Sanford and Son: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{quote| '''Lamont Sanford''': You know what they say, the truth will set you free.<br />
{{quote|'''Lamont Sanford''': You know what they say, the truth will set you free.
'''Fred Sanford''': Your uncle Edgar told the truth, and the judge gave him six months. }}
'''Fred Sanford''': Your uncle Edgar told the truth, and the judge gave him six months. }}



Revision as of 18:55, 7 August 2014

S-A-N-F-O-R-D Period.


Lamont Sanford: You know what they say, the truth will set you free.
Fred Sanford: Your uncle Edgar told the truth, and the judge gave him six months.

A Dom Com (of sorts) from Sitcom kingpin Norman Lear about a Grumpy Old Man and his long-suffering son who live in a rundown house situated in the middle of a junkyard. Hilarity Ensues. An Americanization of the British sitcom Steptoe and Son.

Redd Foxx and Demond Wilson played the title characters of Fred and Lamont Sanford from January 14, 1972 until March 25, 1977 on NBC and shared the screen with a number of memorable supporting players (notably Whitman Mayo as the forgetful Grady Wilson and LaWanda Page as bible-thumping harridan Esther Anderson). The father-son duo engaged in frequent arguments about everything under the sun and truly got on each other's nerves, but despite the loud fights and constant disappointments the two remained devoted to each other. The series was one of the highest rated sitcoms of the 1970s before internal strife caused both Foxx and Wilson to walk away from the show in the spring of 1977; subsequent spinoffs and revivals failed to recapture the magic.

Contains examples of: