There's an interview with Oppenheimer director Christopher Nolan, more from BBC drama Wolf, Lucy Worsley’s back with Royal History's Biggest Fibs, and there’s classic comedy with Michael Crawford.
Pick of the Day
The Arts Interviews, 10.30pm, BBC Four
The BBC's Culture editor Katie Razzall talks to Christopher Nolan, one of the world's most renowned film directors and the man behind the likes Memento, Inception and Dunkirk, to mark the release of his new film Oppenheimer.

They discuss the Hollywood strikes, AI and film and why British-born Nolan was drawn to the story of J Robert Oppenheimer, the enigmatic Manhattan Project scientist who had a leading role in developing the atomic bomb.
Don’t Miss
Bake Off: The Professionals, 8.00pm, Channel 4
In the first of tonight's challenges, the remaining teams are tasked with creating 24 reimagined millefeuille and 24 pavlovas in never-before-seen ways.
Then the showpiece display must feature two batches of 24 modern religieuse, designed to look like musical icons.
FROM, 9.00pm, Sky Sci-fi
Streaming on NOW
Season 2 of this spooky sci-series continues with another double episode.
Kenny and Ellis make a grisly discovery out in the forest; Boyd finds it difficult to come to terms with the reality of what's happening to him.
Then, as Boyd's condition grows more alarming, Sara's return to town puts him in a difficult position. In the meantime, Jim shares a troubling new theory about the town.
Wolf, 9.00pm, BBC One
As the drama continues, a vet finds something trapped in the intestines of Bear the lost dog. Jack delves deeper into the Donkey Pitch case and becomes convinced there was a second killer.
What They Really Mean For You, 8.00pm, BBC One
Justin Rowlatt, Michelle Ackerley and Dr Tara Shine investigate the eco-friendly alternatives to oil and gas boilers and if it's possible to build an entirely low-carbon electricity network before the UK government's net zero target of 2050.
Justin explores a futuristic house in Salford that is used to test new heating technologies in extreme conditions.
Michelle gets an insight into how heat pumps are installed and the cost of doing so.
Tara meets the gas company promoting hydrogen as the solution to home heating and finds out if it is a feasible option.
Sky Coppers, 9.00pm, Channel 4
This weel the unit hunts for a group of kids trying to set fire to a shed in an allotment.
An infrared drone kit is used to search for a teenager who hasn't been seen since climbing a scaffolding around a nightclub in Birmingham.
Plus, the night-time search for a burglar breaking into a house with a suspected cannabis crop.
New or Returning Shows
Storyville: The Trials of Oppenheimer, 10.55pm, BBC Four
Zoe Wanamaker (below) narrates this film documenting the rise and fall of scientist J Robert Oppenheimer, the director of the project that developed the first atomic bomb.
He later tried to prevent a nuclear arms race in his role with the Atomic Energy Commision, but his stance made him many political enemies and he was later put on trial for supposed communist sympathies.
The events are told through dramatic re-creation and expert testimony, with David Strathairn taking the role of Oppenheimer.
Royal History's Biggest Fibs with Lucy Worsley, 9.30pm, BBC Four
The entertaining – and very English – historian and TV presenter Lucy Worsley (below) explores some of the myths swirling around the French Revolution of 1789 - an uprising that brought down the nation's royal family.
This violent revolution became the blueprint of many future revolutions across the world, but what exactly happened during this turbulent period is open to manipulation and interpretation.
Historian Michael Rapport explains how the revolution was not started by starving peasants as many assume but was in fact sparked by a group of lawyers and property owners.
The Hundred, 6.00pm, BBC Two & Sky Sports Cricket
Streaming on NOW
Isa Guha (below) presents the BBC’s live coverage of the first men's match of the campaign, held at Trent Bridge in Nottingham.
It features the Trent Rockets against Southern Brave, with a sart-time of 6.30pm.
The Rockets are the reigning champions, having defeated Manchester Originals in last year's final, while Brave are looking to improve this time around after finishing seventh of eight teams in 2022.
Michael Crawford and Michele Dotrice Remember - Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em, 8.00pm, BBC Four
It's 50 years since accident-prone Frank Spencer and his long-suffering wife Betty first appeared on the small screen in Some Mothers Do 'Ave ‘Em.
Here, Michael Crawford and Michele Dotrice - the actors who brought them to life - are reunited to recall their time working on the hit 1970s sitcom.
They reveal how they came to be cast, what it was like to film the series and the impact the show's success had on their lives and careers.
Followed at 8.30pm by a classic episode of Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em.
In a bid to find work, disaster-prone Frank attends an interview for a job as an ironmonger's salesman.
Then at 9pm there’s To Be Perfectly Frank, where Michael Crawford reveals how he created Frank Spencer in this documentary going behind the scenes of Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em.
It also features detailed preparations for some of the hilarious but extremely dangerous stunts from the series. First shown in 1977.