Doctor Who at the Proms: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 09:47, 29 December 2010

This article needs a big cleanup.

Nothing terribly wrong with grammar, but the article should be reoriented. It's giving far too much information about the individual concerts themselves, rather than the broader series. For suggestions on improvement, see deletion rationale at Talk:Doctor Who at the Proms - List of Music.

These problems might be so great that the article's factual accuracy has been compromised. Talk about it here or check the revision history or Manual of Style for more information.

Doctor Who at the Proms was a series of concerts held in the Royal Albert Hall in London, as part of the annual BBC Proms concert series. The concerts, dating back to 1895, focused primarily on classical music. The Doctor Who events featured music from the revived series, composed by Murray Gold, as well as some classical pieces. To date the Doctor Who Prom has been held in 2008 and 2010. Each featured original material, and characters from the series.

2008

For Main Article See Doctor Who At The Proms (2008)


The first Doctor Who at the Proms was held on 27th July 2008. The event was hosted by Freema Agyeman with a special appearance by Catherine Tate, and featured appearances by several monsters from the series, including a Sontaran, Davros and Cybermen.

A highlight of the event was a 7-minute mini-episode entitled DW: Music of the Spheres. Written by Russell T Davies and featuring David Tennant as the Doctor, the episode broke the fourth wall by having the Doctor directly address the audience and involve them in an adventure. During the mini-episode, the Doctor claims to have been a performer in the first Proms in 1895, playing the tuba.

Tim Phillips also performed a full rendition of "Song for Ten" as part of the concert, which concluded with a performance of the Doctor Who theme. The theme was the only piece of music in the programme from the show not composed by Gold.

Doctor Who at the Proms was originally aired live on BBC Radio. It was also videotaped for later broadcast and DVD release, and aired on the BBC in early 2009. It was later included as a bonus feature on the DVD release of DW: The Next Doctor. In early 2010 it was also included in the Complete 2009 Specials box set, both in DVD and Blu-Ray formats. The home video release differs from the original broadcast; among other changes, Phillips' performance is not included, and a surprise appearance by Delia Derbyshire's original 1963 arrangement of the Doctor Who theme at the end of Music of the Spheres was likewise removed, along with the opening credits for the mini-episode, which used the then-current opening sequence.

The BBC announced the Proms concert at a press event on 9th April 2008, during which noted violinist Nigel Kennedy, promoting his own appearance at the Proms, played a radically rearranged rendition of the Doctor Who theme.[1] This event led to speculation that Kennedy would perform at the Proms show itself, but this did not occur.

2010

For Main Article see Doctor Who at the Proms (2010)

A second Doctor Who at the Proms concert, again featuring the music of Murray Gold, was performed twice, on 24th and 25th July 2010. Each aired live on BBC Radio Three and will be later broadcast, presumably edited together, on BBC Three television. Karen Gillan hosted both the shows with special appearances by Arthur Darvill and Matt Smith.

As with the 2008 concert, music from the revival series was featured, primarily from Series 5, although a few pieces from earlier seasons were included. Several non-Gold classical pieces were also performed, as well as the 2010 arrangement of the Doctor Who Theme (unlike the 2008 concert, the 2010 event featured the current version of the theme rather than another arrangement).

Just as with the 2008 Doctor Who at the Proms, there was a special untitled mini-episode performed, featuring Matt Smith. Starting out in the same manner as Music of the Spheres, the story featuref Matt Smith, in character as the Doctor, performing in the Royal Albert Hall itself in front of the audience. Just as with Music of the Spheres, it broke the fourth wall to include audience participation.

Clips from Doctor Who at the Proms were used in the trailer for Doctor Who: The Monsters Are Coming!

See also