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* [[Gareth David-Lloyd]] played Watson in the 2010 movie {{wi|Sherlock Holmes (2010 film)|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]], [[Nigel Stock]] and [[Robert Daws]].
* [[Gareth David-Lloyd]] played Watson in the 2010 movie {{wi|Sherlock Holmes (2010 film)|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]], [[Nigel Stock]] and [[Robert Daws]].
* 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]]'')
* 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 (TV story)|Sprout Boy meets a Galaxy of Stars]]'' with the likeness of [[Martin Freeman]], whom played him in ''Sherlock'' alongside [[Benedict Cumberbatch]].
* The character featured in the ''[[Sprout Boy meets a Galaxy of Stars (TV story)|Sprout Boy meets a Galaxy of Stars]]'' bears a likeness of [[Martin Freeman]], whom played Watson in ''[[Sherlock]]'' alongside [[Benedict Cumberbatch]].


== External link ==
== External link ==

Revision as of 07:35, 30 May 2018

John Watson

"Dr John Hamish Watson M.D." (PROSE: A Gallery of Pigeons) 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

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, he was asked by the Pope to investigate the missing books at the Library of St John the Beheaded. At the library, he encountered the Seventh Doctor who told him that he would help him find what he was looking for. He went with the Doctor to question Kate Prendersly before she spontaneously combusted. He witnessed an apparition when he and Holmes were following Baron Maupertuis and saw the doorman combust. On discovering that Holmes' brother Sherringford Holmes was involved, he accompanied the Doctor to Bombay encountering Bernice Summerfield, of whom he was enamoured. They then rode a Rakshassa through the portal. Arriving in Ry'leh, he went to spy on the enemy camp and was captured, but was rescued by Ace. They then climbed a mountain to the Rakshassha base. He watched Tir Ram transform into a Rakshassha. After the being known as Azathoth was defeated, he bought Benny dinner. (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)

By 1893, John had married Mary Watson. In the spring of this year, John was on a cruise with her when Bernice Summerfield tried to contact him. (AUDIO: The Adventure of the Diogenes Damsel)

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

External link