TV

Sorry, ‘Party of Five’ fans: Scott Wolf sees no reboot coming

The Night Shift

Wednesday, 10 p.m., NBC

The second half of this two-part episode wraps up an overnight catastrophe, this time involving a mother and young son who need rescuing from a car accident. With the boy’s life hanging in the balance, the team starts to realize there is more to the family dynamic than meets the eye. The episode also marks the reappearance of TC’s (Eoin Macken) sister-in-law, Annie (Sarah Jane Morris), a widowed train wreck. Although she is a thorn in the sides of both TC and Dr. Scott Clemmens (Scott Wolf), Annie is trying to salvage things via newfound sobriety.

Wolf, fondly remembered as Bailey on Fox’s “Party of Five,” recently spoke with The Post by phone from the show’s Albuquerque, NM, set about Clemmens’ evolution and whether a “Party” reboot could be in order.

Toward the end of Wednesday’s episode, Clemmens — who’s also sober — has an eyes-locked interaction with Annie. What’s up with that?
She is engaged in her own sobriety, and that’s where she and Scott wind up connecting. The story that winds up getting explored throughout this season. Without giving too many spoilers away, I feel in some way — just some flawed, human way — it kind of creates this ball of “This might be the last person [Clemmens] should get involved with.” And in some ways, this becomes attractive.

TC and Clemmens were at each others’ throats deep into Season 2, but eventually evolved into mutual respect. What changed?
It would have been very easy to keep these two at odds, and that’s just the easiest way to write it. But it’s far more interesting, unique and real to have them on one level just want to punch each other in the face and on the other level really understand each other.

Netflix revived “Fuller House” and will debut “Gilmore Girls” later this year. Any chance for a “Party of Five” reunion?
I don’t know. I don’t think so. I’ve not heard anything. Our cast all feels like we set that story down when it belonged to be set down. Where other shows are more ripe for new exploration, I think that one had its time. As much as I would love to see what Bailey’s up to in 2016, I don’t know that we need to make a show about it.

“Party of Five” still resonates with folks.
The kind of crazy circle of life that’s happening right now is there’s a new wave of, “Hey, I grew up on the show and now I’m showing my kids the show” — which makes me feel, you know, 106 years old. What a remarkable thing that the show still has that kind of value to people that they want to pass it onto their kids. I mean, what more could you ask for? — Eric Hegedüs

AND HERE’S WHAT ELSE TO WATCH THIS WEEK:

Deliverance

Wednesday, 8:45 a.m., Sundance

The River Wild

Thursday, 1 p.m., AMC
Summer is a great time to get off the grid and recreate with the family or even just your buddies, but Hollywood movies warn you not to do so in a boat. “Deliverance” (1972) takes four friends on a canoe trip on Georgia’s fictional Cahulawassee River and plunges them into a world of murder, rape and revenge. Starring Jon Voight, Burt Reynolds and Ned Beatty. In “The River Wild” (1994), Meryl Streep takes a vacation from Oscar-bait roles with foreign accents, playing a white-water rafting guide showing her family a good time on the rapids. While cresting the waves, she meets two felons who force her to take them down river to meet their consorts. Break out the life preservers.

Game of Thrones

Sunday, 9 p.m., HBO
Undeterred, the High Sparrow (Jonathan Pryce) eyes another target. Jaime (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) confronts a hero. Arya (Maisie Williams) makes a plan. The North is reminded.

Angie Tribeca

Monday, 9 and 9:30 p.m., TBS
Season premiere. A man is found dead in a dog park, but Lt. Atkins (Jere Burns) doesn’t think Tribeca (Rashida Jones) is ready for the case because she hates dogs —and she’s just risen from a yearlong coma. In the second episode, a missing sushi chef is fished out of the ocean.

The Americans

Wednesday, 10 p.m., FX
Season finale. Philip (Matthew Rhys) and Elizabeth (Keri Russell) are in a high-stakes race against the FBI to recover a hazardous package. Will they get there in time? And will Paige (Holly Taylor) follow her parents into the family business? With Noah Emmerich.

Wayward Pines

Wednesday, 9 p.m., Fox
Nurse Pam (Melissa Leo) becomes a lethal threat to the town, and Theo (Jason Patric) continues to dig deeper into why he was chosen to be part of this town’s population.

Feed the Beast

Sunday and Tuesday, 10 p.m., AMC
Series debut. Two Bronx-born best friends, Tommy Moran (David Schwimmer) and Dion Patras (Jim Sturgess), take one last shot at their dream — opening a restaurant. What are the obstacles? Dion can’t stay out of trouble. Tommy can’t move past it. For two friends on the brink of losing everything, a dusty pipe dream is all they have left to turn their lives around. Co-starring Michael Gladis, so memorable as Paul Kinsey on “Mad Men.”

UnReal

Monday, 10 p.m., Lifetime
Season premiere. In this satire of TV dating shows, conniving producers Rachel Goldberg (Shiri Appleby), and Quinn King (Constance Zimmer) cast pro quarterback Darius Hill (B.J. Britt) on “Everlasting,” as the show’s first African-American bachelor. Meanwhile, Chet (Craig Bierko) returns, trying to stake a claim for power. Co-starring Josh Kelly.