bpatrick said:
My vote for the worst goes to the last telecast of Jerry Lewis' short-
lived Saturday-night show in 1963. On it he railed at ABC CEO Leonard
Goldenson and the efforts ABC was making to get something out of him
about the content of the following week's show. Like a spoiled child he
said, "I don't do like I'm supposed to." A far cry from Jerry the humanitarian
we're used to today.
I should clarify what I said above about Jerry Lewis and Leonard Goldenson;
I meant the efforts by ABC during the run of the show to get Jerry
to open up about what he had planned for the next week. The week after
Jerry's last show there was, IIRC, a beauty pageant of some sort, and the
week after that "The Hollywood Palace" premiered and lasted six years.
Jerry Lewis' show on ABC has to be ranked as one of the worst programs in television history. Apparently the network thought that Lewis, who was still a top money earner in the movies, could draw an audience to TV. They learned the hard way he couldn't.
Two ironies here.
One of the early hosts of "The Hollywood Palace" was Dean Martin. After being introduced and sang a few songs, Martin joked: "I want to thank Jerry Lewis for building this nice facility."
The second irony is that a few years after the ABC debacle, Lewis went to NBC to once again try a second time to host a TV show and once again he bombed. Meanwhile Dean Martin, who had one of the top rated variety programs on TV at the time, asked his audience to watch Lewis' show; something I am almost certain Lewis would have never done.
Even when Frank Sinatra got Martin and Lewis together on the MDA telethon in 1976, you can hear Lewis on You Tube say to Sinatra: "You son-of-a bitch, it should have been a jew"....referring that someone other than Sinatra, who like Martin was Italian, should have been the person to patch things up between the two men.
I bring these points up because everything I ever read indicated that Martin couldn't stand Lewis and didn't speak to him for 20 years. It was only after Dean's son died in a plane crash did the two men reconcile their differences.