Six Nations Live (STV, 2.45pm)

AT the end of February, Ireland’s Six Nations match against Italy in Dublin was cancelled as the coronavirus pandemic began to take an increasingly devastating grip around the world. Now, seven months on from the last fixture, the competition is finally ready to resume at the Aviva Stadium.

This is both teams’ fourth match of the championship, with Ireland winning both their home fixtures, against Scotland and Wales, but losing at Twickenham. However, they will be expecting to get back to winning ways today as the Italians have not won a Six Nations contest since 2015.

Strictly Come Dancing (BBC1, 7.25pm)

LAST week, we got the launch show and found out which celebrities had been paired with which professionals. Now it’s time to see the partnerships in action as the 12 couples take to the floor to make their debut performances in the first live episode. The pandemic means there have been some changes – for a start, there are only three judges, Shirley Ballas, Craig Revel Horwood and Motsi Mabuse, as Bruno Tonioli is set to miss some of the early live shows due to the difficulties of commuting between Britain and the US.

However, there will still be glitz, fancy footwork and presenters Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman. Plus, as in previous years, the celebrities won’t face being booted off this week. Instead, their scores will be carried over to next week, when the public will get a say in who stays and who goes.

DNA (BBC4, 9pm)

AN impressive cast, including Britain’s Charlotte Rampling and rising Polish star Zofia Wichlacz, appear in this new Danish crime thriller from Torleif Hoppe, the co-creator of The Killing. It follows Rolf Larsen, a respected Copenhagen detective whose life changes forever when his baby daughter goes missing.

Five years later, a serious flaw is uncovered in the Danish police’s DNA basis that offers a new lead and raises hopes Rolf’s daughter may be alive. Will investigating a parallel case lead him to the truth about what happened to his child?

Inna de Yard (Sky Arts, 10pm)

WRITER and director Peter Webber’s joyous, vibrant film had its world premiere at last year’s Tribeca Film Festival and set against a backdrop of the lush green mountains of Jamaica. It sees a superstar group of reggae legends – including Ken Boothe, Kiddus I, Cedric Myton, Winston McAnuff and Judy Mowatt – join together to record a new album of hits in an unplugged style that harks back to their roots. The documentary also doubles as a love letter to and retrospective of reggae music, as it recounts the history and cultural importance of the genre.