The Wings of a Butterfly (audio story): Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox Story SMW | |||
{{Infobox Story | |||
|image = | |image = | ||
|series = [[Short Trips (series)|Short Trips]] | |range = Short Trips (series) | ||
|anthology | |series in range = Short Trips - Volume I | ||
|series number in range = 1 | |||
|number in series = 6 | |||
|series = ''[[Short Trips (series)|Short Trips]]'' | |||
|audio anthology = Short Trips - Volume I | |||
|number = | |number = | ||
|doctor = Sixth Doctor | |doctor = Sixth Doctor | ||
|companions = | |companions = | ||
|enemy = | |enemy = | ||
|setting = [[Bixor]] | |setting = {{il|[[Bixor]]|[[Gallifrey]]}} | ||
|writer = | |writer = Colin Baker | ||
|director = [[Nicholas Briggs]] | |director = [[Nicholas Briggs]] | ||
|read by = [[Colin Baker]] | |read by = [[Colin Baker]] | ||
Line 17: | Line 20: | ||
|sound = [[Nicholas Briggs]] | |sound = [[Nicholas Briggs]] | ||
|publisher = Big Finish Productions | |publisher = Big Finish Productions | ||
|release date = | |release date = 5 November 2010 | ||
|format = 1 X 19 min. | |format = 1 X 19 min. | ||
|production code = | |production code = | ||
Line 23: | Line 26: | ||
|prev = The Deep (audio story) | |prev = The Deep (audio story) | ||
|next = Police and Shreeves (audio story) | |next = Police and Shreeves (audio story) | ||
}}'''''The Wings of a Butterfly''''' was a 2010 audio short story written and performed by [[Colin Baker]] for [[Big Finish]]. It featured a [[companion]]-less [[Sixth Doctor]]. Written about the year 2000, and previously published in the unlicensed anthology, ''Missing Pieces'', the story explored the Doctor's willingness to change the flow of time in ways not authorised by the [[High Council]] of the [[Time Lord]]s. | }}{{Spotify|album=6vq69dSPv9AMFVvCRaFdjx|height=350}} | ||
'''''The Wings of a Butterfly''''' was a 2010 audio short story written and performed by [[Colin Baker]] for [[Big Finish]]. It featured a [[companion]]-less [[Sixth Doctor]]. Written about the year 2000, and previously published in the unlicensed anthology, ''Missing Pieces'', the story explored the Doctor's willingness to change the flow of time in ways not authorised by the [[High Council]] of the [[Time Lord]]s. | |||
== Summary == | == Summary == | ||
Visiting [[Gallifrey]] to attend an academic conference, the [[Sixth Doctor]]'s old friend and mentor, [[Duotheros]], requests that he use | Visiting [[Gallifrey]] to attend an academic conference, the [[Sixth Doctor]]'s old friend and mentor, [[Duotheros]], requests that he use [[the Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]] to examine a temporal anomaly centred on [[Bixor]]. The planet, once thriving, appears to have mysteriously eradicated itself, substantially reducing the number of people interested in buying Duotheros' definitive history of that sector of space. Will the Doctor's investigations reveal the cause? Or does Bixor's untimely demise have something to do with a certain blue box? | ||
== Plot == | == Plot == | ||
After giving a presentation at the [[Time Lord]] | After giving a presentation at the [[Time Lord Academy]], [[Duotheros]] invites his former student, [[Sixth Doctor|the Doctor]], to his study quarters to ask him a favour. Duotheros had been studying the history of the planet [[Bixor]], when it was suddenly destroyed by an unknown event on the planet. As the Doctor was less inclined to ignore the mystery of the planet's destruction, compared to other Time Lords, Duotheros had decided to ask the Doctor to head to Bixor to discover the cause of its destruction. The Doctor agrees to the request and departs. Duotheros thinks about what he has just done, and, considering the Doctor's tendency to get involved with things he shouldn't, quickly changes his mind, heading to the door to call the Doctor back. Upon opening the door, he finds out he is too late, for standing outside the door is the Doctor, having just returned from Bixor. The two step back into the study. | ||
The Doctor explains what happened to Bixor. Its destruction was caused by a incorrectly made pair of trousers. A man had been wearing the trousers while walking on a crowded street, when the trousers fell down. People noticed and stopped to laugh at him. While they were all distracted, a pickpocket stole keys from the pocket of one of the laughing people. Upon discovering the car the keys belonged to, the pickpocket gave his bicycle to a nearby boy, before driving off in the stolen car. The boy, not used to riding a bicycle, was unsteady on it, and accidentally rode it out into the road, into the path of a large truck. The truck swerved to avoid the boy, accidentally crashing into a substation, causing a power outage to an entire manufacturing sector. It took hours for the damage to be repaired. | The Doctor explains what happened to Bixor. Its destruction was caused by a incorrectly made pair of trousers. A man had been wearing the trousers while walking on a crowded street, when the trousers fell down. People noticed and stopped to laugh at him. While they were all distracted, a pickpocket stole keys from the pocket of one of the laughing people. Upon discovering the car the keys belonged to, the pickpocket gave his bicycle to a nearby boy, before driving off in the stolen car. The boy, not used to riding a bicycle, was unsteady on it, and accidentally rode it out into the road, into the path of a large truck. The truck swerved to avoid the boy, accidentally crashing into a substation, causing a power outage to an entire manufacturing sector. It took hours for the damage to be repaired. | ||
One of the facilities affected was a vector module assembly plant. When the power was restored, the machinery in the factory sprung back to life, implanting sixteen modules with double printed circuits, which were subsequently installed into the guidance system of an aerial transport drone. The drone's function was to transport dangerous materials to the capital's central nuclear power generation plant. The drone's main system developed a fault, leading to the activation of the backup, double printed modules. When this occurred, the drone was flying over Bixor's only active volcanic fissure. The drone accelerated to sub-light speed and dove into the fissure. The dangerous materials reacted with the planet's magma, causing a chain reaction that destroyed Bixor. | One of the facilities affected was a vector module assembly plant. When the power was restored, the machinery in the factory sprung back to life, implanting sixteen modules with double printed circuits, which were subsequently installed into the guidance system of an aerial transport drone. The drone's function was to transport dangerous materials to the capital's central nuclear power generation plant. The drone's main system developed a fault, leading to the activation of the backup, double printed modules. When this occurred, the drone was flying over Bixor's only active volcanic fissure. The drone accelerated to sub-light speed and dove into the fissure. The dangerous materials reacted with the planet's magma, causing a chain reaction that destroyed Bixor. | ||
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Duotheros is shocked upon hearing this. For Bixor, a world whose inhabitants were supposed to create great things, to be wiped out thanks to a pair of trousers is horrific. The Doctor offers to travel back to Bixor to make a "trouser adjustment". As the destruction of Bixor has only just been discovered, the record of the event hasn't be uploaded to [[the Matrix]] yet, so the Time Lords won't know of him making such a change. Duotheros thinks about it and decides to take the risk. | Duotheros is shocked upon hearing this. For Bixor, a world whose inhabitants were supposed to create great things, to be wiped out thanks to a pair of trousers is horrific. The Doctor offers to travel back to Bixor to make a "trouser adjustment". As the destruction of Bixor has only just been discovered, the record of the event hasn't be uploaded to [[the Matrix]] yet, so the Time Lords won't know of him making such a change. Duotheros thinks about it and decides to take the risk. | ||
Upon returning to Bixor, the Doctor discovers why the trousers were incorrectly made, and swears to never do a | Upon returning to Bixor, the Doctor discovers why the trousers were incorrectly made, and swears to never do a favour for any old friends ever again. The trousers had been incorrectly made, because the worker who created the trousers had been distracted by a sight outside her window, the sight of [[the Doctor's TARDIS]] materialising outside the building. She had witnessed the Doctor's original arrival to Bixor, and it had been the Doctor's arrival to discover the cause of Bixor's destruction that had actually been the cause of its destruction. | ||
Knowing this, the Doctor travels back in time 30 years before his original arrival. He then plants a tree outside the building, one that would grow and block the window, preventing the worker from being distracted by his arrival resulting in the trousers being correctly made, averting the destruction of Bixor. The Doctor heads back to the TARDIS, only to discover something horrible. He had parked the TARDIS near another manufacturing plant, and multiple workers were staring out of their windows at him, meaning his second arrival had also been witnessed and had distracted some workers. | Knowing this, the Doctor travels back in time 30 years before his original arrival. He then plants a tree outside the building, one that would grow and block the window, preventing the worker from being distracted by his arrival resulting in the trousers being correctly made, averting the destruction of Bixor. The Doctor heads back to the TARDIS, only to discover something horrible. He had parked the TARDIS near another manufacturing plant, and multiple workers were staring out of their windows at him, meaning his second arrival had also been witnessed and had distracted some workers. | ||
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* [[Duotheros]] | * [[Duotheros]] | ||
== | == Worldbuilding == | ||
* The word ''[[Tellurian]]'' is used to indicate "[[Earth]]-like" or "from Earth". | * The word ''[[Tellurian]]'' is used to indicate "[[Earth]]-like" or "from Earth". | ||
* The Doctor feels like he's playing a [[long game]]. | * The Doctor feels like he's playing a [[long game]]. | ||
* Duotheros has studied the [[rim galaxies]]. | * Duotheros has studied the [[rim galaxies]]. | ||
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* Colin Baker talked at length about this story on the [http://www.bigfinish.com/podcast/Colin-Baker-Podcast-14-September-2010 14 September 2010 edition of the Big Finish Podcast]. | * Colin Baker talked at length about this story on the [http://www.bigfinish.com/podcast/Colin-Baker-Podcast-14-September-2010 14 September 2010 edition of the Big Finish Podcast]. | ||
* In that interview, he claimed the story had originated as a commission by [[Gary Russell]] for ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]''. However, it didn't get published, because Russell left DWM before Baker had completed the story. In the Big Finish interview, he claims that the story was originally written "in [Microsoft] Word 2". If true, that would either date the story to around the time of Baker's tenure on the television programme — and well before Russell's editorship of the magazine — or it would indicate that he had a relatively dated computer system in the 1990s. In any event, Baker claimed to have had to go to some special effort to convert the story to a format readable by a modern computer. | * In that interview, he claimed the story had originated as a commission by [[Gary Russell]] for ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]''. However, it didn't get published, because Russell left DWM before Baker had completed the story. In the Big Finish interview, he claims that the story was originally written "in [Microsoft] Word 2". If true, that would either date the story to around the time of Baker's tenure on the television programme — and well before Russell's editorship of the magazine — or it would indicate that he had a relatively dated computer system in the 1990s. In any event, Baker claimed to have had to go to some special effort to convert the story to a format readable by a modern computer. | ||
* The story was not the same as he had originally devised, because he was originally writing for the shorter word counts of DWM | * The story was not the same as he had originally devised, because he was originally writing for the shorter word counts of DWM. | ||
* The podcast interview further positively identifies [[Nicholas Briggs]] as the director of this piece. | * The podcast interview further positively identifies [[Nicholas Briggs]] as the director of this piece. | ||
* ''The Wings of a Butterfly'' contains no reference to any [[companion]] or any televised or audio adventure. The "Continuity Guide" to ''[[Missing Pieces (anthology)|Missing Pieces]]'' set the story "prior to ''[[Business Unusual (novel)|Business Unusual]]''", a [[BBC Past Doctor Adventures]] novel by [[Gary Russell]] published in [[1 September (releases)|September]] [[1997 (releases)|1997]]. | |||
* ''The Wings of a Butterfly'' contains no reference to any [[companion]] or any televised or audio adventure. | |||
== Continuity == | == Continuity == | ||
* The Sixth Doctor's attitude towards changing history is the polar opposite of that expressed by the [[First Doctor]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Aztecs]]'') | * The Sixth Doctor's attitude towards changing history is the polar opposite of that expressed by the [[First Doctor]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Aztecs (TV story)|The Aztecs]]'') | ||
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{{TitleSort}} | |||
[[Category:Short Trips: Volume 1 audio stories]] | |||
[[Category:Sixth Doctor audio stories]] | [[Category:Sixth Doctor audio stories]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Audio stories set on Gallifrey]] | ||
[[Category:Audio stories that use the Dominic Glynn theme]] | [[Category:Audio stories that use the Dominic Glynn theme]] | ||
[[Category:Time Lord audio stories]] |
Latest revision as of 22:08, 6 March 2024
The Wings of a Butterfly was a 2010 audio short story written and performed by Colin Baker for Big Finish. It featured a companion-less Sixth Doctor. Written about the year 2000, and previously published in the unlicensed anthology, Missing Pieces, the story explored the Doctor's willingness to change the flow of time in ways not authorised by the High Council of the Time Lords.
Summary[[edit] | [edit source]]
Visiting Gallifrey to attend an academic conference, the Sixth Doctor's old friend and mentor, Duotheros, requests that he use the TARDIS to examine a temporal anomaly centred on Bixor. The planet, once thriving, appears to have mysteriously eradicated itself, substantially reducing the number of people interested in buying Duotheros' definitive history of that sector of space. Will the Doctor's investigations reveal the cause? Or does Bixor's untimely demise have something to do with a certain blue box?
Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]
After giving a presentation at the Time Lord Academy, Duotheros invites his former student, the Doctor, to his study quarters to ask him a favour. Duotheros had been studying the history of the planet Bixor, when it was suddenly destroyed by an unknown event on the planet. As the Doctor was less inclined to ignore the mystery of the planet's destruction, compared to other Time Lords, Duotheros had decided to ask the Doctor to head to Bixor to discover the cause of its destruction. The Doctor agrees to the request and departs. Duotheros thinks about what he has just done, and, considering the Doctor's tendency to get involved with things he shouldn't, quickly changes his mind, heading to the door to call the Doctor back. Upon opening the door, he finds out he is too late, for standing outside the door is the Doctor, having just returned from Bixor. The two step back into the study.
The Doctor explains what happened to Bixor. Its destruction was caused by a incorrectly made pair of trousers. A man had been wearing the trousers while walking on a crowded street, when the trousers fell down. People noticed and stopped to laugh at him. While they were all distracted, a pickpocket stole keys from the pocket of one of the laughing people. Upon discovering the car the keys belonged to, the pickpocket gave his bicycle to a nearby boy, before driving off in the stolen car. The boy, not used to riding a bicycle, was unsteady on it, and accidentally rode it out into the road, into the path of a large truck. The truck swerved to avoid the boy, accidentally crashing into a substation, causing a power outage to an entire manufacturing sector. It took hours for the damage to be repaired.
One of the facilities affected was a vector module assembly plant. When the power was restored, the machinery in the factory sprung back to life, implanting sixteen modules with double printed circuits, which were subsequently installed into the guidance system of an aerial transport drone. The drone's function was to transport dangerous materials to the capital's central nuclear power generation plant. The drone's main system developed a fault, leading to the activation of the backup, double printed modules. When this occurred, the drone was flying over Bixor's only active volcanic fissure. The drone accelerated to sub-light speed and dove into the fissure. The dangerous materials reacted with the planet's magma, causing a chain reaction that destroyed Bixor.
Duotheros is shocked upon hearing this. For Bixor, a world whose inhabitants were supposed to create great things, to be wiped out thanks to a pair of trousers is horrific. The Doctor offers to travel back to Bixor to make a "trouser adjustment". As the destruction of Bixor has only just been discovered, the record of the event hasn't be uploaded to the Matrix yet, so the Time Lords won't know of him making such a change. Duotheros thinks about it and decides to take the risk.
Upon returning to Bixor, the Doctor discovers why the trousers were incorrectly made, and swears to never do a favour for any old friends ever again. The trousers had been incorrectly made, because the worker who created the trousers had been distracted by a sight outside her window, the sight of the Doctor's TARDIS materialising outside the building. She had witnessed the Doctor's original arrival to Bixor, and it had been the Doctor's arrival to discover the cause of Bixor's destruction that had actually been the cause of its destruction.
Knowing this, the Doctor travels back in time 30 years before his original arrival. He then plants a tree outside the building, one that would grow and block the window, preventing the worker from being distracted by his arrival resulting in the trousers being correctly made, averting the destruction of Bixor. The Doctor heads back to the TARDIS, only to discover something horrible. He had parked the TARDIS near another manufacturing plant, and multiple workers were staring out of their windows at him, meaning his second arrival had also been witnessed and had distracted some workers.
The Doctor knows he can't risk that this event could once more lead to Bixor's destruction, so he decides to take no chances. He travels back in time one day, in the middle of the night, away from any building. He then walks back to the site of his second arrival and sets up a series of mirrors to obscure the spot where the TARDIS will appear, preventing the workers from seeing his arrival. Upon finishing, the Doctor returns to the TARDIS and departs, heading back to Gallifrey. Upon arriving, he is greeted by Duotheros, who has no recollection of the timeline in which Bixor was destroyed, or of having met with the Doctor anytime recently.
Characters[[edit] | [edit source]]
Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The word Tellurian is used to indicate "Earth-like" or "from Earth".
- The Doctor feels like he's playing a long game.
- Duotheros has studied the rim galaxies.
Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Colin Baker talked at length about this story on the 14 September 2010 edition of the Big Finish Podcast.
- In that interview, he claimed the story had originated as a commission by Gary Russell for Doctor Who Magazine. However, it didn't get published, because Russell left DWM before Baker had completed the story. In the Big Finish interview, he claims that the story was originally written "in [Microsoft] Word 2". If true, that would either date the story to around the time of Baker's tenure on the television programme — and well before Russell's editorship of the magazine — or it would indicate that he had a relatively dated computer system in the 1990s. In any event, Baker claimed to have had to go to some special effort to convert the story to a format readable by a modern computer.
- The story was not the same as he had originally devised, because he was originally writing for the shorter word counts of DWM.
- The podcast interview further positively identifies Nicholas Briggs as the director of this piece.
- The Wings of a Butterfly contains no reference to any companion or any televised or audio adventure. The "Continuity Guide" to Missing Pieces set the story "prior to Business Unusual", a BBC Past Doctor Adventures novel by Gary Russell published in September 1997.
Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Sixth Doctor's attitude towards changing history is the polar opposite of that expressed by the First Doctor. (TV: The Aztecs)
|