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August 14, 2004
En août, RAS sauf la Loi de Jerry / It's August, it's quiet, except for Jerry's Law

On sait, on sait: les Américains sont obsédés par Jerry Lewis et son statut de comique vedette en France et ils ne peuvent s'empêcher de glisser son nom dans une conversation sur l’hexagone. Pourquoi pas?! C'est toujours plus agréable que les remarques à l'apéro sur l'occupation nazie d'il y a 63 ans, l'antisémitisme en France ou la vague de chaleur meurtrière de l'été dernier. Ouf, déjà le 16 août: on sans doute échappé à un remake cet été!

We all know this: Americans are obsessed with Jerry Lewis and his status as a comic star in France, and they can't help slip his name into any conversation about the Hexagon. And why not?! It's always more pleasant than cocktail-hour remarks on the Nazi occupation some 63 years ago, or anti-Semitism in France, or last summer's killer heat wave. Whew! -- it's already August 16; we probably avoided a replay this summer!

Plastic héberge une énième discussion sur l'angoisse de la France, qui rêve de restaurer sa gloire d'antan." Et ça ne loupe pas, il est question de ce bon vieux Jerry. Mike Godwin avait lancé le concept de la loi de Godwin, selon laquelle Hitler et les Nazis jaillissent comme des pantins dans les discussions en ligne et salopent tout. Selon ma nouvelle "loi de Jerry", le génie comique est inévitablement mentionné dans les cinq premiers commentaires d'un cyberdébat sur la France.

Plastic hosts yet another one of these discussions about "an anxious France dreaming of restoring its former glory." And sure enough, good ol' Jerry comes up in the thread. Mike Godwin once coined something called Godwin's law, according to which Hitler and the Nazis inevitably spring up like jumping Jacks in any online thread, spoiling rational discussion. So, according to my new "Jerry's Law," the comic genius will be mentioned within the first 5 comments of any online debate about France in America.

Chez Plastic, il est rappelé que Jerry Lewis était chaud en France dans les années 60 et que cette période est révolue. Selon Adam Gopnik, dilettante de "la Fwance", les Français raffolent des artistes populaires américains avec "une œuvre". Un participant dit que le succès de Jerry Lewis était surtout du à l’acteur français qui le doublait, et qu’après sa mort, aucun film de Jerry Lewis n’a eu de succès en France. En réalité, il a eu plusieurs doubleurs, dont le fameux Roger Carel, toujours parmi nous à ce que sache. Mais c’est vrai que le doublage explique en grande partie le succès de plusieurs sommets de la culture américaine en France, comme les séries Starsky et Hutch et Magnum.

On Plastic, participants recall that Jerry Lewis was hot in France in the 60s and that this phase is over. According to "Fwance" dilettante Adam Gopnik, the French are enamored with any American popular artist who has an oeuvre." A Plastic-er says that the success of Jerry Lewis was mostly due to the French actor guy dubbing him, and that after he died, no Jerry Lewis movie was ever successful in France. In fact, he had several actors dubbing him, among whom was the remarkable Roger Carel, who is still among us, as far as I know. But it's true that excellent French dubbing explains in part the success of those monuments of American culture in France, such as the TV series Starsky and Hutch and Magnum P.I.

Une professeur, Rae Beth Gordon, a publié le livre Pourquoi les Français aiment Jerry Lewis qui m'apprend pas mal de choses. Selon elle, Jerry Lewis est l'héritier d'un genre de comédie inhérent des music-halls français des années 1880. Leurs sketches sont tous sur le même modèle: mouvements frénétiques, tics, grimaces et bizarres comportements imitant des désordres nerveux comme l'hystérie, l'épilepsie et le syndrome de Tourette. Citons cette critique du livre:

"A professor, Rae Beth Gordon, has published a book called Why the French love Jerry Lewis, which taught me quite a few things. She says that Jerry Lewis is the heir of a special kind of comedy that first appeared in the music halls of France in the 1880s. Their sketches were characterized by the kinds of frenetic movements, tics, facial grimaces, and other bizarre behavior that mimicked various nervous disorders such as "hysteria," epilepsy, and Tourette's Syndrome. Let's quote from this review of the book:

"Le public français était fasciné et diverti par ces comportements sur une scène, alors qu'ils reflétaient de nombreuses maladies nerveuses tout juste reconnues comme telles et débattues dans la presse populaire." Le mouvement hystérique et rapide d'un corps humain en accéléré et la vélocité extrême d'un train express, thème fréquent des premiers films comiques et dramatiques est devenu 'le paradigme caractéristique de la modernité.' [...] Ce paradigme fut personnifié plus tard par 'Les feux de la rampe' de Chaplin et 'Les temps modernes' dans lesquels tout bouge selon une vélocité hédoniste implacable."
"The French public was fascinated and entertained by watching these behaviors - which reflected many of the nervous diseases just being recognized and written about in the popular press - on the café-concert stage."


"Hysterical and rapid movement of a speeding human body, and the extreme velocity of the express train, a frequent subject of early comic and dramatic films, Gordon says, became the idiosyncratic 'paradigm for modernity' [...] This paradigm was later epitomized in Chaplin's 'City Lights' and 'Modern Times' film classics, in which everything moved with relentless, hedonistic velocity."

Ce qui explique aussi sans doute pourquoi tant de Français (moi y compris) adorent le regretté comique anglais Benny Hill et particulièrement les scènes de poursuites saccadées en conclusion de chaque épisode.

Which probably explains why so many French people (me included) adore the late, lamented English comic Benny Hills with a particular fondness for the speeded-up chases closing each episode.

Posted by Emmanuelle at August 14, 2004 10:23 AM
Comments


Any news about the March 2003 phone call from a LA DJ to Jacques Chirac ? The DJ said he was Jerry Lewis and Jacques Chriac took the call to describe the french stance about Irak... hoax or not ?

Posted by: Pierre CARION at August 16, 2004 11:33 PM

Salut Pierre,
Surprise surprise, it was an hoax, meaning that Chirac never was on the phone - he was busy doing something else that day. Mediatic has the details somewhere here. Now I remember I blogged about this back then.
Longe live Jerry Lewis!

Posted by: Emmanuelle at August 16, 2004 11:51 PM

I meant "Long Live" but anyway

Posted by: Emmanuelle at August 16, 2004 11:52 PM

Oh, people who dump on Jerry Lewis don't know what the Hell they're talking about. Ok, Slapstick of Another Kind was pretty horrifying. But other than that.

Yeah, I used to like Benny Hill for the undercranked chases and the heart-pounding Yakety Sax soundtrack. Then I hit puberty, and suddenly found myself drawn to his show for entirely different reasons...

Posted by: Paul Hrissikopoulos at August 17, 2004 12:18 AM

It has always annoyed me when any discussion about France always ends up resorting to "well, they also like Jerry Lewis." Okay, we get it. Let's try to be less trite.

Posted by: savvy at August 17, 2004 9:07 PM

Jerry Lewis is worse than Hitler!!!!!

Posted by: Jerry Godwin at August 18, 2004 5:55 PM

A lot of Americans secretly like Jerry Lewis too. As a director friend of mine once said: "Watch a Jerry Lewis movie and I DEFY you not to laugh!"

Posted by: Cathy Seipp at August 19, 2004 11:32 AM

It's remarkable that the French get so much flack for enjoying the comedy of Jerry Lewis, and the English somehow get away with their obsession of David Beckham.

Posted by: Steve Smith at August 22, 2004 12:17 PM

bonjour
je souhaite correspondre avec jerry par e-mail
est il possible de le faire
merci d'avance
cordialement

Posted by: benard at November 5, 2004 7:06 AM


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