Wilfred Mott: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(654 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{subpage tabs}}
{{ImageLink}}
{{Infobox Individual
{{Infobox Individual
|individual name= Wilfred Mott
|image       = Wilf salutes.jpg
|image=[[Image:Wilfred Mott.jpg|250px]]
|alias      = Paratroop One
|race= [[Human]]
|species    = Human
|home planet= [[Earth]]
|origin      = [[Earth]]
|home era= Early [[21st century]]
|birth date  = [[1928]] or [[1929]]
|appearances= [[DW]]: ''[[Voyage of the Damned]]''
|spouse      = Eileen Mott
|actor= [[Bernard Cribbins]]
|child      = Sylvia Noble
|grandchild  = Donna Noble
|great-grandchild = Rose Noble
|in-law      = Geoff Noble
|first cs    = Voyage of the Damned (TV story)
|appearances = {{appears}}
|actor       = Bernard Cribbins
|clip        = Merry Christmas Doctor! - Doctor Who The End of Time - BBC
}}
}}
{{counterparts |name=Wilfred Mott|2=Wilfred Mott (Turn Left)|d2=''Turn Left''|3=Wilfred Mott#Four Doctors (Time Lord Victorious) |d3=''Four Doctors''}}
'''Wilfred Mott''' was the [[husband]] of [[Eileen Mott]], the [[father]] of [[Sylvia Noble]], the maternal [[grandfather]] of [[Donna Noble]] and great-grandfather of [[Rose Noble]].
He was also a one-time travelling [[companion]] of the [[Tenth Doctor]], and the final companion with whom the Doctor travelled in that incarnation. Unlike many of the people of Earth, Wilfred was willing to believe aliens would come in peace one day, and that humanity would eventually travel out to the stars and mingle with them.
A witness to several [[alien invasion]]s of [[Earth]], he was instrumental in stopping the [[Time Lord]]s' return from within the [[time-lock]] which had sealed them in the [[Last Great Time War]]. In that effort, he trapped himself in a chamber about to be flooded with lethal [[radiation]]. His rescue was the proximate cause of the Tenth Doctor's [[regeneration]] into his [[Eleventh Doctor|eleventh incarnation]]. Fifteen years later he would get the chance to see the Doctor again, having recently regenerated into his [[Fourteenth Doctor|fourteenth incarnation]] and bearing the face of the Tenth Doctor once again.
== Biography ==
=== Early life ===
Wilf was born circa [[1928]]-[[1929|29]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Star Beast (TV story)|timestamp=00:24:00}})
[[Donna Noble]] stated that he had enlisted to fight in [[World War II]] while underage. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nemonite Invasion (audio story)}}) By [[1948]], Wilf was a private in the 6th Airborne Division of the [[British Army]], stationed in the British Mandate of [[Palestine]] at its end. According to a [[The Woman (The End of Time)|mysterious Time Lady]], Wilf had served in the military without once taking a life, a fact Wilf defended, feeling proud not to have killed anyone. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The End of Time (TV story)}})
=== Family life ===
At some point, Wilf met [[Eileen Mott|Eileen]] and had a daughter named [[Sylvia Noble|Sylvia]] with her. He said that his time with his wife was the most wonderful years he had and that the time with her flew by. He never shouted at Sylvia during her childhood. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|In the Blood (novel)}})
When his granddaughter, [[Donna Noble]], was in [[primary school]], Wilf objected to her being taught to sing "[[Wild Blue Yonder (song)|Wild Blue Yonder]]" for the [[choir]], telling the head of the choir, [[Bean (Wild Blue Yonder)|Mrs Bean]], that it was a [[military]] song about going to [[war]], but Mrs Bean defended it as sounding [[jolly]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)}})
In the [[2006]] elections, after the death of [[Tony Blair|the British Prime Minister]] at the hands of the [[Slitheen family]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Aliens of London (TV story)}}) Wilfred claimed to have voted for [[Harriet Jones]], though Sylvia disputed this. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Stolen Earth (TV story)}}) On [[24 December|Christmas Eve]] [[2007]], Wilfred was laid up with [[Spanish influenza|Spanish flu]], unable to attend his granddaughter's wedding. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Sontaran Stratagem (TV story)}}) Sometime later, Eileen died. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Beautiful Chaos (novel)}})
=== Meeting the Doctor ===
[[File:WilfV.jpg|thumb|left|Wilfred meets the [[Tenth Doctor]] and [[Astrid Peth]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Voyage of the Damned (TV story)}})]]
During another Christmas Eve,<!--While "last year" is stated in Voyage, the exact chronology is iffy. See Behind the scenes.--> while most of [[London]] had fled to the countryside to avoid a potential third alien invasion after the previous Christmastime attacks from the [[Sycorax]] and the [[Racnoss]], Wilf remained to man his [[newspaper stand]]. During the night, he was approached by the [[Tenth Doctor]] and [[Astrid Peth]], and told them he was the only person in London apart from Queen [[Elizabeth II]] in [[Buckingham Palace]]. After he explained to them why London was empty, they were teleported away after the Doctor told him not to worry. The next day, Wilf saw the ''[[Titanic (spaceship)|Titanic]]'' hurtled over London, yelling for the aliens not to ruin Christmas. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Voyage of the Damned (TV story)}})
An amateur [[astronomer]] and keen [[Stargazing|stargazer]], Wilf pitched a tent behind his daughter's house in [[Chiswick]] and spent most of his nights on top a hill with a [[telescope]] looking for aliens among the stars. Donna waved to him from [[the Doctor's TARDIS]] while flying away. Seeing the Doctor again through his telescope, Wilf felt happy for his granddaughter for being able to travel the universe, yelling and cheering as the TARDIS took off. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Partners in Crime (TV story)}})
=== Supporting Donna's travels ===
Donna visited her mother and him after she had returned to Earth. She told Wilf, but not her mother about the Doctor, for fear she would react badly. She told him about [[ATMOS]] and what they were doing. When the Doctor turned up with a UNIT soldier, Wilfred realised the Doctor was the same man he had met at Christmas. He opened the family car to investigate an ATMOS device and was trapped inside when it was triggered. He began to suffocate ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Sontaran Stratagem (TV story)}}) but was freed by his daughter [[Sylvia Noble]]. The next day he told Donna he would keep her secret and not tell her mother. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Poison Sky (TV story)}})
Wilfred featured on the home improvement, reality TV series ''[[Haunted Makeovers]] ''alongside Sylvia, the Doctor and Donna. The Doctor and Donna were investigating the haunting of Morley mansion. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|No Place (audio story)}})
At some point, Wilfred discovered a new star, which was named after him. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Beautiful Chaos (novel)}})
=== The Dalek invasion ===
[[File:WilfSylviaSE.jpg|thumb|left|Wilf and Sylvia square off against the Daleks. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Stolen Earth (TV story)}})]]
When the Earth was moved into the [[Medusa Cascade]], he and Sylvia tried to fight the [[Dalek]]s. Wilf fired a paintball at a Dalek's eyestalk, hoping to blind it, but it dissolved the paint. As it was about to exterminate him, [[Rose Tyler]] teleported to the scene and killed the Dalek. Sylvia and Wilf took her to their home. A message came from a [[Sub-Wave Network]]. They couldn't respond, as Sylvia thought [[webcam]]s were "naughty" and didn't let her father have one. He watched as [[Martha Jones]] and [[Francine Jones|her mother]], [[Torchwood Three]] and [[Sarah Jane Smith]] spoke with [[Harriet Jones]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Stolen Earth (TV story)}}) After the Earth was returned to its proper place, they celebrated. When the Doctor brought Donna back to them without any memory of her adventures with him, Wilf was distraught at the thought of her returning to her previous life. He promised to look up at the sky every night and remember the Doctor on Donna's behalf. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Journey's End (TV story)}})
=== Helping the Doctor ===
[[File:WilfSeesTheWoman.jpg|thumb|Wilfred's surprised to see [[The Woman (The End of Time)|the Woman]] on [[television]] instead of [[Elizabeth II|the Queen]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The End of Time (TV story)}})]]
As Christmas approached, Wilf, along with everyone else on Earth, began having nightmares involving the laughing face of {{Simm}}. Seeking refuge in a church, he was approached by a [[The Woman (The End of Time)|mysterious woman]], who told him the church had been a convent in the 1300s, had been attacked by a demon from the sky and saved by a "sainted physician"; then she vanished. The next day, Wilf organised a "[[Silver Cloak]]" of old age pensioners. He quickly found the Doctor and in a café learned of his prophesied death. On Christmas morning, Wilf was watching the Queen's speech when it was interrupted by the mysterious woman, whom only he could see. She told Wilf he would have to take up arms, that the Doctor could still be saved and that Wilf must not tell the Doctor anything of what she had said. Wilf took his [[firearm|old service revolver]], met the Doctor outside the Noble house and joined him in tracking down the Master.
[[File:DoctorAndWilfred.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor and Wilfred resolve to stop the Master. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The End of Time (TV story)}})]]
They arrived too late to stop the Master turning every human on Earth into a duplicate of himself, but Wilf was protected from the effect behind a radiation shield. He escaped with the Doctor to a spaceship. During this time, Wilf and the Doctor felt they would both be proud to have been related to each other. After another encounter with the woman, he gave the Doctor his gun and urged him to kill the Master. The Doctor initially refused, but on learning the Time Lords were behind everything, he took the gun.
In the fight that followed, Earth shot missiles at the ship. Wilf manned one of the guns and had the aliens land so he could join the Doctor. He freed someone trapped in the radiation booth, but as a result was himself trapped. After he witnessed the Doctor and the Master defeat {{Dalton}} and the Time Lords, Wilf then knocked on the booth door four times to be let out, unknowingly fulfilling the prophecy of "He will knock four times."
Due to the nuclear bolt still being active, the radiation would flood the booth and kill him, but not harm anyone else. To save him, the Doctor would have to sacrifice himself. Wilf was willing to die instead because he had "had his time", but the Doctor saved him and absorbed a fatal dose of radiation, which caused him to start to regenerate. He took Wilf home and promised to see him one more time before he changed.
At Donna's second wedding, Wilf met the Doctor again, just like he had promised. The Doctor gave Wilf and Sylvia a winning lottery ticket he had purchased with money borrowed from [[Geoff Noble]] before leaving. Wilf and Sylvia gave Donna the ticket and Wilf tearfully saluted the Doctor as he took off. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The End of Time (TV story)}})
=== Life goes on ===
Wilf was met by [[River Song]] to talk about his history with the Tenth Doctor, alongside [[Jackie Tyler]], Sylvia Noble and [[Francine Jones]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Judge, Jury and Executioner (short story)}})
At some point, Wilf was taken to the [[Black Archive]] by [[UNIT United Kingdom|UNIT]] to have his record as a [[companion]] of the Doctor taken. His memories of the visit were subsequently erased and he was sent on his way. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Day of the Doctor (TV story)}})
=== Growing family ===
[[File:WilfWildBlueYonder.jpg|thumb|left|Wilfred sees the Doctor again in 2023. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)}})]]
Wilf became a great-grandfather when Donna and Shaun had [[Rose Noble|a child]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|We Are Family (short story)|page=35}}) who eventually come out as both transgender and non-binary, choosing the name of Rose for herself. By [[2023]], Wilf, no longer able to use the stairs in the Nobles' [[23 Bachelor Road|new home]], was living in [[Cottage (The Star Beast)|sheltered accommodation]] paid for by [[UNIT United Kingdom|UNIT]], as [[Kate Lethbridge-Stewart]] said she would take care of him due to his days as a [[soldier]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Star Beast (TV story)}}) Wilf would soon start needing a [[wheelchair]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)}})
After Donna regained her [[memory|memories]] ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Star Beast (TV story)}}) during the [[November 2023 UFO incident]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Star Beast (novelisation)}}) she decided to go on one last trip with the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] to see Wilf, excited at the chance to show him that her memories were back and to let Wilf meet the Doctor again. However, after Donna accidentally spilled [[coffee]] on the console, the TARDIS took off, completely out of control. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Star Beast (TV story)}}) Shortly after Donna's disappearance, [[The Giggle (event)|a mass hysteria]] took over the world, and Wilf instructed his family to "bunker down" while he waited at [[Camden Market]] for the TARDIS to return, maintaining a faith that the Doctor would return to save the world. When the Doctor and Donna finally returned a few days after they had left, they were greeted by Wilf, who welcomed them back warmly, but also informed them of the ongoing crisis, just as the people around them started attacking each other and a [[plane]] crash-landed nearby, forcing Wilf, Donna and the Doctor to take cover behind the TARDIS. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)}}) Once UNIT arrived to collect the Doctor, Donna handed off Wilf to the soldiers, who promised to keep him safe as she went with the Doctor at Wilf's urging.
After the Doctor saved the world from [[the Toymaker]], and was convinced to settle down and heal on Earth with Donna by the [[Fifteenth Doctor]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) Wilf came to [[Fourteenth Doctor's home|the Doctor's home]] in the countryside ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Giggle (novelisation)}}) for a family picnic. He entertained himself by shooting at the [[mole]]s in the back garden, with the Doctor having put [[force field]]s around the moles to protect them. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})
=== Other realities ===
==== Parallel World ====
{{Main|Wilfred Mott (Turn Left)}}
Wilfred Mott had his life changed for the worse on [[25 June]] [[2007]], when Donna created [[parallel world (Turn Left)|a parallel world]] by turning right instead of left. He and his family were forced to relocate to [[Leeds (Turn Left)|Leeds]] following the destruction of [[London (Turn Left)|London]]. Watching the night sky through his telescope, Wilf was first to inform Donna that the stars were going out, convincing her to go with [[Rose Tyler]], who would help her negate the timeline. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Turn Left (TV story)}})
==== The continuity bomb ====
[[File:FD WD.jpg|thumb|The Doctor lets Wilfred die. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Four Doctors (comic story)}})]]
In an [[Alternate timelines (Four Doctors)|alternate timeline]] created by a [[continuity bomb]], the Doctor allowed Wilfred to die in the radiation chamber instead of saving him from death, viewing himself as the more useful of the two to the universe. This led to the Doctor becoming a tyrant that ruled the cosmos with an iron fist until his death. ([[COMIC{{cs|''[[Four Doctors (comic story)}})
== Personality ==
Wilfred had a positive attitude. Even in a crisis, he turned to good war-time spirit. He was a strong patriot, loyal to Queen Elizabeth and his beloved England. He also had a good relationship with his granddaughter [[Donna Noble]] and encouraged her companionship with the Doctor, even keeping it a secret from his daughter, [[Sylvia Noble|Sylvia]], for a time. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Sontaran Stratagem (TV story)}})
According to Sylvia, he always spilt either [[soup]] or [[tea]] down his [[cardigan]]. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Prequel to Donna Noble: Kidnapped (audio story)}})
Wilfred also proved a loyal companion to the Doctor, from searching him out when prompted to by [[The Woman (The End of Time)|the mysterious woman]], to giving the Doctor his gun and prompting him to kill the Master, as well as serving as a gunner when the ship they were on was under attack. He convinced the [[Vinvocci]] to take him back to help the Doctor. He also showed a willingness for self-sacrifice by saving someone trapped in a radiation booth and being willing to die there so the Doctor could live, saying he was an old man who had had his time. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The End of Time (TV story)}})
When the Doctor brought Donna back with her memories erased, Wilfred was devastated as he felt she had grown into a better person after her travels with the Doctor and even tried to get him to talk to her, remarking that he needed her when the Doctor admitted he had done wrong whilst travelling alone. However, he didn't share his daughter's hard feelings against him for wiping her memories, and promised to look up at the sky every night on Donna's behalf. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Journey's End (TV story)}}, {{cs|The End of Time (TV story)}})
He developed a paternal relationship with the Doctor, trying to comfort him when he began to cry during their conversation and wanted him to be happy and to have someone to make him laugh. He was also willing to give up his life to let the Doctor live. This relationship was picked up by others, with {{Simm}} sarcastically referring to Wilfred as the Doctor's father. Both Wilf and the Doctor admitted that they'd be proud if they actually were father and son. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The End of Time (TV story)}}) The [[Fourteenth Doctor]] expressed a desire to see Wilf again after Donna safely regained her memories, with Donna noting that it would have been hard for Wilf to keep the Doctor a secret from her for so many years and that he would love to see him one last time. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Star Beast (TV story)}}) Indeed, even fifteen years after the Tenth Doctor's regeneration Wilfred still valued his friendship and paternal relationship with the Doctor highly, at first shocked to see the Fourteenth Doctor looking identical to his tenth incarnation, but quickly becoming overjoyed and emotional upon seeing his friend once more. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)}}) After retiring on Earth, the Doctor started referring to Wilf as "Grandad," although he put force fields on the [[mole]]s that Wilf was hunting as the Doctor liked the moles. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})
According to Sylvia, she had no higher compliment than Wilfred being impressed by the Doctor saving the day. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Star Beast (TV story)}})
== Skills ==
A trained soldier, Wilfred survived [[World War II]] without killing anyone. Being proud of his service, he wore a Parachute Regiment pin on his signature red hat. He still kept his service revolver as a memento, which he later gave to the Doctor to use against {{Simm}}. He also proved to be a proficient gunner when he shot down some of the missiles that the Master had fired at the Vinvocci's spaceship. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The End of Time (TV story)}}) He momentarily blinded a [[Dalek]] with a well-placed paintball shot to its small eye stalk, although the Dalek recovered its vision almost instantly. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Stolen Earth (TV story)}}) Even by [[2023]], Wilf could still capable shoot at moles out in the fields, forcing the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] to design a forcefield to protect them from Wilf's shots. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})


'''Wilfred Mott''' is an elderly man who lives in Britain in the 21st Century, and is the grandfather of companion [[Donna Noble]]. He is the father of [[Sylvia Noble]].
Unlike so many others who had spent years searching, Wilfred and the small gang of pensioners whom he commanded found the Doctor within only a few hours of his arrival, much to the Doctor's bewilderment. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The End of Time (TV story)}})


==Biography==
== Behind the scenes ==
Wilfred was residing at an abandoned newspaper stand in London at Christmas at a point where Earth was aware of alien life and the threat they pose (especially at Christmas). He claims to be the only person who has remained in London (as well as [[Queen Elizabeth II]]) as everyone else has fled to the countryside. He is seen again towards the end of the episode, yelling at the [[Titanic (spaceship)|Titanic]] spaceship as it hurtles towards London.
* When ''[[Voyage of the Damned (TV story)|Voyage of the Damned]]'' was filmed, Wilfred was intended neither as a recurring character nor as Donna's grandfather. He was meant solely to be a newsstand worker named Stan. The character was made [[Sylvia Noble]]'s father after the death of [[Howard Attfield]], who was originally to have reprised [[Geoff Noble|his ''Runaway Bride'' role]]. Several scenes with Geoffrey Noble had already been filmed before Attfield's death, and these were rewritten and reshot to incorporate Wilfred as Donna's grandfather. Russell T Davies changed the character's name from Stan to Wilfred as he didn't feel Stan was a suitable name for a recurring character.{{fact}}
* Over a year and a half prior to the broadcast of ''Voyage of the Damned'', an image of Cribbins' character [[Frank Cosgrove]] from the [[2005 (releases)|2005]] finale of the BBC television series {{wi|Down to Earth (2000 TV series)|Down to Earth}} was used for the feature ''[[Weddings (feature)|Weddings]]'' published on the ''[[Torchwood House (tie-in website)|Torchwood House]]'' [[Doctor Who tie-in websites|tie-in website]].
* Wilfred Mott and [[Donna Noble]] were the first companions introduced to be related to each other. Wilfred was introduced in ''[[Voyage of the Damned (TV story)|Voyage of the Damned]]'', while Donna was introduced in ''[[Doomsday (TV story)|Doomsday]]'', predating the introduction of [[River Song]] in ''[[Silence in the Library (TV story)|Silence in the Library]]'' and River's parents [[Amy Pond]] and [[Rory Williams]] in ''[[The Eleventh Hour (TV story)|The Eleventh Hour]]''.
* [[David Tennant]] would later name his child (born in May 2013) Wilfred.{{fact}}
** In {{wi|Postman Pat: The Movie}}, Tennant voiced a character named Wilf.
* Before playing Wilfred, Bernard Cribbins played companion [[Tom Campbell]] in the movie ''[[Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A.D. (theatrical film)|Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.]]''.
* In 2020, [[Robert Shearman]] stated that he had always believed Wilfred to be the Doctor's [[Whifferdill]] companion [[Frobisher]], partly because he considered Cribbins a good fit for the character, and partly because he thought that having a shapeshifting penguin grandfather made a great deal of sense for Donna Noble as a character.<ref>[https://twitter.com/ShearmanRobert/status/1245532259328950277 "I've always secretly thought he was Wilf. Partly because I love the idea that Bernard Cribbins secretly played Frobisher, and partly because Donna makes such sense as the descendant of a shapeshifting penguin."]</ref>
* The setting of the present day of Donna Noble's family in [[Series 4 (Doctor Who 2005)|series 4]] of ''[[Doctor Who (TV series)|Doctor Who]]'' is [[Aliens of London dating controversy|inconsistent]], and their later appearance in the [[Christmas Special]] and [[New Year Special]] ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]'' is not dated at all, though it appears to be the year immediately after ''[[Voyage of the Damned (TV story)|Voyage of the Damned]]''{{'}}s [[Christmas]] setting. In the television episode ''[[The Fires of Pompeii (TV story)|The Fires of Pompeii]]'', Donna mentions the Doctor saving her in [[2008]]. In the novel ''[[Beautiful Chaos (novel)|Beautiful Chaos]]'', set between the television episodes ''[[The Poison Sky (TV story)|The Poison Sky]]'' and ''[[The Stolen Earth (TV story)|The Stolen Earth]]'', a newspaper at a newsagent gives the date as [[Friday]] [[15 May]] [[2009]]. During an in-universe episode of ''[[The Blue Box Files]]'' in the audio drama ''[[SOS (audio story)|SOS]]'', [[Abby McPhail]] describes the events of the television story ''[[Partners in Crime (TV story)|Partners in Crime]]'' as taking place in 2008. During the [[2023 specials]], Sylvia mentions Donna's memory loss happened "a long time ago, darling. fifteen years" in ''[[The Star Beast (TV story)|The Star Beast]]'', while ''[[The Giggle (TV story)|The Giggle]]'' places the present day in 2023, heavily implying a 2008 setting for series 4.
* Bernard Cribbins' failing health meant the role planned for him in {{cs|Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)}} and {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}} had to be reduced to one scene in ''Wild Blue Yonder'', in which his character uses a wheelchair as the actor himself was doing at the time.<ref>https://uk.movies.yahoo.com/doctor-whos-russell-t-davies-080000775.html?guccounter=1</ref> It was Cribbins' final role before his eventual death in July 2022, shortly after principal photography wrapped: the scene was filmed in early May 2022, very early on in production of the three 2023 specials. Wilfred was portrayed by a stand-in ''The Giggle'' as Cribbins was unable to shoot the scene himself, with archival audio used for the character's one line.
** Following Cribbins' death, Russell T Davies briefly considered adding a scene to ''The Giggle'' where the Doctor alludes to Wilfred passing away off-screen. He was dissuaded by [[Phil Collinson]], who convinced him to keep Wilfred alive "just off-camera".


==Behind the Scenes==
== External links ==
{{Dwlx}}


He is played by actor [[Bernard Cribbins]] and first appeared in "[[Voyage of the Damned]]".  Series producer [[Phil Collinson]] has reported that he will be a recurring character throughout the fourth series. He is the father of [[Sylvia Noble]] and Grandfather of [[Donna Noble]]
== Footnotes ==
{{reflist}}
{{Companions of the Tenth Doctor}}
{{children of Time}}
{{NameSort}}


In the "Coming soon..." trailer at the end of "Voyage of the Damned", Wilfred can be seen again.
[[Category:Companions of the Doctor]]
[[Category:21st century individuals]]
[[Category:Human business owners]]
[[Category:Human Tenth Doctor companions]]
[[Category:World War II veterans]]
[[Category:Children of Time]]
[[Category:Human astronomers]]
[[Category:20th century individuals]]
[[Category:Humans who have been inside the Doctor's TARDIS]]
[[Category:Human biological fathers]]
[[Category:British Army soldiers]]
[[Category:Silver Cloak]]
[[Category:Chiswick residents]]
[[Category:Noble family]]


[[Category:21st century individuals|Mott]]
[[cs:Wilfred Mott]]
[[Category:Humans|Mott]]
[[de:Wilfred Mott]]
[[fr:Wilfred Mott]]
[[it:Wilfred Mott]]
[[ro:Wilfred Mott]]
[[ru:Уилфред Мотт]]
[[Category:Human wheelchair users]]

Latest revision as of 20:17, 4 September 2024

Wilfred Mott was the husband of Eileen Mott, the father of Sylvia Noble, the maternal grandfather of Donna Noble and great-grandfather of Rose Noble.

He was also a one-time travelling companion of the Tenth Doctor, and the final companion with whom the Doctor travelled in that incarnation. Unlike many of the people of Earth, Wilfred was willing to believe aliens would come in peace one day, and that humanity would eventually travel out to the stars and mingle with them.

A witness to several alien invasions of Earth, he was instrumental in stopping the Time Lords' return from within the time-lock which had sealed them in the Last Great Time War. In that effort, he trapped himself in a chamber about to be flooded with lethal radiation. His rescue was the proximate cause of the Tenth Doctor's regeneration into his eleventh incarnation. Fifteen years later he would get the chance to see the Doctor again, having recently regenerated into his fourteenth incarnation and bearing the face of the Tenth Doctor once again.

Biography[[edit] | [edit source]]

Early life[[edit] | [edit source]]

Wilf was born circa 1928-29. (TV: The Star Beast [+]Loading...{"timestamp":"00:24:00","1":"The Star Beast (TV story)"})

Donna Noble stated that he had enlisted to fight in World War II while underage. (AUDIO: The Nemonite Invasion [+]Loading...["The Nemonite Invasion (audio story)"]) By 1948, Wilf was a private in the 6th Airborne Division of the British Army, stationed in the British Mandate of Palestine at its end. According to a mysterious Time Lady, Wilf had served in the military without once taking a life, a fact Wilf defended, feeling proud not to have killed anyone. (TV: The End of Time [+]Loading...["The End of Time (TV story)"])

Family life[[edit] | [edit source]]

At some point, Wilf met Eileen and had a daughter named Sylvia with her. He said that his time with his wife was the most wonderful years he had and that the time with her flew by. He never shouted at Sylvia during her childhood. (PROSE: In the Blood [+]Loading...["In the Blood (novel)"])

When his granddaughter, Donna Noble, was in primary school, Wilf objected to her being taught to sing "Wild Blue Yonder" for the choir, telling the head of the choir, Mrs Bean, that it was a military song about going to war, but Mrs Bean defended it as sounding jolly. (TV: Wild Blue Yonder [+]Loading...["Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)"])

In the 2006 elections, after the death of the British Prime Minister at the hands of the Slitheen family, (TV: Aliens of London [+]Loading...["Aliens of London (TV story)"]) Wilfred claimed to have voted for Harriet Jones, though Sylvia disputed this. (TV: The Stolen Earth [+]Loading...["The Stolen Earth (TV story)"]) On Christmas Eve 2007, Wilfred was laid up with Spanish flu, unable to attend his granddaughter's wedding. (TV: The Sontaran Stratagem [+]Loading...["The Sontaran Stratagem (TV story)"]) Sometime later, Eileen died. (PROSE: Beautiful Chaos [+]Loading...["Beautiful Chaos (novel)"])

Meeting the Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]

Wilfred meets the Tenth Doctor and Astrid Peth. (TV: Voyage of the Damned [+]Loading...["Voyage of the Damned (TV story)"])

During another Christmas Eve, while most of London had fled to the countryside to avoid a potential third alien invasion after the previous Christmastime attacks from the Sycorax and the Racnoss, Wilf remained to man his newspaper stand. During the night, he was approached by the Tenth Doctor and Astrid Peth, and told them he was the only person in London apart from Queen Elizabeth II in Buckingham Palace. After he explained to them why London was empty, they were teleported away after the Doctor told him not to worry. The next day, Wilf saw the Titanic hurtled over London, yelling for the aliens not to ruin Christmas. (TV: Voyage of the Damned [+]Loading...["Voyage of the Damned (TV story)"])

An amateur astronomer and keen stargazer, Wilf pitched a tent behind his daughter's house in Chiswick and spent most of his nights on top a hill with a telescope looking for aliens among the stars. Donna waved to him from the Doctor's TARDIS while flying away. Seeing the Doctor again through his telescope, Wilf felt happy for his granddaughter for being able to travel the universe, yelling and cheering as the TARDIS took off. (TV: Partners in Crime [+]Loading...["Partners in Crime (TV story)"])

Supporting Donna's travels[[edit] | [edit source]]

Donna visited her mother and him after she had returned to Earth. She told Wilf, but not her mother about the Doctor, for fear she would react badly. She told him about ATMOS and what they were doing. When the Doctor turned up with a UNIT soldier, Wilfred realised the Doctor was the same man he had met at Christmas. He opened the family car to investigate an ATMOS device and was trapped inside when it was triggered. He began to suffocate (TV: The Sontaran Stratagem [+]Loading...["The Sontaran Stratagem (TV story)"]) but was freed by his daughter Sylvia Noble. The next day he told Donna he would keep her secret and not tell her mother. (TV: The Poison Sky [+]Loading...["The Poison Sky (TV story)"])

Wilfred featured on the home improvement, reality TV series Haunted Makeovers alongside Sylvia, the Doctor and Donna. The Doctor and Donna were investigating the haunting of Morley mansion. (AUDIO: No Place [+]Loading...["No Place (audio story)"])

At some point, Wilfred discovered a new star, which was named after him. (PROSE: Beautiful Chaos [+]Loading...["Beautiful Chaos (novel)"])

The Dalek invasion[[edit] | [edit source]]

Wilf and Sylvia square off against the Daleks. (TV: The Stolen Earth [+]Loading...["The Stolen Earth (TV story)"])

When the Earth was moved into the Medusa Cascade, he and Sylvia tried to fight the Daleks. Wilf fired a paintball at a Dalek's eyestalk, hoping to blind it, but it dissolved the paint. As it was about to exterminate him, Rose Tyler teleported to the scene and killed the Dalek. Sylvia and Wilf took her to their home. A message came from a Sub-Wave Network. They couldn't respond, as Sylvia thought webcams were "naughty" and didn't let her father have one. He watched as Martha Jones and her mother, Torchwood Three and Sarah Jane Smith spoke with Harriet Jones. (TV: The Stolen Earth [+]Loading...["The Stolen Earth (TV story)"]) After the Earth was returned to its proper place, they celebrated. When the Doctor brought Donna back to them without any memory of her adventures with him, Wilf was distraught at the thought of her returning to her previous life. He promised to look up at the sky every night and remember the Doctor on Donna's behalf. (TV: Journey's End [+]Loading...["Journey's End (TV story)"])

Helping the Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]

Wilfred's surprised to see the Woman on television instead of the Queen. (TV: The End of Time [+]Loading...["The End of Time (TV story)"])

As Christmas approached, Wilf, along with everyone else on Earth, began having nightmares involving the laughing face of the Saxon Master. Seeking refuge in a church, he was approached by a mysterious woman, who told him the church had been a convent in the 1300s, had been attacked by a demon from the sky and saved by a "sainted physician"; then she vanished. The next day, Wilf organised a "Silver Cloak" of old age pensioners. He quickly found the Doctor and in a café learned of his prophesied death. On Christmas morning, Wilf was watching the Queen's speech when it was interrupted by the mysterious woman, whom only he could see. She told Wilf he would have to take up arms, that the Doctor could still be saved and that Wilf must not tell the Doctor anything of what she had said. Wilf took his old service revolver, met the Doctor outside the Noble house and joined him in tracking down the Master.

The Doctor and Wilfred resolve to stop the Master. (TV: The End of Time [+]Loading...["The End of Time (TV story)"])

They arrived too late to stop the Master turning every human on Earth into a duplicate of himself, but Wilf was protected from the effect behind a radiation shield. He escaped with the Doctor to a spaceship. During this time, Wilf and the Doctor felt they would both be proud to have been related to each other. After another encounter with the woman, he gave the Doctor his gun and urged him to kill the Master. The Doctor initially refused, but on learning the Time Lords were behind everything, he took the gun.

In the fight that followed, Earth shot missiles at the ship. Wilf manned one of the guns and had the aliens land so he could join the Doctor. He freed someone trapped in the radiation booth, but as a result was himself trapped. After he witnessed the Doctor and the Master defeat Rassilon and the Time Lords, Wilf then knocked on the booth door four times to be let out, unknowingly fulfilling the prophecy of "He will knock four times."

Due to the nuclear bolt still being active, the radiation would flood the booth and kill him, but not harm anyone else. To save him, the Doctor would have to sacrifice himself. Wilf was willing to die instead because he had "had his time", but the Doctor saved him and absorbed a fatal dose of radiation, which caused him to start to regenerate. He took Wilf home and promised to see him one more time before he changed.

At Donna's second wedding, Wilf met the Doctor again, just like he had promised. The Doctor gave Wilf and Sylvia a winning lottery ticket he had purchased with money borrowed from Geoff Noble before leaving. Wilf and Sylvia gave Donna the ticket and Wilf tearfully saluted the Doctor as he took off. (TV: The End of Time [+]Loading...["The End of Time (TV story)"])

Life goes on[[edit] | [edit source]]

Wilf was met by River Song to talk about his history with the Tenth Doctor, alongside Jackie Tyler, Sylvia Noble and Francine Jones. (PROSE: Judge, Jury and Executioner [+]Loading...["Judge, Jury and Executioner (short story)"])

At some point, Wilf was taken to the Black Archive by UNIT to have his record as a companion of the Doctor taken. His memories of the visit were subsequently erased and he was sent on his way. (TV: The Day of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Day of the Doctor (TV story)"])

Growing family[[edit] | [edit source]]

Wilfred sees the Doctor again in 2023. (TV: Wild Blue Yonder [+]Loading...["Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)"])

Wilf became a great-grandfather when Donna and Shaun had a child, (PROSE: We Are Family [+]Loading...{"page":"35","1":"We Are Family (short story)"}) who eventually come out as both transgender and non-binary, choosing the name of Rose for herself. By 2023, Wilf, no longer able to use the stairs in the Nobles' new home, was living in sheltered accommodation paid for by UNIT, as Kate Lethbridge-Stewart said she would take care of him due to his days as a soldier. (TV: The Star Beast [+]Loading...["The Star Beast (TV story)"]) Wilf would soon start needing a wheelchair. (TV: Wild Blue Yonder [+]Loading...["Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)"])

After Donna regained her memories (TV: The Star Beast [+]Loading...["The Star Beast (TV story)"]) during the November 2023 UFO incident, (PROSE: The Star Beast [+]Loading...["The Star Beast (novelisation)"]) she decided to go on one last trip with the Fourteenth Doctor to see Wilf, excited at the chance to show him that her memories were back and to let Wilf meet the Doctor again. However, after Donna accidentally spilled coffee on the console, the TARDIS took off, completely out of control. (TV: The Star Beast [+]Loading...["The Star Beast (TV story)"]) Shortly after Donna's disappearance, a mass hysteria took over the world, and Wilf instructed his family to "bunker down" while he waited at Camden Market for the TARDIS to return, maintaining a faith that the Doctor would return to save the world. When the Doctor and Donna finally returned a few days after they had left, they were greeted by Wilf, who welcomed them back warmly, but also informed them of the ongoing crisis, just as the people around them started attacking each other and a plane crash-landed nearby, forcing Wilf, Donna and the Doctor to take cover behind the TARDIS. (TV: Wild Blue Yonder [+]Loading...["Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)"]) Once UNIT arrived to collect the Doctor, Donna handed off Wilf to the soldiers, who promised to keep him safe as she went with the Doctor at Wilf's urging.

After the Doctor saved the world from the Toymaker, and was convinced to settle down and heal on Earth with Donna by the Fifteenth Doctor, (TV: The Giggle [+]Loading...["The Giggle (TV story)"]) Wilf came to the Doctor's home in the countryside (PROSE: The Giggle [+]Loading...["The Giggle (novelisation)"]) for a family picnic. He entertained himself by shooting at the moles in the back garden, with the Doctor having put force fields around the moles to protect them. (TV: The Giggle [+]Loading...["The Giggle (TV story)"])

Other realities[[edit] | [edit source]]

Parallel World[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Wilfred Mott (Turn Left)

Wilfred Mott had his life changed for the worse on 25 June 2007, when Donna created a parallel world by turning right instead of left. He and his family were forced to relocate to Leeds following the destruction of London. Watching the night sky through his telescope, Wilf was first to inform Donna that the stars were going out, convincing her to go with Rose Tyler, who would help her negate the timeline. (TV: Turn Left [+]Loading...["Turn Left (TV story)"])

The continuity bomb[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Doctor lets Wilfred die. (COMIC: Four Doctors [+]Loading...["Four Doctors (comic story)"])

In an alternate timeline created by a continuity bomb, the Doctor allowed Wilfred to die in the radiation chamber instead of saving him from death, viewing himself as the more useful of the two to the universe. This led to the Doctor becoming a tyrant that ruled the cosmos with an iron fist until his death. ([[COMIC{{cs|[[Four Doctors (comic story)}})

Personality[[edit] | [edit source]]

Wilfred had a positive attitude. Even in a crisis, he turned to good war-time spirit. He was a strong patriot, loyal to Queen Elizabeth and his beloved England. He also had a good relationship with his granddaughter Donna Noble and encouraged her companionship with the Doctor, even keeping it a secret from his daughter, Sylvia, for a time. (TV: The Sontaran Stratagem [+]Loading...["The Sontaran Stratagem (TV story)"])

According to Sylvia, he always spilt either soup or tea down his cardigan. (AUDIO: Prequel to Donna Noble: Kidnapped [+]Loading...["Prequel to Donna Noble: Kidnapped (audio story)"])

Wilfred also proved a loyal companion to the Doctor, from searching him out when prompted to by the mysterious woman, to giving the Doctor his gun and prompting him to kill the Master, as well as serving as a gunner when the ship they were on was under attack. He convinced the Vinvocci to take him back to help the Doctor. He also showed a willingness for self-sacrifice by saving someone trapped in a radiation booth and being willing to die there so the Doctor could live, saying he was an old man who had had his time. (TV: The End of Time [+]Loading...["The End of Time (TV story)"])

When the Doctor brought Donna back with her memories erased, Wilfred was devastated as he felt she had grown into a better person after her travels with the Doctor and even tried to get him to talk to her, remarking that he needed her when the Doctor admitted he had done wrong whilst travelling alone. However, he didn't share his daughter's hard feelings against him for wiping her memories, and promised to look up at the sky every night on Donna's behalf. (TV: Journey's End [+]Loading...["Journey's End (TV story)"], The End of Time [+]Loading...["The End of Time (TV story)"])

He developed a paternal relationship with the Doctor, trying to comfort him when he began to cry during their conversation and wanted him to be happy and to have someone to make him laugh. He was also willing to give up his life to let the Doctor live. This relationship was picked up by others, with the Saxon Master sarcastically referring to Wilfred as the Doctor's father. Both Wilf and the Doctor admitted that they'd be proud if they actually were father and son. (TV: The End of Time [+]Loading...["The End of Time (TV story)"]) The Fourteenth Doctor expressed a desire to see Wilf again after Donna safely regained her memories, with Donna noting that it would have been hard for Wilf to keep the Doctor a secret from her for so many years and that he would love to see him one last time. (TV: The Star Beast [+]Loading...["The Star Beast (TV story)"]) Indeed, even fifteen years after the Tenth Doctor's regeneration Wilfred still valued his friendship and paternal relationship with the Doctor highly, at first shocked to see the Fourteenth Doctor looking identical to his tenth incarnation, but quickly becoming overjoyed and emotional upon seeing his friend once more. (TV: Wild Blue Yonder [+]Loading...["Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)"]) After retiring on Earth, the Doctor started referring to Wilf as "Grandad," although he put force fields on the moles that Wilf was hunting as the Doctor liked the moles. (TV: The Giggle [+]Loading...["The Giggle (TV story)"])

According to Sylvia, she had no higher compliment than Wilfred being impressed by the Doctor saving the day. (TV: The Star Beast [+]Loading...["The Star Beast (TV story)"])

Skills[[edit] | [edit source]]

A trained soldier, Wilfred survived World War II without killing anyone. Being proud of his service, he wore a Parachute Regiment pin on his signature red hat. He still kept his service revolver as a memento, which he later gave to the Doctor to use against the Saxon Master. He also proved to be a proficient gunner when he shot down some of the missiles that the Master had fired at the Vinvocci's spaceship. (TV: The End of Time [+]Loading...["The End of Time (TV story)"]) He momentarily blinded a Dalek with a well-placed paintball shot to its small eye stalk, although the Dalek recovered its vision almost instantly. (TV: The Stolen Earth [+]Loading...["The Stolen Earth (TV story)"]) Even by 2023, Wilf could still capable shoot at moles out in the fields, forcing the Fourteenth Doctor to design a forcefield to protect them from Wilf's shots. (TV: The Giggle [+]Loading...["The Giggle (TV story)"])

Unlike so many others who had spent years searching, Wilfred and the small gang of pensioners whom he commanded found the Doctor within only a few hours of his arrival, much to the Doctor's bewilderment. (TV: The End of Time [+]Loading...["The End of Time (TV story)"])

Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • When Voyage of the Damned was filmed, Wilfred was intended neither as a recurring character nor as Donna's grandfather. He was meant solely to be a newsstand worker named Stan. The character was made Sylvia Noble's father after the death of Howard Attfield, who was originally to have reprised his Runaway Bride role. Several scenes with Geoffrey Noble had already been filmed before Attfield's death, and these were rewritten and reshot to incorporate Wilfred as Donna's grandfather. Russell T Davies changed the character's name from Stan to Wilfred as he didn't feel Stan was a suitable name for a recurring character.[source needed]
  • Over a year and a half prior to the broadcast of Voyage of the Damned, an image of Cribbins' character Frank Cosgrove from the 2005 finale of the BBC television series Down to Earth was used for the feature Weddings published on the Torchwood House tie-in website.
  • Wilfred Mott and Donna Noble were the first companions introduced to be related to each other. Wilfred was introduced in Voyage of the Damned, while Donna was introduced in Doomsday, predating the introduction of River Song in Silence in the Library and River's parents Amy Pond and Rory Williams in The Eleventh Hour.
  • David Tennant would later name his child (born in May 2013) Wilfred.[source needed]
  • Before playing Wilfred, Bernard Cribbins played companion Tom Campbell in the movie Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A.D..
  • In 2020, Robert Shearman stated that he had always believed Wilfred to be the Doctor's Whifferdill companion Frobisher, partly because he considered Cribbins a good fit for the character, and partly because he thought that having a shapeshifting penguin grandfather made a great deal of sense for Donna Noble as a character.[1]
  • The setting of the present day of Donna Noble's family in series 4 of Doctor Who is inconsistent, and their later appearance in the Christmas Special and New Year Special The End of Time is not dated at all, though it appears to be the year immediately after Voyage of the Damned's Christmas setting. In the television episode The Fires of Pompeii, Donna mentions the Doctor saving her in 2008. In the novel Beautiful Chaos, set between the television episodes The Poison Sky and The Stolen Earth, a newspaper at a newsagent gives the date as Friday 15 May 2009. During an in-universe episode of The Blue Box Files in the audio drama SOS, Abby McPhail describes the events of the television story Partners in Crime as taking place in 2008. During the 2023 specials, Sylvia mentions Donna's memory loss happened "a long time ago, darling. fifteen years" in The Star Beast, while The Giggle places the present day in 2023, heavily implying a 2008 setting for series 4.
  • Bernard Cribbins' failing health meant the role planned for him in Wild Blue Yonder [+]Loading...["Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)"] and The Giggle [+]Loading...["The Giggle (TV story)"] had to be reduced to one scene in Wild Blue Yonder, in which his character uses a wheelchair as the actor himself was doing at the time.[2] It was Cribbins' final role before his eventual death in July 2022, shortly after principal photography wrapped: the scene was filmed in early May 2022, very early on in production of the three 2023 specials. Wilfred was portrayed by a stand-in The Giggle as Cribbins was unable to shoot the scene himself, with archival audio used for the character's one line.
    • Following Cribbins' death, Russell T Davies briefly considered adding a scene to The Giggle where the Doctor alludes to Wilfred passing away off-screen. He was dissuaded by Phil Collinson, who convinced him to keep Wilfred alive "just off-camera".

External links[[edit] | [edit source]]

Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]