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Richard Lewis (comedian)

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Richard Lewis
Birth nameRichard Philip Lewis
Born (1947-06-29) June 29, 1947 (age 77)
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
MediumStand-up, television, film
NationalityAmerican
Years active1971–present
GenresBlack comedy, surreal humor
Subject(s)Self-deprecation, neuroticism, psychotherapy, hypochondria, paranoia, depression, human sexuality, Jewish culture, pop culture, family
SpouseJoyce Lapinsky (January 2005 – present)
Notable works and rolesMarty Gold in Anything But Love
Himself in Curb Your Enthusiasm

Richard Philip Lewis (born June 29, 1947) is an American comedian and actor.

Early life

Lewis was born in Brooklyn, New York City and was raised in Englewood, New Jersey. His father worked as a caterer and his mother was an actress. Lewis is Jewish.[3] He later attended Ohio State University and was a member of the Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity.

Career

Lewis began performing stand-up comedy in the 1970s. He worked as a copywriter for an ad agency by day, while honing his stand-up act at night. The ad agency was named Contemporary Graphics (no longer exists) and was located above Lovey's pizzeria in Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey. Lewis gained popularity in the 1980s with numerous appearances on Late Night with David Letterman and his own television specials on HBO. He has starred in the ABC sitcom Anything But Love which ran for four seasons. He co-starred with Don Rickles on the short-lived Daddy Dearest. He had a recurring role on Showtime series Rude Awakening and as Rabbi Richard Glass on the dramatic series 7th Heaven, and appeared on the Tales from the Crypt episode "Whirlpool". Lewis has written comic articles for magazines such as Playboy, and endorsed the popular early-1990s beverage, Boku, as well as Snapple and Certs breath mints. In 2007 he made a cameo appearance as Phillip, the school counselor of Max's school, in the T.V Series George Lopez. Recently he also made cameos in Everybody Hates Chris as an old man in the hospital bed next to Chris Rock and as Charlie Sheen's accountant in Two and a Half Men.

Lewis has also achieved moderate success in films, appearing as Prince John in Robin Hood: Men in Tights, as a frontier doctor in Wagons East!, as an unemployed actor in Once Upon A Crime and as himself in the film The Wrong Guys. He played the lead role of Jimmy Epstein in the dramatic film Drunks and in the 1999 comedy Game Day. He also appeared in the dramatic pictures Leaving Las Vegas, Hugo Pool and The Maze. He made his acting debut in the 1977 TV movie mockumentary Diary of a Young Comic.

On January 9, 2001, Lewis visited The Howard Stern Show to promote his book The Other Great Depression, which described his recovery from alcoholism.

He currently has a frequent recurring role as a character based on himself on Larry David's critically acclaimed Curb Your Enthusiasm on HBO. Lewis and David met at summer camp in Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York when they were thirteen.[4]

Super Bowl XLV commercial

On February 6, 2011, Lewis was in a commercial for Snickers with Roseanne Barr, portraying a logger who refused to work. Upon eating a Snickers bar, Lewis transforms into the real logger, "Tony", and he and his coworker watch another worker (Barr) complain about back pain before being hit with a log on a cable.

"The ______ from hell"

Lewis claims to be the originator of the phrase "The ______ from hell" as in "the date from hell" or "the roommate from hell". This theory is expounded in the Curb Your Enthusiasm episode "The Nanny from Hell". Lewis has petitioned the editors of Bartlett's to be given credit for the coinage, but the editors claim that the phrase was a common idiom prior to Lewis' use of it.[5] However, the Yale Book of Quotations does attribute the phrase to Lewis.[6][7]

The first occurrence of the construction to be found in the Corpus of Historical American English (http://corpus2.byu.edu/coca/) is the 1864 "the devils from hell" in Henry Augustus Wise's novel Captain Brand of the "Centipede" (p. 110). John Abbott's 1874 book David Crockett features "the demons from hell". The first creative use originates from the magazine The Atlantic Monthly were in 1917 writer Hutchinson coined "the deliverance from hell".

"The Ladies from Hell" is a translation of German "Die Damen aus der Hölle", a nickname German troops gave to kilted Scottish soldiers during World War I.

The oldest documented "the date from hell" phrase can be found in a 1988 book, which may in fact have been influenced by Mr. Lewis.[8] There is also a mention of "the taxes from hell", in 1959, when Richard Lewis was only twelve years old.[9] Also note the Frank Zappa album Jazz from Hell released in the mid 80s.

Although Lewis certainly was not the first person to ever use it, he may well have popularized the phrase. In any event, "The BLANK from hell" was infrequent before the 1980s and gained currency from the late 1980s onwards.

Trademarks

Lewis is noted for always wearing an all-black outfit.[10] During his routines, he commonly places his right hand on his forehead, then stretches it outward as he makes his point. He also performs with long pieces of paper with notes on them, refers to the notes, then extemporaneously delivers his material. He has also performed drinking out of a New York Jets mug instead of a plain water bottle.

References

  1. ^ Interview with Bill Zehme, Richard Lewis: Concerts from Hell: The Vintage Years, Image Entertainment, Released 2005-09-13
  2. ^ Kirschling, Gregory (2008-11-07). "Artie Lange: 'F--- It, I'll Write a Book'". EW.com. Retrieved 2008-11-11.
  3. ^ Firestone, Jay (2008-03-13). "Richard Lewis, comedian from heaven". Jewish Journal. Retrieved 2010-06-23. But his sense of disconnect could just as easily be attributed to his Jewish upbringing in New Jersey.
  4. ^ Inside Media: Top TV Stars in Their Own Words / Curb Your Enthusiasm: Larry David On Richard Lewis http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0by1eaJJ96E&feature=PlayList&p=CCA7829EA1851A41&index=1
  5. ^ Flamm, Matthew. Between the Lines. 60 Minutes. 11-01-2002. Retrieved on December 28, 2006
  6. ^ Yale Press Log: Yale Gives Richard Lewis Hell, 2006-10-11. Retrieved on 2008-04-13.
  7. ^ Zwicky, Arnold. Language Log: Yet Another Snowclone Omnibus, 2007-08-11. Retrieved on 2008-04-13.
  8. ^ My California Friends, and other stories.Google Ngram Viewer
  9. ^ The Taxes from HellGoogle Ngram Viewer
  10. ^ Fine, Marshall. "Richard Lewis: The Metamorphosis," The New York Observer, February 25, 2007.


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