The Masters of Luxor (unproduced TV story): Difference between revisions

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It would have aired during [[Season 1]] after ''An Unearthly Child'' and instead of ''[[The Daleks]]'', the story ultimately commissioned. In September 1992, [[Titan Books]] published the script in [[Doctor Who Script Books|book form]] as part of its [[Doctor Who: The Scripts]] line. [[David Whitaker]] was still trying to get the script in working order for production in [[1964]].
It would have aired during [[Season 1]] after ''An Unearthly Child'' and instead of ''[[The Daleks]]'', the story ultimately commissioned. In September 1992, [[Titan Books]] published the script in [[Doctor Who Script Books|book form]] as part of its [[Doctor Who: The Scripts]] line. [[David Whitaker]] was still trying to get the script in working order for production in [[1964]].
==Audio Adaptation==
The professional company [[Big Finish Productions]] is currently (2010) producing a series of audio dramas adapting unproduced ''Doctor Who'' teleplays; in 2011, they announced that ''Masters'' will feature in the third series of the Lost Stories as its seventh release.


==Fan production==
==Fan production==
In 2001, TS Entertainment made a fan production of ''Masters of Luxor'' as a four-part serial, starring Anthony Sarlo as the Doctor. The professional company [[Big Finish Productions]] is currently (2010) producing a series of audio dramas adapting unproduced ''Doctor Who'' teleplays; in 2011, they announced that ''Masters'' will feature in the third series of the Lost Stories as its seventh release.
In 2001, TS Entertainment made a fan production of ''Masters of Luxor'' as a four-part serial, starring Anthony Sarlo as the Doctor.


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 11:04, 6 August 2011

Template:Nc The Masters of Luxor (also known as The Robots) was an unmade Doctor Who serial by Anthony Coburn, the writer of the first-ever Doctor Who story An Unearthly Child. It was inspired by the reports Coburn had read about computers that were just beginning to be used within the television industry.[1]

It would have aired during Season 1 after An Unearthly Child and instead of The Daleks, the story ultimately commissioned. In September 1992, Titan Books published the script in book form as part of its Doctor Who: The Scripts line. David Whitaker was still trying to get the script in working order for production in 1964.

Audio Adaptation

The professional company Big Finish Productions is currently (2010) producing a series of audio dramas adapting unproduced Doctor Who teleplays; in 2011, they announced that Masters will feature in the third series of the Lost Stories as its seventh release.

Fan production

In 2001, TS Entertainment made a fan production of Masters of Luxor as a four-part serial, starring Anthony Sarlo as the Doctor.

See also

Footnotes

  1. Howe, David J., Stammers, Mark, Walker, Stephen James, 1992, Doctor Who: The Sixties, Doctor Who Books, an imprint of Virgin Publishing Ltd, London, p.8
prose stub