, who died of cancer Sunday at 65, lived almost every day of the last 45 years with Lamb Chop. |
� � � �THAT LAMB CHOP, she could drive you crazy. Sweet and fluffy like all such critters but with a subversive charm that would make Mary�s little lamb blush. � � � �The Lamb Chop stunt that�s driven me most nuts over the years is when she starts singing a song, in that mocking, nasal tone she adopts when she wants to really annoy you. And she doesn�t stop. The song is called �The Song That Doesn�t End.� And it doesn�t. It just goes on and on, my friend, the same few words, the same manic melody. � � � � After a few minutes you feel that there�s a Mister Softee truck playing its irritating siren song inside your head, you�re riding on a carousel that�s going faster and faster and will not stop, and you just want to scream. � � � �Imagine how Shari Lewis felt. The ventriloquist, puppeteer, musician and actress and entertainer, who died of uterine cancer Sunday in Los Angeles at 65 (going on 5 or 6), has lived almost every day of the last 45 or so years with Lamb Chop and siblings, the southern-accented Hush Puppy and inveterate kidder Charley Horse. � � � � NONSTOP KIDDING � � � �More than 40 years of pathetic puns! Ridiculous riddles! Nutty knock-knock jokes! � � � �Q: What�s dark brown, sweet and dangerous? � � � �A: Shark-infested chocolate pudding. � � � � Lewis� superb comic timing was always at its sharpest with Lamb Chop. Their repartee was sometimes so natural that they seemed like longtime vaudeville partners, rather than simply a performer and what was originally a crude sock puppet. � � � �Check out their brisk give-and-take on �Lamb Chop�s Play Along!� (A&M Home Video, 1992), which was also the title of the PBS TV show that brought her back to American TV that year after a long hiatus. � � � �Shari and Lamb Chop each have a joke to tell. Shari goes first. � � � ��How do you get nuts from a squirrel?� � � � ��I don�t know,� says Lamb Chop. �How do you get nuts from a squirrel?� � � � �Shari: �You say, �stick �em up!� � � � � �Lamb Chop makes no reaction. The joke just isn�t funny to the puppet, though Shari is roaring with laughter. � � � ��You�re not supposed to laugh at your own jokes,� Lamb Chop says, in a tone of mild reprimand. � � � �Shari shrugs. �I thought it was hilarious. Your turn.� � � � �Lamb Chop asks: �What animal can jump higher than a tree?� � � � ��I don�t know,� Shari replies. �What animal can jump higher than a tree?� � � � ��Any animal,� Lamb Chop answers. �Trees can�t jump.� � � � �This time it�s Lamp Chop howling, while Lewis sits stone-faced. �I thought you weren�t supposed to laugh at your own jokes,� Shari says, feeling she�s one-upped Lamb Chop. � � � ��You set me a bad example,� Lamb Chop says, adorably batting her eyelashes. � � � �At this point, Lewis cracks up, as if she�s been caught off-guard by Lamb Chop�s witty retort. Clearly, she has crossed a line with this character, as if the ventriloquist has been feeding lines to the puppet for so long that even she doesn�t know what�s going to come next out of Lamb Chop�s furry little mouth. � � � � SURPRISE AND DELIGHT � � � �Shari Lewis always had that sense of surprise and delight. With a bright red pony tail, barely 21 years old, she made her first TV appearance with Lamb Chop on the �Captain Kangaroo Show� in 1957. (She was already a veteran of the young medium, having won an Arthur Godfrey Talent Show in 1952). After that single �Captain Kangaroo� guest spot, Lewis was given her own program. � � � ��The Shari Lewis Show� ran weekly on NBC until 1963, when the networks decided it was cheaper to feed kids cartoons on Saturday morning rather than live variety shows. � � � �Lewis responded to the cancellation of �The Shari Lewis Show� with the high-spirited resilience that characterized her productive creative life. She performed in Las Vegas, then on celebrity game shows in the �60s. When that phase went out of fashion, the classically trained musician dusted off her baton and conducted symphony orchestras. � � � �She had a weekly Sunday night show on the BBC from 1968 to 1976. She appeared in Australia and Canada, did summer stock theater, and wrote more than 60 children�s books, among which the most notable may be �One-Minute Bedtime Stories� and �One-Minute Bible Stories.� � � � �In 1992, baby boomers with young children blinked twice when �Lamb Chop�s Play-Along� made its debut on PBS. One of our best TV friends and confidantes from our own childhood still looked like a kid, and Lamb Chop, Charley Horse and Hush Puppy seemed to have hardly aged at all. Lewis and the show won five consecutive Emmy awards. � � � � KEEPING IT SIMPLE � � � � �I think there�s a simplicity about Lamb Chop that is an important part of her appeal,� Lewis told the Associated Press in 1996. �But I don�t really know what it is that is the continuing element.� � � � �Maybe, of course, it is the jokes, which remain as groaningly funny to pre-and-post kindergartners now as they were when we were kids. � � � ��Knock-knock� � � � ��Who�s there?� � � � ��Alex.� � � � ��Alex who?� � � � ��Al-ex-plain later.� � � � �No need for Shari Lewis to explain her magic. She gave us the infinite joy of the song that doesn�t end. Wayne Robins -- columnist. � � � � |
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�Shari is also survived by her beloved family of characters, Lamb Chop, Charlie Horse and Hush Puppy.�
� FAMILY NEWS RELEASE |
� � � �LEWIS, diagnosed with uterine cancer in June, was undergoing chemotherapy treatments when she developed pneumonia and died Sunday at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, spokeswoman Maggie Begley said. � � � �After the treatments started six weeks ago, the Emmy Award-winning ventriloquist cut short production in Vancouver on her latest PBS children�s series, �The Charlie Horse Music Pizza.� � � � �She billed the series as an educational �Cheers� for children with a focus on music. The show premiered Jan. 5. � � � �Lewis won 12 Emmys, including five for her last PBS series, �Lamb Chop�s Play-Along.� � � � � STARTED ON �CAPTAIN KANGAROO� � � � �Lewis and Lamb Chop premiered on television�s �The Captain Kangaroo Show� in the mid 1950s, and that single appearance led to her own TV program, �The Shari Lewis Show,� which ran Saturday mornings on NBC. � � � �Millions of children in successive generations grew up with Lewis and her brand of playfulness and joy. She also wrote more than 60 children�s books. � � � �During a 1986 White House Christmas party hosted by Nancy Reagan, Lewis and her puppets entertained hundreds of youngsters from around the world. � � � �Lewis never spoke down to children, instead inviting them into her own creative and fun world. � � � �In addition to Emmys, she won a Peabody Award, the John F. Kennedy Center Award for Excellence and Creativity, seven Parents� Choice Awards and the Action for Children�s Television Award. � � � �In 1997, Shari Lewis Enterprises Inc. was sold to Golden Books Family Entertainment for an undisclosed price. � � � �Lewis, who lived in Beverly Hills, is survived by her husband of 40 years, publisher Jeremy Tarcher, as well as a daughter and a sister. � � � ��Shari is also survived by her beloved family of characters, Lamb Chop, Charlie Horse and Hush Puppy,� the family said in a news release. � � � �The funeral will be private and a public memorial service will be announced later, Begley said. � � � |
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