John Watson: Difference between revisions
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|species = Human | |species = Human | ||
|origin = [[Earth]] | |origin = [[Earth]] | ||
|appearances = [[PROSE]]: ''[[Prelude All-Consuming Fire (short story)|Prelude All-Consuming Fire]]'', ''[[All-Consuming Fire (novel)|All-Consuming Fire]]'', ''[[Happy Endings (novel)|Happy Endings]]'', ''[[The Found World (novel)|The Found World]]'', ''[[The Shape of Things (novel)|The Shape of Things]]'', ''[[A Gallery of Pigeons (short story)|A Gallery of Pigeons]]'', [[AUDIO]]: ''[[All-Consuming Fire (audio story)|All-Consuming Fire]]'' | |appearances = {{il|[[PROSE]]: ''[[Prelude All-Consuming Fire (short story)|Prelude All-Consuming Fire]]'', ''[[All-Consuming Fire (novel)|All-Consuming Fire]]'', ''[[Happy Endings (novel)|Happy Endings]]'', ''[[The Found World (novel)|The Found World]]'', ''[[The Shape of Things (novel)|The Shape of Things]]'', ''[[A Gallery of Pigeons (short story)|A Gallery of Pigeons]]'', ''[[Erasing Sherlock (novel)|Erasing Sherlock]]''|[[AUDIO]]: ''[[All-Consuming Fire (audio story)|All-Consuming Fire]]''}} | ||
|actor = | |actor = | ||
|voice actor = Richard Earl | |voice actor = Richard Earl |
Revision as of 16:08, 30 December 2016
"Dr John H. Watson M.D." was the literary alias of the assistant to the detective Sherlock Holmes. According to some accounts he was a real person with the first name of "James" who inspired a literary character. (PROSE: Prelude All-Consuming Fire) Others held that Sherlock Holmes, and therefore he himself, were entirely fictional. (TV: The Snowmen)
Biography of the "real" Watson
James studied with Arthur Conan Doyle when they attended the same medical school, (PROSE: Prelude All-Consuming Fire) Edinburgh. (PROSE: Evolution)
Watson was known for his fictionalised accounts of the adventures of his friend Sherlock Holmes that were edited by Arthur Conan Doyle, in whose name they were published. Because of this, it was widely believed both contemporaneously and later that Holmes was in fact a fictional character created by Conan Doyle. In 1887, Holmes and Watson assisted the Seventh Doctor in battling a being pretending to be the Old One called Azathoth. (PROSE: All-Consuming Fire)
Later that year, they travelled to 24 April 2010 to attend the wedding of Bernice Summerfield and Jason Kane. (PROSE: Happy Endings)
In 1888, Watson and Holmes met up with Iris Wildthyme and Panda. (PROSE: The Shape of Things)
References
After the Third Doctor negatively compared Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart to Sherlock Holmes, the Brigadier jokingly said "Come on, Dr Watson," when another power failure hit Wenley Moor nuclear research facility. (TV: Doctor Who and the Silurians)
Behind the scenes
- On both occasions of their meeting the Doctor and his associates (and during the various references to said meetings) it is suggested that Sherlock Holmes and John Watson are not in fact their real names, but the pseudonyms used in the fictional stories written about them. Information regarding their encounters with Bernice Summerfield and Ace is only provided in subjective form by Bernice herself and Watson, each of whom maintained diaries of said events. (PROSE: All-Consuming Fire, Happy Endings)
- The television story The Snowmen suggested that stories of Holmes and Watson were inspired by the adventures of Madame Vastra and Jenny Flint, which might imply that Jenny was the "real" John Watson within the context of the Doctor Who universe. The reference book Doctor Who: The Secret Lives of Monsters includes an excerpt from a book called A Study in Green in which Vastra, Jenny and Strax encounter Holmes and Watson. Jenny bought all 200 copies of the book to keep it off the shelves.
- Within the Sherlock Holmes canon, Watson is referred to as "James" in the story The Man with the Twisted Lip. The inference of its use in Prelude All-Consuming Fire is that Doyle accidentally used his friend's real name.
- Gareth David-Lloyd played Watson in the 2010 movie Sherlock Holmes. He has also been played by André Morell in the 1959 film version of The Hound of the Baskervilles, Alan Cox in Young Sherlock Holmes and Andrew Sachs on BBC Radio. He has also been played by actors such as Bill Paterson and Nigel Stock.
- According to producer Barry Letts, both Letts and script editor Terrance Dicks believed the relationship between the Third Doctor and the Brigadier had developed into one like Holmes and Watson. (DOC: Life on Earth)
- The character featured in the Sprout Boy meets a Galaxy of Stars with the likeness of Martin Freeman, whom played him in Sherlock alongside Benedict Cumberbatch.