1998–2003: Blankety Blank, travel shows, and Eyes Down In 1998, the BBC produced a six-week Sunday series titled
The Lily Savage Show, during which he interviewed guests like
Elton John,
Alan Yentob, and
Anthea Turner. O'Grady found the scripted, non-spontaneous nature of the series difficult, and it was not well received. As Lily, O'Grady was invited on to other television chat shows, such as
Richard and Judy; he appeared in a Christmas special of cookery show
Ready, Steady, Cook. He went on an eight-week tour as Lily, before starring as Miss Hannigan in a West End revival of the musical
Annie. He subsequently accompanied the show's tour of the UK, before appearing in
pantomime in Birmingham. The BBC decided to revive the quiz show
Blankety Blank, previously hosted by
Terry Wogan and
Les Dawson. They selected O'Grady to present the show as Lily, allowing him to ad lib rather than follow a script. Screened on primetime Saturday night in 1998 and 1999,
Blankety Blank proved a ratings winner, attracting an audience of 9 million. ITV then purchased it, offering O'Grady a two-year deal (2001 and 2002) for £1 million. ITV let him be more risque in his use of humour on
Blankety Blank, and also commissioned a comedy series,
Lily Live!. This show also proved a success, earning O'Grady nominations for both the Best Comedy Entertainment Personality and Programme at the 2000
British Comedy Awards. With increased earnings—his assets were estimated to total £4 million—in 1999 O'Grady purchased a house in
Aldington, Kent from comedian
Vic Reeves, decorating it in an
Art Nouveau style and establishing a
smallholding. Tired of appearing as Lily, O'Grady decided to try to make a career for himself outside of drag. He appeared as himself in an advert campaign for Double Two shirt-makers, before pitching a six-part
travelogue series to ITV, who agreed to part-fund it. The project resulted in ''Paul O'Grady's Orient
, for which he travelled throughout East and Southeast Asia. Although poorly received by the tabloid press, it achieved good ratings, and ITV commissioned a second series, Paul O'Grady's America'', in which he visited various U.S. cities. Again it received poor tabloid reviews. O'Grady suffered a bout of clinical depression, but recovered in time to perform alongside
Cilla Black and
Barbara Windsor in a
burlesque rendition of "
You Gotta Get a Gimmick" at the 2001
Royal Variety Performance; the televised event attracted 11.5 million viewers. In April 2002, O'Grady had a heart attack, which doctors attributed to a combination of a
congenital family heart problems with stress,
heavy smoking, and
caffeine. His recovery meant missing the Heritage Foundation Awards ceremony, where he was awarded television personality of the year award. Returning to work, he appeared as the
Child Catcher in a twelve-week run of the musical
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang at the
London Palladium, receiving good reviews. He followed this with a Christmas season as the Wicked Queen in the pantomime
Snow White at
Manchester Opera House. In 2003, O'Grady appeared in
Celebrity Driving School, a BBC
Comic Relief show in which he learned to drive, alongside
Nadia Sawalha and
Jade Goody. One of his tantrums on the shows was nominated for a Best Television Moment of the Year Award. Although turning down most offers to appear in a sitcom, he agreed to play the manager of a Merseyside
bingo hall in the BBC series
Eyes Down, commenting: "He's an evil, twisted man who hates everything that moves. Not exactly a challenge for me". Screened in the prime Friday night slot, the show was popular with viewers, if not reviewers, and was renewed for a second series in 2004. The BBC were also planning on reviving
The Generation Game; O'Grady presented two pilot episodes in late 2003 but left the project, unhappy with the result. O'Grady ended 2003 in
pantomime at the
Bristol Hippodrome.
2004–2011: ''The Paul O'Grady Show and Paul O'Grady Live'' O'Grady temporarily stood in for
Des O'Connor on ITV's lunchtime chat show
Today with Des and Mel, enjoying the feeling of presenting live. ITV executives then offered him his own daytime chat show: ''The Paul O'Grady Show''. There was initial press concern that O'Grady's style of adult humour would not be appropriate for a daytime slot, but ITV's controller of entertainment, Mark Wells, declared that "Paul is one of the funniest people on television – he deserves to be on it far more than he is." The show first aired in October 2004 from 5 pm to 6 pm and saw O'Grady interviewing celebrity guests; it represented "a glorious mix of seemingly unscripted banter, chat and slapstick humour". In producing the show, O'Grady worked with many old friends, including warm-up man
Andy Collins. The series was a hit, attaining between 2.5 and 2.7 million viewers daily. According to O'Grady biographer Neil Simpson, the series was "a riotous, endearingly
kitsch romp with no pretensions to be anything other than pure entertainment. In some ways it was pure vaudeville[...] There were novelty acts, talking dogs, whistling goldfish, extraordinary stories. His audience laughed like drains at his anecdotes and were brought right into the heart of the show." The inclusion of his dog, Buster, on the show proved particularly popular with audiences. The show gained a devoted following, with many fans attending the screenings; often, as many as a hundred had to be turned away. Describing those attending the screenings, Simpson noted that "Groups of middle aged women dominate—but they are joined by beautiful twenty-something women with flawless make-up, flash City boys with
Louis Vuitton briefcases, hip-looking students out for a good time and pensioners just wanting a laugh in the afternoon." The show's viewing figures exceeded those of Channel 4's daytime chat show,
Richard & Judy. Tabloids stoked the rivalry between the shows, calling it the "Chat Wars". O'Grady claimed that tabloids had been publishing false quotations attributed to him, describing Richard and Judy as "a lovely couple and we certainly haven't fallen out." At Christmas 2004, O'Grady starred in a pantomime,
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, at the
Victoria Palace Theatre in London's West End. After the second series of ''The Paul O'Grady Show'' was commissioned, in March 2005 it was awarded Best Daytime Programme by the
Royal Television Society, and O'Grady was subsequently awarded Best Entertainment Performance at the
BAFTAs. In August controversy arose after it was revealed that the staff member responsible for interviewing the show's prospective child reporters had written derogatory notes about them; O'Grady dismissed the staff member responsible and issued a public apology. In June 2005, Murphy died of
brain cancer. Prior to Murphy's death, O'Grady had promised him that his production company—now named
Olga TV after one of O'Grady's dogs—would take creative control over ''The Paul O'Grady Show''. ITV refused to allow this, and so O'Grady moved the show to Channel 4, where it was renamed ''The New Paul O'Grady Show''. Press accused O'Grady of moving in pursuit of a higher salary; Channel 4 offered him a contract for £2 million a year, making him one of Britain's highest-paid television stars. In June 2006, O'Grady suffered a second massive heart attack, undergoing an
angioplasty; he received around 7000 get-well-soon cards and letters from fans. He returned to work for the second series of ''The New Paul O'Grady Show'' in September, during which the show's viewing figures hit a new peak. To deal with his health issues, he began taking a week off mid-series, where he was replaced by guest presenters. O'Grady subsequently won the Ten Years at the Top award at the TV Quick and TV Choice awards. The tabloids tried to re-ignite the "chat wars" by claiming a rivalry between O'Grady and other daytime television shows such as
The Sharon Osbourne Show and
The Brian Conley Show. Amid the later
News International phone hacking scandal, police from
Operation Weeting informed him that
News of the World reporter
Glenn Mulcaire had hacked his mobile phone. He decided not to sue. 2006 also saw the start of his relationship with future-husband André Portasio, a ballet dancer. and appeared in ''
Ghosthunting with Paul O'Grady and Friends'', filmed in
Palermo, Sicily. 2008 also saw publication of the first volume of O'Grady's memoirs, ''At My Mother's Knee ... And Other Low Joints
, published by Bantam. The second volume, The Devil Rides Out: The Second Coming'', followed in 2010. After budget talks broke down with Channel 4, O'Grady ended ''The New Paul O'Grady Show''. In October 2009, O'Grady agreed to an £8 million deal with ITV to host a Friday prime-time chat-show, ''
Paul O'Grady Live''. The first series aired from September to November 2010. In October, O'Grady attracted media attention after calling the
Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition government "bastards" on his show for mass cuts to social services. He also voiced his support for student protesters who
had occupied and vandalised the Conservative Party headquarters.
Ofcom received several complaints over the incident. ''Paul O'Grady Live
was picked up for a second series from April to July 2011, and included a special devoted to American pop star Lady Gaga. In October, ITV axed Paul O'Grady Live''. O'Grady stated that ITV had asked him to return for a third series, but that he had refused, claiming that he had had enough of the chat show format, and that he was fed up with the "interference" from the show's producers. In April 2012, O'Grady appeared on ''
The One and Only Des O'Connor'', a one-off special for
ITV which looked back on the life of
Des O'Connor. In October 2012, the third volume of his memoirs,
Still Standing: The Savage Years, was released. In 2012, O'Grady also revived his Lily Savage character for a cameo in ''Paul O'Grady's Little Cracker'', a Christmas short story. In July 2013, O'Grady narrated the ITV documentary
Me and My Guide Dog following the work of Guide Dogs. In April 2013, O'Grady presented a documentary about
burlesque performer
Gypsy Rose Lee as part of ITV's
Perspectives series. That month, he also presented ITV's
British Animal Honours award ceremony. In 2013, ITV revived ''The Paul O'Grady Show''. In November, O'Grady suffered an angina attack and underwent further heart surgery. In 2013, O'Grady guest starred as cancer patient Tim Connor in three episodes of the BBC medical drama
Holby City. On 31 October 2013, O'Grady recorded a non-broadcast pilot for a
BBC One sitcom called
Led Astray, starring alongside
Cilla Black. The show was not commissioned for a full series due to the pair's busy schedules. In 2013, O'Grady presented two-part
BBC documentary series ''Paul O'Grady's Working Britain'', which was nominated for a
National Television Award in January 2014. On 16 October 2013, O'Grady presented
The One and Only Cilla Black, a 90-minute
ITV special celebrating Cilla Black's 50 years in show business. The show was later repeated shortly after Cilla Black's death in August 2015, with O'Grady presenting a short tribute to her to introduce the show. The first series of ''
Paul O'Grady's Animal Orphans'' screened in 2014, with O'Grady travelling to see wildlife in Africa; a second series followed in 2015 and a third in 2016. The first series averaged 3.29 million viewers while the second averaged 2.75 million. In 2014, he appeared in a
Gogglebox special for
Stand Up to Cancer. In December 2014, O'Grady appeared in ITV's documentary
Rita & Me celebrating
Barbara Knox's fifty years as the character
Rita Tanner in
Coronation Street. In September 2015, O'Grady's fourth book
Open the Cage, Murphy!: Further Savage Adventures was released. In 2015, O'Grady presented
Bob Monkhouse: The Million Joke Man, a three-part factual series for
Gold, exploring the life of comedian and presenter
Bob Monkhouse. In December 2015, O'Grady appeared in
Our Cilla, a one-off programme about the life of
Cilla Black. 2016 saw O'Grady present ''Paul O'Grady: The Sally Army & Me
, a documentary series on The Salvation Army for BBC One. That year, he also presented a Channel 4 documentary, Paul O'Grady's 100 Years of Movie Musicals
, and another for ITV, Paul O'Grady's Favourite Fairy Tales
. That same evening he appeared on ITV in Hilda Ogden's Last Ta-ra
, which was a tribute to the late Coronation Street'' actress
Jean Alexander. In August 2017, O'Grady married Portasio in a ceremony at London's
Goring Hotel, although the pair continued to live separately. That year also saw the screening of two-part ITV series ''Paul O'Grady: For the Love of Animals – India
, and the three-part Channel 4 series Paul O'Grady's Hollywood
, as well as a Channel 5 documentary about his life, The Paul O'Grady Story''. It also saw the publication of O'Grady's fifth book, ''Paul O'Grady's Country Life''. The first series was watched by an average of 1.5 million viewers. A Christmas episode aired on 23 December 2017, before the second series aired from 30 December 2017. A third series was filmed in February 2018. In 2020, O'Grady presented the six-part ITV series ''Paul O'Grady's Great British Escape
, in which he visited sites across Kent. In September 2021, he began hosting Paul O'Grady's Saturday Night Line-Up''. In May 2023, O'Grady appeared alongside
Paul Hollywood,
King Charles and
Queen Camilla,
Sister Sister and
Ricky Tomlinson in a pre-recorded segment for the opening of the first semi-final of the
Eurovision Song Contest 2023, which was hosted in Liverpool. This was O'Grady's final television work before his death. A final series of
For The Love of Dogs that O'Grady recorded in summer 2022 aired from April to September 2023 on ITV, and on 30 January 2024, it was announced that the show would continue with a new presenter,
Alison Hammond. Plus, a new 2 part documentary series for ITV, ''Paul O'Grady's Great Elephant Adventure'', that O'Grady also filmed in 2022, aired on 31 March and 7 April 2024. ==Radio==