Lenny Henry (in-universe): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary
Tag: visualeditor-wikitext
No edit summary
Tag: visualeditor-wikitext
Line 4: Line 4:
|alias        = {{il|Lenny Henry|9.5th Comic Relief Host}}
|alias        = {{il|Lenny Henry|9.5th Comic Relief Host}}
|species      = Time Lord
|species      = Time Lord
|origin        = [[Earth]]
|job          = Presenter
|only          = Lenny Henry Regenerates into David Tennant (TV story)
|only          = Lenny Henry Regenerates into David Tennant (TV story)
|clip          = Meet the 9.5th Doctor... Sir Lenny Henry 👀
|clip          = Meet the 9.5th Doctor... Sir Lenny Henry 👀

Revision as of 09:10, 18 March 2023

This subject is not a valid source for writing our in-universe articles, and may only be referenced in behind the scenes sections or other invalid-tagged articles.

You may be looking for the real Lenny Henry.

As "Sir Lenny Henry", the apparent 9.5th Doctor, and 9.5th Comic Relief Host was a presenter for Comic Relief.

While getting ready in his dressing room to host Comic Relief, he began feeling ill. Regenerating in front of a baffled production accident, he turned into a new Doctor (NOTVALID: Lenny Henry Regenerates into David Tennant) identical to the Fourteenth Doctor into whom the Thirteenth Doctor regenerated into another account. (TV: The Power of the Doctor)

Behind the scenes

Although he is called "Lenny Henry" in dialogue, Henry's character in the minisode is identified as the "9.5th Doctor" in the title of the YouTube Short upload of the regeneration scene, and as the "9.5th Comic Relief Host" in the title of the Facebook upload of the full munisode. The YouTube upload simply used the actor names, Lenny Henry and David Tennnant.

Accepting the notion that Henry is to some degree playing the Doctor in this skit, this makes the second time that he did so, as he previously portrayed a parodical Seventh Doctor in an untitled sketch. However, there is nothing to connect the two portrayals, making this similar to Jim Broadbent and Richard E Grant's two distinct portrayals of non-mainline Doctors.