His television break came when he appeared on The Comedians.[4] During the 1970s and 1980s he was one of the most popular faces on British TV. He was a subject of the television programme This Is Your Life in 1977 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews.
He continued to host many shows including Name that Tune, Wednesday at 8,[5]The Tom O'Connor Show, Gambit, Crosswits and many more, including The Tom O'Connor Road Show for the BBC. This show ran daily at lunch times and was watched by over 12 million viewers each day, but was an expensive show to mount because it came live from a different town each week, requiring the production team to move weekly. The show had several young producers who were overseen by executive producer Steve Weddel, and came out of the now defunct BBC Pebble Mill Studios. The script was written by O'Connor and writer Barry Faulkner, who had worked with O'Connor on his previous shows, with up-to-the-minute changes being made just before broadcast. In 1988 he was reported to have fallen in love with an 18-year-old prostitute, which challenged his clean-cut image.[3] Within a year, he'd lost all but one of his shows, Crosswits.[6]
In 2000, O'Connor made his television acting debut as Father Tom (a Catholic priest) in the BBC series Doctors.[7] On 24 February 2006, he was given an award for having appeared as a guest on the TV programme Countdown 100 times.[8] O'Connor won Celebrity Come Dine with Me, scoring a record-breaking 29/30, on 14 March 2010.[9]
In 2011, O'Connor appeared on Pointless Celebrities, a celebrity edition of the BBC One gameshow with his daughter-in-law Denise Lewis (the gold-medal-winning Olympic heptathlete). They reached the final, eventually winning £500 for charity.[10]
^ abwww.9xb.com. "Tom O'Connor". Prime Performers. Archived from the original on 22 December 2018. Retrieved 10 October 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)