The Graham Norton Show
11.05pm, BBC One
Another starry night in Norton’s studio: Hollywood greats Reese Witherspoon and Will Ferrell join forces in new wedding comedy You’re Cordially Invited. They’ll be on the sofa with Ariana Grande (still pumping the Wicked publicity) and Don Gilet, who stars in the BBC’s weirdly popular whodunnit Death in Paradise. Live music comes from friend-of-the-show Olly Alexander, before a visit to the big red chair for wicked anecdotes. Hollie Richardson
Amanda & Alan’s Spanish Job
8pm, BBC One
TV show recommissions never cease to amaze: Amanda Holden and Alan Carr are back with their renovation series, this time in Andalusia. The house Holden has bought is a crumbling wreck and Carr looks seriously close to quitting before even starting: (“Oh my God, there’s a turd in the bath.”) HR
Food Unwrapped
8pm, Channel 4
What’s the difference between cold-brew coffee and iced coffee, and which is better? Kate Quilton is in Kenya to investigate, while Helen Lawal is in Portugal to pit frozen pastries against fresh. Meanwhile, in Staffordshire, Briony May Williams assesses a divisive roast dinner ingredient: the parsnip. Jack Seale
Travel Man: 48 Hours in Washington, DC
8.30pm, Channel 4
Another cheerful minibreak with Joe Lycett, who treats fellow comic Phil Wang to a brisk tour of the US capital. Several of the usual political destinations are on the itinerary but there are plenty of detours, too, not least a trip to the peculiar Barbie Pond installation which sees dolls arranged in new formations every month. Phil Harrison
Bloody Mary: Lucy Worsley Investigates
9pm, BBC Two
Pioneer or monster? Mary Tudor became England’s first queen in 1553 but she is most famously known as Bloody Mary for executing subjects for their religious beliefs. In this final investigation of the series, Worsley asks if her reputation was fair. HR
The Good Ship Murder
9pm, Channel 5
As the cruise ship sails to Madeira, there’s a new murder for police detective turned ship’s entertainer Jack Grayling (Shayne Ward) to investigate. He’s ably assisted by Catherine Tyldesley as First Officer Kate Woods, but we’re still awaiting that – surely inevitable – Jane McDonald cameo. Ellen E Jones
Film choices
Nightbitch, Disney+
Just like the physical transformations in recent body horror The Substance, the changes undergone by Amy Adams’s Mother in Marielle Heller’s off-kilter drama are a metaphor for the inequities faced by women in society. Here, however, the tone is lighter and wittier, as the former artist finds being stuck at home caring for her two-year-old son increasingly exhausting and dull. Her pent-up resentment – and the laissez-faire attitude of her husband (Scoot McNairy) – leads her to grow thick hair, a tail and other doggy accoutrements, and embrace her animal nature. More domestic comedy than werewolf chiller, its success rests on the ever-excellent Adams’s let-it-all-out performance. Simon Wardell
Posso Entrare? An Ode to Naples, Disney+
Along with countless creative types down the centuries, Trudie Styler fell in love with Naples. Giving equal weight to its beauty and bloodshed, her reflective documentary makes time for the ordinary working-class people who give the lie to the view that the southern Italian city is nothing more than a fearful hotbed of mafia violence. Crime is obviously still a major presence, as Gomorrah author Roberto Saviano reveals, but Styler also talks to the glove-makers, lemonade sellers, graffiti artists and priests who have made Naples their home and are helping it move on from its notorious reputation. SW