Tag Archives: Lewis

Stella Stevens Dies: ‘Poseidon Adventure’ Actress & Elvis Presley, Jerry Lewis Co-Star Was 84 – Deadline

  1. Stella Stevens Dies: ‘Poseidon Adventure’ Actress & Elvis Presley, Jerry Lewis Co-Star Was 84 Deadline
  2. Stella Stevens dead at 84: Hollywood star was battling Alzheimer’s disease Daily Mail
  3. Stella Stevens, Leading Lady Who Starred With Jerry Lewis, Elvis Presley, Is Dead At 84 HuffPost
  4. Stella Stevens, Who Starred in ‘The Nutty Professor,’ ‘The Poseidon Adventure,’ Dies at 84 Variety
  5. Stella Stevens, Nutty Professor Actress and ’60s Hollywood Bombshell, Dead at 84: ‘OG of Badass Women’ PEOPLE
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Stella Stevens Dies: ‘Poseidon Adventure’ Actress & Elvis Presley, Jerry Lewis Co-Star Was 84 – Deadline

  1. Stella Stevens Dies: ‘Poseidon Adventure’ Actress & Elvis Presley, Jerry Lewis Co-Star Was 84 Deadline
  2. Stella Stevens dead at 84: Hollywood star was battling Alzheimer’s disease Daily Mail
  3. Stella Stevens, Starlet of the Sixties and ‘Nutty Professor’ Actress, Dies at 84 Hollywood Reporter
  4. Stella Stevens, Nutty Professor Actress and ’60s Hollywood Bombshell, Dead at 84: ‘OG of Badass Women’ PEOPLE
  5. Stella Stevens dead at 84: Nutty Professor & Poseidon Adventure star dies after Alzheimer’s struggle, son A… The US Sun
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Have Man City created Pep Guardiola’s dream full-back? Rico Lewis feels like a new breed of player

Realistically, it was nothing new. Pep Guardiola has been using a flexible defensive approach for years, and his use of half-backs — those who push inside from a full-back position to a central midfield role — has become a standard part of his approach with Bayern Munich and Manchester City.

Still, there are times when you have to stand back and appreciate Guardiola’s boldness. In the 3-1 victory over Leeds last night, he used a three-man defence stretched across the width of the pitch, a central midfielder in Rodri who often dropped in to centre-back but also burst forward to score the opener, and a full league debutant in Rico Lewis as a holding-midfielder-cum-right-back. The key thing, of course, is that it all worked perfectly.

On paper, Guardiola was using a back four, comprising the 18-year-old Lewis on the right, John Stones and Manuel Akanji in the middle, and Nathan Ake at left-back. But that was City’s shape without the ball, which isn’t particularly relevant when they had 69 per cent of possession.

On the pitch, of course, it was something different. Leeds played an extremely narrow 4-3-3, attempting to dominate the centre of the pitch and prevent City from passing through the middle. Stones pushed out to right-back and Lewis drifted inside — you can see him near the centre spot in the screengrab below. City played, as they often do, with a 3-2 defensive base…

… and then, further forward, something approaching a front five. Ilkay Gundogan and Kevin De Bruyne could be considered part of a box midfield, but they were roughly on the same line as City’s front three.

And some of the shapes City took up in possession were extraordinary. Here’s an example of Stones and Ake, the two wider defenders in possession, pushing forward in advance of Rodri and taking it in turns to carry the ball forward, exploiting Leeds’ narrowness.

Here’s Rodri dropping into defence, to the right of Akanji…

… and then again to the left, making a back four to help City play around Leeds’ front three and allowing Stones and Ake to move wider. The particularly bold thing here, of course, is leaving Lewis entirely on his own in midfield.

The following move, when City played their way out of Leeds’ press after 15 minutes, was particularly impressive — not just because of the slick passing, but because of the positioning of the respective players.

Akanji, in theory the most ‘fixed’ defender as the central of the three, is on the ball at left-back. Stones, who spent most of the game near the right touchline, is over towards the left corner flag. Rodri, the holding midfielder, is briefly the most obvious defender, while left-back Ake is tucked in alongside the central midfielder, Gundogan.

The most interesting individual performance came from Lewis, who really feels like something new.

Whereas Guardiola has previously converted full-backs who are accustomed to playing as ‘natural’ full-backs, advancing down the flanks, Lewis has seemingly been moulded in City’s academy specifically to play this role.

He spent more of his time in midfield than at full-back and feels more comfortable than Kyle Walker or Joao Cancelo in terms of receiving forward passes in tight spaces, on the turn, and playing another forward pass.

He’s excellent at scanning the pitch as the passer plays the ball to him, and pops the ball past opponents quickly and unfussily, in the mould of a Spanish midfielder more than an English full-back.

His distribution was generally tidy rather than expressive, but on a couple of occasions, he received the ball centrally and then spread it out to the flank, forcing Leeds inside and then outside.

And he’s also capable of overlapping when required — here, as City built a move in the left channel, he sprinted forward to give Riyad Mahrez an option on the outside, before passing infield for Kevin De Bruyne to have a shot from range.

The tricky thing about Lewis’ role can be the defensive transitions when City lose possession. Lewis isn’t in a natural position to cope with an opposition left-winger, but because Leeds were playing so narrow, Lewis’ job was fairly simple — just tracking Wilfried Gnonto’s run.

The trickier task was for Stones, whose positioning was so advanced and wide that tucking inside into a centre-back role could have been difficult — he needs to go from outside Lewis to inside him. Leeds were sloppy at turnovers and didn’t exploit any space between City’s defenders.

It’s also worth considering the importance of recovery pace when playing Stones’ role and Walker is probably now more suited to that position rather than Lewis’ role.

Ultimately, City won this game through a quick break and then a high press, rather than from moves stemming from build-up play in deep positions. But they controlled possession well, dragged Leeds around, exploited space out wide and guarded against counter-attacks.

The biggest positive was Lewis, who was at the heart of everything and deserves to keep his place for the visit of Everton on New Year’s Eve.

It remains to be seen whether he’s used in upcoming clashes with Chelsea, Manchester United and Tottenham. But on this evidence, he symbolises Guardiola’s novel approach we’ve come to take for granted, and might soon be considered a new breed of player entirely.



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Sam Bankman-Fried meets with The Big Short author Michael Lewis while on house arrest

Author Michael Lewis, whose bestseller The Big Short was adapted into a Hollywood blockbuster, reportedly met with disgraced FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried in recent days at the California home where he is holed up awaiting trial. 

Lewis, 62, met with Bankman-Fried for several hours on Friday at the $4 million home of the accused crypto fraudster’s parents, who are both Stanford University law professors, the New York Post reported citing sources.

Outside the home, barricades manned by private security guards seal off the residential street to keep curious onlookers at bay, an arrangement that is costing Bankman-Fried’s parents some $10,000 per week, according to the Post.

Lewis has reportedly been working on a book about Bankman-Fried for months, a project that was first revealed last month when the implosion of FTX accelerated his timeline for publication. 

Prior to Bankman-Fried’s arrest on federal charges, Lewis reportedly spent six months shadowing the 30-year-old CEO, traveling with him and interviewing him extensively. 

FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried leaves the Federal Court in New York on Thursday after he was released on a $250 million bond and ordered to detention in his parent’s California home

A team of security guards and the Stanford police guard a closed street barricade near the residence of Sam Bankman-Fried that prevents access to the Fried home on Monday

Author Michael Lewis, whose bestseller The Big Short was adapted into a Hollywood Blockbuster, reportedly met with Bankman-Fried at the home on Friday

The Ankler first reported that literary agent Michael Snyder informed his contacts that Lewis had six months’ worth of material on Bankman-Fried – who feuded in spectacular style with his mentor, Binance founder and CEO Changpeng Zhao.

Zhao, head of the world’s largest bitcoin and crypto exchange, initially announced plans to rescue FTX, Bankman-Fried’s company, but then backed out, saying FTX was not stable.

Lewis likened the pair to Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader.

‘Michael hasn’t written anything yet, but the story has become too big for us to wait,’ the agent said in his email, obtained by The Ankler.

Lewis’ previous books The Big Short, Moneyball and The Blind Side were all turned into Hollywood blockbusters. 

It’s unclear whether Bankman-Fried would stand to benefit financially if Lewis’ upcoming book about him were turned into a movie. 

Typically, studios do not have to pay to obtain life rights for public figures, especially if they option a work of non-fiction for adaptation.

Bankman-Fried’s parents Barbara Fried and Joseph Bankman are both Stanford University law professors. They are seen above leaving court last week 

The family is reportedly paying $10,000 per week for the private security patrols sealing off their residential street and keeping onlookers away

Disgraced FTX-founder Sam Bankman-Fried will be spending his house arrest at this five-bedroom home in the Bay Area after being released on $250million bond Thursday

However, even some convicted criminals have taken payouts from studios eager to avoid lawsuits. In one case, the con artist Anna Sorkin took $320,000 from Netflix for the rights to adapt her life story, though the funds reportedly went to pay restitution and fines. 

Bankman-Fried has not been convicted of any crime, but is free on $250 million bail as he awaits trial on federal charges including wire fraud, commodities fraud, securities fraud, money laundering, and campaign finance law violations. 

In August, Lewis discussed in broad terms his upcoming book about Bankman-Fried in an interview with Financial News.

‘I really don’t want to reveal exactly what I’m writing about,’ he said.

‘But I found a character through whom I can write about — it weirdly links up Flash Boys, The Big Short and Liar’s Poker.

‘I guess it is possible it will be framed as a crypto book, but it won’t be a crypto book.

‘It’ll be about this really unusual character. You’ll learn all about crypto and you’ll learn about what screwed up market structure in the United States and so on.’

Sam Bankman-Fried is depicted in court on Thursday where he was granted $250million bail

FTX had a one-time valuation of $32 billion before collapsing in bankruptcy last month amid allegations that billions in client funds were siphoned off to prop up Bankman-Fried’s hedge fund, Alameda Research.

Bankman-Fried, arrested in the Bahamas two weeks ago, was brought to the United States last week to face charges that he cheated FTX investors and looted customer deposits.

He was freed on a $250 million personal recognizance bond to live with his parents in Palo Alto, California, after an electronic monitoring bracelet was attached to him so authorities could track his whereabouts.

On Tuesday, the case was reassigned to Judge Lewis A. Kaplan, after the judge originally assigned recused herself because her husband worked for a law firm that had once done work related to FTX. 

Kaplan, 78, who has held senior status in Manhattan federal court for over a decade, was nominated to the bench by President Bill Clinton in 1994 and has a reputation as a non-nonsense jurist.

He has overseen numerous high-profile trials and is currently presiding over the two federal civil suits that former Elle magazine advice columnist E. Jean Carroll filed against former President Donald Trump.

Carroll said Trump raped her in the dressing room of a Manhattan luxury department store in 1995 or 1996. Trump has denied the accusations. A trial is scheduled for April.

The storied judge also was presiding over sex abuse claims by an American woman against Prince Andrew before the two sides settled earlier this year, with Andrew declaring that he never meant to malign her character and agreeing to donate to the woman’s charity. Prior to the settlement, Kaplan had refused Andrew’s request to toss the lawsuit.

Most recently, Kaplan presided over the civil trial of Kevin Spacey after a fellow actor accused him of trying to molest him in his apartment after a party when he was 14 and Spacey was 26. 

A jury sided with Spacey, finding that actor Anthony Rapp had not proved his case against him. 

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Davante Lewis easily ousts Lambert Boissiere III in PSC race | Local Politics

Progressive policy advocate Davante Lewis defeated three-term Public Service Commissioner Lambert Boissiere III on Saturday, handing the incumbent and utilities that backed him a stunning loss with the help of big money from environmental groups who want to shake up the commission.

Lewis, 30, who lives in Baton Rouge and works for the left-leaning Louisiana Budget Project, ran on a platform of making bold changes to how Louisiana regulates utilities. He called for a quicker transition to renewables, an effort to harden the electric grid in the face of increasingly severe hurricanes and a crackdown on excessive fees by Entergy and other utilities.

He becomes the first openly LGBTQ person elected to state office in Louisiana, according to the LGBTQ Victory Fund.

With all early votes counted, plus election day votes from 738 of 748 precincts, Lewis had amassed 59% of the vote, after getting just 18% in the primary last month. He advanced to the runoff after edging out Boissiere’s three other challengers, two of whom later endorsed Lewis.

Both Lewis and Boissiere are Democrats.

Lewis’ campaign put Boissiere in the difficult position of defending the work of the PSC at a time when electric bills have soared, squeezing ratepayers, only a year after Hurricane Ida left millions without power, many for weeks.

Boissiere drew much of his financial support from utilities, lobbyists and others with business before the commission, and his opponents routinely criticized his campaign funding.

Boissiere countered by slamming Lewis for the support he drew from out-of-state groups. In particular, Lewis benefitted from Keep the Lights On, a super PAC largely funded by the Environmental Defense Fund that raised over $1 million for the race.

The incumbent was also aided by two key allies: U.S. Rep. Troy Carter, whose district spans much of the same area as the PSC’s District 3, and Gov. John Bel Edwards, who cut an ad for Boissiere in the home stretch of the campaign.

But Lewis was able to garner support from a network of advocacy groups and environmentalists who believe the commission has been asleep at the wheel regulating utilities at a time when climate change is threatening the grid.

Boissiere belongs to a prominent political family and has served on the commission since 2005, giving him an edge in name recognition across the district, which spans from New Orleans to Baton Rouge.

Voters and the media have historically paid little attention to the commission, an obscure five-member body. But it has drawn more interest of late, after hurricanes exposed an aging and battered electric grid and bills soared because of high natural gas prices.

The commission is tasked with regulating utilities and setting electric rates, among other things.

Throughout the campaign, Lewis criticized Boissiere and the PSC as feckless regulators who have been asleep at the wheel. He has promised to make bold changes to accelerate the transition to renewables; bolster the grid to better withstand hurricanes; and tackle “excessive” fees from utilities. Lewis and Keep the Lights On also targeted Boissiere for taking campaign contributions from utilities the commission regulates.

Boissiere defended the work of the PSC, touting steps the agency has already taken to approve solar farms and rein in Entergy’s rates. He also noted that he’s one of only two Democrats on the five-member body. Being the minority party, he said, has made it difficult to move the PSC toward more progressive policies.



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Apple Nearing Deal For Michael Lewis’ Book Rights On Wild Story Of Fallen Crypto King Sam Bankman-Fried & FTX: The Dish – Deadline

EXCLUSIVE: Michael Lewis’ fortunate timing seemingly has paid off.

Deadline is hearing that Apple is near to a deal for the book rights to Lewis’ story about fallen crypto king Sam Bankman-Fried and his FTX empire.

The author behind Moneyball, The Big Short and The Blind Side spent six months with the embattled entrepreneur, before the stuff hit the fan.

When the deal closes at what sources peg at mid-seven figures, the streamer will have beaten out considerable competition from the likes of Netflix and Amazon for the project.

It is expected to be turned into a feature film. Word in town is an expectation that Adam McKay might become involved, but if so that would be down the road. He adapted Lewis’ book The Big Short. A lot of this is happening in real time, as sources said they didn’t believe there was much to pitch other than the subject and the promise of a proper deep dive by a writer who is the master of turning complicated financial matters into A-list entertainment.

Bankman-Fried, who was understood to be worth up to $26B in paper holdings at one point, ran the cryptocurrency company before it collapsed earlier this month, with Bankman-Fried resigning as CEO of the company, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

RELATED: Tom Brady, Giselle Bündchen, Larry David & Steph Curry Caught In FTX Crypto Fallout With Class Action Suit

Lewis’ book will attempt to explain what went down at the company and with Bankman-Fried, who was forced to put his rich Bahamas resort up for sale and deal with the fallout that also saw a number of celebrities including Tom Brady and Larry David sued for their part in promoting it. With revelations, billion-dollar loans, money grabbed by Bankman-Fried and his girlfriend, and other shenanigans being reported by the day, and FTX’s favorable position coming from political donations to Democrats, you get the feeling that a lot more will play out here.

We heard last week that others circling the project included Amazon Studios, David Heyman, writer Wells Tower and David Yates, Netflix with David Fincher and Sugar23 with Josh Gad.

Lewis’ book is one of a number of projects on the topic.

Scott Burns and Jonathan Glickman’s Panoramic have a project with The New York Times’ Andrew Ross Sorkin, who has closely covered the FTX debacle, and Graham Moore, the Oscar-winning writer behind Benedict Cumberbatch film The Imitation Game, also has thrown his hat in the ring with plans to write direct an adaptation of New York Magazine’s deep dive into the subject.

There will undoubtedly be more to come on this one.



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H’wood FTX Frenzy as Michael Lewis Reveals He Spent 6 Months with Founder

WHOOPS Sam Bankman-Fried testified before Congress in May. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

In this issue:

  • The full CAA email reveals Michael Lewis’ next book is about Sam Bankman-Fried with at least one plot point focusing on the rivalry with Binance’s Changpeng Zhao

  • The role of former CAA agent (and Elon Musk pal) Michael Kives with Bankman-Fried

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With the stunning collapse of crypto exchange FTX still rippling through the financial markets, the entertainment industry sprang into action over the weekend with a far more pressing concern: Who’s going to nab the rights to this story?

We now know at least one part of how this plays out. The town was abuzz Saturday after an email spread that revealed that Michael Lewis — the most talented and successful non-fiction writer working today — had embedded with FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried for the past six months and was making the collapsing cryptocurrency exchange the centerpiece of his next book. The Ankler obtained the email from CAA agent Matthew Snyder, originally sent to potential buyers on Friday (CAA did not immediately return a request for comment). The email reveals that not a word of the book has been written yet but, well, things just can’t wait:

The email from Snyder:

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In August, Lewis hinted about his new book in an interview with Financial News.

“I really don’t want to reveal exactly what I’m writing about,” he said “But I found a character through whom I can write about — it weirdly links up Flash Boys, The Big Short and Liar’s Poker.

“I guess it is possible it will be framed as a crypto book, but it won’t be a crypto book. It’ll be about this really unusual character. You’ll learn all about crypto and you’ll learn about what screwed up market structure in the United States and so on.”

For those keeping score, Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, had agreed to take over FTX, the second-largest cryptocurrency exchange, at the start of last week after FTX was unable to process customer withdrawals amid panic about both the crypto markets and Bankman-Fried’s reported co-mingling of assets between FTX and his hedge fund. In a shocking twist, Binance backed out of the deal citing “corporate due diligence” setting the stage for FTX’s bankruptcy filing and Bankman-Fried’s resignation as CEO. 

FTX had a one-time valuation of $32 billion and substantial ties to the entertainment industry. Then-spouses Tom Brady and Gisele Bundchen, as well as Larry David, memorably starred in much-ridiculed spots hawking the company. Steph Curry and Naomi Osaka likewise were paid endorsers.

Industry insiders likewise also have been speculating about the impact of FTX bankruptcy on one of their own: former CAA agent Michael Kives.

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Loretta Lynn, Jerry Lee Lewis honored at CMA Awards with fiery performances — in one case, literally

Elle King and Dan Auerbach of the Black Keys perform onstage at the 56th annual CMA Awards. (Photo: Terry Wyatt/WireImage)

The country community has been rattled by the losses of several legends this year, including Loretta Lynn, who was the first woman to win the Country Music Association Awards’ Entertainer of the Year honor 50 years ago, and Jerry Lee Lewis, who was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame on Oct. 19, just nine days before his death. Both icons received fitting tributes at the 56th annual CMA Awards, which took place Wednesday, but one of those tributes was a bit more fiery than the other — literally — and was definitely a lot more polarizing.

The show cold-opened with vintage footage of trailblazer Lynn accepting her Entertainer of the Year trophy at the 1972 CMAs ceremony, followed by a medley of Lynn hits by three of country music’s biggest female superstars — Carrie Underwood sassily singing “You Ain’t Woman Enough (To Take My Man),” Miranda Lambert doing “Don’t Come Home a Drinkin,’” and Reba McEntire declaring “You’re Lookin’ at Country” — before all three joined forces for “Coal Miner’s Daughter.”

Another Lynn successor, Carly Pearce, played her 2021 original “Dear Miss Loretta,” introducing her performance by saying, “I grew up in Kentucky, like the great Loretta Lynn. My Mamaw Pearce and I loved to listen to Loretta’s songs together. I think Mamaw loved Loretta so much because she too was a coal miner’s daughter. I never met Loretta — always wished I would’ve — but I wrote this song in tribute to her because I so admire everything about her, especially how she wrote about her life unapologetically. Loretta, this is for you.”

While the Lynn tributes were sweet and sentimental, the homage to Lee was pure rock ‘n’ roll rebellion. Alt-Americana agitator Elle King, joined by Ohio blues-garage duo the Black Keys, lit up the stage — yes, literally, when King set her piano ablaze — for a rousing and rowdy “Great Balls of Fire.” King, in painted-on patent pleather pants with “THE KILLER” emblazoned in rhinestones across her rear, Juicy Couture-style, snarled and screeched and pounded the keys, while the Keys chugged and grooved along.

Elle King performs at the 56th Annual CMA Awards. (Photo: Reuters/Mario Anzuoni)

Elle King performs at the 56th Annual CMA Awards. (Photo: Reuters/Mario Anzuoni)

Elle King and Dan Auerbach of the Black Keys perform onstage at the 56th annual CMA Awards (Photo: Terry Wyatt/WireImage)

Elle King and Patrick Carney of the Black Keys perform onstage at the 56th annual CMA Awards (Photo: ABC via Getty Images)

Twitter reaction was split. Some fans loved the Lewis tribute’s unpredictable, seat-of-the-PVC-pants rawk energy, but others criticized King’s bodacious outfit and Gene Simmons-like waggling tongue. Some detractors accused King of not actually playing the piano live, not being country enough, being rude and disrespectful, or even being drunk. However, this was the liveliest, loosest moment of the night, and it was the sort of tribute that wild-man the Killer himself — and maybe even rebel-girl Lynn, too — probably would’ve appreciated.

“Great Balls of Fire” wasn’t the only rock ‘n’ roll moment of Wednesday’s three-hour CMAs ceremony. Duos the War and Treaty and Brothers Osborne teamed up to preview a track from “Nashville’s love letter to the Rolling Stones, Stoned Cold Country, a forthcoming all-star collection of countrified Stones covers, and they fired up the stage in their own way with “It’s Only Rock & Roll.” And earlier in the night, Brothers Osborne had a chance to acknowledge the legacy of another country legend who tragically passed away in 2022, Naomi Judd.

Naomi’s daughter and Judds bandmate, Wynonna Judd, presented Brothers Osborne with the Duo of the Year award, first taking a moment at the podium to sincerely state, “In death there is life, and here I am. Thank you for your love and your support. These past six months have been a time to grieve and a time to be grateful. And I am humbled and honored tonight to still have a seat at the table of country music. I have the opportunity of presenting the CMT award for Duo, which Mom and I won seven times.” As Judds superfan T.J. Osbourne accepted this year’s honor, he gushed, “There’s been so many surprising moments in this entire career. The fact I moved to Nashville and I got to stay here and I got to eventually not eat ramen noodles, that was a surprise. And to be here tonight and then to be in the presence of Wynonna while winning this award will be one of the biggest highlights of my entire life. This is so crazy to me.”

But perhaps the most touching speech about loss was by frontman Matt Ramsey, as he accepted Old Dominion’s Vocal Group of the Year award. “Obviously, we’ve lost a lot of legends, but there’s nobody in this category, and really any category, that would be here without Alabama. And we just lost Jeff Cook,” he said, referring to the Alabama co-founder and guitarist who died on Nov. 7. Ramsey then turned to his bandmates and mused, “It just got me thinking… just, there’s nothing like being in a band, you know? I’m so grateful to have my friends, and I can’t imagine losing one of you guys. And I’m so honored to make music. We love you. And we love the opportunity do what we love doing.”

The 56th annual CMA Awards ceremony was hosted by Luke Bryan and Peyton Manning and took place Nov. 9 at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena. Other performers included Ashley McBryde, Brandy Clark, Cody Johnson, the Zac Brown Band, Lainey Wilson, Morgan Wallen, Thomas Rhett with Katy Perry, Patty Loveless and Chris Stapleton, Cole Swindell and Jo Dee Messina, and Kelsea Ballerini with Kelly Clarkson and Carly Pearce on a rousing “You’re Drunk, Go Home.”

The Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award was presented to Alan Jackson with greatest-hits performances by Dierks Bentley, Jon Pardi, Carrie Underwood, Lainey Wilson, and a visibly moved Jackson himself. The night’s biggest honor, Entertainer of the Year, went to Luke Combs. For a full list of this year’s Country Music Association Awards winners, click here.

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Family, friends and fans gather at funeral for rock ‘n’ roll legend Jerry Lee Lewis on Saturday

Family, friends and fans gathered Saturday to bid farewell to rock ‘n’ roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis at memorial services held in his north Louisiana hometown.

Lewis, known for hits such as ‘Great Balls of Fire’ and ‘Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On,’ died Oct. 28 at his Mississippi home, south of Memphis, Tenn. He was 87.

TV evangelist Jimmy Swaggart, Lewis’ cousin, told the more than 100 people inside Young’s Funeral Home in Ferriday, the town where Lewis was born, that when Lewis died he ‘lost the brother I never had.’

‘We learned to play piano together,’ Swaggart recalled. ‘I had to make myself realize that he was no longer here.’

Swaggart and Lewis released ‘The Boys From Ferriday,’ a gospel album, earlier this year and Swaggart said he wasn’t sure if Lewis was going to be able to get through the recording session.

‘He was very weak’: Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart speaks at the funeral service for his cousin, rock ‘n’ roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis, in Ferriday, La. on Saturday, eight days after the singer’s death on October 28

Donna Hoffmann, third cousin to rock ‘n’ roll hall of famer Jerry Lee Lewis, views his casket covered in flowers and portraits before the start of his funeral service

Ronnie Lewis, son of rock ‘n’ roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis, walks past his father’s casket before his funeral service, as flowers, portraits and memorable pictures were on display

Pallbearers carry Lewis’ casket into a white hearse following the singer’s funeral in his home town of Ferriday, which is right before the Louisiana-Mississippi border

Mourners gather outside Young’s Funeral Home following the end of proceedings at Lewis’ funeral on Saturday

Judith Brown, seventh wife of Lewis, wore an all-black outfit and shades as she was seen leaving her late husband’s funeral

Lewis was the last survivor of the rock ‘n’ roll generation that included Elvis, Little Richard and Chuck Berry

Lewis died last month, aged 87. He is pictured at the 47th Annual Grammy Awards in February 2005 at the Staples Center

‘He was very weak,’ Swaggart said. ‘I remember saying, “Lord, I don’t know if he can do it or not.” But when Jerry Lee sat at that piano, you know he was limited to what he could play because of the stroke, but when the engineer said the red light is on and when he opened his mouth, he said, ‘Jesus, hold my hand, I need thee every hour. Hear my feeble plea, oh Lord, look down on me.’

The session resulted in the album, and two of its songs played during the service: ‘In the Garden’ and ‘The Old Rugged Cross.’ Audience members were seen wiping tears from their eyes and singing along with Lewis as the recordings played.

‘He was one of the greatest entertainers who ever lived,’ Swaggart said.

Lewis, who called himself ‘The Killer,’ was the last survivor of a generation of artists that rewrote music history, a group that included Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry and Little Richard.

Lewis’ body was at the front of the funeral home’s main parlor, inside a closed, red casket with a spray of red roses on top. Several funeral wreaths, including one in the form of a musical note, dotted the walls behind and around the casket as did photos of the singer, one of which showed him in a red suit hunched over and singing into a microphone.

Lewis died at his home in Nesbit, Mississippi, following a battle with pneumonia and a stroke suffered in 2019. He is pictured in the final photo taken before his death in Memphis

Jacob Tolliver greets others outside Young’s Funeral Home as family and friends gathered for Lewis’ final sendoff following proceedings inside

Mourners Carolyn Coghlan Gremillion and Bert Nokes gather with others outside Young’s Funeral Home after Lewis’ funeral

Left to right, Gabriel Swaggart, Eric Williams and Zach Farnum gather with others outside Young’s Funeral Home on Saturday

Mourners Jacob Tolliver, left, and Eric Williams were also in attendance as they celebrate Lewis’ life

Kenny Lovelace, who has performed with rock and roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis since the 1960’s, walks outside after the funeral service for Lewis

Swaggart’s son, Donnie Swaggart, recalled a meeting in Memphis between Lewis and members of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, a country rock band, that highlighted Lewis’ humorous side.

He said his father and Lewis were walking toward an arena’s exit as the band members were coming in. 

‘As they neared Lewis, one asked, “Is that who I think it is? Is that Jerry Lee Lewis?” As Jerry Lee passed, one of the men asked, “Are you Jerry Lee Lewis?” Jerry Lee stopped and looked each of them up and down and said, “Boys, Killer’s my name and music’s my thing.” And then he walked out.’

Donnie Swaggart said the guys stood there, with their jaws dropped in amazement. ‘What a sense of humor he had,’ he said as the audience laughed.

After his personal life blew up in the late 1950s following news of his marriage to his cousin, 13-year-old — possibly even 12-year-old — Myra Gale Brown, while still married to his previous wife, the piano player and rock rebel was blacklisted from radio and his earnings dropped to virtually nothing. Over the following decades, Lewis struggled with drug and alcohol abuse, legal disputes and physical illness.

‘He always had a heart for God, even at his lowest times,’ Jimmy Swaggart said. ‘I will miss him very much but we know where he is now and thank God for that.’

People line up outside Young’s Funeral Home to view the casket of rock and roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis before his funeral

Russell Lee Adams and Holly Carville sign the guestbook at the entrance to Lewis’ funeral service in Louisiana

Marcel Riesco, left, and Xochi Shirtz, of Nashville, wait in line outside Young’s Funeral Home to view Lewis’ casket

People sign the guestbook at the entrance to Young’s Funeral Home as they enter for the funeral service for rock ‘n’ roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis

Xavier Ellis, 28, a Ferriday native now teaching in Opelousas, La., said Lewis’ life is an inspiration.

‘He was a poor kid from Ferriday who made it to the heights he made it to. I’m very impressed with his life story. I’m saddened by him leaving, but his legacy will live on,’ Ellis said.

In the 1960s, Lewis reinvented himself as a country performer and the music industry eventually forgave him. He had a run of top 10 country hits from 1967 to 1970, including ‘She Still Comes Around’ and ‘What’s Made Milwaukee Famous (Has Made a Loser Out of Me).’

In 1986, along with Elvis, Berry and others, Lewis was in the inaugural class of inductees for the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and joined the Country Hall of Fame this year. His life and music were reintroduced to younger fans in the 1989 biopic ‘Great Balls of Fire,’ starring Dennis Quaid, and Ethan Coen’s 2022 documentary ‘Trouble in Mind.’

A 2010 Broadway musical, ‘Million Dollar Quartet,’ was inspired by a recording session that featured Lewis, Elvis, Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash.

Jerry Lee Lewis sits for a picture at the Country Music Hall of Fame after it was announced he will be inducted as a member on May 17, 2022, in Nashville, Tenn.,

Lewis is pictured, furthest left, recording with Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins and others at Sun Studios, Memphis, during the 1950s. The mic they sang into, pictured in the foreground, was auctioned in 2004 

Brown is pictured with her former husband when she was 15. Lewis died while married to his seventh wife, Judith, who collected an award in his honor earlier this month 

Lewis is pictured performing onstage at Cerritos Center for the Performing Arts on November 17, 2018 in Cerritos, Calif.

Lewis won a Grammy in 1987 as part of an interview album that was cited for best spoken word recording, and he received a lifetime achievement Grammy in 2005.

The following year, ‘Whole Lotta Shakin’ was selected for the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry, whose board praised the ‘propulsive boogie piano that was perfectly complemented by the drive of J.M. Van Eaton’s energetic drumming. The listeners to the recording, like Lewis himself, had a hard time remaining seated during the performance.’

Tom Tomschin and his wife, Sandra, of Cicero, Ill., traveled to Ferriday to give homage to Lewis for all he’s done for the music industry.

‘We felt the need to pay our respect to the pioneer of rock ‘n’ roll who had a major part in the creation of and shaping of the genre,’ Tomschin said. ‘I’ve been a fan my entire life.’

The hearse carrying Lewis readies to depart the funeral home for burial after his funeral service

Fans wave farewell as the hearse carrying Lewis’ coffin departs the evangelical funeral home in Ferriday, Louisiana

Tomschin, 45, a government administrator, said ‘Crazy Arms’ and ‘You Win Again’ are two of his favorite songs by Lewis, who he described as one of a kind.

‘He never lived a life behind a curtain,’ Tomschin said of Lewis. ‘In his ups and downs, the good and bad, he did what he was going to do. Jerry Lee Lewis laid it all out on the table. There’s never going to be another person like Jerry Lee Lewis.’

Sandra Tomschin, 44, a library director, said she grew up on Lewis’ music and it’s left an indelible print on her life.

‘We love it,’ she said of his music. ‘We’ve been to several of his concerts and even though he’s gone, he will still live on in our hearts.’

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Bob Dylan covers Jerry Lee Lewis in tribute at Nottingham gig

Bob Dylan paid tribute to Jerry Lee Lewis at his gig in Nottingham on Friday night (October 28), covering ‘I Can’t Seem To Say Goodbye’.

After erroneous reports of his death earlier this week, rock’n’roll pioneer Lewis was confirmed dead at the age of 87 on Friday, dying of natural causes at home in DeSoto County, Mississippi.

During his gig at the Motorpoint Arena that same night, Dylan played a version of ‘I Can’t Seem To Say Goodbye’, the song written by Don Robertson and famously covered by Lewis on his ‘A Taste Of Country’ album from 1970.

Introducing the rendition, Dylan said: “I don’t know how many of you know, but Jerry Lee’s gone. We’re gonna play this song, one of his. Jerry Lee will live forever – we all know that.”

Watch the performance below.

Lewis, who rose to prominence in the late 1950s with tracks like ‘Breathless’ and ‘High School Confidential’, was hospitalised in Memphis after suffering a stroke in 2019. While he was forced to cancel some planned appearances, he made a full recovery.

The singer was born in Louisiana and became a session musician in 1956 at Sun Records in Memphis, eventually playing with the likes of Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, and Carl Perkins. Dubbed “The Killer” for his outrageous performances, the rockabilly star recorded 40 studio albums during his career.

Lewis’ career was also marked by controversy. In 1958, while embarking on a UK tour, reporters discovered that Myra Gale Brown, his wife who was travelling with him, was only 13 years old and also his cousin. It was also revealed that he was still married to his second wife at the time of making vows with Brown. After the news spread, his tour was cancelled, and Lewis was blacklisted from the radio.

An NME obituary to Lewis read: “The last of the gang to die was the most contemptible and notorious of his contemporaries. Elvis Presley was The King of Rock’n’roll, Little Richard its King and Queen. And Jerry Lee? He called himself the Killer.

“The flipside of his personality was a string of lamentable controversies that vastly overshadow his legacy.”



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