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SANFORD AND SON
 Sanford and Son CAST
Fred Sanford................................................
Redd Foxx
Lamont Sanford ....................................Demond
Wilson
Grady Wilson (1973-1977) .......................Whitman Mayo
Aunt Esther (1973-1977) .........................LaWanda
Page
Woody Anderson (1976-1977).................. Raymond Allen
Bubba Hoover.............................................
Don Bexley
Janet Lawson (1976-1977) .........................Marlene
Clark
Roger Lawson (1976-1977).................... Edward Crawford
Donna Harris ...........................................Lynn
Hamilton
Officer Swanhauser (1972) ...........................Noam
Pitlik
Officer Hopkins ("Happy") (1972-1976) .........Howard Platt
Aunt Ethel (1972) ....................................Beah
Richards
Julio Fuentes (1972-1975)........................ Gregory
Sierra
Rollo Larson......................................... Nathaniel
Taylor
Melvin (1972)............................................
Slappy White
Officer Smith ("Smitty") (1972-1976) ............Hal Williams
Ah Chew (1974-1975.....................................)
Pat Morita
PRODUCER
Norman Lear
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 136 Episodes
NBC
January 1972-September 1977
Friday 8:00-8:30
April 1976-August 1976 Wednesday
9:00-9:30
U.S. Domestic Comedy
The
1972 NBC television program Sanford and Son chronicled the
adventures of Fred G. Sanford, a cantankerous widower living with
his grown son, Lamont, in the notorious Watts section of contemporary,
Los Angeles, California. Independent producers, Norman Lear and
Bud Yorkin licensed the format of a British program, Steptoe
& Son, which featured the exploits of a cockney junk dealer,
and created Sanford and Son as an American version. Sanford
and Son, The Jeffersons and Good Times, all produced
by Lear and Yorkin, featured mostly black casts--the first such
programming to appear since the Amos 'n' Andy show was canceled
in a hailstorm debate in 1953.
The starring role of Sanford and Son was portrayed by actor-comedian
Redd Foxx. Foxx (born John Elroy Sanford) was no newcomer to the
entertainment industry. His racy nightclub routines had influenced
generations of black comics since the 1950s. Born in St. Louis,
Missouri, Foxx began a career in the late 1930s performing street
acts. During the 1950s he achieved a measure of success as a nightclub
performer and recorder of bawdy joke albums. By the 1960s he was
headlining in Las Vegas. In 1969, he earned a role as an aging junk
dealer in the motion picture Cotton Comes to Harlem, a portrayal
that brought him to the attention of Lear and Yorkin.
It was Foxx's enormously funny portrayal of sixty-five year old
Fred G. Sanford that quickly earned Sanford and Son a place
among the top-ten watched television programs to air on NBC television.
He was supported by Lamont, his thirtyish son, and a multi-racial
cast of regular and occasional characters who served as the butt
of Sanford's often bigoted jokes and insults. Fred's nemesis, the
"evil and ugly" Aunt Esther (portrayed by veteran actor, LaWanda
Page), often provided the funniest moments of the episode, as she
Fred traded jibes and insults. The trademark routine of the series
occurred when Fred feigned a heart attack by clasping his chest
in mock pain. Staggering drunkenly he would threaten to join his
deceased wife Elizabeth, calling out "I'm coming to join you, Elizabeth!"
Though
enormously successful, Foxx became dissatisfied with the show, its
direction, and his treatment as star of the program. In a Los
Angeles Times article, he stated, "Certain things should be
yours to have when you work your way to the top." At one point he
walked off the show complaining that the white producers and writers
had little regard or appreciation of African-American life and culture.
In newspaper interviews he lambasted the total lack of black writers
or directors. Moreover, Foxx believed that his efforts were not
appreciated, and in 1977 he left NBC for his own variety show on
ABC. The program barely lasted one season.
Sanford
and Son survived some five years on prime-time television. It
earned its place in television history as the first successful,
mostly black cast television sitcom to appear on American network,
primetime television in twenty years since the cancellation of Amos
'n' Andy. It was an enormously funny program, sans obvious ethnic
stereotyping. "I'm convinced that Sanford and Son shows middle
class America a lot of what they need to know..." Foxx said in a
1973 interview. "The show ...doesn't drive home a lesson, but it
can open up people's minds enough for them to see how stupid every
kind of prejudice can be." After Foxx left the show permanently,
a pseudo-spin-off, called Sanford Arms proved unsuccessful
and lasted only one season.
-Pamala
Deane
FURTHER READING
Bogel,
Donald. Blacks, Coons, Mulattos, Mammies and Bucks: An Interpretive
History of Blacks in American Film. New York: Garland, 1973.
_______________.
Blacks in American Television and Film. New York: Garland,
1988.
Friedman,
Lester D. Unspeakable Images: Ethnicity and the American Cinema.
Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1991.
Gray, Herman. Watching Race: Television and the Struggle for
"Blackness." Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1995.
MacDonald,
J. Fred. Blacks and White TV: Afro-Americans in Television Since
1948. Chicago: Nelson-Hall, 1993.
Marc,
David, and Robert J. Thompson. Prime Time, Prime Movers: From
I Love Lucy to L.A. Law, America's Greatest TV Shows and People
Who Created Them. Boston: Little, Brown, 1992.
Taylor,
Ella. Prime Time Families: Television Culture in Postwar America.
Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990.
See
also Amen; Amos
'n' Andy; Comedy,
Domestic Settings; Good
Times; Lear,
Norman; Racism,
Ethnicity and Television; 227
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