Stage O'Connor appeared at the
Glasgow Empire,
MGM Grand,
Las Vegas, the
Opera House, Sydney, and the
O'Keefe Centre, Toronto, and made more than one thousand solo appearances at the
London Palladium. In October 2015, O'Connor and
Jimmy Tarbuck starred in their own one-off show at the London Palladium to raise money for the new Royal Variety Charity. Due to the success of this show, they toured the country in 2016 from April to October. The venues they visited were (in chronological order), the Southampton
Mayflower Theatre,
Leeds Grand Theatre, Southend
Cliffs Pavilion,
Bristol Hippodrome,
Bournemouth International Centre, and
Milton Keynes Theatre. In 2017, O'Connor and Tarbuck toured the UK again from May to December. The venues they visited included
Theatre Royal, Norwich,
Wolverhampton Grand Theatre,
Blackpool Opera House,
Princess Theatre, Torquay,
The Hexagon, Reading,
Theatre Royal, Newcastle and
Grand Theatre, Swansea. Until 2019, O'Connor toured theatres around the UK with his one-man show.
Television O'Connor starred in mainstream television shows in almost every year from 1963 until the 2000s, a feat that only one other television personality has achieved worldwide (U.S. game show host
Bob Barker, who hosted mainstream television shows from 1956 until 2007, with 1966–1972 being in syndication). • Between 1963 and 1971 O'Connor hosted ''
The Des O'Connor Show, a British variety show, for eight series on ITV. This was followed by Des O'Connor Entertains'', a show which ran for two series between 1974 and 1976 and featured singing, dancing, and comedy sketches. In 1969, thirteen editions of the show were sold to
NBC in the United States, as a summer replacement for the network's
Kraft Music Hall. The series was broadcast in more than forty countries. • Between 1977 and 2002, O'Connor presented his own chat show series entitled ''
Des O'Connor Tonight'' which lasted for seven series on
BBC Two and later seventeen on ITV. • From 1992 to 1998 O'Connor presented the game show
Take Your Pick! where he met fourth wife Jodie Wilson. In 1995 and 1997 O'Connor compèred the
Royal Variety Performance. • In January 2001 ITV aired ''
An Audience with Des O'Connor''. • From 2002 to 2006 O'Connor co-hosted
Today with Des and Mel opposite
Melanie Sykes. The show was a lunchtime light entertainment programme aired on ITV. On 12 May 2006, the channel announced that the show would be one of a number to be axed in a "painful, but utterly necessary" move. • In January 2007, O'Connor replaced
Des Lynam as co-presenter of the
Channel 4 game show
Countdown with
Carol Vorderman. He left the show in 2008 to spend more time on theatre and entertainment-based projects. In 2009, O'Connor was replaced by sports presenter
Jeff Stelling. • In April 2012, ITV aired ''
The One and Only Des O'Connor'', a one-off show that celebrated O'Connor's 80th birthday, with guests including
Katherine Kelly,
Olly Murs,
Robert Lindsay, and Melanie Sykes.
Guest appearances • O'Connor appeared as a guest on
The Morecambe and Wise Show a number of times. He was the butt of many a joke by Eric Morecambe, being referred to as "Des – short for 'desperate", and "Death O'Connor". One line, sung to the tune of "Crazy Words – Crazy Tune" was, "Roses are red, violets are blue, Des can't sing, we know that's true!". (O'Connor was actually an old friend of the duo, and even participated in writing many of the "put-downs".) • In May 2012, O'Connor took part in the TV game show
Would I Lie to You?. • In December 2012, O'Connor was invited to celebrate 100 years of the
Royal Variety Performance with
Bruce Forsyth,
Ronnie Corbett, and
Jimmy Tarbuck. • In December 2012, O'Connor partnered
Lee Mack in a celebrity edition of
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?. • In December 2013, O'Connor appeared in a celebrity edition of
The Chase. • In October 2014, O'Connor was a panellist on an episode of
Through the Keyhole. • In April 2017, O'Connor was on the panel of ''
Harry Hill's Alien Fun Capsule''.
Singing O'Connor had a successful career as a singer, recording 36 albums, five of which reached the
top 40 of the
UK Albums Chart. O'Connor appeared with Morecambe and Wise on several of their Christmas shows. including "
I Pretend", which topped the
UK Singles Chart in 1968, and "
The Skye Boat Song", a 1986 duet with
Roger Whittaker. His singing ability was often parodied on
The Morecambe & Wise Show, with O'Connor taking part in the sketches. ==Awards and honours==