[from bbc.co.uk]
Thursday 7 September 2000 01.40 BST
Desmond Wilcox
A documentary innovator, his work explored the joys and fears of people who had previously been overlooked by television
In 1965, Wilcox moved to the BBC's newly-established second channel to present and edit, with Bill Morton, the first current affairs series, Man Alive, avowedly devoted to such human predicaments as agoraphobia or the search for an ideal partner. "They wheel a plague cart through the world," I wrote at the time, "crying 'Bring out your dread.' " But there were some powerful episodes, and, within three years, the Man Alive Unit was a little free state within the BBC empire.
In 1972 Wilcox was promoted to be the BBC's head of general features, where he stayed until 1980. One of his tasks was to have to tell the patrician journalist Peregrine Worsthorne, after Perry had just become the second luminary to pronounce the f-word on television, that a projected series he was to write and present would no longer be going ahead.
Wilcox was still able to conduct occasional projects of his own. Americans (1978), a series of 13 profiles of unsung, ordinary citizens, would have been a classic if only Wilcox had not succumbed to temptation or pressure from above and included two wretched celebrities, child film star Jodie Foster and the then First Lady, Rosalynn Carter.[...]
Behind the scenes, Wilcox remained an able and creative broadcaster, and the head of his own production company. Over the years he also won a number of Bafta awards .
He published several books related to his TV series, including Americans and Return Visit, and, with Esther Rantzen, Kill the Chocolate Biscuit, a light-hearted collection of mostly funny things that had happened to them on their way to becoming one of television's most celebrated and most durable husband-and-wife teams.
He is survived by Esther Rantzen, and their three children; and three children from his first marriage.