After His Death, Jerry Lewis’ Sons Break Silence on Receiving No Inheritance

After Jerry Lewis’s death in 2017 at age 91, his six sons from his first marriage—Gary, Ronald, Anthony Joseph, Christopher Joseph, Scott Anthony, and the late Joseph Christopher—were stunned to learn they had been deliberately excluded from his will.

In the will, originally executed in 2012, Lewis specifically wrote:

“I have intentionally excluded Gary Lewis, Ronald Lewis, Anthony Joseph Lewis, Christopher Joseph Lewis, Scott Anthony Lewis and Joseph Christopher Lewis and their descendants as beneficiaries of my estate, it being my intention that they shall receive no benefits hereunder.”

That clause left no room for ambiguity—Lewis’s direction was clear that not only his six sons, but also any of their descendants, would inherit nothing from his estate .

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As a result, Lewis left his entire estate—valued in the range of $50 million—to his second wife, SanDee “Sam” Pitnick, and their adopted daughter, Danielle.

Danielle, who had been adopted in 1992, was reportedly extremely close to her father; in one of his last interviews Lewis said, “I don’t have to do anything for her to love me. She loves me already.”

The youngest of his boys, Joseph Christopher Lewis, had tragically died in 2009 of a drug overdose; Lewis acknowledged this in his will to make sure his exclusion extended beyond the living descendants.

For years, the six surviving sons remained silent. But eventually, hurt and resentment surfaced. Gary Lewis, best known as frontman for Gary Lewis & the Playboys, made no secret of the emotional pain, once calling his father “mean and evil” and suggesting that Joseph’s death was partly “a death of a broken heart” over feeling abandoned.

Jerry Lewis, Comedy's Renaissance Man, Dies at 91 | Vogue

In addition, Jerry Lewis had an acknowledged extramarital daughter, Suzan (sometimes called Suzann), born in the 1950s.

Though she took a DNA test affirming a biological connection, she was never named in the will—raising questions about whether her legal position might allow her to contest the estate.

After Lewis passed, Suzan revealed she was homeless and living on a bench in Philadelphia, stating, “I think that I would deserve something… especially in my situation”.

Experts noted that explicitly naming his sons and their descendants as disinherited ensured the will’s clarity, making legal challenges easier to defend.

Typically, high‑profile figures might use trusts to distribute wealth privately—but Lewis chose the public route.

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The fallout was twofold: On one hand, Lewis is celebrated worldwide for his longstanding work and philanthropy, raising over $2.5 billion for muscular dystrophy research through his famous MDA telethons.

On the other, his actions toward his own children reveal a deeply fractured personal life.

Gary and his brothers’ decision to eventually speak out underscores the emotional toll of feeling deliberately forgotten.

Their silence turned into a public reckoning—one that highlights unresolved family trauma and the emotional costs of revenge or estrangement.

Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis Photo 4 | eBay

Jerry Lewis’s legacy now stands as a stark contrast: a towering public figure whose monumental charity work and cinematic impact are shadowed by a deeply troubled and painful family story.

As his sons and the public continue to digest the truth behind his final will, it remains a cautionary tale about forgiveness, inheritance, and the enduring wounds left in the wake of familial division.

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