The Doctor: Difference between revisions

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:*"[[Exile]]" stars [[Arabella Weir]] as a female Doctor who escaped her trial at the conclusion of "The War Games."
:*"[[Exile]]" stars [[Arabella Weir]] as a female Doctor who escaped her trial at the conclusion of "The War Games."
=====Pastiches, Parodies, and Adaptations=====
*The two ''Doctor Who'' films produced in the 1960s starred [[Peter Cushing]] as a human Doctor from twentieth-century Earth whose surname actually was "Who."  The TARDIS  was his own invention.  Although not considered canon, the films have inspired a few stories and treatments concerning the further adventures of this Doctor.
*The 1970s stage play, "[[Doctor Who and the Seven Keys to Doomsday]]" featured [[Terrence Martin]] as the Doctor, with [[Wendy Padbury]] as his companion.
*A [[1986]] installment of ''The [[Lenny Henry]] Show'' included a sketch with Henry as the Doctor, battling the [[Cybermen]] and their leader [[Thatchos]], a cyberized version of [[Margaret Thatcher]], complete with bouvant hair and purse.
*"[[The Curse of Fatal Death]]," a multi-part sketch broadcast as part of the Comic Relief charity telethon in [[1999]], starred [[Rowan Atkinson]] as the Ninth Doctor,  [[Richard E. Grant]] as the Tenth Doctor, [[Jim Broadbent]] as the Eleventh Doctor, [[Hugh Grant]] as the Twelfth Doctor, and [[Joanna Lumley]] as the final, Thirteenth, and female Doctor. Because this adventure was a spoof of the ''Doctor Who'' series, it is generally not considered canon by fans.
*In addition to his appearance in "The Curse of Fatal Death," Richard E. Grant also provided the voice of the Doctor in the animated adventure "[[Scream of the Shalka]]," featured on the [http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/doctorwho/webcasts/shalka/  BBC's Doctor Who website], beginning in November - December, [[2003]].
*[[The Wanderer]], portrayed by [[Nicholas Briggs]] in the [[BBV audio adventures| BBV audio adventure]] "[[Cyber-Hunt]]," is a character loosely based on the Doctor.  [[The Stranger]], a character portrayed by [[Colin Baker]] first in a series of video adventures and later in several BBV audio adventures, is also loosely based on the Doctor.

Revision as of 07:12, 16 March 2005

The Doctor is the title character in the Doctor Who series. He is a Time Lord from the planet Gallifrey, who wanders through time and space in his ship, the TARDIS. For the most part, and usually because the vessel's navigation system is old and unreliable, he explores the universe at random and uses his extensive knowledge of science and advanced technology to heroically avert the crises that he encounters. The Doctor has, at various times, been accompanied by companions who have chosen to travel with him for a variety of reasons.

The Doctor is considered a renegade by his fellow Time Lords, for his penchant of getting "involved" with the affairs of other worlds, in direct violation of official Time Lord policy. However, most of the time his actions are tolerated, especially when he has saved not just Gallifrey, but the universe, several times over. His standing in Time Lord society has waxed and waned over the years, from being a hunted man to even being appointed Lord President of the High Council (an office he did not assume for very long and eventually was removed from in his absence). In the end, though, he has always seemed quite content to remain a renegade and an exile.

The character was first portrayed by William Hartnell in 1963. When Hartnell left the series in 1966 , the role was taken over by Patrick Troughton. To date, eight actors have played the Doctor on television, with perhaps the most enduring incarnation being the fourth, played by Tom Baker. Christopher Eccleston will play the Ninth Doctor in a new series to debut in March of 2005.

When the series begins, nothing is known of the Doctor at all, not even his name. In the very first serial, An Unearthly Child, two teachers from the Coal Hill School in London, Barbara Wright and Ian Chesterton, become intrigued by one of their students, Susan Foreman, who exhibits high intelligence and unusually advanced knowledge. Trailing her to a junkyard at 76 Totter's Lane, they encounter a strange old man and hear Susan's voice coming from inside what appears to be a police box. Pushing their way inside, the two find that the exterior is actually camouflage for the dimensionally transcendental interior of the TARDIS.

Susan calls the old man "Grandfather", but he simply calls himself the Doctor. When he fears Ian and Barbara may alert the local authorities to what they've seen, he subsequently whisks them all away to another locaton in time and space.

Changing faces

Eight actors (with a ninth to follow) have officially played the Doctor on television. The changing of actors playing the part of the Doctor is explained within the series by the Time Lords' ability to regenerate after suffering mortal injury, illness, or old age. The process repairs and rejuvenates all damage, but as a side-effect it changes the Time Lord's physical appearance and personality semi-randomly. This ability was not introduced until producers had to find a way to replace the elderly William Hartnell with Patrick Troughton and was not explicitly called "regeneration" until Jon Pertwee's transformation to Tom Baker at the conclusion of Planet of the Spiders. On screen, the transformation from Hartnell to Troughton was called a "renewal" and from Troughton to Pertwee a "change of appearance."

Despite the fact that the Doctor is supposed to be the same person throughout his regenerations, each actor to play the Doctor has purposely imbued their incarnation with distinct quirks and characteristics. At his core, however, the Doctor continues to be a heroic figure, fighting the evils of the universe wherever he finds them, even if his values and motives are sometimes alien.

The Nine Doctors

Hartnell played the Doctor as an irascible, grandfatherly type, a brilliant but often short-tempered scientist.

In contrast to Hartnell, Troughton's Doctor was a sort of "cosmic hobo," often frightened of the alien menaces he faced, whose solutions were sometimes of a hit-or-miss nature.

Pertwee's Doctor cut more of a dashing figure than his predecessors, a dandy with a penchant for gadgets and martial arts, particularly "Venusian akido."

Perhaps the most eccentric incarnation, the Fourth Doctor was something of a cross between Willy Wonka and the Mad Hatter, rarely without his signature scarf of incredible length.

The youngest of the Doctors, Davison's incarnation had a fondness for cricket. He was somewhat more nervous and less sure of himself than the two previous Doctors, though no less heroic.

Sporting a multi-hued wardrobe that looked as if designed by Christian Lacroix, the Sixth Doctor had a manic personality and an ascerbic wit.

His voice touched by a Scottish burr, the Seventh Doctor combined the vagabound nature of the Second and Fourth Doctors with the scientific brilliance of the First and Third incarnations.

McGann's Doctor showed a romantic and sensitive side not evident in the previous Doctors, a point of some controversy among fans.

It remains to be seen what personality traits the Ninth Doctor will exhibit

Other Doctors

Past Doctors
  • In "The Brain of Morbius", it is implied through visual images displayed during a mental battle between the Doctor and Morbius that the Doctor had at least eight incarnations prior to the First Doctor. However, multiple dialogue references throughout the series (particularly in The Three Doctors and The Five Doctors) contradict this, as well as the fact that the Doctor has regenerated three times since Peter Davison's tenure. Explanations by fans have included theories that the images were of Morbius's previous incarnations or that they were false images induced by the Doctor. Yet another possibility, suggested by the Virgin New Adventure novel, "Lungbarrow," is that these were the Doctor's incarnations during his previous existence on Gallifrey as "the Other."
  • The Other was a mysterious third collaborator with Rassilon and Omega in the experiments which led to the founding of Time Lord civilization on Gallifrey. Hinted at during the last two seasons of the original series, the identity of the Other was firmly established as being the Doctor in a previous existence in the novel "Lungbarrow."


Future Doctors
  • In Logopolis, a mysterious white-cloaked figure known as the Watcher assists in the transition between the Fourth and Fifth Doctors. Nyssa comments that the Watcher "was the Doctor all the time," but there is no real evidence to back up this assertion and the actual nature of the character has never been made clear.
Alternative Doctors
  • During his trial at the conclusion of "The War Games," the Second Doctor is shown a series of portraits from which he may choose the form of his next regeneration before the Time Lords exile him to Earth. None is to his liking, nor does one of them look like Jon Pertwee, who had not yet been cast in the role of the Doctor. Stories featuring the adventures of these "could-have-been" Doctors may appear at some point, if they have not already.
  • In the Sixth Doctor serial The Trial of a Time Lord, a Time Lord with the title of the Valeyard (played by Michael Jayston) was revealed to be a potential future Doctor, existing somewhere between his twelfth and final incarnations and embodying all the evil and malevolence of the Doctor's dark side. The Valeyard was defeated in his attempt to actualize himself by stealing the Sixth Doctor's remaining regenerations, however, and so may never actually come to exist.
  • Michael Jayston reprises his role as the Valeyard in "He Jests at Scars...," playing an alternate reality Valeyard who won his battle with the Sixth Doctor.
  • "Deadline" features Sir Derek Jacobi as a Doctor who turns out to be the fantasy world alter ego of a mentally ill writer struggling to finish a script for a proposed television series about a character tentatively called, "Doctor Who."
  • "Exile" stars Arabella Weir as a female Doctor who escaped her trial at the conclusion of "The War Games."
Pastiches, Parodies, and Adaptations
  • The two Doctor Who films produced in the 1960s starred Peter Cushing as a human Doctor from twentieth-century Earth whose surname actually was "Who." The TARDIS was his own invention. Although not considered canon, the films have inspired a few stories and treatments concerning the further adventures of this Doctor.
  • In addition to his appearance in "The Curse of Fatal Death," Richard E. Grant also provided the voice of the Doctor in the animated adventure "Scream of the Shalka," featured on the BBC's Doctor Who website, beginning in November - December, 2003.