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Paul O'Grady

Paul James O'Grady MBE DL (14 June 1955 – 28 March 2023) was an English comedian, broadcaster, drag queen, actor, and writer. He achieved notability in the London gay scene during the 1980s with his drag queen persona Lily Savage, through which he gained broader popularity in the 1990s. O'Grady subsequently dropped the character and in the 2000s became the presenter of various television and radio shows, including The Paul O'Grady Show.

Paul O'Grady

O'Grady in 2009
Born
Paul James O'Grady

(1955-06-14)14 June 1955
Tranmere, Cheshire, England
Died28 March 2023(2023-03-28) (aged 67)
Occupations
  • Comedian
  • broadcaster
  • drag queen
  • actor
  • writer
Years active1988–2023
Spouses
  • Teresa Fernandes
    (m. 1977; div. 2005)
  • André Portasio
    (m. 2017)
Children1

Born to a working-class Irish migrant family in Tranmere, Cheshire, O'Grady moved to London in the late 1970s, initially working as a peripatetic care officer for Camden Council. He developed his drag act in 1978, basing the character of Lily Savage upon traits found amongst female relatives. Touring England as part of drag mime duo the Playgirls, O'Grady then went solo as a stand-up comedian in the early 1980s. Performing as Savage for eight years at a South London gay pub, the Royal Vauxhall Tavern (RVT), he gained a popular following among London's gay community and used his character to speak out for gay rights. After being nominated for a 1992 Perrier Award, O'Grady attracted mainstream attention and made various television, radio, and theatrical appearances. As Savage, he presented the television shows The Big Breakfast (1995–1996), Blankety Blank (1997–2002), and Lily Live! (2000–2001), earning various awards and becoming a well known public figure.

Wishing to diversify from Savage, O'Grady starred in the BBC One sitcom Eyes Down (2003–2004) and presented two travel documentaries for ITV. In 2004, he began presenting ITV's daytime chat show The Paul O'Grady Show. After the network refused to transfer creative control of the series to O'Grady's production company Olga TV, he moved to Channel 4 in 2006, where the show was rebranded as The New Paul O'Grady Show, airing until 2009. O'Grady presented the late night ITV show Paul O'Grady Live (2010–2011) and BBC Radio 2's Paul O'Grady on the Wireless (2009–2022). Additional television shows included Paul O'Grady: For the Love of Dogs (2012–2023), Paul O'Grady's Animal Orphans (2014–2016), Blind Date (2017–2019), and Paul O'Grady's Great British Escape (2020). He also published several books, including a four-volume memoir.

O'Grady was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2008 Birthday Honours for services to entertainment. In 2020 he became president of the British Music Hall Society, taking over the role from Roy Hudd.[1] He was a deputy lieutenant for the County of Kent.[2]

Early life

Childhood: 1955–1971

O'Grady was born on 14 June 1955 at St. Catherine's Hospital in the Tranmere area of Birkenhead, Cheshire (now Merseyside).[3] His father, Patrick "Paddy" Grady (1912–1973),[4] was Irish and had grown up in Ballincurry, County Roscommon, before moving to England in 1936 and settling in the working-class area of Birkenhead. His name was changed from "Grady" to "O'Grady" in a paperwork mistake when he joined the Royal Air Force, and he kept the new name.[5] Patrick married Mary "Molly" Savage (1916–1988), who was born in England to Irish immigrants from County Louth.[3] Paul was their third child; his birth came over a decade after those of brother Brendan (born 1941) and sister Sheila (born 1944).[4]

O'Grady spent his early life at the family's rented home at 23 Holly Grove in Higher Tranmere.[6] He later said, "When I look back on my childhood I have no bad memories. Our family was loving and full of affection. I never knew what divorce was until I moved to London. I was an indulged child and completely protected from anything bad."[7] Attending St. Joseph's Catholic Primary School, O'Grady excelled in all subjects except mathematics. Hoping that he had a good future ahead of him, his parents budgeted to send him to a private school, the Catholic-run Redcourt, but his grades dropped. Failing the eleven plus exam, he was unable to enter a grammar school so attended the Blessed Edmund Campion R.C. Secondary Modern and the Corpus Christi High School.[8] It was at the school that O'Grady experienced his first homosexual encounter, enjoying a brief romance with another boy, although he still assumed he was heterosexual.[9]

A fan of the popular television series The Avengers and Batman,[10] O'Grady was enrolled in the Cub Scouts by his mother, but he hated it, leaving after a month. An altar boy at a local Catholic church, he was dismissed after laughing during a funeral service.[11] He then joined the Marine Cadet Section of the Sea Cadet Corps, later commenting that he was following in the footsteps of his childhood hero, the cartoon character Popeye.[12] He enjoyed the cadets, and at the advice of his captain joined the Boys' Amateur Boxing Club, developing a lifelong love of the sport.[13] Playing truant from school, he got into trouble with his parents, and subsequently with the police after burgling a house with three friends.[14] O'Grady's first job was a paper round that he kept for a week,[15] and through this and other jobs, he saved up to afford Mod clothes, for a time becoming a suedehead.[16]

Early adulthood: 1972–1977

Leaving school aged 16, O'Grady obtained a job in the civil service, working as a clerical assistant for the DHSS at their Liverpool office; he commuted in from his parents' Tranmere home. Supplementing this income, he worked part-time at the bar of the Royal Air Forces Association (RAFA) club in Oxton.[17] Called for a disciplinary hearing at the DHSS and accused of incompetent behaviour and tardiness, he resigned.[18] Obtaining a job at the Wheatsheaf Hotel in Virginia Water, Surrey, aged 17, O'Grady moved there; the management accused him of stealing, which he denied.[19]

Promptly returning to Birkenhead, he increasingly socialised within the Liverpudlian gay scene, attending meetings of the Campaign for Homosexual Equality and working at a gay bar called the Bear's Paw;[20][21] this was kept a secret from his parents, to whom he was not "out of the closet".[20] He also had casual sex with a female friend, Diane Jansen,[22] who became pregnant, news which O'Grady discovered in the same week that both his parents suffered heart attacks; his mother made a recovery, but his father died.[23] Following the birth of his daughter, Sharon Lee Jansen, in May 1974, O'Grady agreed to pay towards her upkeep, but refused to marry Jansen, recognising his homosexuality.[24]

Briefly working as an assistant clerk at Liverpool Magistrates' Court, O'Grady subsequently worked as a barman at Yates's Wine Lodge, supplementing the income with the occasional night at the Bear's Paw.[25] Realising this wage was insufficient to support both himself and his daughter, he travelled to London, lodging in Westbourne Green, but found only poorly paid work as a barman. In London, he began associating with drag queens, particularly a couple who used the stage name of the Harlequeens. Although making friends in the city, O'Grady was homesick and returned to Birkenhead.[26] Employed as an accountant in a FMC Meats Merseyside abattoir, he then worked for three years at the Children's Convalescent Home and School in West Kirby, a home for disabled and abused children.[27][28]

Returning to London, he rented a flat in Crouch End and began busking with a friend in Camden Town before obtaining a job as a physiotherapist's assistant at the Royal Northern Hospital.[29] Made redundant by public sector cuts, O'Grady took up a job at a gay club called the Showplace, befriending a Portuguese lesbian named Teresa Fernandes. In May 1977, they married to prevent her deportation; they lost contact and only legally divorced in 2005.[30][31] Taking up jobs as a cleaner and a waiter at private functions,[32] he began working for Camden Council as a peripatetic care officer. Living in with elderly people and dysfunctional families would have a lasting effect on him.[33]

Career in drag

Lily Savage and the drag circuit: 1978–1984

I've frequently been asked over the years who Lily Savage was based on and I've always answered that it was no one in particular and she was just a figment of my imagination. The truth, I realise now, is that Lily owes a lot to the women I encountered in my childhood. Characteristics and attitudes were observed and absorbed, Aunty Chris's in particular, and they provided the roots and compost for the Lily that would germinate and grow later on.

— Paul O'Grady, 2008[34]

While working for Camden Social Services, O'Grady made his first attempt at putting together a drag act, creating the character of Lily Savage; he later said, "I wanted to get up there but be larger than life, a creature that was more cartoon than human."[35] His debut was on the afternoon of 7 October 1978 at The Black Cap gay pub in Camden, where his act involved miming the words to Barbra Streisand's "Nobody Makes a Pass at Me" from the show Pins and Needles.[36] Following a holiday to Poland,[37] he visited an ex-boyfriend in Manila in the Philippines, there working briefly as a barman and waiter at a brothel.[38]

Returning to London, O'Grady moved to Purley and then Streatham with a drag act, the Glamazons. With one of them, nicknamed "Hush", he founded a two-man drag mime act, the Playgirls, although found little work in London. Agreeing to a tour of northern England, they moved to Slaithwaite, Yorkshire,[39] also accepting a month's work at a club in Copenhagen, Denmark.[40] Diversifying their act, O'Grady learned fire eating and developed a striptease while wearing a fat suit he named "Biddy".[41] After Hush returned to London, O'Grady continued his drag performance as a solo act under the name of "Paul Monroe", a reference to Marilyn Monroe.[42] Under financial strain, O'Grady moved back in with his mother in Birkenhead.[43] Amid mass unemployment, O'Grady briefly lived off the dole before resurrecting the Playgirls with his friend Vera; initially performing in Liverpool, where they were caught up in the 1981 Toxteth riots, they began touring other parts of northern England until returning to London.[44]

Again working as a support worker for Camden Council Social Services,[45] O'Grady lived in Vauxhall and then Brixton before reviving the Playgirls with Hush, devising an act based upon the film What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?[46] At the end of the year, he appeared as an Ugly Sister in a drag pantomime of Cinderella.[47] In March 1983 he joined the Equity union, allowing him to take a role in the theatrical adaptation of If They'd Asked for a Lion Tamer at the Donmar Warehouse.[48] The Playgirls gained bookings to appear across London, and also in Amsterdam and Copenhagen; O'Grady and Hush joined with drag artist David Dale to form an act known as "LSD", which stood for "Lily, Sandra, and Doris". Devising an act that parodied children's television show Andy Pandy, they gained bookings across London and in Edinburgh.[49]

Residency in Vauxhall: 1984–1992

In 1984, O'Grady began work as a barman at a Vauxhall gay pub, the Elephant and Castle. As Lily, he compered "Ladies Night" each Tuesday, where amateur drag acts would perform.[50] As compere, he tried out comedy routines, becoming known for insulting both the acts and the audience; he attracted growing crowds and he was interviewed by artist Patrick Procktor.[51] After six months, he transferred his act to the nearby Royal Vauxhall Tavern (RVT) gay pub, re-opening his show on Thursday nights as "Stars of the Future".[52] In 1985 he obtained his own council flat in Vauxhall's Victoria Mansions.[53] During the mid-1980s, he entered a relationship with Brendan "Murph" Murphy, the manager of a gay sauna near the Oval, Kennington.[54] Murphy subsequently became O'Grady's manager.[55]

 
In 1985, O'Grady began compering in the role of Lily Savage at the Royal Vauxhall Tavern (RVT).

Eventually appearing at the RVT three times a week, on Sundays O'Grady began performing at the Union Tavern in Camberwell and the Goldsmith's Tavern in New Cross, where he often preceded Vic Reeves' three-hour show Vic Reeves Big Night Out.[56] Quitting his council work, he focused full-time on his career as Lily, taking his act across the country and abroad.[57] Other venues he performed at included the Madame JoJo's club in Soho,[58] the Bloomsbury Theatre,[59] and the Heaven nightclub.[60] Befriending American drag queen Divine and his manager Bernard Jay, Jay booked O'Grady to appear in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.[61] As Divine had done, O'Grady also recorded his own Hi-NRG song, "Tough at the Top", which was produced by DJ Ian Levine.[62] In 1988, he performed as Madame in The Scythe of Reason,[63] and appeared at the Glasgow Mayfest, where he developed a lifelong friendship with actor Ian McKellen.[64]

O'Grady used his act to speak out on issues affecting the gay community, especially during the HIV/AIDS crisis.[65] In April 1988 he took part in a march against Section 28, a policy introduced by Margaret Thatcher's Conservative government that many denounced as homophobic.[66] Regularly doing charity fundraisers for HIV/AIDS research, many of his friends died from AIDS-related complications;[67] he later related that "People my age will never get over the horrors."[68] He performed in a play about the disease at the King's Head Theatre in Islington, befriending co-star Amanda Mealing.[69]

From 1989 to 1992 O'Grady performed annually as Lily at the Edinburgh Fringe, gaining increasing recognition.[70] He was nominated for the 1991 Perrier Award alongside Jack Dee, Eddie Izzard, and (the ultimate winner) Frank Skinner.[71] He later related that "The Edinburgh Festival changed my life. The experience opened doors for me that would otherwise have been firmly closed, exposing me to a much wider audience than I'd previously been used to."[72] O'Grady followed this with a show titled Lily Savage Live from the Hackney Empire; a sell-out, it was the first time that his performance was recorded.[73] In 1992 he embarked on an Australian tour, performing alongside the Australian comedian Mark Trevorrow,[74] and proceeded to Los Angeles, where he was present for the 1992 riots in that city.[75]

O'Grady obtained his breakthrough into television when he played the character of a transvestite prostitute informant, Roxanne, in three episodes of ITV's police drama The Bill between 1988 and 1990.[76] Just before filming on the first episode, O'Grady's mother died.[77] In 1990 he appeared in the ITV miniseries Chimera as a social worker; during filming he befriended co-star Liza Tarbuck.[78] He followed this with a performance as a Marlene Dietrich-style cabaret singer in an episode of Rik Mayall's ITV comedy The New Statesman.[79] He had continued to perform regularly at the RVT, and after the proprietors Pat and Breda McConnor decided to move on, he and Murphy unsuccessfully sought to replace them.[80] O'Grady never compered at the RVT again after the McConnors left.[81]

Mainstream success: 1992–1998

 
One of O'Grady's Lily Savage costumes on display at the Museum of Liverpool

After leaving the RVT, O'Grady continued to tour as Lily and released VHS videos of his performances.[82] Gaining further public exposure through an appearance on the late-night Channel 4 comedy show Viva Cabaret!,[83] he appeared on an episode of BBC quiz show That's Showbusiness.[84] Moving into radio, he began making regular appearances as Lily on Woman's Hour and Loose Ends.[85] Also moving into film, he travelled to Dublin, Ireland to play an inmate in the 1993 film In the Name of the Father; although not in the Lily character, he was credited as "Paul Savage".[86] In character as Lily, he appeared on an October 1994 episode of BBC series The Steve Wright People Show,[87] had a cameo in the soap Brookside the following month,[88] and presented an episode of BBC music show Top of the Pops.[89] He also appeared as a female pirate in an episode of BBC children's show Pirates.[90]

Employed to narrate the BBC 2 series Life Swaps,[91] he was also given his own late-night Channel 4 series, Live from the Lilydrome, which was filmed in a working men's club in Blackpool.[92] Given top billing at the gay rights charity Stonewall's 1994 Equality Show in Albert Hall,[93] he also played the role of Nancy in the London Palladium's performance of the musical Oliver!.[94] Reflecting his increasing success in mainstream British comedy, in 1994 he was nominated for both Top Live Stand-Up Comedian and Top Television Comedy Newcomer at the British Comedy Awards.[95] Some in the South London gay scene were critical of O'Grady, accusing him of being a sell out; he fiercely denied these accusations, stating that "I've done nearly ten years on the factory floor and now I feel I deserve a shot in the office."[96]

After Paula Yates resigned as presenter of the Channel 4 morning television program The Big Breakfast, its production company Planet 24 employed O'Grady to replace her. A four-week Lie-in with Lily was commissioned as a trial run.[97] As Lily, O'Grady ignored the suggested questions of PR agents, instead asked personal questions of his guests; having attracted 2 million viewers, Planet 24 renewed his contract to keep him on as presenter.[98] Through contacts made in showbusiness, he befriended many A-list celebrities, among them Elton John and Cher.[99] O'Grady found the early morning starts difficult, particularly as he was also appearing as Lily in a musical version of Prisoner Cell Block H at the Queen's Theatre in London's West End.[100] When the musical then toured the UK, O'Grady took a break from The Big Breakfast to accompany it.[101]

He took his new dog, a shih tzu-bichon frisé cross named Buster, with him on tour;[102] O'Grady later commented that "He was never happier than in a TV studio or theatre... Buster knew all the theatre doormen and loved being fussed over. He was a smashing dog."[103] At the time, O'Grady had been making greater attempts to get to know his teenage daughter; the Daily Mirror tabloid treated her existence as a headline scandal in autumn 1994.[104] Critical of the media, O'Grady condemned them for solely referring to him as a drag queen; he commented that Barry Humphries, who played the character of Dame Edna Everage, was "never called a drag act because he's a heterosexual male. But I'm called one because I'm a gay man. It's homophobic and it's wrong as there is nothing remotely sexual about what I do. I dress up as a woman for financial purposes, nothing else."[105]

In April 1996, O'Grady filmed a performance at the LWT Tower as An Evening with Lily Savage, broadcast on ITV in November. A hit, it was awarded Best Entertainment Program at the 1997 National Television Awards.[106] He turned down ITV's subsequent offer of a weekly show because it would air before the watershed and thus force him to drastically alter his act into a form of light entertainment.[107] With Murphy he then established a production company, Wildflower.[108] Returning to theatre, he performed The Lily Savage Show for a 16-week sell-out run at Blackpool's North Pier Theatre and then Lily's Christmas Cracker at the Blackpool Opera House, the latter filmed for broadcast by the BBC.[109] At this juncture, he agreed to appear as Lily in adverts for the Ford Escort,[110] subsequently appearing in ad campaigns for Pretty Polly tights, the soft drink Oasis, and a bingo company.[111] Earnings from these performances allowed him to move out of his Vauxhall council flat and into a house near Tower Bridge in South London.[112] He also purchased a flat in Saltaire.[113]

Television

Blankety Blank, travel shows, and Eyes Down: 1998–2003

 
Several of O'Grady's Lily Savage costumes on display at the Museum of Liverpool

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.[114] As Lily, O'Grady was invited on to other television chat shows, such as Richard and Judy;[115] he appeared in a Christmas special of cookery show Ready, Steady, Cook.[116] He went on an eight-week tour as Lily,[117] before starring as Miss Hannigan in a West End revival of the musical Annie.[118] He subsequently accompanied the show's tour of the UK,[119] before appearing in pantomime in Birmingham.[120]

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.[121] Screened on primetime Saturday night, Blankety Blank proved a ratings winner, attracting an audience of 9 million. ITV then purchased it, offering O'Grady a two-year deal for £1 million.[122] ITV let him be more risque in his use of humour on Blankety Blank, and also commissioned a new comedy series, Lily Live!.[123] 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.[124] With increased earnings—his assets were estimated to total £4 million[125]—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.[126]

Tired of appearing as Lily, O'Grady decided to try to make a career for himself out of drag.[127] He appeared as himself in an advert campaign for Double Two shirt-makers,[128] 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.[129] O'Grady suffered a bout of clinical depression,[130] but recovered in time to perform alongside Cilla Black and Barbara Windsor in a burlesque rendition of "You Gotta Have a Gimmick" at the 2001 Royal Variety Performance; the televised event attracted 11.5 million viewers.[131]

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.[132] His recovery meant missing the Heritage Foundation Awards ceremony, where he was awarded television personality of the year award.[133] 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.[134] He followed this with a Christmas season as the Wicked Queen in the pantomime Snow White at Manchester Opera House.[135]

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.[136] 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".[137] 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.[138] 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.[139] O'Grady ended 2003 in pantomime at the Bristol Hippodrome.[140]

The Paul O'Grady Show and Paul O'Grady Live: 2004–2011

I just want the show to be like a party, a group of pals gabbing away about the first things that come into their heads. There are always enough things in life to worry and get depressed about. I want my show to take our minds off all that stuff, even if it's only for a while.

Paul O'Grady, c. 2004[141]

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.[142] ITV executives then offered him his own daytime chat show: The Paul O'Grady Show.[143] 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."[144]

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".[144] In producing the show, O'Grady worked with many old friends, including warm-up man Andy Collins.[145] The series was a hit, attaining between 2.5 and 2.7 million viewers daily.[146] 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."[147] The inclusion of his dog, Buster, on the show proved particularly popular with audiences.[148] The show gained a devoted following, with many fans attending the screenings; often, as many as a hundred had to be turned away.[149] 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."[150]

On or off camera it is the brilliant anecdotes about his life and the endless stream of trenchant opinions on the world in general that keep Paul's fans coming back for more.

Biographer Neil Simpson, 2008[151]

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".[152] 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."[153] 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.[154] 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.[155] 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.[156]

In June 2005, Murphy died of brain cancer.[157] 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.[158] Press accused O'Grady of moving in pursuit of a higher salary;[159] Channel 4 offered him a contract for £2 million a year, making him one of Britain's highest-paid television stars.[160]

 
O'Grady at the 2009 funeral of actress Wendy Richard

In June 2006, O'Grady suffered a second massive heart attack, undergoing an angioplasty;[161][162] he received around 7000 get-well-soon cards and letters from fans.[163] 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.[164] To deal with his health issues, he began taking a week off mid-series, where he was replaced by guest presenters.[165] O'Grady subsequently won the Ten Years at the Top award at the TV Quick and TV Choice awards.[166]

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.[167] 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.[168] 2006 also saw the start of his relationship with future-husband André Portasio, a ballet dancer.[169] In 2008, O'Grady had a cameo as himself in the Doctor Who episode "The Stolen Earth",[170] and appeared in Ghosthunting with Paul O'Grady and Friends, filmed in Palermo, Sicily.[171] 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.[172] The second volume, The Devil Rides Out: The Second Coming, followed in 2011.[173]

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.[174][175] The first series aired from September to November 2010.[176] 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.[177][178][179] He also voiced his support for student protesters who had occupied and vandalised the Conservative Party headquarters.[180][181] Ofcom received several complaints over the incident.[178] 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.[182] In October, ITV axed Paul O'Grady Live.[183][184] 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,[175][185] and that he was fed up with the "interference" from the show's producers.[185] That month, he also performed in Drama at Inish at the Finborough Theatre in Earl's Court.[186]

Animal shows and Blind Date: 2012–2023

2012 saw the launch of ITV documentary series Paul O'Grady: For the Love of Dogs, covering life at Battersea Dogs and Cats Home in south London. O'Grady commented that he had wanted to do such a show for years and that he took to it with an "enthusiasm that surprised everyone except me". Although scheduled to initially film at the centre for six days, he stayed as a volunteer for six months.[187] At the end of the first series, O'Grady was invited to become an ambassador for the centre, and a bronze statue of his late dog, Buster, was erected on a plinth at the centre.[188] He also adopted a dog from the home; a Jack RussellChihuahua cross named Eddy.[188] Through the series he developed a friendship with actor Tom Hardy, who appeared in one episode.[189]

 
Through his series For the Love of Dogs, O'Grady built links with the Battersea Dogs and Cats Home in South London, becoming an ambassador for the charity.

In April 2012, O'Grady presented The One and Only Des O'Connor, a one-off special for ITV which looked back on the life of Des O'Connor.[190] In October 2012, the third volume of his memoirs, Still Standing: The Savage Years, was released.[191] In 2012, O'Grady also revived his Lily Savage character for a cameo in Paul O'Grady's Little Cracker, a Christmas short story.[192] He later expressed criticism of the show RuPaul's Drag Race and the contemporary drag performers on it, stating: "It's all about shading and contouring your face now and being like supermodels [...] This new brigade who just parade around going, sashay, shantay—that's not drag to me", lacking the comedic element common to drag queens of his generation.[193]

In July 2013, O'Grady narrated the ITV documentary Me and My Guide Dog following the work of Guide Dogs.[194] In April 2013, O'Grady presented a documentary about burlesque performer Gypsy Rose Lee as part of ITV's Perspectives series.[195] That month, he also presented ITV's British Animal Honours award ceremony.[196][197][198]

In 2013, ITV revived The Paul O'Grady Show.[199][200] In November, O'Grady suffered an angina attack and underwent further heart surgery.[201]

In 2013, O'Grady guest starred as cancer patient Tim Connor in three episodes of the BBC medical drama Holby City.[202] 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.[203][204] 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.[205] 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.[206] 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.[207][208][209]

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.[210] The first series averaged 3.29 million viewers whilst the second averaged 2.75 million.[211] In 2014, he appeared in a Gogglebox special for Stand Up to Cancer.[212][213] 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.[214]

In September 2015, O'Grady's fourth book Open the Cage, Murphy!: Further Savage Adventures was released.[192] 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.[215][216] In December 2015, O'Grady appeared in Our Cilla, a one-off programme about the life of Cilla Black.[217] 2016 saw O'Grady present Paul O'Grady: The Sally Army & Me, a documentary series on The Salvation Army for BBC One.[218][219][220][221] That year, he also presented a Channel 4 documentary, Paul O'Grady's 100 Years of Movie Musicals,[222][223] and another for ITV, Paul O'Grady's Favourite Fairy Tales.[224] 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.[225]

In August 2017, O'Grady married Portasio in a ceremony at London's Goring Hotel,[169] although the pair continued to live separately.[226] That year also saw the screening of two-part ITV series Paul O'Grady: For the Love of Animals – India,[227] and the three-part Channel 4 series Paul O'Grady's Hollywood,[228] as well as a Channel 5 documentary about his life, The Paul O'Grady Story.[229] It also saw the publication of O'Grady's fifth book, Paul O'Grady's Country Life.[226] In 2017, Channel 5 revived the game show Blind Date with O'Grady as its presenter.[230][231][232] The first series was watched by an average of 1.5 million viewers. A Christmas episode aired on 23 December 2017,[233] before the second series aired from 30 December 2017.[234] A third series was filmed in February 2018.[235]

In 2020, O'Grady presented the six-part ITV series Paul O'Grady's Great British Escape, in which he visited sites across Kent.[236][237] In September 2021, he began hosting Paul O'Grady's Saturday Night Line-Up.[238]

Radio

In 2008 and 2009, O'Grady occasionally sat in for Elaine Paige on her BBC Radio 2 show Elaine Paige on Sunday. From April 2009, O'Grady presented his own two-hour long programme on BBC Radio 2 called Paul O'Grady on the Wireless which was broadcast on Sundays from 5 pm to 7 pm.

O'Grady was a guest on Kate Thornton's Paper Cuts in 2015. In September 2017, O'Grady presented a two-part documentary for BBC Radio 2 called The Story of the Light. The show saw O'Grady celebrate the 50th anniversary of Radio 2 by looking back at the BBC Light Programme that the channel replaced.[239]

In August 2022, it was announced that O'Grady was resigning from BBC Radio 2 due to his unhappiness with having to share his slot with Rob Beckett. His final show aired that same month.[240] On 21 November 2022, it was announced that O'Grady would join Boom Radio to present a show on Christmas Day, similar to the festive show he presented for Radio 2.[241]

Charity work

O'Grady supported philanthropic causes for carers.[242] From 2008 onwards, O'Grady was an ambassador for Save the Children.[243]

In 2012, O'Grady became an ambassador for Battersea Dogs and Cats Home following his series For the Love of Dogs, which was filmed in the home.[244] In 2013, he took part in the Pedigree Feeding Brighter Futures campaign with Amanda Holden, which aimed to give a million meals to rescue dogs nationwide.[245][246]

In 2014, O'Grady co-starred in a Dementia Friends TV advertisement campaign to raise awareness about the disease.[247][248]

In October 2015, following his work on Animal Orphans, O'Grady became a patron of Orangutan Appeal UK.[249]

In September 2016, O'Grady was recognised for his work with animals when he won the award for Outstanding Contribution to Animal Welfare at the RSPCA's Animal Hero Awards.[250]

Personal life

In 1974, with his friend Diane Jansen, O'Grady had a daughter, Sharon. O'Grady's grandson, Abel, was born in December 2006,[251] with a granddaughter being born in December 2009.[252] From 1977 to 2005, he was in a marriage of convenience with a Portuguese woman, Teresa Fernandes, although he was not in an active relationship with her.[31]

We used to fight like cat and dog. We were two alpha males vying to be top dog. He was a tricky bastard and I can be tricky too. We'd have real punch-ups. But I'd tell him everything. Suddenly, I was totally on my own. That's when I said, "Lily's going." Because he's always been here with Lily. I thought "I can't do it any more." So she sort of died with him.

Paul O'Grady on the death of Brendan Murphy, 2012[185]

His long-term lover and business partner was Brendan Frank Murphy (4 March 1956 – 9 June 2005). In the fourth volume of his biography, he noted that he has "always had a penchant for the bad boys".[253] Known to many friends as "Lily" or "Lil",[254] O'Grady was known for having had many high-profile and celebrity friends, including politician Mo Mowlam, actresses Amanda Mealing and Barbara Windsor, comedian Brenda Gilhooly and singer Cilla Black.[255]

O'Grady divided his time between his Central London flat and his rural Kentish farmhouse,[256] where he grew organic fruit and vegetables[257] and a variety of herbs, having a keen interest in herbalism.[258] A lifelong animal lover,[103] as a child O'Grady kept rabbits, hamsters, guinea pigs, mice, a ferret and a rat as pets; he commented that his mother thought him "a bit weird" as a result.[103] At his farm, he owned sheep, pigs, goats, donkeys, ducks, chickens, geese, ferrets, bats, mice and dogs.[259]

Two of O'Grady's pet dogs became well known to the British public through appearances on The Paul O'Grady Show. The first was a rescue dog, Buster Elvis Savage, a Shih Tzu/Bichon Frise cross. Buster was euthanised in November 2009 as a result of his cancer.[260][261] O'Grady dedicated the second volume of his autobiography to Buster, describing him as "The greatest canine star since Lassie".[262] A second dog, the Cairn Terrier Olga, also attracted attention. In 2013, it was revealed that she was undergoing chemotherapy due to cancer.[204] Olga was euthanised in April 2018 after suffering from kidney failure.[263]

In an interview with the Daily Mirror in 2006, O'Grady admitted that smoking forty cigarettes a day had contributed to his two heart attacks.[264]

Known for his "trenchant opinions",[151] O'Grady was critical of the British royal family, having been raised by his father to view them as social parasites; the exception in his mind was Diana, Princess of Wales, whom he came to respect for her charitable work with those living with HIV/AIDS.[265] In 2013, O'Grady expressed his support for the Labour Party, championing Labour leader Ed Miliband as a better candidate for UK Prime Minister than Conservative incumbent David Cameron.[266] He lambasted the Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition government then in power, describing them as "absolutely disgusting. They have no idea what the common working man and woman are doing. They are not in touch with the working-classes. They have led privileged lives – they've had public schools and have never been on the shop floor."[266] He also praised Miliband's successor, Jeremy Corbyn.[192]

In 2015, he told a reporter that despite his wealth, he still felt "very much" working-class; "I know that probably sounds strange. Mentally, I still am. I'm still thinking, have I got the rent for Friday?"[192] Raised as a Roman Catholic, in his autobiography he related having "grown out of Catholicism" after his mother's death, but had "always been interested in alternative religions",[267] citing a particular interest in Wicca.[268] He has also reported seeing unexplained lights over his Kent home, considering the possibility that he was being observed by extra-terrestrials.[269]

Death

O'Grady died "unexpectedly but peacefully" on 28 March 2023, at the age of 67.[270][271][272] His death was announced by his husband, André Portasio,[273] and tributes for the former television host came in from television presenter Lorraine Kelly and LGBTQ+ rights campaigner Peter Tatchell.[274]

Filmography

Year(s) Title Role Notes
1988–1990 The Bill Roxanne As Paul Savage
1991 Chimera Donaldson As Paul Savage
1992 The New Statesman Marlene Dietrich
1993 In the Name of the Father Prisoner
1994 Top of the Pops Guest presenter As Lily Savage
1995–1996 The Big Breakfast Presenter As Lily Savage
1996 An Evening with Lily Savage Presenter As Lily Savage
1997 The Lily Savage Show Presenter As Lily Savage
1997–2002 Blankety Blank Presenter As Lily Savage
67 episodes
1999 Love Bites with Lily Savage Presenter As Lily Savage
2000 Paul O'Grady's Orient Presenter
2000–2001 Lily Live! Presenter As Lily Savage
2001 Paul O'Grady's America Presenter
2002–2003 Outtake TV Presenter
2003 Today with Des and Mel Guest presenter
2003–2004 Eyes Down Ray Temple
2004–2005 The British Soap Awards Presenter
2004–2009,
2013–2015
The Paul O'Grady Show Presenter
2005 Comic Aid Presenter (as Lily Savage)
2008 Doctor Who Himself Episode: "The Stolen Earth"
2010 Coronation Street: The Big 50 Presenter
2010–2011 Paul O'Grady Live Presenter
2012–2023 Paul O'Grady: For the Love of Dogs Presenter
2012 The One and Only Des O'Connor Guest
2013 The British Animal Honours Presenter
Me and My Guide Dog Narrator
Paul O'Grady's Working Britain Presenter
Perspectives: Gypsy Rose Lee – The Queen of Burlesque Presenter
Holby City Tim Connor
2013, 2015 The One and Only Cilla Black Presenter
2014–2016 Paul O'Grady's Animal Orphans Presenter
2015 Bob Monkhouse: The Million Joke Man Presenter
2016 Paul O'Grady: The Sally Army & Me[275] Presenter
Paul O'Grady's 100 Years of Movie Musicals Presenter
Paul O'Grady's Favourite Fairy Tales Presenter
2017 Paul O'Grady: For the Love of Animals – India Presenter
2017–2019 Blind Date Presenter 33 episodes
2017 Paul O'Grady's Hollywood Presenter
2018–2019 Paul O'Grady's Little Heroes Presenter
2018 Paul O'Grady: For the Love of Dogs: India Presenter
The NHS Heroes Awards Presenter
2020 Paul O'Grady's Great British Escape[276] Presenter
2021 The Madame Blanc Mysteries David
Paul O'Grady's Saturday Night Line Up[277] Presenter

Awards and nominations

In 2005, Liverpool John Moores University awarded O'Grady an honorary fellowship for services to entertainment,[278] and in 2010, he received an honorary Doctor of Arts from De Montfort University in Leicester in recognition of his outstanding contribution to television, radio and the stage.[279]

Year Award Work Result Notes
1997 National Television Awards Most Popular Entertainment Performance An Evening with Lily Savage Nominated [280]
2000 British Comedy Awards Best Comedy Entertainment Personality Lily Live! Nominated
2002 National Television Awards Most Popular Entertainment Presenter The Paul O'Grady Show Nominated
2005 British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Performance Won
British Comedy Awards Best Comedy Entertainment Personality Won
National Television Awards Most Popular Entertainment Presenter Nominated
Most Popular Daytime Programme Won
2006 Most Popular Entertainment Presenter Nominated
2007 Nominated
2008 Nominated
2010 Nominated
2015 Most Popular Chat Show Host The Paul O'Grady Show Nominated
2018 Special Recognition Award Paul O'Grady: For the Love of Dogs Won

References

Footnotes

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Sources

  • Brown, Maggie (15 June 2009). "'Taking a pay cut won't demotivate me'". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  • Henderson, Jamie (17 April 2013). "Paul O'Grady's Battersea Dogs Home TV show up for Bafta Award". Wandsworth Guardian. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  • Lawson, Mark (28 October 2010). "Paul O'Grady's socialist fury rant was a rare live-TV shock". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  • Levantis, Demitri (29 April 2013). "Paul O'Grady calls David Cameron 'Sheriff of Nottingham' over bedroom tax". Gay Star News. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  • Media Monkey (26 October 2010). "Paul O'Grady takes on the government". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  • Media Monkey (4 April 2013). "Paul O'Grady returns with a familiar breed of show". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  • O'Grady, Paul (2008). At My Mother's Knee ... and Other Low Joints. London: Bantam Press. ISBN 978-0-593-05925-8.
  • O'Grady, Paul (2010). The Devil Rides Out: The Second Coming. London: Bantam. ISBN 978-0-593-06424-5.
  • O'Grady, Paul (2012). Still Standing: The Savage Years. London: Bantam. ISBN 978-0-593-06939-4.
  • O'Grady, Paul (2015). Open the Cage, Murphy! Further Savage Adventures... London: Bantam. ISBN 978-0593072592.
  • Scoular, Allen (2014). "I've always been an animal lover". My VIP. No. 8. pp. 24–26.
  • Simpson, Neil (2008). Paul O'Grady: The Biography. London: John Blake Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84454-417-2.
  • "Paul O'Grady on Showbiz Sex Arrests: 'Whatever Happened To Innocent Until Found Guilty?'". The Huffington Post UK. 8 May 2013. Retrieved 21 May 2013.

External links

  • Paul O'Grady at IMDb
Preceded by Host of Blankety Blank
1997–2002
(as Lily Savage)
Succeeded by

paul, grady, this, article, about, english, comedian, actor, other, uses, disambiguation, paul, james, grady, june, 1955, march, 2023, english, comedian, broadcaster, drag, queen, actor, writer, achieved, notability, london, scene, during, 1980s, with, drag, q. This article is about the English comedian and actor For other uses see Paul O Grady disambiguation Paul James O Grady MBE DL 14 June 1955 28 March 2023 was an English comedian broadcaster drag queen actor and writer He achieved notability in the London gay scene during the 1980s with his drag queen persona Lily Savage through which he gained broader popularity in the 1990s O Grady subsequently dropped the character and in the 2000s became the presenter of various television and radio shows including The Paul O Grady Show Paul O GradyMBE DLO Grady in 2009BornPaul James O Grady 1955 06 14 14 June 1955Tranmere Cheshire EnglandDied28 March 2023 2023 03 28 aged 67 OccupationsComedianbroadcasterdrag queenactorwriterYears active1988 2023SpousesTeresa Fernandes m 1977 div 2005 wbr Andre Portasio m 2017 wbr Children1Born to a working class Irish migrant family in Tranmere Cheshire O Grady moved to London in the late 1970s initially working as a peripatetic care officer for Camden Council He developed his drag act in 1978 basing the character of Lily Savage upon traits found amongst female relatives Touring England as part of drag mime duo the Playgirls O Grady then went solo as a stand up comedian in the early 1980s Performing as Savage for eight years at a South London gay pub the Royal Vauxhall Tavern RVT he gained a popular following among London s gay community and used his character to speak out for gay rights After being nominated for a 1992 Perrier Award O Grady attracted mainstream attention and made various television radio and theatrical appearances As Savage he presented the television shows The Big Breakfast 1995 1996 Blankety Blank 1997 2002 and Lily Live 2000 2001 earning various awards and becoming a well known public figure Wishing to diversify from Savage O Grady starred in the BBC One sitcom Eyes Down 2003 2004 and presented two travel documentaries for ITV In 2004 he began presenting ITV s daytime chat show The Paul O Grady Show After the network refused to transfer creative control of the series to O Grady s production company Olga TV he moved to Channel 4 in 2006 where the show was rebranded as The New Paul O Grady Show airing until 2009 O Grady presented the late night ITV show Paul O Grady Live 2010 2011 and BBC Radio 2 s Paul O Grady on the Wireless 2009 2022 Additional television shows included Paul O Grady For the Love of Dogs 2012 2023 Paul O Grady s Animal Orphans 2014 2016 Blind Date 2017 2019 and Paul O Grady s Great British Escape 2020 He also published several books including a four volume memoir O Grady was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire MBE in the 2008 Birthday Honours for services to entertainment In 2020 he became president of the British Music Hall Society taking over the role from Roy Hudd 1 He was a deputy lieutenant for the County of Kent 2 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Childhood 1955 1971 1 2 Early adulthood 1972 1977 2 Career in drag 2 1 Lily Savage and the drag circuit 1978 1984 2 2 Residency in Vauxhall 1984 1992 2 3 Mainstream success 1992 1998 3 Television 3 1 Blankety Blank travel shows and Eyes Down 1998 2003 3 2 The Paul O Grady Show and Paul O Grady Live 2004 2011 3 3 Animal shows and Blind Date 2012 2023 4 Radio 5 Charity work 6 Personal life 7 Death 8 Filmography 9 Awards and nominations 10 References 10 1 Footnotes 10 2 Sources 11 External linksEarly lifeChildhood 1955 1971 O Grady was born on 14 June 1955 at St Catherine s Hospital in the Tranmere area of Birkenhead Cheshire now Merseyside 3 His father Patrick Paddy Grady 1912 1973 4 was Irish and had grown up in Ballincurry County Roscommon before moving to England in 1936 and settling in the working class area of Birkenhead His name was changed from Grady to O Grady in a paperwork mistake when he joined the Royal Air Force and he kept the new name 5 Patrick married Mary Molly Savage 1916 1988 who was born in England to Irish immigrants from County Louth 3 Paul was their third child his birth came over a decade after those of brother Brendan born 1941 and sister Sheila born 1944 4 O Grady spent his early life at the family s rented home at 23 Holly Grove in Higher Tranmere 6 He later said When I look back on my childhood I have no bad memories Our family was loving and full of affection I never knew what divorce was until I moved to London I was an indulged child and completely protected from anything bad 7 Attending St Joseph s Catholic Primary School O Grady excelled in all subjects except mathematics Hoping that he had a good future ahead of him his parents budgeted to send him to a private school the Catholic run Redcourt but his grades dropped Failing the eleven plus exam he was unable to enter a grammar school so attended the Blessed Edmund Campion R C Secondary Modern and the Corpus Christi High School 8 It was at the school that O Grady experienced his first homosexual encounter enjoying a brief romance with another boy although he still assumed he was heterosexual 9 A fan of the popular television series The Avengers and Batman 10 O Grady was enrolled in the Cub Scouts by his mother but he hated it leaving after a month An altar boy at a local Catholic church he was dismissed after laughing during a funeral service 11 He then joined the Marine Cadet Section of the Sea Cadet Corps later commenting that he was following in the footsteps of his childhood hero the cartoon character Popeye 12 He enjoyed the cadets and at the advice of his captain joined the Boys Amateur Boxing Club developing a lifelong love of the sport 13 Playing truant from school he got into trouble with his parents and subsequently with the police after burgling a house with three friends 14 O Grady s first job was a paper round that he kept for a week 15 and through this and other jobs he saved up to afford Mod clothes for a time becoming a suedehead 16 Early adulthood 1972 1977 Leaving school aged 16 O Grady obtained a job in the civil service working as a clerical assistant for the DHSS at their Liverpool office he commuted in from his parents Tranmere home Supplementing this income he worked part time at the bar of the Royal Air Forces Association RAFA club in Oxton 17 Called for a disciplinary hearing at the DHSS and accused of incompetent behaviour and tardiness he resigned 18 Obtaining a job at the Wheatsheaf Hotel in Virginia Water Surrey aged 17 O Grady moved there the management accused him of stealing which he denied 19 Promptly returning to Birkenhead he increasingly socialised within the Liverpudlian gay scene attending meetings of the Campaign for Homosexual Equality and working at a gay bar called the Bear s Paw 20 21 this was kept a secret from his parents to whom he was not out of the closet 20 He also had casual sex with a female friend Diane Jansen 22 who became pregnant news which O Grady discovered in the same week that both his parents suffered heart attacks his mother made a recovery but his father died 23 Following the birth of his daughter Sharon Lee Jansen in May 1974 O Grady agreed to pay towards her upkeep but refused to marry Jansen recognising his homosexuality 24 Briefly working as an assistant clerk at Liverpool Magistrates Court O Grady subsequently worked as a barman at Yates s Wine Lodge supplementing the income with the occasional night at the Bear s Paw 25 Realising this wage was insufficient to support both himself and his daughter he travelled to London lodging in Westbourne Green but found only poorly paid work as a barman In London he began associating with drag queens particularly a couple who used the stage name of the Harlequeens Although making friends in the city O Grady was homesick and returned to Birkenhead 26 Employed as an accountant in a FMC Meats Merseyside abattoir he then worked for three years at the Children s Convalescent Home and School in West Kirby a home for disabled and abused children 27 28 Returning to London he rented a flat in Crouch End and began busking with a friend in Camden Town before obtaining a job as a physiotherapist s assistant at the Royal Northern Hospital 29 Made redundant by public sector cuts O Grady took up a job at a gay club called the Showplace befriending a Portuguese lesbian named Teresa Fernandes In May 1977 they married to prevent her deportation they lost contact and only legally divorced in 2005 30 31 Taking up jobs as a cleaner and a waiter at private functions 32 he began working for Camden Council as a peripatetic care officer Living in with elderly people and dysfunctional families would have a lasting effect on him 33 Career in dragLily Savage and the drag circuit 1978 1984 I ve frequently been asked over the years who Lily Savage was based on and I ve always answered that it was no one in particular and she was just a figment of my imagination The truth I realise now is that Lily owes a lot to the women I encountered in my childhood Characteristics and attitudes were observed and absorbed Aunty Chris s in particular and they provided the roots and compost for the Lily that would germinate and grow later on Paul O Grady 2008 34 While working for Camden Social Services O Grady made his first attempt at putting together a drag act creating the character of Lily Savage he later said I wanted to get up there but be larger than life a creature that was more cartoon than human 35 His debut was on the afternoon of 7 October 1978 at The Black Cap gay pub in Camden where his act involved miming the words to Barbra Streisand s Nobody Makes a Pass at Me from the show Pins and Needles 36 Following a holiday to Poland 37 he visited an ex boyfriend in Manila in the Philippines there working briefly as a barman and waiter at a brothel 38 Returning to London O Grady moved to Purley and then Streatham with a drag act the Glamazons With one of them nicknamed Hush he founded a two man drag mime act the Playgirls although found little work in London Agreeing to a tour of northern England they moved to Slaithwaite Yorkshire 39 also accepting a month s work at a club in Copenhagen Denmark 40 Diversifying their act O Grady learned fire eating and developed a striptease while wearing a fat suit he named Biddy 41 After Hush returned to London O Grady continued his drag performance as a solo act under the name of Paul Monroe a reference to Marilyn Monroe 42 Under financial strain O Grady moved back in with his mother in Birkenhead 43 Amid mass unemployment O Grady briefly lived off the dole before resurrecting the Playgirls with his friend Vera initially performing in Liverpool where they were caught up in the 1981 Toxteth riots they began touring other parts of northern England until returning to London 44 Again working as a support worker for Camden Council Social Services 45 O Grady lived in Vauxhall and then Brixton before reviving the Playgirls with Hush devising an act based upon the film What Ever Happened to Baby Jane 46 At the end of the year he appeared as an Ugly Sister in a drag pantomime of Cinderella 47 In March 1983 he joined the Equity union allowing him to take a role in the theatrical adaptation of If They d Asked for a Lion Tamer at the Donmar Warehouse 48 The Playgirls gained bookings to appear across London and also in Amsterdam and Copenhagen O Grady and Hush joined with drag artist David Dale to form an act known as LSD which stood for Lily Sandra and Doris Devising an act that parodied children s television show Andy Pandy they gained bookings across London and in Edinburgh 49 Residency in Vauxhall 1984 1992 In 1984 O Grady began work as a barman at a Vauxhall gay pub the Elephant and Castle As Lily he compered Ladies Night each Tuesday where amateur drag acts would perform 50 As compere he tried out comedy routines becoming known for insulting both the acts and the audience he attracted growing crowds and he was interviewed by artist Patrick Procktor 51 After six months he transferred his act to the nearby Royal Vauxhall Tavern RVT gay pub re opening his show on Thursday nights as Stars of the Future 52 In 1985 he obtained his own council flat in Vauxhall s Victoria Mansions 53 During the mid 1980s he entered a relationship with Brendan Murph Murphy the manager of a gay sauna near the Oval Kennington 54 Murphy subsequently became O Grady s manager 55 In 1985 O Grady began compering in the role of Lily Savage at the Royal Vauxhall Tavern RVT Eventually appearing at the RVT three times a week on Sundays O Grady began performing at the Union Tavern in Camberwell and the Goldsmith s Tavern in New Cross where he often preceded Vic Reeves three hour show Vic Reeves Big Night Out 56 Quitting his council work he focused full time on his career as Lily taking his act across the country and abroad 57 Other venues he performed at included the Madame JoJo s club in Soho 58 the Bloomsbury Theatre 59 and the Heaven nightclub 60 Befriending American drag queen Divine and his manager Bernard Jay Jay booked O Grady to appear in Fort Lauderdale Florida 61 As Divine had done O Grady also recorded his own Hi NRG song Tough at the Top which was produced by DJ Ian Levine 62 In 1988 he performed as Madame in The Scythe of Reason 63 and appeared at the Glasgow Mayfest where he developed a lifelong friendship with actor Ian McKellen 64 O Grady used his act to speak out on issues affecting the gay community especially during the HIV AIDS crisis 65 In April 1988 he took part in a march against Section 28 a policy introduced by Margaret Thatcher s Conservative government that many denounced as homophobic 66 Regularly doing charity fundraisers for HIV AIDS research many of his friends died from AIDS related complications 67 he later related that People my age will never get over the horrors 68 He performed in a play about the disease at the King s Head Theatre in Islington befriending co star Amanda Mealing 69 From 1989 to 1992 O Grady performed annually as Lily at the Edinburgh Fringe gaining increasing recognition 70 He was nominated for the 1991 Perrier Award alongside Jack Dee Eddie Izzard and the ultimate winner Frank Skinner 71 He later related that The Edinburgh Festival changed my life The experience opened doors for me that would otherwise have been firmly closed exposing me to a much wider audience than I d previously been used to 72 O Grady followed this with a show titled Lily Savage Live from the Hackney Empire a sell out it was the first time that his performance was recorded 73 In 1992 he embarked on an Australian tour performing alongside the Australian comedian Mark Trevorrow 74 and proceeded to Los Angeles where he was present for the 1992 riots in that city 75 O Grady obtained his breakthrough into television when he played the character of a transvestite prostitute informant Roxanne in three episodes of ITV s police drama The Bill between 1988 and 1990 76 Just before filming on the first episode O Grady s mother died 77 In 1990 he appeared in the ITV miniseries Chimera as a social worker during filming he befriended co star Liza Tarbuck 78 He followed this with a performance as a Marlene Dietrich style cabaret singer in an episode of Rik Mayall s ITV comedy The New Statesman 79 He had continued to perform regularly at the RVT and after the proprietors Pat and Breda McConnor decided to move on he and Murphy unsuccessfully sought to replace them 80 O Grady never compered at the RVT again after the McConnors left 81 Mainstream success 1992 1998 One of O Grady s Lily Savage costumes on display at the Museum of Liverpool After leaving the RVT O Grady continued to tour as Lily and released VHS videos of his performances 82 Gaining further public exposure through an appearance on the late night Channel 4 comedy show Viva Cabaret 83 he appeared on an episode of BBC quiz show That s Showbusiness 84 Moving into radio he began making regular appearances as Lily on Woman s Hour and Loose Ends 85 Also moving into film he travelled to Dublin Ireland to play an inmate in the 1993 film In the Name of the Father although not in the Lily character he was credited as Paul Savage 86 In character as Lily he appeared on an October 1994 episode of BBC series The Steve Wright People Show 87 had a cameo in the soap Brookside the following month 88 and presented an episode of BBC music show Top of the Pops 89 He also appeared as a female pirate in an episode of BBC children s show Pirates 90 Employed to narrate the BBC 2 series Life Swaps 91 he was also given his own late night Channel 4 series Live from the Lilydrome which was filmed in a working men s club in Blackpool 92 Given top billing at the gay rights charity Stonewall s 1994 Equality Show in Albert Hall 93 he also played the role of Nancy in the London Palladium s performance of the musical Oliver 94 Reflecting his increasing success in mainstream British comedy in 1994 he was nominated for both Top Live Stand Up Comedian and Top Television Comedy Newcomer at the British Comedy Awards 95 Some in the South London gay scene were critical of O Grady accusing him of being a sell out he fiercely denied these accusations stating that I ve done nearly ten years on the factory floor and now I feel I deserve a shot in the office 96 After Paula Yates resigned as presenter of the Channel 4 morning television program The Big Breakfast its production company Planet 24 employed O Grady to replace her A four week Lie in with Lily was commissioned as a trial run 97 As Lily O Grady ignored the suggested questions of PR agents instead asked personal questions of his guests having attracted 2 million viewers Planet 24 renewed his contract to keep him on as presenter 98 Through contacts made in showbusiness he befriended many A list celebrities among them Elton John and Cher 99 O Grady found the early morning starts difficult particularly as he was also appearing as Lily in a musical version of Prisoner Cell Block H at the Queen s Theatre in London s West End 100 When the musical then toured the UK O Grady took a break from The Big Breakfast to accompany it 101 He took his new dog a shih tzu bichon frise cross named Buster with him on tour 102 O Grady later commented that He was never happier than in a TV studio or theatre Buster knew all the theatre doormen and loved being fussed over He was a smashing dog 103 At the time O Grady had been making greater attempts to get to know his teenage daughter the Daily Mirror tabloid treated her existence as a headline scandal in autumn 1994 104 Critical of the media O Grady condemned them for solely referring to him as a drag queen he commented that Barry Humphries who played the character of Dame Edna Everage was never called a drag act because he s a heterosexual male But I m called one because I m a gay man It s homophobic and it s wrong as there is nothing remotely sexual about what I do I dress up as a woman for financial purposes nothing else 105 In April 1996 O Grady filmed a performance at the LWT Tower as An Evening with Lily Savage broadcast on ITV in November A hit it was awarded Best Entertainment Program at the 1997 National Television Awards 106 He turned down ITV s subsequent offer of a weekly show because it would air before the watershed and thus force him to drastically alter his act into a form of light entertainment 107 With Murphy he then established a production company Wildflower 108 Returning to theatre he performed The Lily Savage Show for a 16 week sell out run at Blackpool s North Pier Theatre and then Lily s Christmas Cracker at the Blackpool Opera House the latter filmed for broadcast by the BBC 109 At this juncture he agreed to appear as Lily in adverts for the Ford Escort 110 subsequently appearing in ad campaigns for Pretty Polly tights the soft drink Oasis and a bingo company 111 Earnings from these performances allowed him to move out of his Vauxhall council flat and into a house near Tower Bridge in South London 112 He also purchased a flat in Saltaire 113 TelevisionBlankety Blank travel shows and Eyes Down 1998 2003 Several of O Grady s Lily Savage costumes on display at the Museum of Liverpool 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 114 As Lily O Grady was invited on to other television chat shows such as Richard and Judy 115 he appeared in a Christmas special of cookery show Ready Steady Cook 116 He went on an eight week tour as Lily 117 before starring as Miss Hannigan in a West End revival of the musical Annie 118 He subsequently accompanied the show s tour of the UK 119 before appearing in pantomime in Birmingham 120 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 121 Screened on primetime Saturday night Blankety Blank proved a ratings winner attracting an audience of 9 million ITV then purchased it offering O Grady a two year deal for 1 million 122 ITV let him be more risque in his use of humour on Blankety Blank and also commissioned a new comedy series Lily Live 123 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 124 With increased earnings his assets were estimated to total 4 million 125 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 126 Tired of appearing as Lily O Grady decided to try to make a career for himself out of drag 127 He appeared as himself in an advert campaign for Double Two shirt makers 128 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 129 O Grady suffered a bout of clinical depression 130 but recovered in time to perform alongside Cilla Black and Barbara Windsor in a burlesque rendition of You Gotta Have a Gimmick at the 2001 Royal Variety Performance the televised event attracted 11 5 million viewers 131 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 132 His recovery meant missing the Heritage Foundation Awards ceremony where he was awarded television personality of the year award 133 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 134 He followed this with a Christmas season as the Wicked Queen in the pantomime Snow White at Manchester Opera House 135 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 136 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 137 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 138 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 139 O Grady ended 2003 in pantomime at the Bristol Hippodrome 140 The Paul O Grady Show and Paul O Grady Live 2004 2011 Main article The Paul O Grady Show I just want the show to be like a party a group of pals gabbing away about the first things that come into their heads There are always enough things in life to worry and get depressed about I want my show to take our minds off all that stuff even if it s only for a while Paul O Grady c 2004 141 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 142 ITV executives then offered him his own daytime chat show The Paul O Grady Show 143 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 144 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 144 In producing the show O Grady worked with many old friends including warm up man Andy Collins 145 The series was a hit attaining between 2 5 and 2 7 million viewers daily 146 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 147 The inclusion of his dog Buster on the show proved particularly popular with audiences 148 The show gained a devoted following with many fans attending the screenings often as many as a hundred had to be turned away 149 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 150 On or off camera it is the brilliant anecdotes about his life and the endless stream of trenchant opinions on the world in general that keep Paul s fans coming back for more Biographer Neil Simpson 2008 151 The show s viewing figures exceeded those of Channel 4 s daytime chat show Richard amp Judy Tabloids stoked the rivalry between the shows calling it the Chat Wars 152 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 153 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 154 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 155 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 156 In June 2005 Murphy died of brain cancer 157 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 158 Press accused O Grady of moving in pursuit of a higher salary 159 Channel 4 offered him a contract for 2 million a year making him one of Britain s highest paid television stars 160 O Grady at the 2009 funeral of actress Wendy Richard In June 2006 O Grady suffered a second massive heart attack undergoing an angioplasty 161 162 he received around 7000 get well soon cards and letters from fans 163 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 164 To deal with his health issues he began taking a week off mid series where he was replaced by guest presenters 165 O Grady subsequently won the Ten Years at the Top award at the TV Quick and TV Choice awards 166 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 167 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 168 2006 also saw the start of his relationship with future husband Andre Portasio a ballet dancer 169 In 2008 O Grady had a cameo as himself in the Doctor Who episode The Stolen Earth 170 and appeared in Ghosthunting with Paul O Grady and Friends filmed in Palermo Sicily 171 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 172 The second volume The Devil Rides Out The Second Coming followed in 2011 173 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 174 175 The first series aired from September to November 2010 176 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 177 178 179 He also voiced his support for student protesters who had occupied and vandalised the Conservative Party headquarters 180 181 Ofcom received several complaints over the incident 178 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 182 In October ITV axed Paul O Grady Live 183 184 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 175 185 and that he was fed up with the interference from the show s producers 185 That month he also performed in Drama at Inish at the Finborough Theatre in Earl s Court 186 Animal shows and Blind Date 2012 2023 2012 saw the launch of ITV documentary series Paul O Grady For the Love of Dogs covering life at Battersea Dogs and Cats Home in south London O Grady commented that he had wanted to do such a show for years and that he took to it with an enthusiasm that surprised everyone except me Although scheduled to initially film at the centre for six days he stayed as a volunteer for six months 187 At the end of the first series O Grady was invited to become an ambassador for the centre and a bronze statue of his late dog Buster was erected on a plinth at the centre 188 He also adopted a dog from the home a Jack Russell Chihuahua cross named Eddy 188 Through the series he developed a friendship with actor Tom Hardy who appeared in one episode 189 Through his series For the Love of Dogs O Grady built links with the Battersea Dogs and Cats Home in South London becoming an ambassador for the charity In April 2012 O Grady presented The One and Only Des O Connor a one off special for ITV which looked back on the life of Des O Connor 190 In October 2012 the third volume of his memoirs Still Standing The Savage Years was released 191 In 2012 O Grady also revived his Lily Savage character for a cameo in Paul O Grady s Little Cracker a Christmas short story 192 He later expressed criticism of the show RuPaul s Drag Race and the contemporary drag performers on it stating It s all about shading and contouring your face now and being like supermodels This new brigade who just parade around going sashay shantay that s not drag to me lacking the comedic element common to drag queens of his generation 193 In July 2013 O Grady narrated the ITV documentary Me and My Guide Dog following the work of Guide Dogs 194 In April 2013 O Grady presented a documentary about burlesque performer Gypsy Rose Lee as part of ITV s Perspectives series 195 That month he also presented ITV s British Animal Honours award ceremony 196 197 198 In 2013 ITV revived The Paul O Grady Show 199 200 In November O Grady suffered an angina attack and underwent further heart surgery 201 In 2013 O Grady guest starred as cancer patient Tim Connor in three episodes of the BBC medical drama Holby City 202 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 203 204 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 205 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 206 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 207 208 209 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 210 The first series averaged 3 29 million viewers whilst the second averaged 2 75 million 211 In 2014 he appeared in a Gogglebox special for Stand Up to Cancer 212 213 In December 2014 O Grady appeared in ITV s documentary Rita amp Me celebrating Barbara Knox s fifty years as the character Rita Tanner in Coronation Street 214 In September 2015 O Grady s fourth book Open the Cage Murphy Further Savage Adventures was released 192 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 215 216 In December 2015 O Grady appeared in Our Cilla a one off programme about the life of Cilla Black 217 2016 saw O Grady present Paul O Grady The Sally Army amp Me a documentary series on The Salvation Army for BBC One 218 219 220 221 That year he also presented a Channel 4 documentary Paul O Grady s 100 Years of Movie Musicals 222 223 and another for ITV Paul O Grady s Favourite Fairy Tales 224 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 225 In August 2017 O Grady married Portasio in a ceremony at London s Goring Hotel 169 although the pair continued to live separately 226 That year also saw the screening of two part ITV series Paul O Grady For the Love of Animals India 227 and the three part Channel 4 series Paul O Grady s Hollywood 228 as well as a Channel 5 documentary about his life The Paul O Grady Story 229 It also saw the publication of O Grady s fifth book Paul O Grady s Country Life 226 In 2017 Channel 5 revived the game show Blind Date with O Grady as its presenter 230 231 232 The first series was watched by an average of 1 5 million viewers A Christmas episode aired on 23 December 2017 233 before the second series aired from 30 December 2017 234 A third series was filmed in February 2018 235 In 2020 O Grady presented the six part ITV series Paul O Grady s Great British Escape in which he visited sites across Kent 236 237 In September 2021 he began hosting Paul O Grady s Saturday Night Line Up 238 RadioMain article Paul O Grady on the Wireless In 2008 and 2009 O Grady occasionally sat in for Elaine Paige on her BBC Radio 2 show Elaine Paige on Sunday From April 2009 O Grady presented his own two hour long programme on BBC Radio 2 called Paul O Grady on the Wireless which was broadcast on Sundays from 5 pm to 7 pm O Grady was a guest on Kate Thornton s Paper Cuts in 2015 In September 2017 O Grady presented a two part documentary for BBC Radio 2 called The Story of the Light The show saw O Grady celebrate the 50th anniversary of Radio 2 by looking back at the BBC Light Programme that the channel replaced 239 In August 2022 it was announced that O Grady was resigning from BBC Radio 2 due to his unhappiness with having to share his slot with Rob Beckett His final show aired that same month 240 On 21 November 2022 it was announced that O Grady would join Boom Radio to present a show on Christmas Day similar to the festive show he presented for Radio 2 241 Charity workO Grady supported philanthropic causes for carers 242 From 2008 onwards O Grady was an ambassador for Save the Children 243 In 2012 O Grady became an ambassador for Battersea Dogs and Cats Home following his series For the Love of Dogs which was filmed in the home 244 In 2013 he took part in the Pedigree Feeding Brighter Futures campaign with Amanda Holden which aimed to give a million meals to rescue dogs nationwide 245 246 In 2014 O Grady co starred in a Dementia Friends TV advertisement campaign to raise awareness about the disease 247 248 In October 2015 following his work on Animal Orphans O Grady became a patron of Orangutan Appeal UK 249 In September 2016 O Grady was recognised for his work with animals when he won the award for Outstanding Contribution to Animal Welfare at the RSPCA s Animal Hero Awards 250 Personal lifeIn 1974 with his friend Diane Jansen O Grady had a daughter Sharon O Grady s grandson Abel was born in December 2006 251 with a granddaughter being born in December 2009 252 From 1977 to 2005 he was in a marriage of convenience with a Portuguese woman Teresa Fernandes although he was not in an active relationship with her 31 We used to fight like cat and dog We were two alpha males vying to be top dog He was a tricky bastard and I can be tricky too We d have real punch ups But I d tell him everything Suddenly I was totally on my own That s when I said Lily s going Because he s always been here with Lily I thought I can t do it any more So she sort of died with him Paul O Grady on the death of Brendan Murphy 2012 185 His long term lover and business partner was Brendan Frank Murphy 4 March 1956 9 June 2005 In the fourth volume of his biography he noted that he has always had a penchant for the bad boys 253 Known to many friends as Lily or Lil 254 O Grady was known for having had many high profile and celebrity friends including politician Mo Mowlam actresses Amanda Mealing and Barbara Windsor comedian Brenda Gilhooly and singer Cilla Black 255 O Grady divided his time between his Central London flat and his rural Kentish farmhouse 256 where he grew organic fruit and vegetables 257 and a variety of herbs having a keen interest in herbalism 258 A lifelong animal lover 103 as a child O Grady kept rabbits hamsters guinea pigs mice a ferret and a rat as pets he commented that his mother thought him a bit weird as a result 103 At his farm he owned sheep pigs goats donkeys ducks chickens geese ferrets bats mice and dogs 259 Two of O Grady s pet dogs became well known to the British public through appearances on The Paul O Grady Show The first was a rescue dog Buster Elvis Savage a Shih Tzu Bichon Frise cross Buster was euthanised in November 2009 as a result of his cancer 260 261 O Grady dedicated the second volume of his autobiography to Buster describing him as The greatest canine star since Lassie 262 A second dog the Cairn Terrier Olga also attracted attention In 2013 it was revealed that she was undergoing chemotherapy due to cancer 204 Olga was euthanised in April 2018 after suffering from kidney failure 263 In an interview with the Daily Mirror in 2006 O Grady admitted that smoking forty cigarettes a day had contributed to his two heart attacks 264 Known for his trenchant opinions 151 O Grady was critical of the British royal family having been raised by his father to view them as social parasites the exception in his mind was Diana Princess of Wales whom he came to respect for her charitable work with those living with HIV AIDS 265 In 2013 O Grady expressed his support for the Labour Party championing Labour leader Ed Miliband as a better candidate for UK Prime Minister than Conservative incumbent David Cameron 266 He lambasted the Conservative Liberal Democrat coalition government then in power describing them as absolutely disgusting They have no idea what the common working man and woman are doing They are not in touch with the working classes They have led privileged lives they ve had public schools and have never been on the shop floor 266 He also praised Miliband s successor Jeremy Corbyn 192 In 2015 he told a reporter that despite his wealth he still felt very much working class I know that probably sounds strange Mentally I still am I m still thinking have I got the rent for Friday 192 Raised as a Roman Catholic in his autobiography he related having grown out of Catholicism after his mother s death but had always been interested in alternative religions 267 citing a particular interest in Wicca 268 He has also reported seeing unexplained lights over his Kent home considering the possibility that he was being observed by extra terrestrials 269 DeathO Grady died unexpectedly but peacefully on 28 March 2023 at the age of 67 270 271 272 His death was announced by his husband Andre Portasio 273 and tributes for the former television host came in from television presenter Lorraine Kelly and LGBTQ rights campaigner Peter Tatchell 274 FilmographyYear s Title Role Notes1988 1990 The Bill Roxanne As Paul Savage1991 Chimera Donaldson As Paul Savage1992 The New Statesman Marlene Dietrich1993 In the Name of the Father Prisoner1994 Top of the Pops Guest presenter As Lily Savage1995 1996 The Big Breakfast Presenter As Lily Savage1996 An Evening with Lily Savage Presenter As Lily Savage1997 The Lily Savage Show Presenter As Lily Savage1997 2002 Blankety Blank Presenter As Lily Savage 67 episodes1999 Love Bites with Lily Savage Presenter As Lily Savage2000 Paul O Grady s Orient Presenter2000 2001 Lily Live Presenter As Lily Savage2001 Paul O Grady s America Presenter2002 2003 Outtake TV Presenter2003 Today with Des and Mel Guest presenter2003 2004 Eyes Down Ray Temple2004 2005 The British Soap Awards Presenter2004 2009 2013 2015 The Paul O Grady Show Presenter2005 Comic Aid Presenter as Lily Savage 2008 Doctor Who Himself Episode The Stolen Earth 2010 Coronation Street The Big 50 Presenter2010 2011 Paul O Grady Live Presenter2012 2023 Paul O Grady For the Love of Dogs Presenter2012 The One and Only Des O Connor Guest2013 The British Animal Honours PresenterMe and My Guide Dog NarratorPaul O Grady s Working Britain PresenterPerspectives Gypsy Rose Lee The Queen of Burlesque PresenterHolby City Tim Connor2013 2015 The One and Only Cilla Black Presenter2014 2016 Paul O Grady s Animal Orphans Presenter2015 Bob Monkhouse The Million Joke Man Presenter2016 Paul O Grady The Sally Army amp Me 275 PresenterPaul O Grady s 100 Years of Movie Musicals PresenterPaul O Grady s Favourite Fairy Tales Presenter2017 Paul O Grady For the Love of Animals India Presenter2017 2019 Blind Date Presenter 33 episodes2017 Paul O Grady s Hollywood Presenter2018 2019 Paul O Grady s Little Heroes Presenter2018 Paul O Grady For the Love of Dogs India PresenterThe NHS Heroes Awards Presenter2020 Paul O Grady s Great British Escape 276 Presenter2021 The Madame Blanc Mysteries DavidPaul O Grady s Saturday Night Line Up 277 PresenterAwards and nominationsIn 2005 Liverpool John Moores University awarded O Grady an honorary fellowship for services to entertainment 278 and in 2010 he received an honorary Doctor of Arts from De Montfort University in Leicester in recognition of his outstanding contribution to television radio and the stage 279 Year Award Work Result Notes1997 National Television Awards Most Popular Entertainment Performance An Evening with Lily Savage Nominated 280 2000 British Comedy Awards Best Comedy Entertainment Personality Lily Live Nominated2002 National Television Awards Most Popular Entertainment Presenter The Paul O Grady Show Nominated2005 British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Performance WonBritish Comedy Awards Best Comedy Entertainment Personality WonNational Television Awards Most Popular Entertainment Presenter NominatedMost Popular Daytime Programme Won2006 Most Popular Entertainment Presenter Nominated2007 Nominated2008 Nominated2010 Nominated2015 Most Popular Chat Show Host The Paul O Grady Show Nominated2018 Special Recognition Award Paul O Grady For the Love of Dogs WonReferencesFootnotes Patrons amp Officers British Music Hall Society Retrieved 17 January 2021 New Deputy Lieutenants of Kent appointed with familiar face amongst them Kent County Council 7 November 2022 Retrieved 11 November 2022 a b Simpson 2008 p 1 O Grady 2008 p 5 a b O Grady s monster The Independent 22 October 1995 Archived from the original on 25 May 2022 Retrieved 19 November 2010 Simpson 2008 pp 2 3 O Grady 2008 pp 56 62 O Grady 2008 p 6 Simpson 2008 p 3 O Grady 2008 pp 7 163 164 O Grady 2008 p 169 O Grady 2008 pp 169 171 O Grady 2008 pp 179 185 O Grady 2008 p 191 Simpson 2008 p 9 O Grady 2008 pp 192 193 O Grady 2008 pp 185 187 205 208 O Grady 2008 p 32 O Grady 2008 pp 199 200 Simpson 2008 p 12 O Grady 2008 pp 216 217 233 O Grady 2008 pp 236 237 O Grady 2008 pp 251 270 a b O Grady 2008 pp 274 278 280 311 Bear s Paw LGBT History Project Archived from the original on 27 February 2015 Retrieved 27 February 2015 Simpson 2008 pp 15 16 O Grady 2008 pp 293 294 319 Simpson 2008 pp 16 22 O Grady 2008 pp 333 340 Simpson 2008 pp 22 23 O Grady 2010 pp 37 45 Simpson 2008 pp 13 14 O Grady 2010 pp 27 33 O Grady 2010 pp 47 82 Simpson 2008 p 13 O Grady 2010 pp 84 99 110 Strudwick Patrick 20 October 2012 Savage by name Why is Paul O Grady so angry The Independent Archived from the original on 25 May 2022 Retrieved 23 November 2012 O Grady 2010 pp 153 171 Paul O Grady The One Show 16 August 2011 a b Simpson 2008 pp 34 35 O Grady 2010 pp 176 188 O Grady 2010 pp 188 199 203 212 Simpson 2008 pp 28 32 O Grady 2010 pp 212 217 O Grady 2008 p 95 O Grady 2010 pp 224 225 O Grady 2010 pp 239 241 O Grady 2010 pp 243 253 Simpson 2008 pp 25 27 O Grady 2010 pp 261 294 O Grady 2012 pp 24 55 O Grady 2012 pp 61 70 O Grady 2012 pp 77 79 O Grady 2012 pp 90 96 O Grady 2012 pp 97 105 O Grady 2012 pp 114 133 O Grady 2012 pp 135 138 144 145 O Grady 2012 pp 143 154 O Grady 2012 pp 157 159 O Grady 2012 pp 161 163 O Grady 2012 pp 166 174 Simpson 2008 pp 37 39 O Grady 2012 pp 176 189 O Grady 2012 pp 176 189 Simpson 2008 p 45 O Grady 2012 pp 190 191 O Grady 2012 pp 211 273 Simpson 2008 pp 35 36 O Grady 2012 pp 221 225 O Grady 2012 p 277 O Grady 2012 pp 219 231 237 O Grady 2012 pp 244 247 269 272 Simpson 2008 p 52 O Grady 2015 p 31 O Grady 2015 pp 89 96 O Grady 2015 pp 48 49 O Grady 2012 pp 276 283 Simpson 2008 pp 54 55 O Grady 2012 pp 215 217 O Grady 2012 pp 284 285 O Grady 2012 pp 231 233 268 O Grady 2012 p 284 O Grady 2012 pp 263 268 Moore Suzanne 21 April 2016 A generation of artists were wiped out by Aids and we barely talk about it The Guardian Retrieved 21 April 2016 Simpson 2008 pp 60 62 O Grady 2015 pp 175 179 Simpson 2008 p 63 Simpson 2008 pp 63 64 O Grady 2015 p 114 O Grady 2015 p 119 Simpson 2008 pp 64 65 O Grady 2015 p 119 O Grady 2015 pp 120 153 O Grady 2015 pp 154 158 Simpson 2008 pp 56 58 O Grady 2012 pp 291 233 300 303 Simpson 2008 p 58 O Grady 2012 pp 296 300 304 305 Simpson 2008 p 65 O Grady 2015 pp 100 102 Simpson 2008 p 65 O Grady 2015 pp 179 80 O Grady 2015 p 203 O Grady 2015 p 205 Simpson 2008 pp 70 71 Simpson 2008 p 68 O Grady 2015 p 205 Simpson 2008 pp 69 70 Simpson 2008 p 67 Simpson 2008 pp 70 71 O Grady 2015 pp 190 191 194 202 Simpson 2008 p 72 Simpson 2008 p 75 O Grady 2015 pp 244 245 Simpson 2008 p 76 O Grady 2015 p 224 O Grady 2015 pp 245 247 Simpson 2008 pp 24 25 O Grady 2015 pp 222 224 Simpson 2008 pp 79 80 O Grady 2015 pp 231 233 Simpson 2008 p 75 Simpson 2008 p 79 Simpson 2008 p 74 Simpson 2008 p 80 Simpson 2008 pp 85 88 O Grady 2015 pp 234 235 Simpson 2008 pp 88 89 Simpson 2008 pp 109 110 Simpson 2008 pp 90 95 O Grady 2015 pp 247 248 Simpson 2008 pp 99 100 Simpson 2008 p 100 O Grady 2015 pp 261 263 a b c Scoular 2014 p 25 Simpson 2008 pp 96 99 Simpson 2008 p 125 Simpson 2008 pp 103 107 O Grady 2015 pp 283 287 Simpson 2008 p 107 Simpson 2008 p 109 Simpson 2008 pp 107 108 O Grady 2015 pp 290 298 307 315 Simpson 2008 pp 111 112 O Grady 2015 p 317 Simpson 2008 pp 125 126 O Grady 2015 p 317 Simpson 2008 p 109 O Grady 2015 pp 250 251 O Grady 2015 p 323 Simpson 2008 pp 118 122 Simpson 2008 p 126 O Grady 2015 p 240 Simpson 2008 p 129 Simpson 2008 pp 128 129 Simpson 2008 pp 129 131 Simpson 2008 p 133 Simpson 2008 p 140 Simpson 2008 pp 122 124 Simpson 2008 pp 141 142 Simpson 2008 p 143 Simpson 2008 p 164 Simpson 2008 p 166 Simpson 2008 pp 137 139 274 Simpson 2008 pp 143 144 Simpson 2008 pp 146 148 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dancer boyfriend Andre Portasio Metro 20 August 2017 Retrieved 25 November 2017 Reynolds Simon 20 February 2008 Paul O Grady to appear in Doctor Who Digital Spy Retrieved 18 May 2008 Shennan Paddy 3 September 2008 Paul s ghost hunt was a real scream Liverpool Echo Retrieved 7 June 2021 Exclusive Paul O Grady on his childhood memories Daily Mirror 29 September 2008 Retrieved 4 July 2017 The Devil Rides Out The Second Coming Waterstones Retrieved 29 March 2023 Kilkelly Daniel 14 October 2009 Paul O Grady agrees to ITV return Digital Spy Retrieved 14 October 2009 a b O Grady 2012 p 324 Paul O Grady Live ITV Entertainment Archived from the original on 27 January 2013 Retrieved 19 November 2010 Media Monkey 2010 a b Lawson 2010 O Grady 2012 pp 324 325 Paul O Grady supports student protestors Coalition of Resistance 13 November 2010 Archived from the original on 16 December 2010 Retrieved 5 December 2010 Paul O Grady supports student protestors Swp org uk Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 5 December 2010 O Grady 2012 pp 328 329 Wightman Catriona 6 October 2011 Paul O Grady Live cancelled by ITV Digital Spy Retrieved 23 November 2012 Love Ryan 7 October 2011 Paul O Grady on chatshow end Everything s hunky dory with ITV Digital Spy Retrieved 23 November 2012 a b c Hardy 2012 O Grady 2012 pp 331 334 O Grady 2012 pp 352 356 a b O Grady 2012 p 356 Powell Emma 18 April 2017 Paul O Grady talks friendship with Tom Hardy We text each other The Evening Standard Retrieved 7 June 2021 ITV commissions Des O Connor tribute show Radio Times 15 March 2012 Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 25 November 2017 Groskop Viv 28 October 2012 Book review Still Standing The Savage Years by Paul O Grady Daily Express Retrieved 4 July 2017 a b c d Nicholson Rebecca 13 October 2015 Paul O Grady I ve lost just about everybody I know The Guardian Retrieved 4 July 2017 Welsh Daniel 15 February 2019 Alan Carr Backtracks After Claiming Paul O Grady Would Join Him On RuPaul s Drag Race UK The Huffington Post Retrieved 7 June 2021 Me and my Guide Dog ITV Press Centre Archived from the original on 9 February 2015 Retrieved 9 February 2015 Perspectives Episode 5 ITV com 14 April 2013 Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 1 October 2013 Media Monkey 2013 The British Animal Honours 2013 Episode 1 ITV com 18 April 2013 Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 1 October 2013 AFI Sponsors British Animal Honours 2013 Animalfriends org uk 10 April 2013 Retrieved 1 October 2013 O Grady back for teatime chat show Belfast Telegraph 4 May 2013 Retrieved 1 October 2013 Paul O Grady to revive teatime chat show for ITV ATV Today 6 May 2013 Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 1 October 2013 Bryant Tom 19 November 2013 Paul O Grady in hospital after angina attack as friends fear for workaholic TV star Daily Mirror Paul O Grady to star in Holby City BBC News 26 June 2013 Retrieved 14 August 2013 Be in the audience Led Astray BBC Archived from the original on 1 October 2013 Retrieved 1 October 2013 a b Paul O Grady Spends 8k on Dog Olga s Cancer Treatment The Huffington Post UK 17 March 2014 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Paul O Grady s Working Britain BBC Media Centre 15 August 2013 Retrieved 1 October 2013 The One and Only Cilla Black CillaBlack com Archived from the original on 9 February 2015 Miller Adam 4 August 2015 Cilla Black ITV to air special documentary honouring national treasure tonight Daily Express Retrieved 25 November 2017 Conlan Tara 3 August 2015 Cilla Black tribute to air on ITV The Guardian Retrieved 25 November 2017 Rigby Sam 3 August 2015 ITV is airing a special tribute to Cilla Black Digital Spy Retrieved 25 November 2017 Paul O Grady s Animal Orphans ITV com 11 December 2013 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Top 30 Programmes BARB McCormack Kirsty 15 October 2014 Kathy Burke and Paul O Grady join Gogglebox charity line up Daily Express Retrieved 25 November 2017 Dowell Ben 16 October 2014 Watch Kathy Burke and Paul O Grady recreate Gogglebox Radio Times Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 25 November 2017 Rita and Me ITV com 30 November 2014 Retrieved 9 December 2014 Gold commissions a million jokes Bob Monkhouse The Million Joke Man UKTV co uk 9 December 2014 Bob Monkhouse The Million Joke Man Comedy co uk Miles Tina 22 December 2015 Paul O Grady remembers Cilla Black I had to keep an eye on her Liverpool Echo Retrieved 25 November 2017 Nissim Mayer 23 September 2015 Paul O Grady celebrates the Sally Army Digital Spy Episode 1 Paul O Grady The Sally Army and Me BBC One Retrieved 25 November 2017 Charlotte Moore unveils BBC One s distinctive autumn winter schedule BBC Media Centre 22 September 2015 Methven Nicola 22 September 2015 Paul O Grady back on BBC as recruit for Salvation Army Daily Mirror Paul O Grady s 100 Years of Movie Musicals Channel 4 Archived from the original on 19 September 2016 Retrieved 25 November 2017 Paul O Grady s 100 Years of Movie Musicals Radio Times Retrieved 25 November 2017 Paul O Grady s ready for fairy tales The Northern Echo Retrieved 25 November 2017 Byrne Paul 16 October 2016 I never lived the high life Coronation Street legend Jean Alexander in her own words Daily Mirror a b Kent TV presenter Paul O Grady on country life in rural Kent in his new book Paul O Grady s Country Life Kent Online 25 November 2017 Retrieved 7 June 2021 McCreesh Louise 30 March 2017 Paul O Grady loses it after witnessing heartbreaking animal cruelty while filming new documentary in India Digital Spy Retrieved 7 June 2021 Paul O Grady s Hollywood Radio Times Retrieved 29 March 2023 The Paul O Grady Story British Comedy Guide Retrieved 25 November 2017 Mozafari Laurence 16 March 2017 Blind Date s revival has finally confirmed its new host Digital Spy Retrieved 25 November 2017 Travis Ben 7 February 2017 Blind Date making TV return but who will replace Cilla Black London Evening Standard Hegarty Tasha 17 June 2017 Blind Date fans give their verdict on Channel 5 reboot Digital Spy Retrieved 25 November 2017 McCreesh Louise 19 December 2017 Blind Date is getting a pantomime Christmas special Digital Spy Retrieved 23 May 2019 Cumberbatch Aime Grant 30 December 2017 The Best TV to watch on December 30 Evening Standard Retrieved 29 March 2023 Pre registration for BLIND DATE hosted by PAUL O GRADY from SRO Audiences Sroaudiences com Retrieved 23 May 2019 Cole Angela 24 November 2021 Paul O Grady s Great British Escape features the Kent coast its orchards Canterbury Cathedral and James Bond author Ian Fleming s favourite pub KentOnline Retrieved 7 June 2021 Paul O Grady s Great British Escape itv com Archived from the original on 5 December 2020 Retrieved 3 December 2020 Lamacraft Tess 10 September 2021 Paul O Grady on his raucous new show Saturday Night Line Up What to Watch Retrieved 10 September 2021 Hepworth David 16 September 2017 The best radio this week Paul O Grady remembers the Light Programme The Guardian Retrieved 25 November 2017 Paul O Grady signs off final Radio 2 show BBC News 15 August 2022 Retrieved 15 August 2022 UK RadioToday 21 November 2022 Boom Radio hires Paul O Grady for Christmas Day show Retrieved 22 November 2022 Simpson 2008 p 249 Paul O Grady Ambassador Save the Children UK Retrieved 25 November 2017 Our people Battersea Dogs and Cats Home 9 March 2016 Retrieved 25 November 2017 Cable 2013 sfn error no target CITEREFCable2013 help Feeding Brighter Futures Pedigree UK Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 1 October 2013 McCormack Kirsty 7 May 2014 Amanda Holden Ray Winstone and Paul O Grady lend their support to dementia campaign Daily Express Retrieved 25 November 2017 New dementia campaign launches as research reveals the true cost to business of dementia Gov uk Retrieved 25 November 2017 Paul O Grady Our New Patron Orangutan Appeal Retrieved 25 November 2017 Paul O Grady receives outstanding contribution to animal welfare prize at the Animal Hero Awards York Press Retrieved 25 November 2017 Simpson 2008 p 286 Wright Jade 17 March 2008 Paul O Grady I really do enjoy being a doting grandad Liverpool Echo Retrieved 28 April 2008 O Grady 2015 p 304 O Grady 2012 p 314 Simpson 2008 pp xii xiii O Grady 2012 pp 362 363 Simpson 2008 p 211 O Grady 2012 pp 340 341 Simpson 2008 p 212 Paul O Grady s dog Buster dies of cancer Daily Mirror Retrieved 20 November 2009 The Paul O Grady Show Buster and Olga Channel 4 Retrieved 27 April 2008 O Grady 2010 p opening leaf Southern Keiran 22 April 2018 Paul O Grady heartbroken after death of pet dog and TV star Olga Irish Independent Retrieved 21 November 2020 Willis Peter 7 August 2006 Paul O Grady Exclusive I Am Like A Broken Toy Daily Mirror Simpson 2008 pp 113 115 a b Levantis 2013 O Grady 2015 p 13 O Grady 2015 pp 15 16 20 Alexander Stian Robinson Andy 27 March 2018 Paul O Grady believes he s being watched by aliens in UFOs at his Ashford home KentLive Retrieved 7 June 2021 Paul O Grady TV presenter and comedian dies aged 67 The Guardian 29 March 2023 Retrieved 29 March 2023 TV star Paul O Grady dies aged 67 BBC News 28 March 2023 Retrieved 28 March 2023 Bedigan Mike 28 March 2023 TV star and comedian Paul O Grady dies at the age of 67 Yahoo News Retrieved 28 March 2023 Paul O Grady TV presenter and comedian dies aged 67 BBC News 29 March 2023 Retrieved 29 March 2023 Cain Sian 28 March 2023 Paul O Grady TV presenter and comedian dies aged 67 The Guardian Retrieved 28 March 2023 BBC1 commissions Paul O Grady The Sally Army amp Me Salvation Army 23 September 2015 Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 23 September 2015 Paul O Grady s Great British Escape ITV The Guardian 11 November 2020 Retrieved 16 November 2020 Paul O Grady s Saturday Night Line Up itv com Retrieved 19 September 2021 Simpson 2008 p 250 Honorary degree for TV star Paul O Grady De Montfort University 14 July 2010 Archived from the original on 28 July 2013 Retrieved 19 November 2010 Paul O Grady IMDb Retrieved 1 September 2018 Sources Brown Maggie 15 June 2009 Taking a pay cut won t demotivate me The Guardian Retrieved 21 May 2013 Henderson Jamie 17 April 2013 Paul O Grady s Battersea Dogs Home TV show up for Bafta Award Wandsworth Guardian Retrieved 21 May 2013 Lawson Mark 28 October 2010 Paul O Grady s socialist fury rant was a rare live TV shock The Guardian Retrieved 21 May 2013 Levantis Demitri 29 April 2013 Paul O Grady calls David Cameron Sheriff of Nottingham over bedroom tax Gay Star News Retrieved 21 May 2013 Media Monkey 26 October 2010 Paul O Grady takes on the government The Guardian Retrieved 21 May 2013 Media Monkey 4 April 2013 Paul O Grady returns with a familiar breed of show The Guardian Retrieved 21 May 2013 O Grady Paul 2008 At My Mother s Knee and Other Low Joints London Bantam Press ISBN 978 0 593 05925 8 O Grady Paul 2010 The Devil Rides Out The Second Coming London Bantam ISBN 978 0 593 06424 5 O Grady Paul 2012 Still Standing The Savage Years London Bantam ISBN 978 0 593 06939 4 O Grady Paul 2015 Open the Cage Murphy Further Savage Adventures London Bantam ISBN 978 0593072592 Scoular Allen 2014 I ve always been an animal lover My VIP No 8 pp 24 26 Simpson Neil 2008 Paul O Grady The Biography London John Blake Publishing ISBN 978 1 84454 417 2 Paul O Grady on Showbiz Sex Arrests Whatever Happened To Innocent Until Found Guilty The Huffington Post UK 8 May 2013 Retrieved 21 May 2013 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paul O Grady Paul O Grady at IMDbPreceded byLes Dawson Host of Blankety Blank1997 2002 as Lily Savage Succeeded byDavid Walliams Portals LGBT BBC Radio Television Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paul O 27Grady amp oldid 1147334960, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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