When Redd was 13 years old, he supported himself by forming a washboard band. When the band broke up, he took off for New York City and never looked back, according to his official website ReddFoxx.com. He gave himself the moniker Redd Foxx as an homage to the professional baseball player Jimmie Foxx, and because he was a “foxy dresser,” adding an extra ‘D’ to his first name so it would be more memorable.
He encountered and befriended a man named Malcolm Little in New York while washing dishes and bussing tables at Jimmy’s Chicken Shack. Little later became the famed Muslim leader Malcolm X, and he referred to Foxx as “the funniest dishwasher on this earth.”
The actor’s early career
Important people were starting to take notice of Redd’s comedic genius. While playing music on the street corners and subways of Harlem with a group called the Bon-Bons, Redd appeared in an amateur hour on comedy radio and subsequently was booked to perform for a week at a nightclub in Newark, New Jersey.
From 1951 to 1955, he was a regular act in Black nightclubs nationwide. While performing in Los Angeles, he was offered a deal to make a comedy record (valued at $25) and went on to make 50 such records over the course of his career. It should be noted that many of those albums were fairly raunchy, and when they were re-released during the Sanford and Son years, they were billed as Redd Foxx: Uncensored.Throughout the tumultuous 1960s, Foxx’s star continued to rise as he made a name for himself doing standup in major venues on the Las Vegas strip.
Redd Foxx gets cast for ‘Sanford & Son’
After his film debut in Ossie Davis’ Cotton Comes to Harlem in 1972, famed producer Norman Lear — who was on the riding high on the success of another sitcom, All in the Family, tapped Foxx to play widower and junk dealer Fred Sanford in NBC’s called Sanford & Son. The show was an instant hit, continuously ranking in the top ten. It was so popular that the network sometimes aired it twice in one week.
Lear had reportedly considered another comedian, Richard Pryor, for the part of Sanford’s son but ultimately went with Vietnam vet and established actor Demond Wilson. Wilson was initially skeptical about Foxx, as his previous experience was only on the stages of comedy clubs and not the theater, saying at the time, “It’s like bringing a dog to a cat party.”Foxx often called Wilson’s character, Lamont, “You big dummy!” which made the audience laugh each time, coining another famous catchphrase on the show.By 1977, Foxx was a household name and a big star, meaning the competition came calling. That year, ABC lured Foxx away from NBC and gave him his own variety show, The Redd Foxx Comedy Hour, to star in and executive produce. “I’ll be doing anything that can possibly be different from what’s been done before,” Foxx reportedly said. “I’ll be doing skits, bits, obnoxious things. I might do Romeo and Juliet with a gorilla,” he joked.The show also featured a variety of guest stars, including Andy Kaufman. It was a dream come true for the actor. Unfortunately, Foxx couldn’t pull in the viewers in the way that Sanford and Son had and the show was canceled less than a year later on January 26, 1978. Foxx and NBC attempted a Sanford and Son revival two years later — without Demond Wilson, who refused to retuen — but it was scrapped. Another short-lived series, The Redd Foxx Show, followed in 1986.