Tony Harding: Difference between revisions
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At the time of his initial involvement with ''Doctor Who'', he was an assistant designer in the BBC's visual effects department. He was brought into the production of ''[[The Invisible Enemy]]'' only because other visual effects personnel had begun to run late on the many models required for the show. Not knowing exactly what he would be doing on the programme, he was handed a script and told to take notice of the minimalist description of K9. From that date he had only three weeks to design and build what would become known as [[K9 Mark I]]. | At the time of his initial involvement with ''Doctor Who'', he was an assistant designer in the BBC's visual effects department. He was brought into the production of ''[[The Invisible Enemy]]'' only because other visual effects personnel had begun to run late on the many models required for the show. Not knowing exactly what he would be doing on the programme, he was handed a script and told to take notice of the minimalist description of K9. From that date he had only three weeks to design and build what would become known as [[K9 Mark I]]. | ||
== | == Credits == | ||
[[File:OriginalK9Sketch.jpg|thumb|right|Harding's original concept art for [[K9]].]] | [[File:OriginalK9Sketch.jpg|thumb|right|Harding's original concept art for [[K9]].]] | ||
* ''[[The Invisible Enemy]]'' | * ''[[The Invisible Enemy]]'' |
Revision as of 09:41, 22 November 2016
Tony Harding was the visual effects designer for several Doctor Who stories. He was the designer of K9, but has called the Malus, another of his creations, his favourite monster.
At the time of his initial involvement with Doctor Who, he was an assistant designer in the BBC's visual effects department. He was brought into the production of The Invisible Enemy only because other visual effects personnel had begun to run late on the many models required for the show. Not knowing exactly what he would be doing on the programme, he was handed a script and told to take notice of the minimalist description of K9. From that date he had only three weeks to design and build what would become known as K9 Mark I.