The Doctor (Seven Keys to Doomsday): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
(Added written details about Michael Sagar's version of this Doctor.)
No edit summary
Line 6: Line 6:
|only = Seven Keys to Doomsday (audio story)
|only = Seven Keys to Doomsday (audio story)
|voice actor = Trevor Martin
|voice actor = Trevor Martin
}}{{ImageLink}}{{Doctors}}One incarnation of '''the Doctor''', following his [[regeneration]], met new [[companion]]s [[Jenny (The Seven Keys to Doomsday)|Jenny]] and [[Jimmy (The Seven Keys to Doomsday)|Jimmy]]. In [[the TARDIS]], they traveled to the [[planet]] [[Karn]], where they prevented the [[Dalek]]s from gaining the [[Crystal of All Power]].
}}{{ImageLink}}{{Doctors}}One incarnation of '''the Doctor''', following his [[regeneration]], met new [[companion]]s [[Jenny (The Seven Keys to Doomsday)|Jenny]] and [[Jimmy (The Seven Keys to Doomsday)|Jimmy]]. In [[the TARDIS]], they travelled to the [[planet]] [[Karn]], where they prevented the [[Dalek]]s from gaining the [[Crystal of All Power]].


This incarnation of the Doctor resembled a middle-aged man, with a hoarse voice. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Seven Keys to Doomsday (audio story)|Seven Keys to Doomsday]]'')
This incarnation of the Doctor resembled a middle-aged man, with a hoarse voice. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Seven Keys to Doomsday (audio story)|Seven Keys to Doomsday]]'')

Revision as of 11:46, 12 November 2019

CharStub.png

One incarnation of the Doctor, following his regeneration, met new companions Jenny and Jimmy. In the TARDIS, they travelled to the planet Karn, where they prevented the Daleks from gaining the Crystal of All Power.

This incarnation of the Doctor resembled a middle-aged man, with a hoarse voice. (AUDIO: Seven Keys to Doomsday)

Behind the scenes

This incarnation of the Doctor originated in the stage play Doctor Who and the Daleks in Seven Keys to Doomsday, in which he was implied to have followed Jon Pertwee's Third Doctor. The stage play version of this character, therefore, was the Fourth Doctor before Tom Baker was cast as the true Fourth Doctor for television. In the audio adaptation, an unidentified incarnation of the Time Lord, played by Nicholas Briggs, preceded him.

The Doctor was played by several other actors in later worldwide performances of the original play, including Michael Sagar in the 1984 production of the play in Porirua, New Zealand. Sagar portrayed the Doctor wearing a checkered suit and sporting a black mustache, giving him an overall look clearly distinct from Trevor Martin's take.[1]

Footnotes