The Way We Were returns for a second season, Tuppence Middleton and Martin Compston stars in new drama Our House, plus documentaries about The Real Peaky Blinders and Katie Price’s son Harvey . . .
Pick of the Day
The Way We Were, 9.35pm, RTÉ One, RTÉ Player
The return of the documentary series about Ireland's social and cultural history over the past 100 years since partition and the foundation of the 26-county state.
Season two begins with a look at the issue of love, including courtship and dating rituals, habits and taboos.
The programme charts a course from the puritanical 1940s and '50s to the tentative sexual revolution of the 1960s ('the bishop and the nightie' anyone?) and '70s right through to the divorce referendum.
Following that there was the decriminalisation of homosexuality and the forging of a more sexually tolerant and Inclusive Ireland.
Don’t Miss
Mastermind, 8.00pm, BBC Two
Clive Myrie (above) hosts the second semi-final of the quiz, with four more returning contenders answering questions on specialist subjects and general knowledge.
This week’s topics are quite a varied lot, ranging from Vincent van Gogh's paintings to the Bill & Ted films, as well as 1990s’ drum & bass and Julia Margaret Cameron, one of Victorian Britain’s most famous photographers.
The Great Cookbook Challenge with Jamie Oliver, 8.00pm, Channel 4
The remaining contestants face two challenges in the semi-final of Jamie Oliver's latest TV project.
First, they must cook in front of the judges for the first time in a live cooking demonstration.
After this, they must prepare a lavish meal to be photographed, producing a visual feast that looks good enough to go in a double-page spread of the cookbook they hope to produce.
New or Returning Shows
Our House, 9.00pm, Virgin Media One
Simon Ashdown's adaptation of Louise Candlish's thriller, starring Tuppence Middleton and Martin Compston.
Fi Lawson arrives home to find strangers moving into her house, but she insists that the property isn't for sale. With events spiralling beyond her control, her panic rises as she is unable to contact her estranged husband Bram or locate her missing children.
Katie Price: What Harvey Did Next, 9.00pm, BBC One
Documentary following the celebrity's son as he turns 19 and pursues a more independent life.
Harvey’s embarking on his first term at a specialist college, National Star, which provides courses for young adults with disabilities and medical and behavioural conditions.
The film explores Katie's struggles with letting go, and an incident in which she was arrested following a car accident, after driving whilst intoxicated and disqualified
The White Handkerchief, 10.35pm, BBC One
Behind the scenes at the creation of a bold new musical play made to mark the 50th anniversary of Bloody Sunday, and to create a new legacy from that devastating event.
Filmed over nine months, this intimate portrait takes viewers into the heart of the production at Derry City Guildhall and a city striving to come to terms with the defining event of its recent history.
It’s seen through the eyes of the crew and cast of the play, and members of the Bloody Sunday families themselves.
The Real Peaky Blinders, 9.00pm, BBC Two
This is a two-part documentary looking at the real-life inspiration for the BBC’s violent gangster series Peaky Blinders, starring Cillian Murphy (below).
Historian Carl Chinn explores the real-life stories of the Birmingham gangs that inspired Steven Knight's hit drama, sorting out the fact from the fiction.
The programme begins by examining the origins of the phenomenon in Birmingham, from the first mention of the term Peaky Blinders in the popular press in 1890.
Chinn also examines the street gangs that stretched back into the Victorian era as far back as the 1860s, when they were known as slogging gangs.
Da Vinci: The Lost Treasure, 10.00pm, BBC Four
Fiona Bruce (below) travels to destinations such as Florence, Milan, Paris and Warsaw to tell the story of Leonardo da Vinci's life.
She’s exploring why a man whose reputation rests on only a few pictures - including the Mona Lisa - is regarded as one of the greatest painters of all time.
Bruce also visits New York to investigate a recently discovered piece by the artist.
Followed at 11pm by Art on the BBC: The Genius of Leonardo da Vinci, where Janina Ramirez explores the BBC archives to explore the work of the Renaissance artist, revealing what lies beneath the Mona Lisa and how Da Vinci acquired his anatomical knowledge.
Ending Today
Leonardo, 9.00pm, BBC Four
Alan Yentob concludes his series on Leonardo da Vinci by telling the story of how the Mona Lisa became the most famous painting in the world.
Admired by millions, surrounded by bodyguards and encased in a protective box and fronted by bullet-proof glass, the enigmatic masterpiece has been stolen, vandalised and exploited over the centuries.
With the help of leading scholars and original research, the subject of the portrait is finally revealed - along with the reason behind her inscrutable smile.
Moors Murders: The Trial, 9.00pm, Channel 4
Here’s the third and final part of this documentary about Moors Murderers, Ian Brady and Myra Hindley (above).
Hindley's brother-in-law David Smith and journalist Clive Entwistle describe the killers' trial in 1966, and recall the tension in court as they faced justice, including the moment when a tape recording of a girl being tortured was played.
The film also documents Myra Hindley's life in prison, and her protracted, unsuccessful campaign to secure her parole.