Hugh Grant, Andie McDowell and the rest of the cast of “Four Weddings and a Funeral” reunite as part of the fifth annual “Red Nose Day Special” (NBC, 8 p.m.). Sting, Josh Groban, John Legend, Kelly Clakson and Blake Shelton will also perform. Hall & Oates will revisit their “You Make My Dreams” in a star-filled new video, and there will be appearances of “Saturday Night Live” stars Kate McKinnon, Michael Che and Colin Jost, as well as a glimpse of Lilly Singh, who will be taking over Carson Daly’s late late time slot this fall.
John Turturro stars as the Franciscan friar at the center of Umberto Eco’s “The Name of the Rose” (Sundance, 10 p.m.) in a new series adaptation of the 1980 bestseller about deaths in a emote medieval abbey from the Italian director Giacomo Battiato.
The seventh and final season of “Elementary” (CBS, 10 p.m.) gets an ignoble sendoff, with a late-starting summer run. Jonny Lee Miller and Lucy Liu do their Sherlock things now relocated to Scotland Yard in London.
Ten years after her death, here’s another dip into the final days of the pinup, “This is Farrah Fawcett” (ABC, 8 p.m.).
“Flip or Flop” star Christina Anstead, who will continue that show with her ex husband Tarek el Moussa, gets her own home-fixing show with “Christina on the Coast” (HGTV, 9 p.m.).
“Secret Life of a Gang Girl: The Untold Story” (A&E, 9 p.m.) presumably will be told.
The reboot of “Paradise Island” (Fox, 8 p.m.) has been canceled after just four episodes. They’ll air another three but move up the premiere of “So You Think You Can Dance” earlier than planned, on June 2. Still slogging on: “Double Shot at Love with DJ Pauly D & Vinny” (MTV, 8 p.m.).
“Project Runway” (Bravo, 9 p.m.) tries to update civic uniforms of the post office, police and department of sanitation.
Tandy and Tyrone are still tying to stop the trafficking ring on “Marvel’s Cloak and Dagger” (Freeform, 8 p.m.).
On “iZombie” (CW, 8 p.m.), Peyton tries to maintain positive PR for zombies in the city.
Murphy starts opening up to Max on “In the Dark” (CW, 9 p.m.).
“Swamp People” (History, 9 p.m.) looks of the crocogator.
Jen tries not to go into labor during Lark’s birthday party on “Life in Pieces” (CBS, 9:30 p.m.).
“Klepper” (Comedy Central, 10:30 p.m.) visits undocumented immigrants in Georgia and ends up arrested.
Final harvests occur on the finale of “The American Farm” (History, 10 p.m.).
Kelly Clarkson, Kenan Thompson, Kristen Bell and Jennifer Garne play on “Hollywood Game Night” (NBC, 10 p.m.).
Turner Classic Movies’ salute to the WWII Homefront continues with “Hope and Glory” (8 p.m.), “The End of the Affair” (10:15 p.m.), “Journey of Margaret” (12:15 a.m.), “Tonight and Every Night” (2 a.m.), “The Lion Has Wings” (4 a.m.) and “For the Common Defense!” (530 a.m.). The actor (and WWII vet) Robert Ryan is featured all day in “”The Sky’s the Limit” (6:45 a.m.), “Berlin Express” (8:30 a.m.), “The Boy with Green Hair” (10:30 a.m.), “Born to Be Bad” (noon), “Her Twelve Men” (1:45 p.m.), “Bad Day at Black Rock” (3:30 p.m.) and “God’s Little Acre” (5 p.m.).
The NBA Playoffs have Toronto at Milwaukee (TNT, 8:30 p.m.).
Baseball has Boston at Toronto (MLB, 12:30 p.m.), Atlanta at San Francisco (MLB, 3:45 p.m.) and White Sox at Houston (MLB, 8 p.m.).
The FIFA U-20 World Cup has Mexico vs. Italy (Fox Sports 2, 11:50 a.m.) and Poland vs. Colombia (Fox Sports 2, 2:20 p.m.).
College softball has Oklahoma State vs. Florida State (ESPN, 7 p.m.) and Texas vs. Alabama (ESPN, 9 p.m.).
Daytime Talk
Kelly Ripa and Ryan Seacrest: Jamie Foxx, Corinne Foxx, Richard Madden. The View: Allison Williams. The Talk: William Shatner, Kllie Pickler. Ellen DeGeneres: Kunal Nayyar, David Mizejewski, YG with Tyga, Loni Love.
Late Talk
Stephen Colbert: Conan O’Brien, Jim Sciutto, the National. Jimmy Kimmel: Jason Sudeikis, Ben Platt. Jimmy Fallon: Harrison Ford, Richard Madden, Bazzi. Seth Meyers: Olivia Wilde, Christopher Abbott, Janine Brito, Sebastian Thomson. James Corden: Lucy Liu, James Marsden. Carson Daly: Alyson Hannigan, Joji, Deafheaven, Nico Santos. Trevor Noah: Wyatt Cenac. Conan O’Brien: Jason Mantzoukas, Nish Kumar.