The Herald - The Herald Magazine

PICK OF THE WEEK

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SATURDAY

Gareth Thomas’s Tour de Trophy for Sport Relief (BBC1, 11.30am)

It’s almost 25 years since the eponymous rugby star made his debut on the internatio­nal stage, and proceeded to blaze a glorious trail. Last December he faced one of his biggest challenges, embarking on a 500-mile bike ride from Cardiff to Aberdeen, towing the 40kg BBC Sports Personalit­y of the Year trophy for Sport Relief. Gareth allowed cameras record every minute of his struggle, in the hope that this film would help change attitudes to people either living in isolation or burdened by a social stigma, issues close to Thomas’s heart.

The Greatest Dancer (BBC1, 6.30pm)

Alesha Dixon and Jordan Banjo host the final of the dancing contest. Just four performers remain in the contest, and with the help of the dance coaches Cheryl, Matthew Morrison, Oti Mabuse and Todrick Hall, they will put on one last show to impress the studio audience and win £50,000 and a chance to showcase their skills on Strictly Come Dancing. Who will become The Greatest Dancer?

The Royals: A Family in Crisis (C5, 8pm)

The Queen famously branded 1992, the year Charles and Diana separated and Windsor Castle caught fire, as an ‘annus horribilis’, but 2019 could give it a run for its money. This documentar­y looks at the issues that affected the monarchy last year, including the rift between princes Harry and William that would eventually lead to the Duke and Duchess of Sussex acrimoniou­sly stepping back from the royal family. Plus, the scandal surroundin­g Prince Andrew’s friendship with convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, and Prince Philip’s car crash and his ongoing health problem.

Hilary Mantel: Return to Wolf Hall (BBC2, 9pm)

In case you didn’t know it, the eponymous author was the brains behind Wolf Hall. That 2009 novel, which documented the rise to power of Thomas Cromwell in the court of Henry VIII, left critics worldwide rubbing their hands with glee, and paved the way for a second tome, Bring Up the Bodies, which hit shelves in 2012. Both books spawned the hit Mark Rylance drama, and now a second series is in the pipeline. Shot over six months in the run-up to publicatio­n of The Mirror and the

Light, the final book in her Booker-winning Tudor saga, this film delves into Ms Mantel’s past. It describes her vivid imaginatio­n, active from an early age, and is a tale of growing up with a dark family secret.

Lost Lives (BBC2, 10pm)

Dermot Lavery and Michael Hewitt’s often moving documentar­y is inspired by the namesake 1999 book. Written over seven years, it recorded the circumstan­ces of the deaths 3,700 people; every man, woman and child killed during the Troubles. Among them was nine-year-old Patrick Rooney, killed by a

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