This Morning will be returning to ITV on Monday (September 12), though with a change in its usual time.

Following the news of the death of Queen Elizabeth II, ITV has revised its usual timetable, replacing scheduled shows with additional and extensive news coverage of the royal family, as well as prepared specials celebrating her life.

On Monday, This Morning, presented by Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby, will air at a later start time of 11am instead of 10am and will run until 1pm, however, ITV is still keeping Lorraine and Loose Women off air, but this may change throughout the week.

holly willoughby and phillip schofield host this morning
Ken McKay/ITV//Shutterstock

Related: Coronation Street's return confirmed but Emmerdale dropped in latest ITV schedule changes

There has been extensive changes in the soaps as well, with Coronation Street confirmed to be returning on Monday at 8pm with Friday's (September 9) displaced episode taking the slot.

Thursday's displaced episode of Emmerdale will air tonight (September 11) at 6.35pm, though it won't air on Monday evening, so it's unclear as to when viewers can see Friday's hour-long episode, which was also cancelled.

What to Read Next

There has been changes elsewhere too, with Channel 5's Home and Away postponed last week following the news, as well as various programmes moving from BBC One to BBC Two to make way for news coverage.

queen elizabeth ii
Getty Images

Related: The Crown season 6 to pause filming out of respect for Queen Elizabeth II

Over on Channel 4, it was confirmed that The Great British Bake Off will air as planned on Tuesday (September 13), so fans of the show should still tune in on Tuesday.

We'll meet a whole new lineup of 12 novice bakers, as well as see the returning judges Prue Leith and Paul Hollywood. Noel Fielding and Matt Lucas also return as hosts.

Further scheduling changes are sure to come over the next few days, and so Digital Spy will keep you updated.

Lettermark

Tasha is a freelance writer for with a particular interest in the representation of women in film and TV. After graduating with a Literature degree then journalism qualifications with News Associates a few years further back than she’d like to admit, Tasha began her freelance career.  She’s worked as a writer, editor and commissioning editor for a number of publications including Digital Spy. She is also a theatre critic. LinkedIn