RIP Sherman Hemsley

Hmm. Here it is on another site.

That’s a great story - thanks. I always like Marla Gibbs. Jefferson reruns and 227 were staples of my childhood…

…as was Amen. That show had a great opening sequence.

Thanks!

RIP, Sherm. (

Man, all the giants are going. Haven’t seen if there’s a thread, but I just learned Chad Everett of Medical Center died recently too.

EDIT: Found the Everett thread.

Norman Lear first saw Hemsley when he was performing in Purlie on Broadway, and knew he had found his George Jefferson. Lear was so insistant on Hemsley’s playing the role that he waited two years for Hemsley to finish the show’s run before introducing the character.

A performance of* Purlie *with Hemsley as Gitlow and Robert Guillaume as the title character was released onto VHS and it was excellent. Bits of it are on YouTube last I checked but it’s never been released on DVD.

For those who’ve never seen the musical or the original, it’s a dark comedy based on a story/play/movie by Ossie Davis. It’s set in the late Jim Crow/just before the dawn of Civil Rights era; a self-educated reformer black preacher, Purlie Victorious Judson (Davis in the non-musical, Robert Guillaume in the taped musical [Cleavon Little in the original Broadway musical]) returns home to Mississippi to con back an inheritance stolen from his family by Ol’ Cap’n, the plantation owner whose land Purlie’s family sharecrops. (Ol’ Cap’n was played by Sorrell “Boss Hogg” Booke in the non-musical version in a performance very like Boss; his kindhearted but stupid son was played by Alan Alda in a performance that sounded a lot like Forrest Gump.)
Hemsley played Gitlow, Purlie’s older brother, an Uncle Tom (in the stereotypical sense- “Yas, Cap’n, yo’ sho iz good t’us, Cap’n”) who, having risen higher than the other sharecroppers under Ol’ Cap’n, isn’t eager for the change Purlie wants to bring. The performance has a lot of George Jefferson in it- or vice versa: cocky, two-faced at times, selfish, but meaner and darker than George. He was great in it.
Anyway, it’s vintage Hemsley:

After his death, Gibbs said that he’d always stayed in touch with her and helped her keep finding work (and vice versa). She said they had recently been talking about trying to get some new project going, and unfortunately it was not to be.

ETA: I also have a vague memory of Howard Cosell insulting Hemsley’s bicycling skills once on Battle of the Network Stars.

Sherm’s not in the ground yet.Some guy claiming to be his brother wants the body. Even assuming he is really Hemsley’s brother, which I doubt, he picked a jerkwad time to come forward.