DWM 333: Difference between revisions

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Issue '''333''' of ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' was current [[24 July (releases)|24 July]] through [[20 August (releases)|20 August]] [[2003 (releases)|2003]]. It detailed the release of the [[webcast]] ''[[Scream of the Shalka]]'', and revealed [[Richard E. Grant]] would be playing what would have been considered an officially-licensed [[Shalka Doctor|ninth Doctor]]. Ironically, this announcement of a Ninth Doctor would soon be rendered moot, when [[Russell T Davies]] succeeded at getting ''[[Doctor Who]]'' back on the air.
Issue '''333''' of ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' was current [[24 July (releases)|24 July]] through [[20 August (releases)|20 August]] [[2003 (releases)|2003]]. It detailed the release of the [[webcast]] ''[[Scream of the Shalka]]'', and revealed [[Richard E. Grant]] would be playing what would have been considered an officially-licensed [[Shalka Doctor|ninth Doctor]]. Ironically, this announcement of a Ninth Doctor would soon be rendered moot, when [[Russell T Davies]] was given permission to produce a brand new series of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' and get it back on the air.


== Contents ==
== Contents ==

Revision as of 23:50, 21 June 2014

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Issue 333 of Doctor Who Magazine was current 24 July through 20 August 2003. It detailed the release of the webcast Scream of the Shalka, and revealed Richard E. Grant would be playing what would have been considered an officially-licensed ninth Doctor. Ironically, this announcement of a Ninth Doctor would soon be rendered moot, when Russell T Davies was given permission to produce a brand new series of Doctor Who and get it back on the air.

Contents

Articles

  • The Accidental Tourist - Was it Doctor Who's destiny to run on British television for 28 years and to become a national treasure? Or was the secret to the show's success merely down to a string of random coincidences? In the first of a three-part series, Daniel O'Mahony travels back to early 1963 and discovers that we were lucky to see the series at all.

Comic content

Archives

Profiles / Interviews

  • Time Gentleman - By 1995, Mark Gatiss had already made quite a name for himself in the Doctor Who world, and was about to become a bigger name in the world at large. Here, in the second part of our in-depth interview, he tells Anthony K McCail about sidesteps to Vancouver, spastic shoes, Spitfires, sentient clouds and stepping inside the spaceship...

Reviews

Previews

Regular features

Credits

Additional details

to be added