Kylie Minogue is one of the big guests on Later, Last Singer Standing continues, Rob Delaney stars on Angela Scanlon's Ask Me Anything, and Worzel Gummidge makes a comeback . . .
Pick of the Day
Later - with Jools Holland, 10.40pm, BBC Two
It's a big one tonight as Jools chats to Kylie Minogue ahead of the release of her new(ish) album, Disco: Guest List Edition, and the singer shares her favourite performances from the Later archives.
There are also performances by Leeds post-punk band Yard Act and Tamil-Swiss singer-songwriter Priya Ragu, while Ed Sheeran (below) plays Leave Your Life from his new album =.
Don’t Miss
Last Singer Standing, 8.00pm, RTÉ One
Four new contestants are added to this week's line-up as they all battle it out against one another in a bid to make it to the grand final.
Nicky Byrne (below) hosts, with Nadine Coyle, Joey Fatone, and Samantha Mumba offering guidance and industry experience to the hopefuls from around Ireland as they take to the stage to perform.
Angela Scanlon's Ask Me Anything, 9.35pm, RTÉ One
It’s episode three of this chat show hosted by the increasingly ubiquitous Angela Scanlon.
No harm in that, of course. She’s an engaging broadcaster.
This week she’ll be chatting to guests Catastrophe star Rob Delaney, pop duo Jedward and Liberty Belle Imelda May (above), who all agree to be asked absolutely anything.
The Graham Norton Show, 10.00pm, Virgin Media One
If you missed this on BBC One last night, look out for a cracking show that features actress Miriam Margolyes talking about her autobiography This Much Is True.
Comic actor Paul Rudd discusses his role in Ghostbusters: Afterlife, while legendary director Ron Howard (above) talks about his Hollywood memoir The Boys.
Oscar-winner Halle Berry reflects on new sports drama Bruised and veteran thesp Stephen Fry promotes his latest book Fry's Ties. Plus, Gregory Porter performs Revival.
Strictly Come Dancing, 6.45pm, BBC One
Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman present the halfway point of the pro-celebrity contest in which sets of partners trip the light fantastic.
Tonight John Whaite and Johannes Radebe (above) take on their most significant dance yet, the rumba. It's the hottest, most intimate ballroom dance.
Chef John says: "Hopefully the whole routine will make people gasp and go, 'Wow!' From the very first step we’re very intimate."
New or Returning Shows
Worzel Gummidge: Guy Forks, 5.45pm, BBC One
The much-loved kids’ show returns for a one-off special, starring Mackenzie Crook (above) and Paul Kaye.
This time around Worzel swaps places with his cousin, Guy Forks, on Bonfire Night - but finds himself on top of the Bonfire as a result.
John and Susan turn to Aunt Sally for help in rescuing Worzel before time runs out.
Saturday Cinema
Star Wars: The Last Jedi, 8.50pm, RTÉ2
Had enough Star Wars yet? Here’s the eighth instalment in the endless fantasy adventure franchise, starring Mark Hamill, Daisy Ridley, Adam Driver and Oscar Isaac.
With the Resistance cornered, aspiring warrior Rey tries to recruit a reluctant Luke Skywalker in her battle against Kylo Ren and his evil forces.
Meanwhile, Finn, grieving mechanic Rose, and faithful droid BB-8 are sent on a covert mission to disengage the First Order's tracking device.
Mission: Impossible - Fallout, 9.10pm, Channel 4
Writer/director Christopher McQuarrie's sixth entry in the action thriller saga, starring Tom Cruise and Henry Cavill.
Ethan Hunt and the IMF team join forces with CIA assassin August Walker to prevent a disaster caused by mysterious arms dealer John Lark and a group of terrorists known as the Apostles.
Hunt and his colleagues are soon pushed to their limits thanks to a face from their past.
As usual for an MI movie, it rattles along - but it's worth watching just for the helicopter scene.
Blazing Saddles, 11.35pm, RTÉ2
'Blazing Saddles was more or less written in the middle of a drunken fistfight.’
This is one of the greatest comedies ever made – and it’s not even writer/director Mel Brooks’ best film.
It’s a Western spoof, in which he co-stars in three different roles alongside Cleavon Little, Gene Wilder and Madeline Kahn, and it’s about as un-PC as could be - even for the 1970s.
Would it be greenlighted today? Not a chance. But its anti-racist message is subversively and hilariously delivered.
The flimsy plot is largely irrelevant, but it revolves around a crooked railway tycoon whose men are terrorising a frontier town. He arranges for a black sheriff to be appointed, hoping the racist, inbred residents of Rock Ridge will reject him.
Portrait of a Lady on Fire, 9.00pm, BBC Four
This French romantic period drama, starring Noemie Merlant and Adele Haenel, was fawned over by critics when it was released in 2019.
It’s about an artist who is commissioned to paint a portrait of a woman about to be married without her knowing.
She observes her subject by day, then works on the painting by night, but in the process, the two women develop a close bond as the wedding draws nearer.