Crossover: Difference between revisions

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* Lady [[Jennifer Buckingham]] from ''[[The War Games]]'' briefly appears in the second volume of [[Kim Newman]]'s crossover-intensive ''[[Wikipedia:Anno Dracula|Anno Dracula]]'' series. Charles Beauregard, the hero of several ''Anno Dracula'' stories, is referred to in ''[[All-Consuming Fire]]''.   
* Lady [[Jennifer Buckingham]] from ''[[The War Games]]'' briefly appears in the second volume of [[Kim Newman]]'s crossover-intensive ''[[Wikipedia:Anno Dracula|Anno Dracula]]'' series. Charles Beauregard, the hero of several ''Anno Dracula'' stories, is referred to in ''[[All-Consuming Fire]]''.   
* The novella ''[[The Doctor and the Enterprise]]'' by [[Jean Airey]] was an unofficial crossover between ''Doctor Who'' and ''[[Star Trek]]'' that was published professionally by Pioneer Books. (The book is non-canonical as ''Star Trek'' has been acknowledged as a fictional element in several episodes (i.e. ''[[The Empty Child]]'').
* The ''Star Trek'' novel ''Ishmael'' by Barbara Hambly contains a reference to a [[Time Lords|time-travelling race]] from the constellation [[Kasterborous]].


[[Category:Crossover characters|*]]
[[Category:Crossover characters|*]]

Revision as of 20:49, 9 June 2008

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A crossover character is a character who exists both within the Doctor Who Universe and one or more other fictional universes. Although, within the Doctor Who Universe, fictional characters have appeared as such (within the Land of Fiction, for example), characters from other works have, from time to time, become involved.

See also Doctor Who Universe in other continuities.

Throwaway lines alluding to other fictional universes are more common than actual appearances of characters from those universes.

Examples

Television examples

So far, only one major crossover has occured in televised Doctor Who, when the Doctor and some of his companions met the cast of EastEnders in Dimensions in Time (which is generally not regarded as part of the canon, despite John Nathan-Turner's intention that it should be).

Of course, EastEnders is fiction in the Doctor Who Universe, as revealed in Army of Ghosts, just as characters like the Doctor and the Daleks are fictional in the continuity of EastEnders.

Comics examples

Prose fiction examples