Ian Levine: Difference between revisions
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== References == | == References == | ||
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<references>DWO Whocast interview, 2012 | <references>DWO Whocast interview, 2012 | ||
Revision as of 19:05, 23 November 2012
Ian Levine (born 22 June 1953) has made several contributions to Doctor Who. He composed the theme music for K9 and Company, contributed to Doctor Who: The Unfolding Text and was the unofficial continuity consultant for Doctor Who in the 1980s, apparently leaving after the casting of Bonnie Langford[1]. He was co-producer of Downtime and for a while collaborated with the Doctor Who Restoration Team on DVD releases of older stories. He was one of the earliest advocates for the BBC to formally begin the process of recovering missing episodes. He was also the producer of the 1985 music video Doctor in Distress. In the documentary, The Missing Years, he credits himself with personally saving the entirety of The Daleks from destruction by BBC Enterprises.
Ian Levine has also made some controversial statements regarding the series. One of these is that he claimed credit for writing at least some of Attack of the Cybermen. This has been denied by both Paula Woolsey and Eric Saward.[source needed]
In the K9 episode The Cambridge Spy, a newspaper clipping from 1963 mentions "His Honour Chief Justice Ian Levine". This is almost certainly a reference/tribute to Levine.
References
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<references>DWO Whocast interview, 2012