‘Shari & Lamb Chop’ Documentary At The Boca International Jewish Film Festival

By Linda Chase - Jewish Connection News
Jan 7, 2025
The Boca International Jewish Film Festival returns for its second season with the Florida premiere screening of the documentary “Shari & Lamb Chop.” The film will be presented during the festival’s Cinebash on January 27th, 2025, at the Wick Theater in Boca Raton. The evening includes a patron dinner beginning at 5:00 p.m., film screening and a live performance by Mallory Lewis (Shari Lewis’ daughter) and Lamb Chop. Film only tickets are available for $36. The festival runs from February 23rd through March 16th with screenings presented at both Movies of Delray and Cinemark Palace 20 in Boca Raton.
“Shari & Lamb Chop” explores the legacy of Puppeteer and Television Host Shari Lewis through Mallory’s eyes. During our interview, Mallory (who tours performing the Lamb Chop Legacy Show) shared memories of her mother.
“Mom was from the Bronx. My grandfather was Peter Pan the Magic Man (the official magician for the city of New York.) He was also a professor at the Yeshiva. My grandmother was a music teacher in the Bronx schools. Between them, my mother inherited both the magic and the music. She was surrounded by Vaudeville performers as a child and used to perform alongside her father. She learned all of the Vaudeville arts, but it was the ventriloquism that made her famous.”
Mallory shared how her mother and Lamb Chop became cultural icons and changed the face of children’s television.
“When mom got her first television series in 1956/57 she did something no other performers were doing at the time; she broke the fourth wall and looked into the camera and connected deeply with the children. Throughout her career, she treated children with respect and encouraged them to be their best self rather than just offering them mindless entertainment. In fact, mom was the creator of the term ‘edu-tainment.’ It is important to remember that when mom first began performing there were only three channels and most homes only had one TV, so likely most families were watching the same program. Unlike children’s performers of her time she did a very sophisticated show that appealed to parents as well.”
“It was wonderful to grow up as Shari’s daughter and even to this day it is wonderful being her daughter. I am very blessed to always be greeted by people with the love that she engendered. My comments section on my Social Media is filled with people telling me how much my mother meant to them and how happy they are that I have kept the legacy alive for the last 25 years,” Mallory continued.
Mallory shared her thoughts on her mother receiving the long overdue cinematic tribute she deserves.
“Director Lisa D'Apolito is passionate about telling the stories of strong, smart, funny women, so mom‘s story spoke to her. I am very happy that the true story will be told. Not with mom being portrayed as a ‘cute little lady with a puppet’ but a more accurate portrayal of her as a three-dimensional woman and a brilliant business person.”
For more information regarding the film festival, visit: www.JFilmBoca.org
Photo credit is Brad Hood