Grady Demond Wilson, the actor best known for playing Lamont Sanford on the popular 1970s series "Sanford and Son," has died at his home in California, according to The New York Times. He was 79.
His son, Christopher Wilson, said his father had prostate cancer.
"Sanford and Son" premiered on NBC in January 1972 and starred comedian Redd Foxx, who played sharp-tongued junk dealer Fred Sanford.
But Wilson’s Lamont provided the show’s emotional backbone, a frustrated, quick-tempered son constantly at odds with his father while keeping their messy world from collapsing.
Wilson’s character became the grounding force of the series, forever fuming at his father’s "you big dummy" digs.
While Foxx’s Fred thrived on theatrics and biting insults, Wilson’s Lamont was the show’s grounding force. The hotheaded, exasperated son snapped back with lines like, "You’ll have to excuse my father," "Are you sure about that, Pop?" and "Hey, Pop! I’m home," keeping the chaos in check while carrying the emotional weight of the series.
Storylines often revolved around Lamont’s frustrations and ambitions, and Wilson’s performance gave the comedy its balance, a balance that helped turn "Sanford and Son" into a cultural phenomenon.
The series ran six seasons, consistently ranking among Nielsen’s top 10 shows for its first five years and landing in the top five three times. In a 1972 feature with Ebony magazine, "Sanford and Son: Redd Foxx and Demond Wilson Wake Up TV’s Jaded Audience," the publication hailed Wilson as "excellent."
Reflecting on his breakthrough role, Wilson told Ebony at the time, "For me, it’s like graduating from school."
Born Grady Demond Wilson on Oct. 13, 1946, in Valdosta, Georgia, Wilson grew up in Harlem, the son of a tailor and a school dietitian. He studied dance and theater from an early age, appearing on Broadway before making his screen debut in 1971.
That year, he appeared in Norman Lear’s "All in the Family" as one of two burglars- alongside Cleavon Little- who held Archie Bunker hostage while delivering pointed commentary on poverty, policing and race. Wilson’s other film credits included Sidney Poitier’s crime drama "The Organization" and the counterculture film "Dealing: Or the Berkeley-to-Boston Forty-Brick Lost-Bag Blues."
Even as "Sanford and Son" dominated ratings, tension simmered off-screen.
Foxx temporarily walked out in 1974 over a contract dispute, and the series ended in spring 1977 with Fred and Lamont still locked in their fiery dynamic.
Wilson later starred in "Baby … I’m Back!" and "The New Odd Couple," though neither matched the cultural staying power of his breakout role.
A ruptured appendix nearly ended Wilson’s life at age 12, a moment he later called transformative. From that day forward, faith guided him. He was raised Roman Catholic but was shaped by Pentecostal worship with his grandmother. He was ordained in the 1980s as a minister in the Church of God in Christ, dedicating himself to preaching and evangelism.
He also pursued writing, publishing "The New Age Millennium: An Exposé of Symbols, Slogans and Hidden Agendas," his memoir "Second Banana: The Bittersweet Memoirs of the Sanford & Son Years" and several children’s books.