1984: Difference between revisions
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== Events == | == Events == | ||
=== | === May === | ||
* The [[Fifth Doctor]] defeated the [[Malus]] in [[Little Hodcombe]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Awakening (TV story)|The Awakening]]'') | * The [[Fifth Doctor]] defeated the [[Malus]] in [[Little Hodcombe]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Awakening (TV story)|The Awakening]]'') | ||
* [[Peri Brown]] and [[Katherine Chambers]] graduated from high school in [[Fell's Point]], [[Baltimore]], [[Maryland]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Reaping (audio story)|The Reaping]]'') | * [[Peri Brown]] and [[Katherine Chambers]] graduated from high school in [[Fell's Point]], [[Baltimore]], [[Maryland]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Reaping (audio story)|The Reaping]]'') | ||
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* The [[Olympic Games]], which were boycotted by the [[Russia|Soviet Union]], were held in [[Los Angeles]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Reaping (audio story)|The Reaping]]'') | * The [[Olympic Games]], which were boycotted by the [[Russia|Soviet Union]], were held in [[Los Angeles]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Reaping (audio story)|The Reaping]]'') | ||
=== | === September === | ||
* [[28 September]] - The [[Sixth Doctor]] and [[Peri Brown]] attended the funeral of [[Anthony Chambers]] in [[Fell's Point]], [[Baltimore]], [[Maryland]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Reaping (audio story)|The Reaping]]'') | * [[28 September]] - The [[Sixth Doctor]] and [[Peri Brown]] attended the funeral of [[Anthony Chambers]] in [[Fell's Point]], [[Baltimore]], [[Maryland]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Reaping (audio story)|The Reaping]]'') | ||
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== Behind the scenes == | == Behind the scenes == | ||
=== | === January === | ||
* [[5 January|05]] - [[TV]]: ''[[Warriors of the Deep]]'' Part 1 was first broadcast, launching [[Season 21]] and marking the return of the [[Sea Devil]]s and the [[Silurian]]s, races not seen since the [[Jon Pertwee]] era. | * [[5 January|05]] - [[TV]]: ''[[Warriors of the Deep]]'' Part 1 was first broadcast, launching [[Season 21]] and marking the return of the [[Sea Devil]]s and the [[Silurian]]s, races not seen since the [[Jon Pertwee]] era. | ||
* [[6 January|06]] - [[TV]]: ''[[Warriors of the Deep]]'' Part 2 was first broadcast. | * [[6 January|06]] - [[TV]]: ''[[Warriors of the Deep]]'' Part 2 was first broadcast. | ||
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* 27 - Director [[Douglas Camfield]] died. | * 27 - Director [[Douglas Camfield]] died. | ||
=== | === February === | ||
* ''Doctor Who Monthly'' changed its title to ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]''. | * ''Doctor Who Monthly'' changed its title to ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]''. | ||
* [[2 February|02]] - [[TV]]: ''[[Frontios (TV story)|Frontios]]'' Part 3 was first broadcast. | * [[2 February|02]] - [[TV]]: ''[[Frontios (TV story)|Frontios]]'' Part 3 was first broadcast. | ||
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* [[24 February|24]] - [[TV]]: ''[[Planet of Fire]]'' Part 2 was first broadcast. | * [[24 February|24]] - [[TV]]: ''[[Planet of Fire]]'' Part 2 was first broadcast. | ||
=== | === March === | ||
* [[1 March|01]] - [[TV]]: ''[[Planet of Fire]]'' Part 3 was first broadcast. | * [[1 March|01]] - [[TV]]: ''[[Planet of Fire]]'' Part 3 was first broadcast. | ||
* [[2 March|02]] - [[TV]]: ''[[Planet of Fire]]'' Part 4 was first broadcast. [[Kamelion]] was destroyed and [[Mark Strickson]] left the series. | * [[2 March|02]] - [[TV]]: ''[[Planet of Fire]]'' Part 4 was first broadcast. [[Kamelion]] was destroyed and [[Mark Strickson]] left the series. | ||
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* [[30 March|30]] - [[TV]]: ''[[The Twin Dilemma]]'' Part 4 was first broadcast, concluding Season 21. This was the last half-hour episode until [[1986]] as [[Season 22]] moved to a new format of forty-five-minute episodes. The 1984 season also marked the end of the show's twenty-four-episode long seasons. Beginning in 1985 the number of episodes was reduced to thirteen, later fourteen. A similar episode count persisted when the series returned in [[2005]]. | * [[30 March|30]] - [[TV]]: ''[[The Twin Dilemma]]'' Part 4 was first broadcast, concluding Season 21. This was the last half-hour episode until [[1986]] as [[Season 22]] moved to a new format of forty-five-minute episodes. The 1984 season also marked the end of the show's twenty-four-episode long seasons. Beginning in 1985 the number of episodes was reduced to thirteen, later fourteen. A similar episode count persisted when the series returned in [[2005]]. | ||
=== | === April === | ||
* [[2 April|2]] - [[Frank Crawshaw]] ([[Arnold Farrow]] in [[TV]]: ''[[Planet of Giants]]'') died. | * [[2 April|2]] - [[Frank Crawshaw]] ([[Arnold Farrow]] in [[TV]]: ''[[Planet of Giants]]'') died. | ||
* [[3 April|3]] - [[Chrissie Marie Fit]] (the [[Assistant (Rendition)|Assistant]] in [[TV]]: ''[[Rendition (TV story)|Rendition]]'') was born. | * [[3 April|3]] - [[Chrissie Marie Fit]] (the [[Assistant (Rendition)|Assistant]] in [[TV]]: ''[[Rendition (TV story)|Rendition]]'') was born. | ||
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* [[26 April|26]] - [[Barry Gray]], composer for ''Dr. Who'' films and Gerry Anderson projects, died. | * [[26 April|26]] - [[Barry Gray]], composer for ''Dr. Who'' films and Gerry Anderson projects, died. | ||
=== | === May === | ||
* [[3 May|03]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[Snakedance (novelisation)|Doctor Who - Snakedance]]'' was first published. With this release, [[Target Books]] returned to non-photographic covers, although for this and the next [[Fifth Doctor]] novelisation, a modified series logo incorporating a photograph of [[Peter Davison]] was utilised. | * [[3 May|03]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[Snakedance (novelisation)|Doctor Who - Snakedance]]'' was first published. With this release, [[Target Books]] returned to non-photographic covers, although for this and the next [[Fifth Doctor]] novelisation, a modified series logo incorporating a photograph of [[Peter Davison]] was utilised. | ||
* [[15 May|15]] - [[Tom Baker]] guest-starred in the American TV series, ''Remington Steele'', in the part "Hounded Steele". | * [[15 May|15]] - [[Tom Baker]] guest-starred in the American TV series, ''Remington Steele'', in the part "Hounded Steele". | ||
* [[24 May|24]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[Enlightenment (novelisation)|Doctor Who - Enlightenment]]'' was first published, a rare occasion when more than one novelisation was published at different times in a calendar month. It was the second and last use of the modified logo-and-photo branding for a [[Fifth Doctor]] novelisation and the final use of a photographic element on a ''Doctor Who'' fiction book until the [[1988]] novelisation of [[PROSE]]: ''[[Time and the Rani (novelisation)|Time and the Rani]]''. As Target was not allowed to feature artistic renderings of [[Peter Davison]] at the time, this was the last appearance of an image of the Fifth Doctor on a new novelisation, although Target was finally allowed to feature drawings of Davison when it issued new editions of many of its novelisations in the early [[1990s]]. Target chose not to include images of the [[Sixth Doctor]] on initial releases of any of that era's novelisations; as a result, no image of a current Doctor appeared on the cover of a newly issued Target novelisation until [[PROSE]]: ''[[Paradise Towers (novelisation)|Paradise Towers]]'' in December [[1988]]. | * [[24 May|24]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[Enlightenment (novelisation)|Doctor Who - Enlightenment]]'' was first published, a rare occasion when more than one novelisation was published at different times in a calendar month. It was the second and last use of the modified logo-and-photo branding for a [[Fifth Doctor]] novelisation and the final use of a photographic element on a ''Doctor Who'' fiction book until the [[1988]] novelisation of [[PROSE]]: ''[[Time and the Rani (novelisation)|Time and the Rani]]''. As Target was not allowed to feature artistic renderings of [[Peter Davison]] at the time, this was the last appearance of an image of the Fifth Doctor on a new novelisation, although Target was finally allowed to feature drawings of Davison when it issued new editions of many of its novelisations in the early [[1990s]]. Target chose not to include images of the [[Sixth Doctor]] on initial releases of any of that era's novelisations; as a result, no image of a current Doctor appeared on the cover of a newly issued Target novelisation until [[PROSE]]: ''[[Paradise Towers (novelisation)|Paradise Towers]]'' in December [[1988]]. | ||
=== | === June === | ||
* [[14 June|14]] - BBC Broadcasting Research issued a Viewing Panel Report gauging response to [[Season 21]] of ''Doctor Who'', which had included the changeover from [[Fifth Doctor]] [[Peter Davison]] to [[Sixth Doctor]] [[Colin Baker]]. The season received an Appreciation Index of 57, while newcomer Baker received a "rather cool reception" from viewers.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/archive/changingwho/10322.shtml BBC - Archive - The Changing Face of Doctor Who - Audience Response Report on 'Doctor Who' in 1984]</ref> | * [[14 June|14]] - BBC Broadcasting Research issued a Viewing Panel Report gauging response to [[Season 21]] of ''Doctor Who'', which had included the changeover from [[Fifth Doctor]] [[Peter Davison]] to [[Sixth Doctor]] [[Colin Baker]]. The season received an Appreciation Index of 57, while newcomer Baker received a "rather cool reception" from viewers.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/archive/changingwho/10322.shtml BBC - Archive - The Changing Face of Doctor Who - Audience Response Report on 'Doctor Who' in 1984]</ref> | ||
=== | === July === | ||
* [[11 July|11]] - [[Hugh Morton]], who played Sir [[James Gregson]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Seeds of Death]]'', died. | * [[11 July|11]] - [[Hugh Morton]], who played Sir [[James Gregson]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Seeds of Death]]'', died. | ||
* [[12 July|12]] - [[Florence Hoath]] ([[Nancy (The Empty Child)|Nancy]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Empty Child]]'' and [[TV]]: ''[[The Doctor Dances]]'') was born. | * [[12 July|12]] - [[Florence Hoath]] ([[Nancy (The Empty Child)|Nancy]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Empty Child]]'' and [[TV]]: ''[[The Doctor Dances]]'') was born. | ||
* [[19 July|19]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Dominators (novelisation)|Doctor Who - The Dominators]]'' was first published. It was the first non-[[Fifth Doctor]] novelisation in two years. | * [[19 July|19]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Dominators (novelisation)|Doctor Who - The Dominators]]'' was first published. It was the first non-[[Fifth Doctor]] novelisation in two years. | ||
=== | === August === | ||
* The ''[[Doctor Who Annual 1985]]'' was published. | * The ''[[Doctor Who Annual 1985]]'' was published. | ||
* [[16 August|16]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[Warriors of the Deep (novelisation)|Doctor Who - Warriors of the Deep]]'' was first published. It was the first fully-artistic [[Fifth Doctor]] novelisation cover and the first to use the new white-outline version of the Target Books logo. | * [[16 August|16]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[Warriors of the Deep (novelisation)|Doctor Who - Warriors of the Deep]]'' was first published. It was the first fully-artistic [[Fifth Doctor]] novelisation cover and the first to use the new white-outline version of the Target Books logo. | ||
=== | === September === | ||
* [[11 September|11]] - [[Troy Glasgow]] ([[Angelo (The Time of Angels)|Angelo]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Time of Angels]]'') was born. | * [[11 September|11]] - [[Troy Glasgow]] ([[Angelo (The Time of Angels)|Angelo]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Time of Angels]]'') was born. | ||
* [[20 September|20]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Aztecs (novelisation)|Doctor Who - The Aztecs]]'' was first published. It was the last book to use the colour version of the Target Books logo. | * [[20 September|20]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Aztecs (novelisation)|Doctor Who - The Aztecs]]'' was first published. It was the last book to use the colour version of the Target Books logo. | ||
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* [[26 September|26]] - [[Chandra Ruegg]] ([[Clare Pope]] in [[TV]]: ''[[Partners in Crime]]'') was born. | * [[26 September|26]] - [[Chandra Ruegg]] ([[Clare Pope]] in [[TV]]: ''[[Partners in Crime]]'') was born. | ||
=== | === October === | ||
* [[10 October|10]] - [[Joan Young]], who played [[Catherine de Medici]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve]]'', died. | * [[10 October|10]] - [[Joan Young]], who played [[Catherine de Medici]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve]]'', died. | ||
* 10 - [[Alan Lake]] ([[Herrick]] in [[TV]]: ''[[Underworld]]'') committed suicide. | * 10 - [[Alan Lake]] ([[Herrick]] in [[TV]]: ''[[Underworld]]'') committed suicide. | ||
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* [[Marvel Comics]] in the United States launched the monthly comic book ''[[Doctor Who (1984)|Doctor Who]]''. It carried colourised reprints of comic strips and other features from ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]''. Initially, [[Fourth Doctor]] material was featured. [[Fifth Doctor]] material followed the next year. | * [[Marvel Comics]] in the United States launched the monthly comic book ''[[Doctor Who (1984)|Doctor Who]]''. It carried colourised reprints of comic strips and other features from ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]''. Initially, [[Fourth Doctor]] material was featured. [[Fifth Doctor]] material followed the next year. | ||
=== | === November === | ||
* [[7 November|7]] - [[Hayden Jones]], who provided the [[Auton]] voice in [[TV]]: ''[[Terror of the Autons]]'' and played [[Lenny Vosper]] in the following story, [[TV]]: ''[[The Mind of Evil]]'', died. | * [[7 November|7]] - [[Hayden Jones]], who provided the [[Auton]] voice in [[TV]]: ''[[Terror of the Autons]]'' and played [[Lenny Vosper]] in the following story, [[TV]]: ''[[The Mind of Evil]]'', died. | ||
* [[15 November|15]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Highlanders (novelisation)|Doctor Who - The Highlanders]]'' was first published. | * [[15 November|15]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Highlanders (novelisation)|Doctor Who - The Highlanders]]'' was first published. | ||
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* [[20 November|20]] - [[Peter Welch]], who played the [[Sergeant (The Highlanders)|Sergeant]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders]]'' and [[Morgan (The Android Invasion)|Morgan]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Android Invasion]]'', died in [[Hammersmith]], [[England]]. | * [[20 November|20]] - [[Peter Welch]], who played the [[Sergeant (The Highlanders)|Sergeant]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders]]'' and [[Morgan (The Android Invasion)|Morgan]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Android Invasion]]'', died in [[Hammersmith]], [[England]]. | ||
=== | === December === | ||
* [[10 December|10]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[Frontios (novelisation)|Doctor Who - Frontios]]'' was first published. | * [[10 December|10]] - [[PROSE]]: ''[[Frontios (novelisation)|Doctor Who - Frontios]]'' was first published. | ||
* [[25 December|25]] - [[Georgia Moffett]], the daughter of [[Peter Davison]] and [[Sandra Dickinson]] and the future wife of [[David Tennant]], was born. After unsuccessfully trying out for the role of [[Rose Tyler]], Moffett played [[Jenny (The Doctor's Daughter)|Jenny]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Doctor's Daughter]]''. | * [[25 December|25]] - [[Georgia Moffett]], the daughter of [[Peter Davison]] and [[Sandra Dickinson]] and the future wife of [[David Tennant]], was born. After unsuccessfully trying out for the role of [[Rose Tyler]], Moffett played [[Jenny (The Doctor's Daughter)|Jenny]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Doctor's Daughter]]''. |
Revision as of 04:57, 31 January 2013
Timeline for 1984 |
1978 • 1979 • 1980 • 1981 • 1982 • 1983 • 1985 • 1986 • 1987 • 1988 • 1989 • 1990 |
The Sixth Doctor claimed that 1984 was "never as good as the book" of the same name by George Orwell. (AUDIO: The Reaping)
Events
May
- The Fifth Doctor defeated the Malus in Little Hodcombe. (TV: The Awakening)
- Peri Brown and Katherine Chambers graduated from high school in Fell's Point, Baltimore, Maryland. (AUDIO: The Reaping)
- 8 May - The Soviet Union withdrew from the 1984 Olympic Games. (AUDIO: The Reaping)
- 9 May - Turlough returned to Trion, Peri Brown joined the Fifth Doctor on his travels and Kamelion was destroyed. (TV: Planet of Fire, AUDIO: The Reaping)
Summer
- Between 9 May and 28 September, Peri Brown's mother Janine and Howard Foster divorced. In spite of this, Janine kept her ex-husband's surname for the rest of her life. (AUDIO: The Reaping)
- The Olympic Games, which were boycotted by the Soviet Union, were held in Los Angeles. (AUDIO: The Reaping)
September
- 28 September - The Sixth Doctor and Peri Brown attended the funeral of Anthony Chambers in Fell's Point, Baltimore, Maryland. (AUDIO: The Reaping)
Unknown dates
- H.C. Clements was bought by the Torchwood Institute. (TV: The Runaway Bride)
- With the TARDIS caught inside a time corridor, the Fifth Doctor, Tegan Jovanka and Turlough arrived in London, where they encountered canisters of Movellan virus and duplicates of humans created by the Daleks. They travelled across the corridor to meet the Daleks and their creator Davros in the future. After witnessing a huge amount of bloodshed in the early days of the Dalek Civil War, Tegan departed from the TARDIS in this year. Commander Lytton escaped from the future alive with his two police guards. (TV: Resurrection of the Daleks)
- Lucie Miller's maternal aunt Patricia Ryder, whom she called "Auntie Pat," was killed by Zygons and replaced by her Zygon husband Trevor. (AUDIO: Grand Theft Cosmos)
- Martha Jones was born. (COMIC: The Forgotten) [disputed statement]
- Indira Gandhi was serving as the Prime Minister of India during this year. As she told the Egyptian Pharaoh Erimem, Peri Brown considered her to be an effective female leader in contrast to her British counterpart and contemporary Margaret Thatcher. Given that Erimem was from the 14th century BC, she had unsurprisingly never heard of either Gandhi or Thatcher. (AUDIO: The Eye of the Scorpion)
- In 1964, Ken Temple believed that it would be possible to evacuate 1% of the human population to Venus by this year if all of Earth's fossil fuels and natural resources were used to create an interplanetary fleet. (AUDIO: The Pelage Project)
- Albert Marsden retired. He and his wife Peggy subsequently bought a cottage in the north of England. (AUDIO: Protect and Survive)
Behind the scenes
January
- 05 - TV: Warriors of the Deep Part 1 was first broadcast, launching Season 21 and marking the return of the Sea Devils and the Silurians, races not seen since the Jon Pertwee era.
- 06 - TV: Warriors of the Deep Part 2 was first broadcast.
- 12 - TV: Warriors of the Deep Part 3 was first broadcast.
- 12 - PROSE: Doctor Who - Mawdryn Undead was first published.
- 12 - The final studio recording session for TV: The Caves of Androzani was held, concluding Peter Davison's time as the Fifth Doctor.
- 13 - TV: Warriors of the Deep Part 4 was first broadcast.
- 19 - TV: The Awakening Part 1 was first broadcast. This was the final two-part Doctor Who story produced as two twenty-five-minute episodes.
- 20 - TV: The Awakening Part 2 was first broadcast.
- 26 - TV: Frontios Part 1 was first broadcast.
- 27 - TV: Frontios Part 2 was first broadcast.
- 27 - Director Douglas Camfield died.
February
- Doctor Who Monthly changed its title to Doctor Who Magazine.
- 02 - TV: Frontios Part 3 was first broadcast.
- 03 - TV: Frontios Part 4 was first broadcast.
- 07 - Production commenced on TV: The Twin Dilemma, the first story of the Colin Baker era.
- 08 - TV: Resurrection of the Daleks Part 1 was first broadcast. Due to a scheduling issue relating to the 1984 Winter Olympics, it was re-edited into two fifty-minute episodes rather than the usual four twenty-five-minute episodes. These were the first "double-length" episodes; the format was adopted permanently in the next season.
- 15 - TV: Resurrection of the Daleks Part 2 was first broadcast. Janet Fielding left the series with this episode.
- 23 - TV: Planet of Fire Part 1 was first broadcast. Nicola Bryant debuted as new companion Peri Brown.
- 24 - TV: Planet of Fire Part 2 was first broadcast.
March
- 01 - TV: Planet of Fire Part 3 was first broadcast.
- 02 - TV: Planet of Fire Part 4 was first broadcast. Kamelion was destroyed and Mark Strickson left the series.
- 08 - TV: The Caves of Androzani Part 1 was first broadcast.
- 09 - TV: The Caves of Androzani Part 2 was first broadcast.
- 15 - TV: The Caves of Androzani Part 3 was first broadcast.
- 15 - PROSE: Doctor Who - Kinda was first published. This was the last fully photographic Peter Davison cover.
- 16 - TV: The Caves of Androzani Part 4 was first broadcast, ending in Peter Davison's regeneration into Colin Baker.
- 17 - John Dearth, who provided the voice of BOSS in TV: The Green Death and portrayed Lupton in TV: Planet of the Spiders, died.
- 22 - TV: The Twin Dilemma Part 1 was first broadcast, launching the Colin Baker era. A slight modification was made to the series logo, adding a prism effect (which created the effect of it being curved); the logo used for merchandising, however, remained as per the version introduced in 1980. This was the first time since the switchover from William Hartnell to Patrick Troughton that a regeneration occurred before the end of a season, allowing the new Doctor to finish the year.
- 23 - TV: The Twin Dilemma Part 2 was first broadcast.
- 27 - Derek Francis, who played Nero in TV: The Romans, died from a heart attack in Wimbledon.
- 29 - TV: The Twin Dilemma Part 3 was first broadcast.
- 30 - TV: The Twin Dilemma Part 4 was first broadcast, concluding Season 21. This was the last half-hour episode until 1986 as Season 22 moved to a new format of forty-five-minute episodes. The 1984 season also marked the end of the show's twenty-four-episode long seasons. Beginning in 1985 the number of episodes was reduced to thirteen, later fourteen. A similar episode count persisted when the series returned in 2005.
April
- 2 - Frank Crawshaw (Arnold Farrow in TV: Planet of Giants) died.
- 3 - Chrissie Marie Fit (the Assistant in TV: Rendition) was born.
- 13 - Richard Hurndall, who had played the First Doctor in TV: The Five Doctors, died.
- 15 - Magician and comic Tommy Cooper, at one point a contender to play the Doctor, suffered a heart attack during a live TV performance and died backstage.
- 22 - Michelle Ryan, who played Christina de Souza in TV: Planet of the Dead, was born.
- 26 - Barry Gray, composer for Dr. Who films and Gerry Anderson projects, died.
May
- 03 - PROSE: Doctor Who - Snakedance was first published. With this release, Target Books returned to non-photographic covers, although for this and the next Fifth Doctor novelisation, a modified series logo incorporating a photograph of Peter Davison was utilised.
- 15 - Tom Baker guest-starred in the American TV series, Remington Steele, in the part "Hounded Steele".
- 24 - PROSE: Doctor Who - Enlightenment was first published, a rare occasion when more than one novelisation was published at different times in a calendar month. It was the second and last use of the modified logo-and-photo branding for a Fifth Doctor novelisation and the final use of a photographic element on a Doctor Who fiction book until the 1988 novelisation of PROSE: Time and the Rani. As Target was not allowed to feature artistic renderings of Peter Davison at the time, this was the last appearance of an image of the Fifth Doctor on a new novelisation, although Target was finally allowed to feature drawings of Davison when it issued new editions of many of its novelisations in the early 1990s. Target chose not to include images of the Sixth Doctor on initial releases of any of that era's novelisations; as a result, no image of a current Doctor appeared on the cover of a newly issued Target novelisation until PROSE: Paradise Towers in December 1988.
June
- 14 - BBC Broadcasting Research issued a Viewing Panel Report gauging response to Season 21 of Doctor Who, which had included the changeover from Fifth Doctor Peter Davison to Sixth Doctor Colin Baker. The season received an Appreciation Index of 57, while newcomer Baker received a "rather cool reception" from viewers.[1]
July
- 11 - Hugh Morton, who played Sir James Gregson in TV: The Seeds of Death, died.
- 12 - Florence Hoath (Nancy in TV: The Empty Child and TV: The Doctor Dances) was born.
- 19 - PROSE: Doctor Who - The Dominators was first published. It was the first non-Fifth Doctor novelisation in two years.
August
- The Doctor Who Annual 1985 was published.
- 16 - PROSE: Doctor Who - Warriors of the Deep was first published. It was the first fully-artistic Fifth Doctor novelisation cover and the first to use the new white-outline version of the Target Books logo.
September
- 11 - Troy Glasgow (Angelo in TV: The Time of Angels) was born.
- 20 - PROSE: Doctor Who - The Aztecs was first published. It was the last book to use the colour version of the Target Books logo.
- 20 - REF: Doctor Who: The Key to Time was first published.
- 26 - Chandra Ruegg (Clare Pope in TV: Partners in Crime) was born.
October
- 10 - Joan Young, who played Catherine de Medici in TV: The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve, died.
- 10 - Alan Lake (Herrick in TV: Underworld) committed suicide.
- 18 - PROSE: Doctor Who - Inferno was first published.
- REF: The Doctor Who Pattern Book was first published.
- Marvel Comics in the United States launched the monthly comic book Doctor Who. It carried colourised reprints of comic strips and other features from Doctor Who Magazine. Initially, Fourth Doctor material was featured. Fifth Doctor material followed the next year.
November
- 7 - Hayden Jones, who provided the Auton voice in TV: Terror of the Autons and played Lenny Vosper in the following story, TV: The Mind of Evil, died.
- 15 - PROSE: Doctor Who - The Highlanders was first published.
- 15 - REF: Doctor Who: Brain Teasers and Mind Benders was first published by Target Books, written by sixteen-year-old fan Adrian Heath.
- 20 - Peter Welch, who played the Sergeant in TV: The Highlanders and Morgan in TV: The Android Invasion, died in Hammersmith, England.
December
- 10 - PROSE: Doctor Who - Frontios was first published.
- 25 - Georgia Moffett, the daughter of Peter Davison and Sandra Dickinson and the future wife of David Tennant, was born. After unsuccessfully trying out for the role of Rose Tyler, Moffett played Jenny in TV: The Doctor's Daughter.
Unknown dates
- Dennis Cleary, who took the part of a peasant in TV: The Reign of Terror, died.
- Amara Karan, who played Rita in TV: The God Complex, was born.
Trivia
to be added