Desmond Wilcox
Desmond John Wilcox was a British television producer, documentary filmmaker, journalist and television executive. He worked at the BBC and ITV during his career and was producer of series such as This Week, Man Alive, and ''That's Life!''
Early life
Wilcox was born in 1931 in Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, to John Wallace Wilcox, a student of architecture under Sir Edwin Lutyens, becoming partner in architectural firm Anderson, Forster, Warren and Wilcox and a Second lieutenant in the Royal Engineers, and Alice May, née Whittle. He attended Cheltenham Grammar School and Christ's College, Finchley. He was then a training apprentice with the Outward Bound Sea School and left home to work as a deckhand in the merchant marine.Career
In 1949, Wilcox began a career in journalism as a reporter on a weekly newspaper. After two years of national service, he moved to Fleet Street to work for the Daily Mirror, becoming a foreign correspondent in the New York bureau.In 1960, Wilcox moved to television as a reporter on ITV's This Week current affairs programme, where he stayed for five years until joining the BBC.
He was co-editor and presenter of the landmark Man Alive series in 1965. He later formed the Man Alive Unit as well as providing the distinctive voice-over in the weekly current-affairs programme TEMPO directed by Mike Hodges.
In an interview in 1986 he said:
From 1972 to 1980, Wilcox was head of general features at the BBC. He made series including Americans, The Visit, Black in Blue and A Day in the Life.
He wrote the book Explorers, based upon the BBC television series of the same name, about the journeys of ten explorers.
Personal life
Wilcox married Patsy Price and they had three children: Claire, Adam, and Cassandra. During his marriage he had an eight-year affair with television presenter Esther Rantzen, and in 1977 he married Rantzen after obtaining a divorce from Patsy. There were three further children from this marriage, including the television presenter Rebecca Wilcox. In 1992, Wilcox converted to Judaism, the religion of his second wife.Later life and death
After he left the staff of the BBC, Wilcox was involved in the occasional series The Boy David, following the story of David Jackson, a badly-deformed Peruvian boy whose face was rebuilt by a Scottish surgeon who adopted him. The series won six international awards.Wilcox died of a heart attack in Paddington, London, on 6 September 2000, at the age of 69.
Media
In 2023, in the ITV1 drama The Long Shadow Wilcox was portrayed by the actor Adam James.Awards
Wilcox was posthumously awarded the Grierson Documentary Film Awards Life Tribute in November 2001.A media arts centre at a High School in Rainhill, Merseyside, has been opened, named in his honour.