Sanford and Son: Ebenezer Sanford


03:30 am - 04:00 am, Wednesday, November 5 on WYOU get (Great Entertainment Television) (22.3)

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About this Broadcast
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Ebenezer Sanford

Season 5, Episode 12

Fred, the Christmas Scrooge, is reproached by ghosts of the past. Lamont: Demond Wilson. Esther: LaWanda Page.

repeat 1975 English
Comedy Christmas Sitcom

Cast & Crew
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Redd Foxx (Actor) .. Fred Sanford
Demond Wilson (Actor) .. Lamont Sanford
LaWanda Page (Actor) .. Aunt Esther Anderson
Lynn Hamilton (Actor) .. Donna Harris
Marc Copage (Actor) .. Fredsie
Don Bexley (Actor)
Adrian Ricard (Actor) .. Mrs. Small
Kathryn Jackson (Actor) .. Mother
Herb Ellis (Actor) .. Landlord

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Redd Foxx (Actor) .. Fred Sanford
Born: December 09, 1922
Died: October 11, 1991
Birthplace: St. Louis, Missouri, United States
Trivia: Born John Sanford, this scratchy-voiced, bulldog-faced black comedian and actor entered show business while still in his teens; over several decades, he worked as a "blue humor" comic in nightclubs and theaters around the country. From 1951-55 he teamed with comic Slappy White. He made 54 "party records" (comedy records with plenty of four-letter words and blue humor, popular mostly in the black community) and established himself as the dean of blue comedy. In the '60s his audience expanded, and he got guest shots on a number of TV shows. After debuting onscreen in Ossie Davis's unexpectedly successful film Cotton Comes to Harlem (1970) Foxx was signed to star in the TV series Sanford and Son the show was a hit and lasted from 1972-77, making him a household name. He went on to appear in the sitcoms Sanford, The Redd Foxx Show and in the variety show The Redd Foxx Comedy Hour and continued appearing regularly as a stand-up comic in Las Vegas.
Demond Wilson (Actor) .. Lamont Sanford
Born: October 13, 1946
Birthplace: Valdosta, Georgia, United States
Trivia: Began his acting career at the age of 4 with an appearance in the Broadway play Green Pastures. Was drafted by the Army and served a tour of duty in Vietnam. Guest-starred on an Emmy-winning episode of All in the Family, which helped him earn a lead role on the popular sitcom Sanford and Son. Scaled back his acting work after experiencing a spiritual awakening and becoming a minister in 1983. Is also a writer whose works include several children's books and the memoir Second Banana: The Bitter Sweet Memoirs of the Sanford & Son Years.
LaWanda Page (Actor) .. Aunt Esther Anderson
Born: October 19, 1920
Died: September 14, 2002
Trivia: A comedienne turned actress who rose to fame as outspoken bible-thumper Aunt Ester in Redd Foxx's hit sitcom Sanford and Son, LaWanda Page performed with such other famous contemporaries as Richard Pryor and Rudy Ray Moore before finding success on the small screen. A native of Cleveland who grew up in St. Louis, Page first hit the stage as an exotic dancer and chorus girl billed "the Bronze Goddess of Fire" (due to her penchant for playing with fire on-stage) before fully realizing her talents as a standup comic. Subsequently approached by Foxx to star in Sanford and Son, Page tickled television viewers' funny bones with her memorable role as Foxx's aggressively religious sister-in-law in the original series' spin-off The Sanford Arms, and the 1980 revival Sanford. Throughout the 1980s and '90s, Page crafted a feature-film career with minor roles in such comedies as Zapped! (1982), My Blue Heaven (1990), Friday (1995), and Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood (1996). Always retaining her fiery approach to comedy, Page also performed on-stage in productions of The Inquest of Sam Cooke and Take It to the Lord...Or Else. On September 14, 2002, LaWanda Page died from complications of diabetes in Los Angeles, CA. She was 81.
Lynn Hamilton (Actor) .. Donna Harris
Born: April 25, 1930
Raymond Allen (Actor)
Marc Copage (Actor) .. Fredsie
Born: June 21, 1962
Don Bexley (Actor)
Born: March 10, 1910
Died: April 15, 1997
Marlene Clark (Actor)
Born: December 19, 1937
Died: May 18, 2023
Birthplace: New York City, New York, United States
Trivia: Marlene Clark, a black supporting actress and occasional lead, appeared on screen beginning in the '70s.
Eric Laneuville (Actor)
Adrian Ricard (Actor) .. Mrs. Small
Born: August 07, 1924
Kathryn Jackson (Actor) .. Mother
James Sheldon (Actor)
Born: November 12, 1920
Died: March 20, 2016
Trivia: James Sheldon may never have directed a feature film, in a career of 50 years behind the camera, but he practically wrote the book on how to direct for television. Along with such contemporaries as Marc Daniels and Charles Dubin, he was devising, inventing, and perfecting the field as he went along, from the dawn of commercial TV in 1948 right to the end of the 1990s. Sheldon's aspirations as a director began astonishingly early, in his early teens when he was brought by his father to see Lauritz Melchior and Kirsten Flagstad doing a Wagner opera at the Metropolitan Opera. He was dazzled by the sound and the color and the sets and, knowing that he couldn't sing or play an instrument, saw directing as his way of contributing creatively to a performance. It took Sheldon a few years to get near that goal; a job as an usher at NBC helped get him into the general vicinity of performance work, and by his early twenties he was an assistant director on radio, which mostly meant timing out the program and making sure that no censorable words got out over the air. His first opportunity to run a program arose when the director of the particular show on which he was working had to be out of town at a sponsor's meeting, and asked Sheldon if he would fill in as director. From that beginning in radio, he jumped to television on CBS in early June of 1948 with the first broadcast of We, the People on CBS, which had its debut one week before Milton Berle's Texaco Star Theatre went on the air. Sheldon went on to direct over 1,000 television shows, encompassing Mr. Peepers, Studio One, Armstrong Circle Theater, The Twilight Zone, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, My Three Sons, Naked City, The Virginian, The Man From U.N.C.L.E., Batman, My World and Welcome to It, Longstreet, M*A*S*H, and The Dukes of Hazzard, among numerous other series. He could also take credit for discovering any number of actors and actresses across the years and giving them early breaks in their careers, perhaps most notably Tony Randall, whom he cast in what was supposed to be a one-page role in a single episode of Mr. Peepers; the producer was so pleased with Randall's work that the part was expanded to five pages and he became a regular on the show. Although several of Sheldon's made-for-television movies have been released theatrically in Europe, he has never had occasion to direct a feature film, though not for lack of desire or interest. He'd always had it in his mind to someday do movies, but unlike Delbert Mann, whose television production of Marty gave him an entrée to the film industry, Sheldon never had a natural jumping-off point to help him make the leap. Alas, the timing on some of his opportunities wasn't always fortuitous. As he explained at a sold-out lecture at New York's Film Forum in March of 2006, his first chance to work in features came to nothing, mostly by virtue of his own reticence: "Anthony Perkins, whom I had directed on television, was due to star in Fear Strikes Out, the Jimmy Piersall story, and he told me that he would like me to direct. But this was 1956, and I didn't quite feel I was ready, and told him that I was gratified that he'd thought of me, but that I wasn't quite ready. Of course, that didn't stop Robert Mulligan, who also had never directed a feature film before, from doing the movie, and going on to do lots of other feature films in the years since." Still, Sheldon never lacked for work or opportunities, and remained busy on the small screen for hundreds of programs across another 40 years. By the start of the 21st century, he was regarded by those in the field as almost a living legend in the realm of television production and directing, and increasingly being sought out for interviews and lectures by such institutions as the Museum of Television and Radio and Film Forum for his reminiscences and recollections about the field he'd all but invented.Sheldon worked steadily until the mid-1980s, when he retired from directing. He died in 2016, at age 95.
Herb Ellis (Actor) .. Landlord
Born: January 17, 1921

Before / After
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