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  1. Dec 29, 2023 · Donna (Lynn Hamilton) won't be waiting around for Fred (Redd Foxx) forever!Sanford and Son From Season 5, Episode 8 'Donna Pops the Question' - After receivi...

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  2. Lamont and Janet (Demond Wilson and Marlene Clark) go to Fred (Redd Foxx) with some wonderful news: they are engaged! At first, Fred doesn't accept it and tr...

  3. PIMPMOBILE

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    • Cleavon Little Was The One Who Suggested Redd Foxx as The Lead.
    • Demond Wilson Didn't Think The Show Would Last Very Long When He Signed Up.
    • CBS Passed on The Show, and Regretted It For years.
    • Quincy Jones Composed The Theme Song.
    • Foxx Wore Makeup to Look older.
    • The Heavy Shoes Were What Transformed Redd Into Fred.
    • Fred Sanford Was Named After Redd's Brother.
    • Foxx Based The Heart Attacks on His Mother.
    • Lawanda Page Would Have Been Fired If It Wasn't For Foxx.
    • Richard Pryor and Paul Mooney Co-Wrote Two Episodes.

    Cleavon Little (Blazing Saddles) was approached to work on the project, but had to say no because of prior commitments. He suggested Redd Foxx, his co-star in Cotton Comes to Harlem(1970). In the film, Foxx played a junk dealer.

    Demond Wilson caught the attention of executive producer Bud Yorkin during a guest appearance on All in the Family in 1971, where he played a burglar who broke into Archie Bunker's house. "I thought about it long and hard and decided to take a chance," Wilson later said of saying yes to Sanford and Son."Redd and I thought we could grab some quick c...

    Wilson and Foxx first met each other in Las Vegas, where Foxx was doing stand-up. Four days after their first reading together, they performed in front of the All in the Family cast, where a visiting NBC vice president witnessed the future and ordered a pilot. Yorkin claimed he was unable to get any CBS officials to watch Foxx and Wilson's rehearsa...

    Quincy Jones was skeptical of Sanford and Son, because he had worked with Foxx decades earlier in shows, and recalled not one word out of the comedian's mouth being appropriate for NBC. "I just wrote what he looked like," Jones saidabout his composition "The Streetbeater," the series' theme song. "It sounds just like him, doesn't it?"

    Foxx, who was nicknamed "Chicago Red" because of his hair color, was only 49 years old when the series began; Fred Sanford was 65. He complained that a lot of people assumed he was Fred's age.

    "Just as soon as I put those big heavy shoes on and walk out there, I become Sanford—but not until then, not until I put my shoes on," Foxx said. "I can put the rest of the outfit on, but if I don't have those shoes on, I don't walk like him, and I don't think like him."

    It was the comedian's tribute to his brother, who had died five years before the show premiered. Lamont Sanford was named after Lamont Ousley, one of the two other teenagers who made up the washtub band Foxx formed when he dropped out of high school after just one year. The character Grady Wilson (Whitman Mayo) was named after Demond Wilson, whose ...

    "Fred Sanford is Mary Sanford, who is my mother, but you can reverse personalities into male or female," Foxx told Sammy Davis Jr. on Sammy and Company. "My mother would do the same thing ... she would have heart attacks when I was a kid, I remember. When she wanted something done she could hardly breathe—she had emphysema, she had cancer, she had ...

    LaWanda Page was the only actress Foxx wanted to play Fred's sister-in-law, Esther. Page was too nervous to give an audition producers liked, but Foxx insisted. "They were going to let me go," Page told Jet magazine in 1977, "but Redd said, 'No, you ain't gonna let her go. That's LaWanda and I knowshe can do it! Just give me some time with her.'"

    The legendary comedians co-wrote two episodes of Sanford and Son together during the show's second season, "The Dowry" and "Sanford and Son and Sister Makes Three."

  4. Sanford and Son is an American sitcom television series that aired on NBC from January 14, 1972, to March 25, 1977. It was based on the British sitcom Steptoe and Son, which initially aired on BBC1 in the United Kingdom from 1962 to 1974. Known for its racial humor, running gags, and catchphrases, the series was adapted by Norman Lear and ...

  5. Advertise With Us. Junk dealer Fred Sanford runs roughshod over his son and partner, Lamont, in a groundbreaking sitcom. Fred's moneymaking schemes routinely backfire, and he does just about ...

  6. Jan 14, 2013 · Created by the team of writer-producers, Ray Galton and Alan Simpson, "Steptoe and Son" centered around the wretched lives of Albert Steptoe, an elderly rag and bone man (i.e., junk dealer) and ...