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OpinionSeptember 26, 1997

A funny man whose humor was just as fresh in one generation as another without stooping to the gutter. That's a pretty fair description of the genius of Richard Bernard Shelton, better known -- and loved -- as Red Skelton. He died last week, and he leaves a gaping whole in the pantheon of great entertainers who have become fixtures on the American scene...

A funny man whose humor was just as fresh in one generation as another without stooping to the gutter. That's a pretty fair description of the genius of Richard Bernard Shelton, better known -- and loved -- as Red Skelton. He died last week, and he leaves a gaping whole in the pantheon of great entertainers who have become fixtures on the American scene.

Many folks in this area will remember his performance at the Show Me Center a few years back. His routine never changed much. Jokes that were side-splitting in the 1940s were just as funny today, thanks to his impish style and ability to laugh at himself.

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Red Skelton is gone, but the memories of Clem, Freddie and others will remain for a long time to come.

God bless, Red Skelton.

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