User:DrWho1963: Difference between revisions

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DrWho1963 is in reality Andrew Ross Hay, a radio presenter from the Portsmouth area of Hampshire in the United Kingdom. He has been a fan of Doctor Who since he was a child of three watching The War Games in 1969. He wrote numerous Doctor Who short stories in his childhood for inclusion in various magazines and related articles. From 1983 onward his stories first focused on him being, "One potential aspect of one potential Doctor", then as being an alternate thirteenth Doctor. 1983 was also the year he began attending conventions and meeting an abundance of Doctor Who related stars. His first was at the 20 Years Of A Timelord convention at Longleat in Wiltshire.
DrWho1963 is in reality Andrew Ross Hay, a radio presenter from the Portsmouth area of Hampshire in the United Kingdom. He has been a fan of Doctor Who since he was a child of three watching The War Games in 1969. He wrote numerous Doctor Who short stories in his childhood for inclusion in various magazines and related articles, all of which were heavily influenced by the Dr Who comics that were around at the time. From 1983 onward his stories first focused on him being, "One potential aspect of one potential Doctor", then as being an alternate thirteenth Doctor. 1983 was also the year he began attending conventions and meeting an abundance of Doctor Who related stars. His first was at the 20 Years Of A Timelord convention at Longleat in Wiltshire.


In 1985, he was The Man In Blue in the audience of the televised Children In Need appeal, on the occasion that 20 Doctor Who stars were also present. In that same year he was part of two locally produced video productions, Manifestation where he played Detective Hughes and Holding Out For A Hero, where he played The Thirteenth Doctor. The following year, as a member of the Doctor Who Appreciation Society, he formed a Blackpool branch called The Good Companions Society.  
In 1985, he was The Man In Blue in the audience of the televised Children In Need appeal, on the occasion that 20 Doctor Who stars were also present. In that same year he was part of two locally produced video productions, Manifestation where he played Detective Hughes and Holding Out For A Hero, where he played The Thirteenth Doctor. The following year, as a member of the Doctor Who Appreciation Society, he formed a Blackpool branch called The Good Companions Society.  

Revision as of 10:40, 10 May 2020

DrWho1963 is in reality Andrew Ross Hay, a radio presenter from the Portsmouth area of Hampshire in the United Kingdom. He has been a fan of Doctor Who since he was a child of three watching The War Games in 1969. He wrote numerous Doctor Who short stories in his childhood for inclusion in various magazines and related articles, all of which were heavily influenced by the Dr Who comics that were around at the time. From 1983 onward his stories first focused on him being, "One potential aspect of one potential Doctor", then as being an alternate thirteenth Doctor. 1983 was also the year he began attending conventions and meeting an abundance of Doctor Who related stars. His first was at the 20 Years Of A Timelord convention at Longleat in Wiltshire.

In 1985, he was The Man In Blue in the audience of the televised Children In Need appeal, on the occasion that 20 Doctor Who stars were also present. In that same year he was part of two locally produced video productions, Manifestation where he played Detective Hughes and Holding Out For A Hero, where he played The Thirteenth Doctor. The following year, as a member of the Doctor Who Appreciation Society, he formed a Blackpool branch called The Good Companions Society.

In 1999, Hay played The Thirteenth Doctor again in short video story called Nightmare, which was set just after his regeneration in the Matrix on Gallifrey. In 2008, he put 110 of his favourite short stories together in a project he called Tales From The Tardis [Not to be confused with any other project of the same name]. This provided an ongoing timeline from his earliest writings as a potential Doctor, to his characters ultimate demise. As a radio host Andrew Ross Hay interviewed several Doctor Who stars for his Newsweek and Community Matters programme.

In 2018, Andrew attempted to put together an internationally produced online audio series but sadly it never materialised. He did however eventually come up with scripts for four full length, six part stories entitled The Nightmare Begins, The Vines Of Death, Time Of The Quarks and Circus Of Death. Loving the Dr Who comics that were around in his childhood, The Thirteenth Doctor has as his companions, Mary Stone and his grandchildren John and Gillian.