Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘Cleaning Lady’ and ‘Alert’ return on Fox

- BY KEVIN MCDONOUGH Contact Kevin McDonough at kevin .tvguy@gmail.com.

“The Cleaning Lady” (8 p.m., Fox, TV-14) is back. A rare broadcast series to revolve around the life of an undocument­ed alien, “Lady” enters its third season starring Elodie Yung as Thony De La Rosa. Born to Cambodian and Filipino parents, Thony was once a lead surgeon in Manila’s best hospital, but circumstan­ces brought her to Las Vegas to work as domestic help while searching for a cure for her ailing son.

A chance encounter with a gangster nearly ends her life, but he recognizes her skills and enlists her into his organizati­on, where she has any number of chances to demonstrat­e her cleaning and medical skills and hide behind multiple identities.

Adding to the complicati­ons, she also works as an embedded agent for the authoritie­s. Her proximity to the powerful and the notorious makes life difficult for everyone she knows.

Sporting a prepostero­usly complicate­d premise and plot, “The Cleaning Lady” has the distinctio­n of being one of two scripted live-action dramas on Fox. The police procedural “Alert: Missing Person’s Unit” (9 p.m., Fox, TV-14) returns tonight for a second season.

Otherwise, you have Fox’s animated Sunday night block and a solid slate of reality competitio­ns, with Friday and Saturday dedicated to sporting events. “Animal Control,” Fox’s scripted live-action comedy, returns tomorrow, as does “Family Guy,” in a rare break from Sunday nights.

› At a time when people talk rather casually about banning books and ideas and “canceling” art and artists, the 2024 documentar­y “A Revolution on Canvas” (9 p.m., HBO, TV-14) may offer a sobering note. Also streaming on Max, it profiles Iranian dissident and artist Nickzad “Nicky” Nodjoumi. Back in the late 1970s, he and most educated citizens rose up against the dictatoria­l shah, long seen as a puppet imposed on their country by the United States and Britain in order to maintain a steady oil supply.

Like many of his contempora­ries, Nicky welcomed the revolution of 1979, hoping it would usher in a democratic society, and he created dozens of paintings documentin­g and celebratin­g his country’s transforma­tion. He soon learned that the so-called Islamic Republic had little interest in democracy or expressive freedom. His works were soon censored and seized, and he barely escaped with his life.

“Canvas” documents a life in exile and a fourdecade effort to regain access to his long-lost “dangerous” work. Cocreated by his daughter, Sara Nodjoumi, it also explores a woman’s difficult relationsh­ip with her father, complicate­d by his treatment of her mother.

› Multiple presidenti­al primary elections known as “Super Tuesday” inspire competing network news coverage (10 p.m., CBS, NBC, ABC) as well as around-the-clock cable news conversati­on. That’s an awful lot of chatter for an election night where the outcomes for both parties’ contests appear to be foregone conclusion­s and where the drama remains more legal than political.

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