To a generation of 1970s television watchers, Demond Wilson was simply known as Lamont, the beleaguered son of Redd Foxx’s Fred Sanford in the NBC hit “Sanford and Son.” Wilson, who went on to become a minister, has died. He was 79.
Mark Goldman, a spokesperson for Wilson, confirmed to NBC News that he died peacefully on Friday following complications from cancer.
“A devoted father, actor, author, and minister, Demond lived a life rooted in faith, service, and compassion. Through his work on screen, his writing, and his ministry, he sought to uplift others and leave a meaningful impact on the communities he served,” Goldman said in an emailed statement.
“Demond was surrounded by love throughout his final days,” Goldman wrote. He is survived by his wife, Cicely Wilson, their six children and two grandchildren.
Wilson was best known as the son of Foxx’s comically cantankerous Fred Sanford character in a sitcom that was among the first to feature a mostly Black cast when it began airing in 1972.

The thoughtful Lamont had to put up with his junkyard owner father’s schemes, bigotry and insults — most famously, and repeatedly, “You big dummy!”
The show was a hit for its six seasons on NBC but ended when ABC offered Foxx a variety show.
Wilson was born in Valdosta, Georgia, and grew up in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan, according to the biography on his website.
He served in the U.S. Army in Vietnam and was wounded there, and he returned to New York and acted onstage before heading to Hollywood.
A guest appearance on “All in the Family” in 1971 led to his best-known role. Norman Lear produced both shows.
Wilson told The Associated Press in 2022 that he got the role over comedian Richard Pryor.
“I said, ‘C’mon, you can’t put a comedian with a comedian. You’ve got to have a straight man,’” he said he told the producers.
After “Sanford and Son” ended, Wilson starred in the shorter-lived comedies “Baby I’m Back” and “The New Odd Couple.” He later appeared in four episodes of the show “Girlfriends” in the 2000s, along with a handful of movie roles.
Though he returned to the screen at times, he told the Los Angeles Times in 1986 that the acting life was not for him: “It wasn’t challenging. And it was emotionally exhausting because I had to make it appear that I was excited about what I was doing.”
Wilson became a minister in the 1980s.

