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Puppeteer Shari Lewis maintained Jewish ties
JULIA STRONGWATER
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
NEW YORK - Although she said she was turned off by Judaism as a youngster, universally known puppeteer Shari Lewis would later return to her religious roots and incorporate Jewish themes into her entertainment projects geared toward children.
Lewis, who died this week at age 64, was an award-winning creator of children's television programs. With her ventriloquism skills and her well-known side kicks - Lamb Chop, Hush Puppy and Charlie Horse - Lewis was able to reach the homes and hearts of kids everywhere.
Born in New York on Jan. 17, 1934, Lewis' love for music began with piano instruction when she was 2 years old. Her first big break in show business came in 1952, when she won the "Arthur Godfrey Talent Scouts" TV show.
Five years later, she introduced her sock puppet, Lamb Chop, to the "Captain Kangaroo Show." This led her eventually to develop her own television show, "The Shari Show."
Although she was raised in an observant Jewish home - her father taught at Yeshiva University - Lewis herself was turned off by Judaism at a young age because when she was growing up girls generally did not have bat mitzvahs.
"I remember all the children putting their menorahs in the window at Hanukkah. I never did that," Lewis recalled when she was presented with the B'nai B'rith Dor L'Dor Award in 1996. But in recent years, as women have become more active in Jewish ritual, Lewis identified more openly with her Jewish identity through her entertainment work.
She produced two Jewish holiday programs for PBS - "Lamb Chop's Special Hanukkah" and "Shari's Passover Surprise" - that also are available on video. Lewis also wrote a children's book, "One-Minute Jewish Stories."
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