The Sunday Telegraph

TuesdayTue­sd

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The A Word

BBC ON ONE, 9.00PM

A quiet hit last year, Peter Bowker’s lovely – and heartbreak­ing – Lake District drama about a couple, Alison (Morven Christie) and Paul Hughes (Lee Ingleby), struggling to do their best for their young autistic son Joe (the outstandin­g Max Vento) returns for a second series. Two years on, musiclovin­g Joe is seven, still wearing his headphones and finding comfort from a challengin­g world in an endless catalogue of indie hits. When he takes to the school roof one day, causing a panic, Alison and Paul realise for the first time that Joe is becoming aware that he is different from the other children around him, and they find it hard to admit even to themselves that they might be in need of specialist help. As ever, there’s no shortage of people willing to offer an opinion, notably Joe’s obstrepero­us grandfathe­r Maurice (Christophe­r Eccleston). But that is the joy of a series set in the realistic context of an extended family in which everyone has their own troubles to deal with. There’s plenty of humour to balance it all out, too, when the former in-laws of Alison’s brother Eddie (Greg Mc Hugh) turn up on the doorstep with a major announceme­nt. Gerard O’Donovan

Motherland

BBC TWO, 10.00PM; NI, 11.15PM

After an enthusiast­ically received pilot last year, Sharon Horgan and Graham Linehan expand their sharply observed comedy about the pitfalls of modern motherhood into a six-part series. The superb cast is led by Anna Maxwell Martin as Julia, whose efforts to balance work, life and parenthood rarely come up to scratch. GO

 ??  ?? Morven Christie, Max Vento and Lee Ingleby in The A Word (above); Sheridan Smith hosts her own evening of entertainm­ent (below, left)
Morven Christie, Max Vento and Lee Ingleby in The A Word (above); Sheridan Smith hosts her own evening of entertainm­ent (below, left)

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