Tony Bennett with Lady Gaga ‘One Last Time,’ ‘Waltons’ and ‘Nash Bridges’ Movies, ‘Hot Zone’ Anthrax Scare, Harry Potter Trivia Challenge, ‘Succession’ Birthday Bash

TV Shows

Tony Bennett wows them one last time in a farewell concert alongside Lady Gaga. A new cast revives The Waltons in a 50th-anniversary Homecoming movie. Don Johnson and Cheech Marin reprise their roles in a Nash Bridges movie. A new Hot Zone limited series revisits the post-9/11 panic of an anthrax bioterror scare. A lavish trivia contest marks the 20th anniversary of the first Harry Potter film. A shattering episode of HBO’s Succession plays out at Kendall’s 40th birthday bash.

Kelsey Bennett/Courtesy of Interscope Records/CBS

One Last Time: An Evening With Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga

SUNDAY: In a memorable recent 60 Minutes report, fans of the legendary crooner Tony Bennett were amazed and moved to see the entertainer, now lost in an Alzheimer’s fog, snap back to his former self when responding to music. This allowed him to celebrate his 95th birthday in August by performing a farewell concert to two sold-out houses at Radio City Music Hall alongside his favorite partner of late, Lady Gaga. An hour special presents highlights of the concert, with Bennett belting out his signature songs, including “I Left My Heart in San Francisco,” and teaming with Lady Gaga on such standards as “The Lady Is a Tramp” and “Anything Goes.” This is not to be missed.

The Cast of The Waltons' Homecoming

Tom Griscom/The CW

The Waltons: Homecoming

SUNDAY: A half-century ago, a TV classic was born when CBS broadcast The Homecoming: A Christmas Story, from which The Waltons was launched in 1972, introducing audiences to a rural Depression-era family that got by with hard work and love. Richard Thomas, the original John-Boy, returns as narrator of the film’s remake, with a new cast led by Scandal’s Bellamy Young as Olivia Walton and This Is Us star Logan Shroyer as eldest son John-Boy, who steps up to keep spirits high among his five siblings (the character of Ben was omitted for this version) while anxiously waiting for papa John (Ben Lawson) to make it home for the holiday during a blizzard.

Cheech Marin as Joe Dominguez, Don Johnson as Nash Bridges

David Moir/USA Network

Nash Bridges

SUNDAY: Another dose of TV nostalgia in a movie revival of the light-action cop show, 20 years after CBS ended its six-season run. Don Johnson is back as the elite detective in the San Francisco Police Department’s Special Investigations Unit, still burning up those hilly city streets in his yellow ’Cuda convertible with sidekick Joe Dominguez (Cheech Marin) for support. After they’re suspended, the movie jumps ahead a year with Nash now a part-time bounty hunter and Joe managing a legal marijuana dispensary. But maybe not for long. Hopes are high for some sort of reboot.

National Geographic

The Hot Zone: Anthrax

SUNDAY: In what feels like the longest-ever episode of FBI (the series continues Monday and Tuesday), a limited-series docudrama depicts the dogged investigation by FBI agents—led by Hawaii Five-0’s Daniel Dae Kim as Matthew Ryker—when deadly anthrax-laced letters are sent to media outlets in the tense weeks after the 9/11 attacks in 2001. Scandal’s Tony Goldwyn steals the show as antic microbiologist and government anthrax expert Dr. Bruce Ivins, who sees himself as the hero of this story, but his mania and paranoia hint at a much darker side.

Harry Potter: Hogwarts Tournament of Houses Helen Mirren

TBS

Harry Potter: Hogwarts Tournament of Houses

SUNDAY: The grand Helen Mirren presides over a lavishly tricked-out four-week trivia event marking the 20th anniversary of the release of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. Match your knowledge with teams bearing the names of the four houses of Hogwarts: Gryffindor, Slytherin, Hufflepuff and Ravenclaw. And don’t be surprised if a few familiar faces drop by to share in the magic.

Succession Season 3 Episode 7 Jeremy Strong as Kendall Roy

HBO

Succession

SUNDAY: In one of the most devastating episodes to date—and that’s saying something—Kendall (Emmy winner Jeremy Strong) throws himself an outrageously over-the-top 40th-birthday party. The rest of the Roy family isn’t in a particularly celebratory mood, and his sibs Shiv (Sarah Snook) and Roman (Kieran Culkin) don’t even consider “The Notorious Ken” the guest of honor. They only have eyes for Lukas Mattson (HBO fixture Alexander Skarsgård, of True Blood and Big Little Lies fame), a tech mogul who could take their company into the future if only they could woo him to their side. But first they’ll have to worm their way into the VIP section. No love lost amid this kin.

Succession - HBO

The Yule Spool:

  • Wellington Paramormal (Saturday, 8:30/7:30c, The CW): “’Twas the Patrol Before Christmas” in a special holiday episode of the hilarious New Zealand horror-spoof mockumentary. A possessed doll and teleporting partygoers are just a few of the paranormal puzzles confronting officers Minogue (Mike Minogue) and O’Leary (Karen O’Leary) as they work the Christmas Eve shift.
  • Hallmark Channel has a bushel: Two on Saturday: Making Spirits Bright (6/5c) and Christmas at Castle Hart (8/7c), starring fan favorite Lacey Chabert in Ireland; and two on Sunday: Christmas in Tahoe (6/5c) and The Christmas Contest (8/7c).
  • Time for Them to Come Home for Christmas (Saturday, 10/9c, Hallmark Movies & Mysteries): The Voice’s Blake Shelton is executive producer of a film about an amnesiac woman (Jessy Schram) whose only clue to her identity is a newspaper clipping inviting her to a Christmas festival.
  • Lifetime revisits one of its recurring TV families in Merry Liddle Christmas Baby (Saturday, 8/7c), then heads to Detroit for Miracle in Motor City (Sunday, 8/7c), where an appearance by Motown legend Smokey Robinson could save a church’s Christmas pageant.
  • A Christmas Witness (Sunday, 8/7c, ION): The Vampire Diaries’ Arielle Kebbel is a federal marshal protecting a charming low-level mobster (Colin Egglesfield) until he can testify right after Christmas.
  • The Great Christmas Light Fight (Sunday, 9/8c, ABC): The showcase for blinding home displays returns for a ninth season, with the entire contest contained within a week (more two-hour episodes air Monday and Thursday).

Inside Weekend TV:

  • Home Town Takeover: Where Are They Now? (Saturday, 8/7c, HGTV): Ben and Erin Napier revisit Wetumpka, Alabama, site of 12 major renovations, to assess the impact Home Town Takeover had on the small town and its surrounding community.
  • Meet Your Makers Showdown (streaming on discovery+): This Is Us star Chrissy Metz hosts a competition for crafts-minded artisans with challenges testing skills in areas including paper art and stained glass. Judges include Grammy winner LeAnn Rimes and craft expert Mark Montano.
  • The Toys That Built America (Sunday, 9/8c, History): A new series shares the origin stories of our favorite playthings—including how a former Air Force pilot and his girlfriend tossing a pie plate on the beach in 1957 led to the creation of the Frisbee. In the opener, we’ll also learn how Silly Putty and Slinky came to be.
  • Dexter: New Blood (Sunday, 9/8c, Showtime): Is prodigal son Harrison (Jack Alcott) following in Dexter’s (Michael C. Hall) dark path? Dex has his suspicions after Harrison emerges from a harrowing school incident as a local hero.

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