From Monday to Friday in Media Culture, Eva Roque gives you her TV tips for the evening.

This weekend, she invites you to watch "François Mitterand and Anne Pingeot, fragments of an amorous passion" on France 5, and "Secret Archives", Laurent Delahousse's new program on France 3.

Eva, last zapping of the week.

What is the theme of the programs you have chosen?

A dive into the archives!

Sunday at 22.40, on France 5, documentary for which I had an immense blow of heart, and it was unexpected, entitled: "François Mitterrand and Anne Pingeot, fragments of an amorous passion".

A passionate story that began in 1963 in Hossegor.

Mitterrand was 46 years old, Anne Pingeot 20. He immediately succumbs to her charm.

Not her.

For two years, he proclaims his love as in a letter from 1964. 

A romance between these two beings is thus reconstituted from their correspondence and from a logbook kept by Mitterrand during all these years.

More than 1,200 letters between 1962 and 1995, and 1,700 journal pages of poetry, heightened feelings, sometimes rupture.

The first words for Mazarine who has just been born.

And his last letter, in September 1995.

This documentary by Yves Gaillard and Hugues Nancy is of infinite beauty.

It tells of a passionate love, the fate of a statesman, the weight of secrets in a family.

There is a form of universalism in this personal story. 

Archives again on France 3 this evening with Laurent Delahousse's new program, "Secret Archives" from 21.05.

Again, it's about discovering another side of people known as Johnny.

I thought I had seen it all.

And no, extract from images shot by director François Reichenbach.

Johnny in a sweat, amid swirls of cigarettes, a glass in his hand.

And Sylvie Vartan's comments.

The challenge is always great to announce secret archives.

The contract is fulfilled with this first issue.

Rare images of Françoise Hardy and Jacques Dutronc, of Joe Dassin, but also unpublished recordings made available by Orlando, his brother. 

Moving archives behind which you will also discover the story between Dalida and Alain Delon.

The last part is devoted to Claude François.

I am less convinced especially as the unpublished images are those of a fan, images obviously stolen without the artist's knowledge.

Still, this first issue is very successful.