The Daily Telegraph

Des O’connor will be missed like a relative

Singer and entertaine­r who rose to the summit of light entertainm­ent and was on the nation’s television screens for 60 years

- By Michael Hogan

Des O’connor, whose death at the age of 88 was announced yesterday after a fall at his home, was a fixture in Britain’s sitting rooms for half a century. It made him almost an honorary member of the family.

Beloved by everyone from giggling schoolchil­dren to swooning grandmothe­rs, the singer was the ultimate entertaine­r, a phenomenal­ly hard worker with the knack of making it look effortless. He was married four times and had five children.

Des O’connor, whose death at the age of 88 was announced yesterday, after a fall at his home, was a fixture in the UK’S sitting rooms for half a century. It made him almost an honorary member of the family.

Beloved by everyone from giggling schoolchil­dren to swooning grandmothe­rs, he was the ultimate entertaine­r, a phenomenal­ly hard worker with the knack of making it look effortless.

“I grew up throughout the Des O’connor years, when he was on air all the time,” said fellow presenter Carol Vorderman, who worked with O’connor when he hosted Countdown the Channel 4 stalwart, between 2007 and 2008. “Up to 20 million people would sit around the TV and laugh until they cried.

“He was the king; one of the very great British television entertaine­rs. It was a complete joy to work with him.”

DJ Tony Blackburn yesterday described O’connor as “a great entertaine­r and, more importantl­y, a very nice person”.

In a statement, Pat Lake-smith, his close friend and long-time agent, said O’connor had been admitted to hospital just over a week ago, following a fall at his home. “He was recovering well and had been in great spirits and looking forward to going home,” she said.

“Unfortunat­ely, his condition suddenly deteriorat­ed and he drifted peacefully away in his sleep.

“He was a joy to work with – he was talented, fun, positive, enthusiast­ic, kind and a total profession­al. He always said the sound of laughter was like the sound of heavenly music.”

O’connor held the record for more mainstream appearance­s on the small screen than any other performer. He starred in prime-time shows every year from 1963 until the Noughties.

Born in London’s east end in 1932, he was the kind of old-fashioned showman they simply don’t make any more.

With his craft honed at holiday camps, in RAF talent shows during his national service and on the stage of the London Palladium (where he made more than 100 appearance­s), he could turn his hand to anything: song, dance, stand-up comedy or presenting.

He found a home for all these abilities on variety vehicle The Des O’connor Show, which ran from 1963 to 1971. This was followed by Des O’connor Tonight, a chat show, which eventually ended in 2002 after 26 years on air. It was the Wogan or Parkinson of ITV but would outlast both of them.

In parallel, O’connor carved out a successful career as an easy listening crooner, clocking up four Top 10 hits – including chart-topper I Pretend – and 36 albums. His global sales totalled more than 16 million records.

His singing ability became a running gag on The Morecambe and Wise Show. He always took this merciless ribbing in great spirit, even cheerfully joining in.

On the duo’s 1975 Christmas special, Des more than held his own as the trio ad-libbed and corpsed with laughter. This ability to laugh at himself was one of many reasons why O’connor was so admired. David Baddiel, the comedian, said yesterday: “It’s worth rememberin­g how brilliant he is at his own expense.”

It’s all too unusual for a celebrity to be adored by punters and peers alike but O’connor was one of those rare beasts. Having intended to hang up his mic at the turn of the millennium, O’connor was soon tempted back to cohost the light entertainm­ent show Today With Des and Mel alongside Melanie Sykes, from 2002 to 2006.

O’connor, who received a CBE for services to broadcasti­ng and entertainm­ent in 2008, was married four times and had five children.

‘Up to 20 million people would sit around the TV and laugh until they cried. He was the king’

DES O’CONNOR, the singer, entertaine­r and talk show host who has died aged 88, became the highest-paid presenter on television, despite being a figure of fun for decades. O’connor started out in the 1950s as a Red Coat at a Butlin’s holiday camp. His irrepressi­bly bubbly personalit­y soon gained him a following and in 1963 he was given his own television variety show. Though his looks were more homely than matinee idol, they won him a female fan club and he went on to carve a niche as a crooner in the style of Dean Martin, hitting the No 1 spot in the UK charts in 1968 with I Pretend. He became the only solo artist to have starred at the London Palladium more than 1,000 times, and as a singer he sold more than 16 million albums worldwide.

Though his chart career largely came to an end in the early 1970s, his career in television flourished. Des O’connor Tonight, a celebrity chat show launched on BBC Two in 1977, was so successful that it continued, intermitte­ntly, in more or less the same format (latterly on ITV) for a quarter of a century.

O’connor’s enduring appeal baffled the more highbrow critics for, as one unkindly observed, “the plain truth is that, despite possessing no apparent shred of talent for comedy, singing or conversati­on, he is a great success as a comedian, singer and conversati­onalist”. His unabashed cheesiness and questionab­le vocal talent famously made O’connor the butt of jokes from Morecambe and Wise: Ernie once told Eric that he had just finished a play about an old man in his eighties who had lost everything. He’d lost his voice, his dignity all gone. And Eric said: “Great, but will Des do it?”

Everybody enjoyed poking fun at O’connor: a commercial of the 1980s featured Russ Abbot as a fisherman who starts playing a Des O’connor record and lowers the speaker into the water – whereupon the terrified fish leap into his waiting net. Some found such jokes uncomforta­ble because they seemed to mock real failings: Kenneth Williams wrote in his diary that the “endless denigratio­n of this singer would only have been funny if he’d been a good singer”. Yet they never failed to raise a laugh.

To many people, O’connor’s success as a chat show host was almost as mysterious. He remained impervious to fashion – sartorial or cultural – habitually appearing on screen in a Seventies-style blue double-breasted suit and sporting the kind of permatan and stiff coiffeur normally associated with bank robbers on the Costa del Sol.

While rivals such as Bob Monkhouse and Michael Parkinson either adapted their routines or sank beneath the new cultural forces of irony and scepticism, O’connor sailed on, and Des O’connor Tonight remained one of the most popular shows on television.

The secret of his success may have been that, like an interviewe­r for Hello! magazine, O’connor provided the easy prompts which allowed his celebrity guests to wear whatever self-image they had chosen and plug their merchandis­e without fear of snide asides or interrupti­on. The show attracted a list of luminaries and launched the careers of numerous hopefuls, including Frank Skinner, Lee Evans, Alan Davies, Lily Savage and Jeff Green.

It became the chat show of choice for politician­s. A beleaguere­d William Hague appeared in one summer special (“Do you have a funniest moment?” asked O’connor). Tony Blair told him that, as prime minister, “You get to meet a lot of exciting people, and do a lot of exciting things.” Later, O’connor’s name appeared on the list of guests at Chequers, prompting the Daily Mail headline: “Why should WE pay for Des O’connor’s dinner?”

O’connor claimed to take criticism in good part, even appearing on The Morecambe and Wise Show in a sketch that mocked him. Eric Morecambe, he once confessed, “made out I was a terrible entertaine­r and I was really worried the jokes would do me damage and ruin my career. But I’ve kept selling records, kept selling out theatres and being on the television. I’m happy with the way it’s kept going.” The jokes “did hurt, but only because we sometimes take ourselves too seriously. I’ve since laughed it off.”

Desmond Bernard O’connor was born on January 12 1932 in Stepney, London. His father was a dustman and his mother a cleaner. For the first five years of his life young Des suffered from rickets and relied on callipers to get about. Then, a few months after he had taken his first steps without them, he was run down by a car that mounted the pavement. He spent the next six months in hospital in an iron lung.

No sooner had he been discharged from hospital than his home was destroyed in the Blitz, forcing his separation from his family when he was evacuated to Northampto­n. He briefly played profession­al football for Northampto­n Town and also trained as a jockey, although he soon gave it up and worked in a shoe factory.

It was while he was doing his National Service in the RAF that O’connor began to think of a career in showbusine­ss. He was caught mimicking his CO; his punishment was to enter a talent contest. He became a Butlin’s Red Coat in the early 1950s, establishi­ng himself as an all-round family entertaine­r and compère. He began touring working men’s clubs and hosting variety shows, making his stage debut in 1953 at the Palace Theatre in Newcastle.

It was not all plain sailing. At the Glasgow Empire in 1954, he was heckled so mercilessl­y that he pretended to faint and was carted offstage to the Royal Infirmary. “I was in tears. But I went back and did the second show that night – if I hadn’t, I don’t think I’d be in showbiz today,” he recalled.

In 1958 he compèred the only British tour of Buddy Holly and the Crickets, having to haul the 6ft 2in Holly out of bed by his feet in the digs they shared to get him to the theatre. The same year, he was brought on to host the television shows Spot That Tune and Sunday Night at the London Palladium.

The Des O’connor Show, launched in 1963, became a huge hit in Britain and in America, establishi­ng him as a prime-time entertaine­r. On the back of his television fame he launched his career as a singer and had his first hit single in 1967 with Careless Hands (a cover of a Mel Tormé song).

His second single, I Pretend, went to No 1, selling well more than a million copies. His third single,

1 2 3 O’leary, became his final Top 10 hit of the 1960s; four more singles made the Top 20, though some, including Dick-a-dum-dum and Feelings, later garnered the dubious accolade of featuring in “worst records ever” lists.

He returned to television in 1974 with Des O’connor Entertains, a variety show with guest stars, featuring singing, dancing and comedy sketches. A similar format was adapted for Des O’connor Tonight, which first went on air in 1977 and ran for 24 years.

In the 1990s, O’connor hosted the game show Take Your Pick and in 2000 he was brought in to present the BBC’S Lottery draw in an attempt to boost flagging ratings; he agreed to a run of six shows at £30,000 each. He returned to ITV in 2002 as co-host with Melanie Sykes of Today With Des & Mel, a live afternoon chat and light entertainm­ent show which won a cult following among university students, giving O’connor a whole new fan base. In 2003, he signed a new one-year £3.7 million contract with ITV, making him, at 71, Britain’s highestpai­d television star.

Although ITV axed Today with Des & Mel in 2006 in what the company described as a “painful, but utterly necessary” move, O’connor was far from finished, and in 2007 he took over from Des Lynam as host of Channel 4’s longrunnin­g quiz show, Countdown.

In 2011, O’connor starred in Dreamboats and Petticoats at the Playhouse Theatre in London, and the following year he replaced Russell Grant in the West End musical The Wizard of Oz at the London Palladium, as Professor Marvel. He later he toured a twoman show with Jimmy Tarbuck, as well as his own one-man show.

O’connor, whose autobiogra­phy Bananas Can’t Fly was published in 2001 and who was appointed CBE in 2008, led a private life almost as active as his showbusine­ss career. He was married four times, first to the beauty queen Phyllis Gill, with whom he had a daughter; secondly to the dancer Gillian Vaughan, with whom he had two more daughters; and, thirdly, to the Swiss model Jay Rufer, with whom he had another daughter.

In 2004, aged 72, he became a father for the fifth time, having a son with his 33-year-old girlfriend, the singer-songwriter Jodie Brooke Wilson, whom he married in 2007; she survives him along with his children. He claimed to be on good terms with all his children and former wives, explaining that the “third party” in his relationsh­ips had always been work.

‘The jokes did hurt, but only because we sometimes take ourselves so seriously’

Des O’connor, born January 12 1932, died November 14 2020

 ??  ?? Des O’connor with artists of the company in Dreamboats and Petticoats at The Playhouse Theatre, London, in 2011, when he joined the West End musical for a limited season
Des O’connor with artists of the company in Dreamboats and Petticoats at The Playhouse Theatre, London, in 2011, when he joined the West End musical for a limited season
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 ??  ?? O’connor, above in 1997, and right, in 1971: early in his career he toured with Buddy Holly, and would have to drag the star out of his bed by his feet to get him to the theatre on time
O’connor, above in 1997, and right, in 1971: early in his career he toured with Buddy Holly, and would have to drag the star out of his bed by his feet to get him to the theatre on time

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