7 /10 1 Votes7
7.8/10 TV Final episode date 22 June 1984 | 6.3/10 First episode date 18 June 1984 Theme song Smile | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Directed by John DorseyJack SheaArthur Forrest Similar The Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Da, Variety show, The Colgate Comedy, The Andy Williams Show, Kraft Music Hall |
The Jerry Lewis Show was the name of several separate but similar American variety, talk and comedy programs starring comedian Jerry Lewis that aired non-consecutively between September 21, 1963 – 1984. The original version of the series aired on ABC from September 21, 1963–December 21, 1963. The second version of the series aired from September 12, 1967–May 27, 1969. The final version of the series aired for a week in 1984.
Contents
- Martin and Lewis
- Renovation of the El Capitan
- Promotion of Elton Rule
- ABC version
- JFK assassination and cancellation
- NBC version
- Syndicated version
- Broadcast history
- Ratings
- References

Martin and Lewis

Before The Jerry Lewis Show premiered in 1963, Lewis made several films and television appearances, notably as host on The Colgate Comedy Hour, with vocalist Dean Martin as the duo "Martin and Lewis", first formed in July 1946. In 1956 after 17 films, a radio series , 29 Colgate shows and many night club appearances, they parted ways bitterly. Both Martin and Lewis continued as successful, but separate show business superstars. Between 1957 and 1962 Lewis headlined several well received solo specials for the NBC and ABC networks. "The Jerry Lewis Show" was the comedians first foray into weekly television.
Renovation of the El Capitan

In 1963, the American Broadcasting Company, (ABC), purchased the Hollywood and Vine Street Theatre, also known as the El Capitan Theatre (not to be confused with the present-day El Capitan Theatre). The theater had been used in previous years for broadcast radio shows for the Mutual Broadcasting System. ABC decided to renovate the theater so to be used for several ABC television shows. The renovation took place of the whole theater. The cost to renovate the facility was $400,000.
Promotion of Elton Rule
The same year of the renovation, ABC decided to promote Elton Rule to head of the network. Rule had previously worked as general manager of programming for ABC's Los Angeles affiliate KABC. Rule and other executives at ABC hired comedian Jerry Lewis to do a show for the network and videotape it at the newly renovated theater.
ABC version
The first version of The Jerry Lewis Show premiered on Saturday September 21, 1963 on ABC. Before the series premiere, ABC gave Lewis $4.5 million to renovate the stage even after the $400,000 renovation done to the whole theater just months before. That was also part of the contract used to get Lewis to do the show. The other, main part of the contract, had Lewis agree to film 40 episodes for the network in exchange for $8 million, making Lewis, at the time, the highest paid television actor in history.
JFK assassination and cancellation
On November 22, 1963, President John F. Kennedy was assassinated while riding in a motorcade in Dallas, Texas. Network news coverage of the assassination and the events that followed pre-empted all scheduled programing between the afternoon of the 22nd and the late evening of the 25th. All series, specials and sporting events were delayed, put on hiatus or cancelled. Episodes of competing series on CBS, The New Phil Silvers Show and Gunsmoke were delayed until January and April 1964, respectively. The NBC Saturday Night Movie was also delayed until January 1964. The Jerry Lewis Show scheduled for the 23rd was suspended and did not return until early December. Its final episode, the thirteenth of forty promised, aired on December 21, 1963.
NBC version
Director-producer Bob Finkel decided to revise The Jerry Lewis Show nearly four years after the original ABC version ended its run. The revision of the series premiered on NBC on September 12, 1967 with guest Barbara Eden.
NBC introduced the show in the Tuesday 8:00 pm time slot. The 60 minute program continuously lost viewers at the half-hour point to The Red Skelton Show, ranked #7 on CBS and #28 rated It Takes a Thief on ABC. The following September as the series entered its second season, NBC decided to switch time slots with I Dream of Jeannie which starred Miss Eden, but the 7:30 pm time slot was not successful either. Jeannie moved to Mondays and finished #26 in the Nielsen ratings, while Lewis lost his potential viewers to The Mod Squad on ABC. NBC cancelled the program, airing its last episode on May 27, 1969.
Syndicated version
Alan Thicke created his own late night talk show to compete against NBC's highly rated The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. The series, entitled Thicke of the Night, was syndicated and only ran for one season before being crushed by Carson and cancelled in June 1984. Needing a replacement program, series distributor Metromedia gave Lewis an on-air tryout in Thicke's former slot. During the week of June 18, 1984, Lewis hosted The Jerry Lewis Show, with Charlie Callas as Lewis' announcer/sidekick. The show failed to attract audiences, and even with guests like Frank Sinatra, it still was not enough to keep viewers watching beyond its one-week trial run, and The Jerry Lewis Show ended after its June 22 episode.
Broadcast history
The syndicated version aired after the 11:00 local news.
Ratings
Neither the ABC or the NBC version of the series ever made it in the top 30.