As a theatre director, he has taken two shows to the Edinburgh Festival - Reynard the Fox in 1985 (also shown at the Young Vic)[15][16] and One Fine Day in 1986.[17]
Film
Tordoff made many appearances in films, including:
Tordoff's first major TV work was the recurring role of Beckett in the 1969 BBC mini series The First Churchills.[25] He appeared as Hippolyte in the 1975 BBC production of Madame Bovary.[25] Also in 1975 he appeared in The Sweeney episode Supersnout in which he played Joey Stickley, a dirty and weaselly informant who conspires to ruin the reputation of Detective Chief Inspector Stephen Quirk of the Metropolitan PoliceFlying Squad.[26]
Tordoff had a recurring role as policeman Brian Tofkin in the John Sullivan comedy Citizen Smith.[29] He appeared in the 1982 episode of MinderRembrandt Doesn't Live Here Anymore as Max.[30] He returned to the show as a shop assistant in the 1989 episode Fiddler on the Hoof.[31] He has appeared in Coronation Street in three different roles, firstly as Arnold in episode 807 on 16 September 1968, photographer Norman Hill for episodes 1836 and 1837 in August 1978 and as Keith Hesketh in three appearances (episodes 4673 to 4675) in 1999.
Tordoff also wrote the TV drama Charlie Was a Rich Man, which was produced by Granada Television in 1980.[37]
Later life
While Tordoff was acting he took training in art at London's City Lit and Morley Colleges.[38]
Since retiring from acting Tordoff has concentrated on gardening[39][40] and painting. In the 1990s he created a prizewinning garden at Navarino Road, Hackney, where he was then living.[41][1] It won the 1996 BBC Gardeners World competition for the best small garden in Britain.[42] This garden continues to be open to the public under its present owners, through the National Garden Scheme.
In 2004, he moved with his partner Maurice Reeve, to Umbria, Italy; creating a second, far larger garden. In 2010, he and Maurice sold the Hackney house and moved to Cambridge, where he created a courtyard garden, which won the third prize in the Gardeners World Magazine competition for 2018.[43]
In 2005, Tordoff exhibited a solo exhibition at the Barbican Estate, working in mixed media collages.[44] He was elected a member of the Cambridge Drawing Society and exhibits regularly with the Cambridge gallery Byard Art. In 2016 his work was chosen to be shown at Art Fair East.[45]
Tordoff founded LGBT Mature in 2018, a group to help support older members of the LGBT community in Cambridge.[46]
In 2023, Tordoff was shortlisted for the Art - Experienced Amateur category in the King Lear Prizes.[47]