Taylor Swift recording her new album, Sources
Taylor Swift is reportedly working on a new studio album. Source says...
Stevie Nicks belts out hits with a little help from her friends. In Colorado in 1986, the singer performs both her solo songs and some Fleetwood Mac oldies. In addition, Lady Boom Boom makes a stylish comeback on Canada’s Drag Race. What to watch tonight is listed below.
Stevie Nicks: Rock a Little
8.15pm, Sky Arts
Fans of Nicks must see this recording of her 1986 performance at Colorado’s Red Rocks Amphitheatre. She performs a set featuring hits like Dreams, Edge of Seventeen, Leather and Lace, and Rhiannon with bandmate Mick Fleetwood and singer-songwriter Peter Frampton, Hollie Richardson.
Gardeners’ World
7.30pm, BBC Two
With more people choosing to cultivate their own food to save money, Monty Don organizes some supper essentials: rocket is seeded, while tomatoes and chillies are ready for harvest. Frances Tophill also travels to a sanctuary in London that emphasizes ecological gardening. Jack Seale
Gaming Music at the Proms
8pm, BBC Four
An electronically enhanced Royal Philharmonic Orchestra performs the compositions for Final Fantasy VIII, Kingdom Hearts, and Battlefield 2042 at the Royal Albert Hall, giving video game music its long overdue day in the spotlight. HR
Jane Austen’s Sanditon
9pm, ITV
A radiant Alison coos, “I stayed up all night” (Rosie Graham). “I can’t eat or sleep because I keep thinking about Captain Carter since dancing with him.” It’s unfortunate that she is unaware that her captain (Maxim Ays) is seducing her while lying. Never mind; another cop has also been interested in her. HR
8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown
9pm, Channel 4
This Countdown spin-off has been so popular that Jimmy Carr has hosted it longer than all other hosts combined, with the exception of Richard Whiteley. Tonight, Alan Carr, Harriet Kemsley, Jonathan Ross, and Maisie Adam will all contribute to its addictively ridiculous approach to literacy and numeracy. A. D. Duggins
Canada’s Drag Race
10.30pm, BBC Three
Our Canadian friends have a couple advantages over the about a billion other Drag Race spin-offs that are available. Tonight: Lady Boom Boom’s boom-boom, a werkroom full of tension, and that general sense of tenacious resolve. Ellen E Jones
Film choice
Thirteen Lives (Ron Howard, 2022),
Amazon Prime Video
Even without any dramatization, the raw facts that form the basis of Ron Howard’s latest film are astounding. In a cave network in Thailand in 2018, floodwaters trapped 12 boys and their football coach within. An international mission, which included two UK cave rescuers and Thai Navy Seals, fought to save them as the monsoon approached. To his credit, Howard conveys the story simply; the mounting suspense as the days go by and the intense claustrophobia of the underwater scenes are enough to keep the reader’s attention. Although Colin Farrell and Viggo Mortensen, who play the British divers, have some star power, they are beautifully subtle, and the Thai participants also receive their due. Simon Wardell
The Band Wagon (Vincente Minnelli, 1953)
1.50pm, BBC Two
Although the age-gap relationship between Cyd Charisse’s ballet dancer Gabrielle and Fred Astaire’s on-the-slide “song-and-dance guy” Tony isn’t the most elegant of movements, this Vincente Minnelli-directed MGM musical is still one of the best movies about putting on a show. That’s Entertainment, Triplets, and the jazzy, film noir-spoofing dance piece Girl Hunt Ballet help to lighten the tense production if a contemporary Broadway adaptation of Faust. The hoofing is undoubtedly top-notch, with Charisse challenging Astaire for first place. SW
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (James Cameron, 1991)
10.45pm, ITV
James Cameron destroyed his own version of the cult classic The Terminator, much like he did with Aliens. Arnold Schwarzenegger turning to the good side, bigger action sequences, improved special effects (Robert Patrick’s liquifying T-1000 was a gamechanger), a relatable mother-child setting, and more combine to make his 1991 sequel a fascinating watch to this day. Invigorated and determined, Linda Hamilton returns to defend her son (Edward Furlong) from a killer cyborg from the future. Making a virtue out of his expressionless robot persona, Arnie is being, well, Arnie. SW
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