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{{Infobox Story SMW <!-- Testing infobox: please do not change the infobox or use this infobox on other pages. -->
name= The Five Doctors|
|image                  = fivedoctors.jpg
novelisation=The Five Doctors (novelisation)|
|novelisation          = The Five Doctors (novelisation)
image=fivedoctors.jpg|
|adapted into          = The Five Doctors (poem)
series=[[Doctor Who television stories|''Doctor Who'' television stories]]|
|series                 = [[Doctor Who television stories|''Doctor Who'' television stories]]
season number=|
|special                = 20th Anniversary Special
story number=129|
|story number           = 129
doctor=[[Fifth Doctor]]|
|doctor                 = Fifth Doctor
companions=[[Tegan Jovanka|Tegan]], [[Turlough]]|
|companions             = [[Tegan Jovanka|Tegan]], [[Vislor Turlough|Turlough]]
featuring=[[First Doctor]], [[Second Doctor]], [[Third Doctor]], [[Susan Campbell|Susan]], [[the Brig]], [[Sarah Jane Smith|Sarah Jane]], [[K9 Mark III|K9]]|
|featuring             = First Doctor
enemy=[[Borusa]], [[The Master (Tremas)|the Master]], [[Cyberman (Mondas)|Cybermen]], [[Dalek]], [[Yeti]]|
|featuring2            = Second Doctor
year=[[Gallifrey]]|
|featuring3            = Third Doctor
writer= [[Terrance Dicks]]|
|featuring4            = Susan Foreman
director= [[Peter Moffatt]] |
|featuring5            = Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart{{!}}the Brigadier
producer= [[John Nathan-Turner]] |
|featuring6            = Sarah Jane Smith
broadcast date= [[25 November]] [[1983]]<ref>This date reflects the first broadcast on a national ''network''.  It was broadcast by a few [[PBS]] ''stations'' in the [[United States]] on [[23 November]] [[1983]].</ref>  |
|featuring7            = Tremas Master{{!}}the Tremas Master
|network=[[BBC1]]<ref>[[BBC1]] ''was'' the ''network'' of first broadcast, although [[WTTW]] in [[Chicago]] was the first ''station'' to commit it to public airwaves.</ref>|
|featuring8            = Jerricho
format= 1x90-minute episode |
|featuring9            = Matrix Rassilon{{!}}Rassilon
production code= [[List of production codes|6K]]|
|featuring10            = K9 Mark III
prev= The King's Demons (TV story) |
|featuring11            = Fourth Doctor
next= Warriors of the Deep (TV story) }}
|featuring12            = Romana II
{{you may|The Five Doctors|n1=the in-universe video game of the same name}}
|enemy                 = [[Lord President|President]] {{Latham}}
'''''The Five Doctors''''' was a ninety-minute story which celebrated the twentieth anniversary of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. Not part of either [[season 20]] or [[season 21|21]], it was instead the original [[Children in Need]] special, presaging a connection between ''[[Doctor Who]]'' and the charity that became more regularised by [[Russell T Davies]] in the [[21st century]].
|setting                = [[Death Zone]], [[Gallifrey]], [[Rassilon Era]]
|writer                 = Terrance Dicks
|director               = [[Peter Moffatt]]
|producer               = [[John Nathan-Turner]]
|epcount                = 1
|broadcast date         = 23 November 1983
|network               = Public Broadcasting Service{{!}}PBS
|format                 = 1x90-minute special
|serial production code = [[List of production codes|6K]]
|prev                   = The King's Demons (TV story)  
|next                   = Warriors of the Deep (TV story)  
|clip                  = Kidnapping the Doctors - The Five Doctors - BBC
|clip2                  = The Doctors Reunite - The Five Doctors - BBC
|clip3                  = Seeking Immortality - The Five Doctors - BBC
|thwr = 90
|thwr2=127
}}{{Store variant data|variant=special edition|release date=1995}}{{Store variant data|variant=Special Edition|release date=1995}}{{Store variant data|variant=40th Anniversary Edition|release date =18 September 2023}}{{dab page|The Five Doctors (disambiguation)}}
'''''The Five Doctors''''' was the 20th Anniversary Special of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. It was part of neither [[Season 20 (Doctor Who 1963)|season 20]] nor [[season 21 (Doctor Who 1963)|21]], but an original [[Children in Need]] special, presaging a connection between ''[[Doctor Who]]'' and the charity that became more regularised by [[Russell T Davies]] in the 21st century.


It was notable for a variety of reasons.
This [[Multi-Doctor story]] featured an unprecedented four incarnations of the Doctor on-screen at once. Incumbent [[Peter Davison]], naturally, appeared as the [[Fifth Doctor]], with [[Patrick Troughton]] and [[Jon Pertwee]] returning as the [[Second Doctor|Second]] and [[Third Doctor]]s, respectively. However, for the first time ever, the role of the [[First Doctor]] was given to [[Richard Hurndall]], a look-alike actor and spiritual successor for the late [[William Hartnell]], who had passed away on [[23 April (people)|23 April]] [[1975 (people)|1975]].


From a financing perspective, it was the first story to be co-produced with overseas broadcasters.  Though such arrangements have been commonplace since [[Doctor Who (1996)|the 1996 telemovie]] [[John Nathan-Turner]]'s procurement of money from the [[ABC1|Australian Broadcasting Company]] was at the time a financial innovation.  Even more impressively, the Australians paid AUD 60,000 towards the production, while agreeing to ''forego onscreen credit''.  ([[REF]]: ''[[The Fifth Doctor Handbook]]'')
Although the title billed five Doctors, [[Tom Baker]] declined to return as the [[Fourth Doctor]]. His Doctor's part in the special would be downplayed from a personal appearance to a limited role using previously-filmed, but never broadcast, footage from the then abandoned story ''[[Shada (TV story)|Shada]]''.


Its location work was completed in [[North Wales]], with the {{w|FFestiniog}} area doubling for [[Gallifrey]]. Though Wales inevitably creates the backdrops for most [[BBC Wales]] ''Doctor Who'' it was at the time an unusual location choice for the then-[[London]]-based ''Doctor Who'' production team.  
''The Five Doctors'' also featured a record number of returning actors who had played [[companion]]s to the Doctor over the years, although a few of the actors only appeared as illusions of these companions. Notable was Carole Ann Ford's return as a much older Susan Foreman, the first time she would play her character in an adult portrayal until her career in [[Big Finish Productions]]. Other appearances included [[Frazer Hines]] and [[Wendy Padbury]] as [[Jamie McCrimmon]] and [[Zoe Heriot]], [[Caroline John]] and [[Richard Franklin]] as [[Liz Shaw]] and [[Mike Yates]], and [[Nicholas Courtney]] as [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart]]. Finally, the story saw the return of [[Elisabeth Sladen]] as [[Sarah Jane Smith]], along with [[K9 Mark III]], a character introduced in the ''[[K9 and Company (TV series)|K9 and Company]]'' pilot ''[[A Girl's Best Friend (TV story)|A Girl's Best Friend]]''. Though he originated from a show which was never picked up for a full season, he was transferred over to ''Doctor Who'' as the newest iteration of [[K9]].


It was one of the first ''Doctor Who'' serials to make extensive use of [[matte painting]]s. Thanks to the then-new [[Quantel Paintbox]] — whose use in ''Doctor Who'' had only rather hesitantly begun in [[season 18]] [[designer]] [[Malcolm Thornton]] was able to replace several model shots and [[glass shot]]s with matte paintings via Paintbox.  This became especially important, given the less-than-optimal weather on location in windy Wales. ([[REF]]: ''[[The Fifth Doctor Handbook]]'')  
It was also the first story co-produced with overseas broadcasters. Though such arrangements have been commonplace since [[Doctor Who (TV story)|the 1996 telemovie]], [[John Nathan-Turner]]'s procurement of money from the [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation]] was a financial innovation. Even more impressively, the Australians paid $A60,000 towards the production while agreeing to forgo on-screen credit. It was similarly unique in that it was broadcast to American audiences on the actual anniversary date of the series, [[23 November (releases)|23 November]] — two days before being aired to British audiences. ([[REF]]: ''[[Doctor Who The Handbook: The Fifth Doctor|The Fifth Doctor Handbook]]'')


The story is well-known for being the adventure in which the Fifth Doctor gets the [[Mike Kelt]]-designed [[TARDIS console]] that would be used throughout the rest of the [[1980s]]. But it's perhaps more important for also introducing a re-design of the entire [[TARDIS console room|console ''room'']].  Prior to this story, there had been little thought about how the console sat in relation to the walls.  Nor, indeed, had the walls been uniformly arranged in precisely the same ways. Thornton argued that, since a new console had been ordered by JNT, the entire set should be regularised. He thus made each facet of the console correspond to a particular wall of the set, and he made each TARDIS wall more angular. This made the set assemble in only one possible way, and reduced assembly time. This improvement to the set essentially solved a problem that had been pointed out with [[Peter Brachacki]]'s original interior for ''[[An Unearthly Child]]''.  Designers from [[Barry Newbery|Brachacki's replacement on ''Child'']] forward had long complained that the TARDIS set was overly complicated and needlessly hard to assemble.
Its location work was completed in [[North Wales]], with the {{w|Ffestiniog}} area doubling for [[Gallifrey]]. Though Wales inevitably provides the backdrops for most [[BBC Wales]] ''Doctor Who'' location work, it was at the time an unusual choice for the ''Doctor Who'' production team based in [[London]].
 
It was one of the first ''Doctor Who'' serials to make extensive use of [[matte painting]]s. With the new [[Quantel Paintbox]] — whose use in ''Doctor Who'' had only hesitantly begun in [[Season 18 (Doctor Who 1963)|season 18]] — [[designer]] [[Malcolm Thornton]] replaced several model shots and [[glass shot]]s with matte paintings via Paintbox. This became especially important, given the less-than-optimal weather in windy Wales. ([[REF]]: ''[[Doctor Who The Handbook: The Fifth Doctor|The Fifth Doctor Handbook]]'')
 
This story premiered the new [[Mike Kelt]]-designed [[TARDIS console]], which would be used through the rest of the 1980s. It further introduced a re-design of the entire [[TARDIS console room|console ''room'']], which would become the final control room design to be used during the run of the classic series. Thornton argued that, since a new console had been ordered by JN-T, the entire set should be regularised. He made each facet of the console correspond to a particular wall of the set and each TARDIS wall more angular. This made the set assemble in only one way, reducing assembly time.
 
Finally, this story was the last televised ''Doctor Who'' story to be written by [[Terrance Dicks]].


== Synopsis ==
== Synopsis ==
Someone is plucking the five incarnations of [[the Doctor]] out of [[time]] and placing them in the [[Death Zone]] on his home [[planet]] of [[Gallifrey]]. Here they will meet old friends and enemies, and play out the deadly [[Game of Rassilon]] for the ultimate prize. But to lose is to win, and he who wins shall lose...
''I am being diminished, whittled away piece by piece. A man is the sum of his memories you know, a [[Time Lord]] even more so...''


== Plot ==
== Plot ==
[[File:DoctorsTARDIS-Fifth.png|thumb|left|The new TARDIS console room]]The [[Fifth Doctor]], [[Tegan Jovanka|Tegan]] and [[Vislor Turlough|Turlough]] are taking a break on the [[Eye of Orion]], one of the most tranquil spots in the [[universe]]. Turlough is sketching while Tegan is enjoying the peaceful atmosphere, which is a change from their non-stop adventures that leave them no time to relax. Elsewhere, in the TARDIS, the Doctor has just finished renovating the control room and goes outside to join his companions and enjoy the peaceful place.
The [[Fifth Doctor]], [[Tegan Jovanka|Tegan]] and [[Vislor Turlough|Turlough]] are taking a break at the [[Eye of Orion]], one of the most tranquil spots in the [[universe]]. In the TARDIS control room, the Doctor has just finished renovating the control console, which now has a more hi-tech look. Turlough is sketching. Tegan is enjoying the peaceful atmosphere. It's a change from their non-stop adventures that leave them no time to relax. The Doctor goes outside to join his companions and enjoy the peace and quiet. When Tegan wonders why it is so restful there, the Doctor explains that it is because of the bombardment of [[positive ion]]s.
 
Elsewhere, in a hidden chamber, a dark figure — who shall be referred to as the Player — manipulates the controls of a forbidden device called the [[Time Scoop]] and kidnaps the [[First Doctor]] as he walks through a [[rose garden (The Three Doctors)|rose garden]]. The Player takes a figurine of the First Doctor from a window-shaped wall alcove and places it on one of five spots on a diorama, which lights up in response.
 
Back on the Eye of Orion, the Fifth Doctor feels a pain in his chest but dismisses the thought that anything is wrong with him as Turlough and Tegan look worriedly at him.
 
Elsewhen, [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart]] is at a [[UNIT]] reunion. He talks to his replacement, [[Colonel]] [[Charles Crichton]], about his former scientific adviser, the Doctor; it seems that UNIT had been unable to track him down for the reunion. The Brigadier says, "Wonderful chap — all of them", which confuses the Colonel. Suddenly, the [[Second Doctor]] bursts through the door, having barged past the sergeant on duty, happy to see his old friend. They take a walk. As they walk and talk in the yard about their times together, the Second Doctor tells the Brigadier that he must go as he is bending the [[Laws of Time]]. However, they are snatched up by the Time Scoop. Models of them appear in the wall alcove and the Player puts them in the spot next to the First Doctor.
 
[[File:SJSK9FiveDocs.jpg|thumb|K9 tries to warn Sarah about the [[Time Scoop]].]]
The Fifth Doctor feels another pain and collapses after reassuring Tegan and Turlough that everything's all right.
 
Elsewhen, the [[Third Doctor]] is driving his vintage car, [[Bessie]]. He notices the Time Scoop coming towards him. He tries to evade it, but is taken anyway; a figure of him appears in the wall alcove and placed into the next spot on the diorama.
 
The Fifth Doctor tells his companions he must get back to the TARDIS. There is something definitely wrong with his past and he is in immediate danger. As he puts it, "A man is the sum of his memories, a Time Lord even more so". He is near the TARDIS when he collapses in pain as his third incarnation is snatched. He tells his companions he has to find "my other selves..."
 
[[Sarah Jane Smith]] is about to leave home. [[K9]] warns her not to. He senses there is danger and it somehow involves the Doctor. He suggests she take him with her. Unfortunately, her car is out of action and she has to take the bus. Believing K9 is overreacting, she dismisses his worry and heads off.


Elsewhere, in a hidden chamber, a dark figure is manipulating the controls of a [[Time Scoop]] and kidnaps the [[First Doctor]] as he walks through a lovely rose garden. The dark figure takes a figurine of the First Doctor from a window and places it on one of five spots on a small diorama.
Somewhen else, the [[Fourth Doctor]] and [[Romana II]] are enjoying a [[punt]] along the [[River Cam]] in [[Cambridge]]. They are Time Scooped by the Player as well. However, to the growing anger of whoever is taking the Doctor's incarnations out of time, he cannot take figures of the Fourth Doctor and Romana from the wall alcove: they have been trapped in a [[time eddy]] in the [[time vortex]] and do not rematerialise. The Player angrily slams a black-gloved fist onto the control panel.


Back on the Eye of Orion, Tegan wonders about why it is so restful there, and the Doctor explains that it is because of the bombardment of positive ions. He feels pain in his chest, but dismisses the thought that anything is wrong with him as Turlough and Tegan look at him in worry.
Waiting at the bus stop, Sarah is snatched by the Time Scoop, and her figurine placed in the diorama alongside the Third Doctor.


Elsewhen, [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart]] is at a [[Unified Intelligence Taskforce|UNIT]] reunion, talking to his replacement about his past scientific advisor, the Doctor. The Brigadier says "they're nice chaps, all of him", confusing his replacement. The [[Second Doctor]] bursts through the door and is happy to see his old friend. As they talk on the yard about their times together, the Second Doctor tells the Brigadier that he must go as he is bending the laws of time. However, they are taken by the Time Scoop. Figures of them appear in the window and the dark figure puts them in the second slot next to the First Doctor.
The Fifth Doctor and his companions have entered the TARDIS. After setting a destination on the console and starting the TARDIS off he collapses. He begins fading into the Time Stream, but Tegan and Turlough keep him in existence by encouraging him. The TARDIS lands, and the scanner shows a desolate, rocky landscape — the [[Death Zone]] on [[Gallifrey]].


[[File:SJSK9FiveDocs.jpg|thumb|K9 tries to warn Sarah about the Time Scoop.]]The Fifth Doctor feels pain again and almost collapses. He tells his companions he must get back to the TARDIS. The Doctor knows there is something definitely wrong with his past and he is in immediate danger.
[[File:Death_Zone_model.jpg|thumb|left|Model figurines of the Doctors and their companions in the Time Scoop's diorama.]]
All the Doctors and their companions, save the Fourth Doctor and Romana, have actually been deposited on a desolate, rocky landscape — the [[Death Zone]] on [[Gallifrey]]. Figures of the Fifth Doctor, Tegan and Turlough have been placed on the diorama section next to the First Doctor — the spot where the Fourth Doctor and Romana should have been placed is flashing.


Elsewhen, the [[Third Doctor]] is out driving his vintage car, [[Bessie]]. He notices the Time Scoop coming towards him. He tries to evade it, but is taken anyway. A few years later, [[Sarah Jane Smith]] is about to leave home. [[K9]] warns her not to as the Doctor is involved with a strange occurrence. Sarah believes K9 is overreacting, dismisses his worry and walks off, only to be Time Scooped as well. As she is Time Scooped, Sarah Jane cries she should have trusted K9's judgment. The Third Doctor and Sarah Jane appears as figures in the dark figure's window and he places them in the next slot in the diorama.
Meanwhile, in the Capitol on Gallifrey, the [[Inner Council]] of [[Time Lord]]s, headed by [[Lord President]] {{Latham}} and consisting of [[Lord Chancellor|Chancellor]] [[Flavia]] and [[Jerricho|the Castellan]], are in session. Despite the recently regenerated and still arrogant Borusa's misgivings, the High Council has voted unanimously to call in {{Ainley}} to go into the Death Zone to help the Doctor, who has been taken out of time and no longer exists in any of his regenerations. They explain that the [[Eye of Harmony]] is being drained by whoever is taking the Doctors out of [[time]], endangering all of Gallifrey. Offered a [[pardon]] and a new cycle of regenerations if he rescues the Doctors, the Master accepts. He is given a copy of the [[Seal of Rassilon|Seal of the High Council]] by the Castellan to prove his credentials and a [[transmat]] recall device. He is transmatted to the Death Zone.


The Fifth Doctor is nearly to the TARDIS before collapsing in pain. He tells his companions he must find himself. This confuses Tegan and Turlough; they have no idea what he means. The Doctor explains he must find his past lives as they are beginning taken out of their time one by one and if a Time Lord's past incarnations cease to exist in the times they were supposed to, he will fade away into nothingness.
In the Zone, the Doctors face many dangers. The First Doctor finds himself in a corridor with mirrored walls and is reunited with his granddaughter, [[Susan Foreman|Susan]]. Their reunion is cut short when [[Dalek (The Five Doctors)|a Dalek]] arrives and tries to kill them. They trick the Dalek into destroying itself by pushing it into a dead end, where a beam from its energy weapon bounces back off the shiny walls and destroys it; as the Doctor points out, "It's very dangerous to fire energy weapons in an enclosed space!" The explosion has blasted a hole in the wall, out which is what the Doctor and Susan recognise as the Death Zone on Gallifrey.


Elsewhen, the [[Fourth Doctor]] and [[Romana II|Romana]] are enjoying a peaceful time [[File:Death_Zone_model.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctors and their companions in the Death Zone]], [[Punt|punting]] along the [[River Cam]] and are Time Scooped by the dark figure as well. However, to the increasing anger of whoever is taking all of the Doctor's known incarnations out of time, he is unable to take the Fourth Doctor and Romana from the window as figures as they have been trapped in a [[time eddy]] withtin the [[time vortex]] and do not rematerialise. All the Doctors and their companions, save the Fourth Doctor and Romana, have actually been deposited on a desolate, rocky landscape — the [[Death Zone]] on [[Gallifrey]] according to where the figure put their figurines.
The Second Doctor and the Brigadier escape from a squad of [[Cyberman|Cybermen]], and the Third Doctor rescues Sarah from her fall down an embankment. Sarah is confused; she had watched the Third Doctor regenerate into the Fourth, but is glad to see the Doctor she once knew.


In the meantime, the Fifth Doctor and his companions have entered the TARDIS as he collapses due to his immediate past life being trapped in a time eddy. He begins fading. However, he sets a destination on the console and the TARDIS takes off.
The Second and Third Doctors explain to their companions that in Gallifrey's past, known as the [[Dark Time]], the Time Lords greatly misused their powers. A device called the Time Scoop plucked beings out of their times and placed them in the Death Zone, where they fought each other in a sort of gladiatorial game for the Time Lords' amusement and entertainment. The Doctors' goal now is to reach the [[Dark Tower]], where the Time Lord founder [[Rassilon]] is entombed, although there is some doubt as to whether Rassilon is actually dead.


Meanwhile, in the Capitol on[[File:Master_five_doctors.jpg|thumb|The Master is called in to help]] Gallifrey, the [[Inner Council]] of [[Time Lord]]s, headed by [[Lord President]] [[Borusa]] and consisting of [[Lord Chancellor|Chancellor]] [[Flavia]] and the [[Castellan]], watch in concern. The [[Eye of Harmony]] is being drained by whomever is taking the Doctors out of [[time]], endangering all of Gallifrey. Despite the once-again-regenerated and still arrogant Borusa's misgivings, the High Council has unanimously voted to call in [[the Master]] to assist by going into the Death Zone to help the Doctors. Offered a pardon and a new cycle of regenerations, the Master accepts. He is given a copy of the Seal of the High Council by the Castellan to prove his credentials, and a [[transmat]] recall device. He is teleported via transmat to the Death Zone.
The Master meets and fails to convince the Third Doctor he is there to help. The Doctor thinks the Master's Seal of Rassilon is a forgery, and when the Master hands it over to try and prove it is genuine, the Doctor confiscates it, thinking the Master has stolen it and says "I'll return it at the first opportunity!" The Master flees when thunderbolts flash down from the sky. The Third Doctor only sees this as confirmation that this is all a plot of the Master's, especially when another thunderbolt disables Bessie. The Doctor and Sarah are forced to continue their journey on foot.


In the Zone, the Doctors face many dangers. The First Doctor finds himself in a hall of mirrors and reunites with his granddaughter, [[Susan Foreman|Susan]]. Their reunion is cut short when a [[Dalek]] arrives and tries to kill them. They trick the Dalek into destroying itself by pushing it into [[File:Susan_and_the_doctor_2.jpg|thumb|left|Grandfather and granddaughter meet again.]] a dead end, where its energy weapon ricochets and destroys it. The Second Doctor and the Brigadier escape from a squad of [[Cyberman (Mondas)|Cybermen]] and the Third Doctor rescues Sarah from her fall down an embankment. Sarah is confused; she had seen the Third Doctor regenerate into the Fourth ("[[Planet of the Spiders]]"), but is glad to see the Doctor she once knew. The Second and Third Doctors explain to their companions that in Gallifrey's past, known as the [[Dark Time]], the Time Lords misused their powers. A device called the Time Scoop plucked beings out of their times and placed them in the Death Zone, where they fought each other in a sort of gladiatorial game. The Doctors' goal now is to reach the [[Dark Tower]], where the Time Lord founder [[Rassilon]] is entombed, although there is some doubt as to whether Rassilon is actually dead.
The First Doctor and Susan find and enter the TARDIS; the presence of the First Doctor seems to stabilise the Fifth for the moment. Together, they scan the tower and find three entrances — one at the apex of the tower, the main gate at the base and one underground, but a [[force field]] prevents the TARDIS's entry, or even it moving within the Death Zone. The Fifth Doctor takes Tegan and Susan towards the main gate but encounters the Master, who has no better luck convincing the Fifth Doctor of his ''bona fides'' than he had the Third. At that moment, the two are confronted by Cybermen. When they try to run away, the Master is knocked out by an explosion caused by a Cyber-gun blast. The Fifth Doctor finds the Master's recall device on his unconscious body and transmats himself to the Capitol. Tegan and Susan start back to the TARDIS to warn the others, but Susan trips and sprains her ankle; and needs Tegan's help.


The Master meets and fails to convince the Third Doctor he is there to help. He flees when thunderbolts fall from the sky. The Third Doctor only sees this as confirmation this is all a plot of the Master's.
In the Capitol, the Fifth Doctor is informed of the situation by the High Council. The Doctor realises he has done the Master an injustice and that they were found too easily by the Cybermen. Like the Daleks, the Cybermen were never brought to the Death Zone in the Dark Times because they fought too well. He opens the recall device and finds a homing beacon inside. The Castellan — who had given the device to the Master — is arrested, and Borusa orders the Commander to search the Castellan's office and living quarters.


The First Doctor and Susan find the TARDIS; the presence of the First Doctor seems to stabilize the Fifth for the moment. Together, they scan the tower and find three entrances — one at the apex of the tower, the main gate at the base, and one underground, but a [[force field]] prevents the TARDIS's entry. The Fifth Doctor takes Tegan and Susan to the main gate, but encounters the Master, who has no better luck convincing the Fifth Doctor than the Third. At that moment, the two are surrounded by Cybermen. When they try to run away, the Master is knocked out by a cybergun blast. The Fifth Doctor finds the Master's recall device on his unconscious body and transmats himself to the Capitol. The Master, confronted by the Cybermen, offers himself as a guide to the Tower.
Tegan and Susan have told the First Doctor what happened to the Fifth Doctor. The First Doctor decides to head for the main gate himself. Tegan insists on accompanying him, much to his dismay. Susan and Turlough remain in the TARDIS to wait for the Tower's force-field to be deactivated so they can move the ship there.


In the Capitol, the Doctor is informed of the situation by the High Council. The Doctor realises not only that he has done the Master an injustice, but also that they were found too easily by the Cybermen. He opens the recall device and finds a homing beacon inside. The Castellan, who gave the Master the device, is arrested and his quarters are to be searched. A box containing the [[Black Scrolls of Rassilon]], forbidden knowledge from the Dark Time, is found. The scrolls spontaneously combust before anyone can examine them, and Borusa orders the Castellan taken to the [[mind probe]] for interrogation. However, as the Castellan is escorted outside, there is a shot. The Doctor rushes out to find the Castellan dead. The Captain of the guard reports he was shot while trying to escape. The Doctor voices his concerns to Chancellor Flavia — the Castellan was stubborn, but not a traitor. There is more to this than meets the eye.
The Master, confronted by the Cybermen, offers himself as a guide to the Tower in order to save his own life.


The Second Doctor and the Brigadier are exploring a series of caves when they encounter a [[Robot Yeti|Yeti]] left over from the previous games. Taking refuge in an alcove, the Doctor tries to chase the Yeti off with a firework, but only maddens it, causing it to collapse the entrance to the alcove. However, the Doctor detects a breeze blowing further back, and discovers the underground entrance to the Tower.
While waiting for the First Doctor and Tegan to get to the Tower, thumping is heard outside the TARDIS; the scanner reveals a squad of Cybermen carrying a coffin-like box and lots of cables.


[[File:Cybermen_defeated.jpg|thumb|The Raston Warrior Robot kills the Cybermen]]On the surface, the Third Doctor and Sarah come across a [[Raston Warrior Robot]], according to the Doctor the most perfect killing machine ever devised. Able to move with blinding speed and fire bolts of metal at its targets, it detects its victims by motion. The Doctor and Sarah cannot move without attracting the robot's attention, but luck is on their side when a squad of Cybermen comes over the ridge and arey eliminated by the robot. Taking advantage of the distraction, the Doctor and Sarah run past the robot, taking some rope and spare bolts from its cave. Reaching a cliff face just above the Tower, the Doctor uses the rope and bolts for a grappling hook. He and Sarah abseil across to the top of the Tower.
A box containing [[Black Scrolls of Rassilon]], forbidden knowledge from the Dark Times has been found, supposedly in the Castellan's quarters. The scrolls spontaneously combust before anyone can examine them, and Borusa orders the Castellan to be taken for interrogation, authorising the use of the [[mind probe]] — much to the Castellan's horror. However, as the Castellan is escorted outside, there is the sound of a staser shot and a cry. The Doctor rushes out to find the Castellan dead, a gun by his hand; the Commander reports he was shot while trying to escape. President Borusa refuses to allow the Doctor to return to the Death Zone and orders Flavia to look after him.


Tegan and Susan have told the First Doctor what happened to the Fifth Doctor. The First Doctor decides to head for the main gate himself, Tegan insisting on accompanying him. Opening the main gate with a keypad hidden under a bell, they find a chessboard floor blocking their way. The First Doctor determines the chessboard is a trap — electrical bolts will destroy anyone attempting to cross unless they find the safe path. The Master appears at this point, warning them the Cybermen are close behind. While the Doctor and Tegan hide, the Master lures the Cybermen onto the chessboard and they are all killed. The Master blithely steps across the board, moving into the Tower after telling the Doctor that "it's as easy as pie." The Doctor realises that the Master means the Greek letter ''pi'', and that the safe path is calculated by means of the mathematical constant. Armed with this knowledge, the Doctor and Tegan make their way across the trap. In the Zone, the TARDIS surrounded by Cybermen, who start to assemble a bomb to blow it up. Inside, Turlough and Susan watch helplessly, not knowing what to do.
The Second Doctor and the Brigadier are exploring a series of caves in the hope of reaching the lower entrance to the Tower when they encounter a [[Yeti (The Five Doctors)|Yeti]], apparently left over from the previous games. Taking refuge in an alcove, the Doctor tries to chase the Yeti off with a firework, but only maddens it, causing it to collapse the entrance to the alcove. However, the Doctor detects a breeze blowing further back, and discovers the underground entrance to the Tower.


[[File:Jamie_&_Zoe_Five_Doctors.jpg|thumb|left|Jamie and Zoe]]The Second and Third Doctors encounter more obstacles while moving separately through the Tower, with the mind of Rassilon emitting intensifying fear. They also encounter what appear to be their previous companions, the Third meeting Captain [[Mike Yates]] and [[Liz Shaw]] and the Second [[Jamie McCrimmon]] and [[Zoe Heriot]]. The Doctors soon realise they are just phantoms to impede their progress through the Tower and the spectres vanish with a scream. Finally, all three Doctors reach the tomb, Rassilon's sepulchre. While the Brigadier, Sarah and Tegan get re-acquainted, the three Doctors try to translate an inscription in [[Gallifreyan (language)|Old High Gallifreyan]] on a pedestal near a control panel.
The Fifth Doctor voices his concerns to Chancellor Flavia. He says that while the Castellan was stubborn, he was devoted to his oath of office and could never have been a traitor and that his reaction to the Scrolls was not that of a guilty man, but sheer disbelief. He suspects that the traitor is still at large. Flavia decides to have a word with the Captain, while the Doctor will speak with Borusa.


The Fifth Doctor finds Borusa has vanished from the Council chamber, but the guards insist the President could not have gotten by them at the only entrance. The transmat is out of power, so the Doctor deduces there must be a secret door. He finds it hidden behind a painting of Rassilon playing the harp. The key to opening the door is a series of notes played on the actual [[Harp of Rassilon|harp]] standing in front of the painting, notes indicated by the sheet music in the painting itself. The Doctor enters the secret chamber, and finds the dark figure that had taken his other selves out of time: Borusa. The Lord President is not satisfied with ruling Gallifrey for his lifetimes — he wants to be President Eternal. Borusa has determined that Rassilon discovered the secret of [[immortality]], and he means to claim it, sending the Doctors into the Zone to clear the way for him. Using the [[Coronet of Rassilon]], Borusa overwhelms the Fifth Doctor's will, forcing him to obey his commands.
[[File:Cybermen_defeated.jpg|thumb|The Raston Warrior Robot eliminates the Cybermen.]]
On the surface, the Third Doctor and Sarah come across a [[Raston Warrior Robot]]. According to the Doctor, it is "the most perfect killing machine ever devised". Able to move with blinding speed and fire bolts of metal at its targets, it detects its victims by motion. The Doctor and Sarah cannot move without attracting the robot's attention, but luck is on their side when a squad of Cybermen come over the ridge. The robot quickly eliminates the entire Cyber squad. Taking advantage of the distraction, the Doctor and Sarah run past the robot, taking some wire and spare bolts from its cave.


In the tomb, the Doctors have deciphered the inscription. Rassilon did discover immortality, and was willing to share it with whoever overcame the obstacles to the tomb and took the ring from his body. However, a line troubles the First Doctor: "To lose is to win and he who wins shall lose." The Master steps out of the shadows to claim immortality himself, but is attacked from behind by the Brigadier and tied up by Sarah and Tegan. The Third Doctor fixes the control panel by reversing the polarity of the neutron flow, allowing the TARDIS to transport itself to the tomb just seconds before the Cybermen's bomb detonates.
The First Doctor and Tegan reach the main door and open it using an entry coder hidden under a large bell.


[[File:Rassilon.jpg|thumb|Rassilon]]The Second Doctor contacts the Capitol, and the Fifth Doctor answers, still under Borusa's control. The Fifth Doctor tells his other selves to await his and Borusa's arrival, knowing of the ring and immortality through his past lives and wishing to keep it a secret. Transmatting over to the tomb, Borusa paralyzes the Doctors' companions with a command and tries to control the minds of the other Doctors as well, but fails as all four Doctors combine their wills against him. However, a booming voice echoes through the chamber. It is Rassilon, demanding to know who disturbs him. Borusa steps forward to claim immortality and while the other Doctors protest, the First Doctor holds the others back and says to the projection of Rassilon that Borusa deserves the prize. Borusa takes the ring from the body and puts it on, but finds himself paralyzed, then transformed into one of several stone faces carved into the side of the casket. Rassilon sends the Master back to his own time, and frees the Fourth Doctor from the time vortex before returning to eternal rest. The First Doctor smugly tells the Fifth that he finally understood the proverb. The prize was another trap — a means for Rassilon to discover who wanted immortality and get them out of the way.
After climbing a cliff, much to Sarah's dismay, the Doctor and Sarah find that there is no clear way across the empty space to the top of the tower. The Doctor uses the wire and bolts for a grappling hook. He and Sarah abseil across the gap to the top of the Tower, to the amusement of the Master far below.


The Doctors and their companions say their good-byes to each other and re-enter the TARDIS, save for the Fifth Doctor, Tegan and Turlough. As the three watch, the others are transported back to their proper timezones. Chancellor Flavia arrives with guards and tells the Doctor that with Borusa's disappearance, the Council has appointed the Doctor as President. The Doctor orders Flavia back to the Capitol, saying that he will follow in his TARDIS and that she has full powers until his return. Once in the ship, however, he tells Tegan and Turlough he has no intention of returning. Tegan asks if the Doctor really intends to go on the run from his own people in a rackety old TARDIS. The Doctor replies, smiling, "Why not? After all, that's how it all started."
On the main floor of the Tower, the First Doctor and Tegan find a red-and-white chessboard floor blocking their way. The Doctor quickly determines the chessboard is a trap — electrical bolts will destroy anyone attempting to cross unless they find the safe path. The Master appears at this point, warning them the Cybermen are close behind. While the Doctor and Tegan hide, the Master lures the Cybermen onto the chessboard, where all but the Cyber-Leader (who waited behind) are killed by the trap. He also tricks the Cyber-Leader into trying to cross with him before fatally blasting him with a Cyber-weapon. Enjoying this little piece of butchery, the Master blithely steps across the board, moving into the Tower after telling the Doctor that "it's as easy as [[pie]]." The Doctor realises that the Master means the Greek letter ''pi'' and the safe path is calculated by means of the mathematical constant. Armed with this knowledge, the Doctor and Tegan make their way across the trap.


In the Death Zone, the TARDIS is now surrounded by Cybermen, who start to assemble a bomb to blow it up. Inside, Turlough and Susan watch helplessly, not knowing what to do.
[[File:Jamie_&_Zoe_Five_Doctors.jpg|thumb|left|Jamie and Zoe appear.]]
The Second and Third Doctors encounter more obstacles while moving separately through the Tower, with the mind of Rassilon emitting intensifying fear. They also encounter what appear to be their previous companions, the Third meeting [[Captain]] [[Mike Yates]] and [[Liz Shaw]] and the Second [[Jamie McCrimmon]] and [[Zoe Heriot]]. The Doctors soon realise they are just phantoms to impede their progress through the Tower and the spectres vanish with a scream. The First Doctor blithely ignores the fear as an illusion, considering that "at my age, there's little left to fear!"
Finally, the first three Doctors reach the [[tomb]]: Rassilon's sepulchre. While the Brigadier, Sarah and Tegan get reacquainted, the three Doctors try to translate an inscription in [[Gallifreyan (language)|Old High Gallifreyan]] on a pedestal near a control panel — arguing among themselves as usual.
The Fifth Doctor finds Borusa has vanished from the Council Chamber, but the guards insist the President could not have gotten by them at the only entrance. The transmat is out of power, so the Doctor [[deduce]]s there must be a secret door and orders the guards to notify Flavia that the President has disappeared. After an intensive search, he realises that the [[Harp of Rassilon]], standing in the Council Chamber, is the key and that a tune will open the door. He starts experimenting.
In the tomb, the Doctors have deciphered the inscription. Rassilon had discovered the secret of [[immortality]]. He was willing to share it with whoever overcame the obstacles to the tomb and took the ring from his body and put it on. However, a line troubles the First Doctor, who wonders just what it means: "To lose is to win and he who wins shall lose." The Master steps out of the shadows, brandishing his tissue compression eliminator, to claim immortality himself and to kill the Doctor "three times over", but the Brigadier moves up behind the Master and surprises him by saying "Nice to see you again!" The Third Doctor kicks the weapon out of the Master's hand, while the Brigadier delivers a powerful right-hook to the Master's jaw. The Master falls to the floor and stays there, knocked out cold, and is tied up by Sarah and Tegan.
The Fifth Doctor realises that the tune is shown in a painting of Rassilon playing the Harp, where the sheet music is clearly depicted. He plays the tune, which opens the door. The Doctor enters the secret chamber and finds the dark figure of the Player who has taken his other selves out of time: Borusa. The Lord President is not satisfied with ruling Gallifrey for all his remaining regenerations — he wants to be President Eternal and rule forever. Like the first three Doctors, Borusa has determined that Rassilon discovered the secret of immortality and he means to claim it, sending the Doctors into the Zone to clear the way of obstacles for him. Using the [[Coronet of Rassilon]], Borusa overwhelms the Fifth Doctor's will, forcing him to obey his commands.
The Third Doctor fixes the control panel by reversing the polarity of the neutron flow, allowing the TARDIS to transport itself to the tomb just seconds before the Cybermen's bomb detonates.
[[File:Rassilon.jpg|thumb|[[Matrix Rassilon|Rassilon]] questions as to whether the Doctors also seek immortality.]]
The Second Doctor contacts the Capitol. The Fifth Doctor answers, still under Borusa's control, and tells his other selves to await his and Borusa's arrival. The First and Third Doctors are suspicious, but the Second doesn't believe them. Transmatting to the tomb with the Fifth Doctor, Borusa paralyses the Doctors' companions with the command "Be silent! Be silent, all of you! Do not move or speak until I give you leave!" Then, Borusa tries to control the minds of the First, Second and Third Doctors. However, they combine their wills against him to free the Fifth Doctor. As Borusa declares that Gallifrey will believe its President's word over that of the notorious renegades, a booming voice echoes through the chamber.
It is [[Matrix Rassilon|Rassilon]], who appears as a large face in the air, demanding to know who disturbs him.
Borusa steps forward to claim his prize of immortality and, while the other Doctors protest, the First Doctor holds them back, telling Rassilon that Borusa deserves the prize. Rassilon instructs Borusa to take the ring from the body and put it on. Borusa does so, but finds himself paralysed as three stone faces carved into the side of Rassilon's bier briefly come to life; they are the others who sought immortality and received it: they are now frozen in stone forever. The ring vanishes from Borusa's finger and returns to Rassilon, while Borusa himself disappears and reappears as a stone face in an empty space on the bier. The faces, including Borusa's, then become stone once more. Borusa has found his immortality, but not the way he wanted it.
Rassilon asks the Doctors if they want immortality too — all four frantically say "No!" The Fifth Doctor asks that they all be returned to their proper time and the Fourth Doctor be freed from the time vortex. Rassilon does so, and the Fourth Doctor and Romana are freed from the time eddy and they both depart in the TARDIS. <ref group="note"> Only in the Original version. In the Special Edition version, they are both returned to the River Cam."</ref>. Then, Rassilon sends the Master — who is just coming to, and is grinning — back to his own time, saying "His sins will find their punishment in due time." After telling the Doctors to say their goodbyes, and that they have chosen wisely, Rassilon bids them farewell and vanishes, returning to his eternal rest as the companions find themselves released from Borusa's psychic hold. The First Doctor smugly tells the Fifth that he finally understood the proverb: "To lose is to win and he who wins shall lose." The prize was yet another trap — a means for Rassilon to discover who wanted immortality and were thus a danger to Gallifrey and get them out of the way.
The Doctors and their companions say their goodbyes to each other — with a few snipes between the Doctors — and re-enter the TARDIS, save for the Fifth Doctor, Tegan and Turlough. As the three watch, the Doctors and their companions are transported back to their proper times in offshoots of the TARDIS splitting off from the original; Rassilon has used temporal fission to send them home.<ref group="note"> Only in the Original version. In the Special Edition version, the Doctors and their companions are transported back to their proper times by the Time Scoop.</ref> Flavia arrives with guards and tells the Doctor that with Borusa's disappearance, the Council has appointed the Doctor as President. The Doctor orders Flavia back to the Capitol, saying she has full deputy powers until his return and that he will follow in his TARDIS. When Flavia begins to protest, the Doctor firmly tells her that she should obey his commands as he is now is president. He then ushers Tegan and Turlough into the TARDIS and orders the guards to escort Flavia back to her duties. The Doctor runs back to the TARDIS, leaving Flavia calling after him.
In the TARDIS, Tegan and Turlough are concerned the Time Lords will send them home now the Doctor has become President, but the Doctor tells them that he has no intention of returning to Gallifrey. Tegan asks if the Doctor really intends to go on the run from his own people in a "rackety old TARDIS". The Doctor replies, smiling, "Why not? After all, that's how it all started..."
== Cast ==
== Cast ==
* [[Fifth Doctor|The Doctor]] - [[Peter Davison]]
* [[Fifth Doctor|The Doctor]] [[Peter Davison]]
* [[Third Doctor|The Doctor]] - [[Jon Pertwee]]
* [[Third Doctor|The Doctor]] [[Jon Pertwee]]
* [[Second Doctor|The Doctor]] - [[Patrick Troughton]]
* [[Second Doctor|The Doctor]] [[Patrick Troughton]]
* [[First Doctor|The Doctor]] - [[Richard Hurndall]]
* [[Fourth Doctor|The Doctor]] [[Tom Baker]]
* [[Fourth Doctor|The Doctor]] - [[Tom Baker]] (footage from unbroadcast ''Shada'')
* [[First Doctor|The Doctor]] [[Richard Hurndall]]/[[William Hartnell]]
* [[First Doctor|The Doctor]] - [[William Hartnell]] (footage from ''The Dalek Invasion of Earth'')
* [[Tegan Jovanka|Tegan]] [[Janet Fielding]]
* [[Tegan Jovanka]] - [[Janet Fielding]]
* [[Turlough]] [[Mark Strickson]]
* [[Turlough]] - [[Mark Strickson]]
* [[Sarah Jane Smith]] [[Elisabeth Sladen]]
* [[Sarah Jane Smith]] - [[Elisabeth Sladen]]
* [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|The Brigadier]] [[Nicholas Courtney]]
* [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart]] - [[Nicholas Courtney]]
* [[Susan Foreman|Susan]] [[Carole Ann Ford]]
* [[Susan Foreman|Susan]] - [[Carole Ann Ford]]
* [[Tremas Master|The Master]] [[Anthony Ainley]]
* [[The Master]] - [[Anthony Ainley]]
* [[Romana II|Romana]] [[Lalla Ward]]
* [[Romana II|Romana]] - [[Lalla Ward]] (footage from unbroadcast ''Shada'')
* [[Lord President]] {{Latham}} — [[Philip Latham]]
* [[Borusa|Lord President Borusa]] - [[Philip Latham]]
* [[Chancellor]] [[Flavia]] [[Dinah Sheridan]]
* [[Flavia|Chancellor Flavia]] - [[Dinah Sheridan]]
* [[Jerricho|The Castellan]] [[Paul Jerricho]]
* [[Castellan (Arc of Infinity)|The Castellan]] - [[Paul Jerricho]]
* [[Cyber-Leader (The Five Doctors)|Cyber-Leader]] [[David Banks]]
* [[Jamie McCrimmon]] - [[Frazer Hines]] (illusion)
* [[Cyber-Lieutenant (The Five Doctors)|Cyber-Lieutenant]] [[Mark Hardy]]
* [[Zoe Heriot]] - [[Wendy Padbury]] (illusion)
* [[Matrix Rassilon|Rassilon]] [[Richard Mathews]]
* [[Liz Shaw]] - [[Caroline John]] (illusion)
* [[Jamie McCrimmon|Jamie]] [[Frazer Hines]]
* [[Mike Yates|Captain Mike Yates]] - [[Richard Franklin]] (illusion)
* [[Zoe Heriot|Zoe]] [[Wendy Padbury]]
* Voice of [[K9 Mark III|K9]] - [[John Leeson]]
* [[Liz Shaw]] [[Caroline John]]
* [[Rassilon]] - [[Richard Mathews]]
* [[Mike Yates|Captain Yates]] [[Richard Franklin]]
* [[Cyber-Leader|Cyber Leader]] - [[David Banks]]
* [[K9 Mark III|K9]] [[John Leeson]]
* [[Cyber-Lieutenant]] - [[Mark Hardy]]
* [[Charles Crichton|Crichton]] [[David Savile]]
* [[Charles Crichton|Crichton]] - [[David Savile]]
* Dalek Voice [[Roy Skelton]]
* Dalek Voice - [[Roy Skelton]]
* [[Dalek Operator]] — [[John Scott Martin]]
* Dalek Operator - [[John Scott Martin]]
* [[Commander (The Five Doctors)|Commander]] [[Stuart Blake]]
* [[Commander (The Five Doctors)|Commander]] - [[Stuart Blake]]
* [[Technician (The Five Doctors)|Technician]] [[Stephen Meredith]]
* [[Technician (The Five Doctors)|Technician]] - [[Stephen Meredith]]
* [[Sergeant (The Five Doctors)|Sergeant]] [[Ray Float]]
* [[Sergeant (The Five Doctors)|Sergeant]] - [[Ray Float]]
* [[Guard (The Five Doctors)|Guard]] [[John Tallents]]
* [[Guard (The Five Doctors)|Guard]] - [[John Tallents]]
* [[Cyber-Scout|Cyber Scout]] [[William Kenton]]
* [[Cyber Scout]] - [[William Kenton]]
* [[Raston Warrior Robot]] [[Keith Hodiak]]
* [[Raston Warrior Robot|Raston Robot]] - [[Keith Hodiak]]


== Crew ==
== Crew ==
* [[Film Editor]] - [[M A C Adams]]
* [[Assistant Floor Manager]] — [[Pauline Seager]]
* [[Studio Lighting]] - [[Don Babbage]]
* [[Camera Supervisor]] - [[Alec Wheal]]
* [[Film Cameraman]] - [[John Baker (cameraman)|John Baker]]
* [[Costumes]] — [[Colin Lavers]]
* [[Visual Effects Designer]]s - [[John Brace]] and [[Mike Kelt]]
* [[Design Effects]] - [[Jean Peyre]]
* [[Production Associate]] - [[June Collins]]
* [[Designer (crew)|Designer]] — [[Malcolm Thornton]]
* [[Production Assistant]] - [[Jean Davis]]
* [[Film Cameraman]] [[John Baker (cameraman)|John Baker]]
* [[Doctor Who theme|Title Music]] - [[Ron Grainer]] and the [[BBC Radiophonic Workshop]]
* [[Film Editor]] — [[M A C Adams]]
* [[Theme arrangement]] - [[Peter Howell]]
* [[Film sound|Film Sound]] - [[John Gatland]]
* [[Make-Up]] - [[Jill Hagger]]
* [[Graphic Designer]] - [[Ian Hewett]]
* [[Incidental Music]] - [[Peter Howell]]
* [[Incidental Music]] — [[Peter Howell]]
* [[Costumes]] - [[Colin Lavers]]
* [[Make-Up]] [[Jill Hagger]]
* [[Special Sounds]] - [[Dick Mills]]
* [[Production Associate]] [[June Collins]]
* [[Studio Sound]] - [[Martin Ridout]]
* [[Production Assistant]] [[Jean Davis]]
* [[Assistant Floor Manager]] - [[Pauline Seager]]
* [[Production Manager]] - [[Jeremy Silberston]]
* [[Script Editor]] - [[Eric Saward]]
* [[Properties Buyer]] - [[Robert Fleming]]
* [[Writer]] - [[Terrance Dicks]]
* [[Technical Manager]] - [[Derek Thompson]]
* [[Designer (crew)|Designer]] - [[Malcolm Thornton]]
* [[Doctor Who theme|Title Music]] — [[Ron Grainer]] and the [[BBC Radiophonic Workshop]]
* [[Director]] - [[Peter Moffatt]]
* [[Theme arrangement]] [[Peter Howell]]
* [[Producer]] - [[John Nathan-Turner]]
* [[Script Editor]] [[Eric Saward]]
* [[Special Sounds]] [[Dick Mills]]
* [[Studio Lighting]] [[Don Babbage]]
* [[Studio Sound]] [[Martin Ridout]]
* [[Writer]] [[Terrance Dicks]]
* [[Video effects|Video Effects]] - [[Dave Chapman]]
* [[Videotape Editor]] - [[Hugh Parson]]
* [[Vision Mixer]] - [[Shirley Coward]]
* [[Visual Effects Designer]]s — [[John Brace]], [[Mike Kelt]]


== References ==
=== Uncredited Crew ===
* Film Lighting Supervisor - [[Archie Dawson]] ([[DWM 564]])


=== [[:Category:Gallifrey|Gallifrey]] ===
== Worldbuilding ==
* The [[Death Zone]] - ''"the black secret at the heart of your [[Time Lord]] paradise"'' - was created in the [[Gallifreyan history#The Dark Time|days before]] [[Rassilon]], when [[Gallifreyan]]s kidnapped aliens for sport.
=== Gallifrey ===
* The [[Second Doctor]] says that his ancestors had ''"tremendous powers, which they misused"''.
* The [[Death Zone]] "the black secret at the heart of your [[Time Lord]] paradise" was created in the [[Gallifreyan history#The Dark Time|days before]] [[Rassilon]], when [[Gallifreyan]]s kidnapped aliens for sport.
* Borusa kidnaps the Doctors to the Death Zone on Gallifrey, using the [[time scoop]].
* Borusa sends the Doctors to the Death Zone using the [[time scoop]].
* The [[Dark Tower]] is accessible from three points.
* The [[Dark Tower]] is accessible from three points, which are revealed in a Gallifreyan nursery rhyme: "Who unto Rassilon's Tower would go/Must choose Above, Between, Below!"
* Borusa, who has [[regeneration|regenerated]] again, is at least the fourth Time Lord to play the [[Game of Rassilon]] in search of immortality.
* The plinth in the [[Tomb of Rassilon]] contains writing in [[Old High Gallifreyan]].
* Borusa, who has [[regenerated]] again, is at least the fourth Time Lord to play the [[Game of Rassilon]] in search of immortality.


=== [[:Category:Individuals|Individuals]] ===
=== Individuals ===
* The Second Doctor mentions the [[Terrible Zodin]] and [[Omega]] while walking with the Brigadier outside [[UNIT HQ]].
* The Second Doctor mentions the [[Terrible Zodin]] and [[Omega]] while walking with the Brigadier outside [[UNIT HQ]].
* UNIT is now headed by Colonel [[Charles Crichton]].
* UNIT is now headed by Colonel [[Charles Crichton]].
* When Borusa attempts to kidnap the [[Fourth Doctor|fourth incarnation]] of the Doctor and [[Romana II|Romana]], they become trapped in a [[time eddy]].
* When Borusa attempts to kidnap the [[Fourth Doctor]] and [[Romana II|Romana]], they become trapped in a [[time eddy]].
* Sarah says she gets [[vertigo]].
 
=== Species ===
[[File:Dalek_Mutant_2.JPG|thumb|The Dalek mutant.]]
* The [[Dalek]]'s dome is blown off when it explodes, revealing the actual Dalek mutant inside — which quickly perishes.
* The Cybermen are quickly destroyed by the [[Raston Warrior Robot]].
* [[Yeti (The Five Doctors)|A Yeti]] is in the Game.


=== [[:Category:Locations|Locations]] ===
=== People from the real world ===
* The Doctor, Tegan and Turlough sit around enjoying the [[Eye of Orion]].
* Whilst punting down the river Cam, the Doctor rambles to Romana about Cambridge graduates, mentioning [[Isaac Newton]].
* The Brigadier surmises the circumstances of his getting to the [[Dark Tower]] as "like a cross between [[Guy Fawkes]] and [[Hallowe'en]]."


=== [[:Category:Species|Species]] ===
=== Technology ===
[[File:Dalek_Mutant_2.JPG|thumb|The Dalek mutant.]]
* The [[Crown of Rassilon]] can be used as an instrument for [[mind control]].
* A [[Dalek]]s top is blown off, revealing the mutant inside. It is a green creature with a thick brain-shaped body and thin, long tentacles that fly around, but possibly because it is in danger.
* The Master is transported into the Death Zone by an open-ended [[transmat]].
* Borusa is using a [[time scoop]] to bring the incarnations of the Doctor and his companions into the Game of Rassilon.
* Rassilon transforms Borusa into a statue.
* Borusa orders the [[Chancellery Guard]] to use a [[mind probe]] on the [[Jerricho|Castellan]] to discover the truth about the [[Black Scrolls of Rassilon]].


=== [[:Category:Robots|Robots]] ===
=== Culture ===
* The [[Third Doctor]] and Sarah Jane Smith encounter a [[Raston Warrior Robot]].
* The [[Fifth Doctor]] misquotes a line from the novel ''[[Through the Looking-Glass]]'', saying "Like Alice, I try to believe three impossible things before breakfast." The actual line is "Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast" and it is said by the White Queen, not Alice.


=== [[:Category:People from the real world|People from the real world]] ===
=== Influences ===
* Whilst punting down the river the Doctor rambles to Romana, mentioning:
:* [[Isaac Newton]]
:* [[Wikipedia:Andrew Marvell|Andrew Marvell]]
:* [[Wikipedia:Christopher Smart|Christopher Smart]]
:* [[Wikipedia:Ernest Rutherford|Ernest Rutherford]]
:* [[Wikipedia:Owen Chadwick|Chadwick]]
:* [[Wikipedia:William Wordsworth|William Wordsworth]]
:* [[Wikipedia:George Jeffreys, 1st Baron Jeffreys of Wem|Judge Jeffries]]


=== [[:Category:Technology|Technology]] ===
* [[Terrance Dicks]] was inspired by the imagery of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Browning Robert Browning]'s poem ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Childe_Roland_to_the_Dark_Tower_Came Childe Roland To The Dark Tower Came]'', originally published in the [[1855]] collection ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Men_and_Women_(poetry_collection) Men and Women]''.
* The Time Lords plan to get [[the Master]] into the Death Zone by means of a ''"power-boosted open-ended [[transmat]] beam"''.


== Story notes ==
== Story notes ==
* This was the sole performance for [[Richard Hurndall]] as the [[First Doctor]]. His first line in the role was, "Susan? Surely, it's Susan?", and his last line was, "Come along, Susan."
* The story united the then-current [[Fifth Doctor]] with his predecessors in an adventure which also featured several of his past and current [[companion]]s and enemies.
* The story united the then-current [[Fifth Doctor]] with his predecessors in an adventure which also featured several of his past and current [[companion]]s and enemies.
*In addition to its inclusion of a number of characters not normally seen together, ''The Five Doctors'' was the first episode of ''Doctor Who'' ever to premiere abroad, the only other being the [[1996]] [[Doctor Who (1996)|television film]]. It was also the first ''Doctor Who'' narrative broadcast as a part of the UK's [[Children in Need]] charity telethon. For the first and, as of [[2011]], only time, a previous incarnation of the Doctor is brought into an episode by having a different actor play him on screen; [[Richard Hurndall]] took over the role of the [[First Doctor]], as [[William Hartnell]] had already passed away.
* This is the first televised story to credit [[William Hartnell]], [[Patrick Troughton]], [[Jon Pertwee]] and [[Tom Baker]] as "The Doctor" rather than "Dr. Who" or "Doctor Who," as had been the norm for the show's first 18 years.
*Although it was broadcast only a month before [[Season 21]], ''The Five Doctors'' is generally considered the seventh and final story of [[Season 20]], which had otherwise concluded the previous March. As such, the story concluded a loose [[story arc]] from Season 20 that involved the Doctor and his friends attempting to reach the [[Eye of Orion]].
* In addition to its inclusion of a number of characters not normally seen together, this was the first episode of ''Doctor Who'' ever to premiere abroad. It was also the first ''Doctor Who'' narrative broadcast as a part of the UK's [[Children in Need]] charity telethon; the Modern Era would see the show contribute a number of mini-episodes and prequels to CiN, but this remains the franchise's most extravagant contribution.
* This story commemorated the twentieth anniversary of ''[[Doctor Who]]''.
* For the first time in the history of the series, a previous incarnation of the Doctor is brought into an episode by having a different actor play him on screen; [[Richard Hurndall]] took over the role of the First Doctor, as William Hartnell had passed away in 1975. ''The Five Doctors'' would be the last time on screen that an actor would portray the First Doctor in a substantive way until [[2013 (releases)|2013]], as the use of [[archive footage]] of Hartnell and body/voice doubles would be used to show the First Doctor in [[TV]]: ''[[The Name of the Doctor (TV story)|The Name of the Doctor]]'' and ''[[The Day of the Doctor (TV story)|The Day of the Doctor]]''. Indeed, nearly 30 years later in 2014, the First Doctor, as a child, made a brief appearance near the end of the episode ''[[Listen (TV story)|Listen]]''. ''The Five Doctors'', however, marked the first time in which an ''adult'' incarnation of the Doctor was portrayed by a replacement actor; this was followed by [[Sylvester McCoy]]'s brief appearance as the [[Sixth Doctor]], originally portrayed by [[Colin Baker]], in ''[[Time and the Rani (TV story)|Time and the Rani]] ''and [[Paul McGann]] doubling for the [[War Doctor]] in ''[[The Night of the Doctor (TV story)|The Night of the Doctor]]''). In audio dramas, various actors portrayed the First Doctor from the late 2000s onward. In 2017, the adult First Doctor appeared properly in ''Doctor Who'' again in the [[Series 10 (Doctor Who 2005)|Series 10]] finale ''[[The Doctor Falls (TV story)|The Doctor Falls]]'' and the following Christmas special ''[[Twice Upon a Time (TV story)|Twice Upon a Time]]'', this time being played by [[David Bradley]], who had played William Hartnell himself in the 50th anniversary special ''[[An Adventure in Space and Time (TV story)|An Adventure in Space and Time]]''. In this case, the First Doctor's change in appearance was explained by the [[Twelfth Doctor]] as the First Doctor's face being "all over the place" due to the First Doctor's impending [[regeneration]].
* Elisabeth Sladen said she wished she hadn't filmed the shot of her rolling down the embankment because it didn't look very good afterwards.
* This story introduced the idea that the [[Time Lord]]s could grant a new regeneration cycle to a Time Lord at the end of their original cycle of twelve regenerations. In this case, it was offered to [[the Master]], though he did not receive it. When the Master returned in the revived series, he had been granted a new regeneration cycle after being [[resurrection|resurrected]] by the Time Lords to fight in the [[Last Great Time War]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Utopia (TV story)|Utopia]]'', ''[[The Sound of Drums (TV story)|The Sound of Drums]]'', ''[[The Doctor Falls (TV story)|The Doctor Falls]]'') On-screen, this ability to grant a new regeneration cycle was seen in ''[[The Time of the Doctor (TV story)|The Time of the Doctor]]''. In this case, the Time Lords, at the pleading of [[Clara Oswald]], granted [[the Doctor]] a new regeneration cycle at the end of the life of his [[Eleventh Doctor|final incarnation]]. Subsequently, questions have been raised by several characters, including the Doctor himself and [[Rassilon]], about how many regenerations the Time Lords gave him in this second cycle. To date, no definitive answer has been given, with the Doctor theorising that he can regenerate forever now. ([[TV]]: ''[[Kill the Moon (TV story)|Kill the Moon]]'', ''[[Hell Bent (TV story)|Hell Bent]]'', ''[[The Doctor Falls (TV story)|The Doctor Falls]]'')
* [[Robert Holmes]] was initially commissioned to write the special, which initially had the working title ''The Six Doctors'' because it originally included a robot impostor of one of the Doctors. Holmes, however, was unable to come up with a workable script, so [[Terrance Dicks]] was commissioned to write the piece. Ironically, the story immediately preceding ''The Five Doctors'', [[DW]]: ''[[The King's Demons]]'', did in fact introduce a robot character, [[Kamelion]], with the ability to impersonate others. However despite being introduced in that story as a new companion, not only is Kamelion not referenced or seen once in ''The Five Doctors'', the character disappeared from the series for a full year.
* This story officially commemorated the twentieth anniversary of ''[[Doctor Who]]''.
* The Five Doctors was co-produced with the Australian Broadcasting Commission who put in AUD $60,000. This was the first and only occurrence of this. Later, the ''[[Doctor Who (1996)|1996 TV movie]]'' and first four seasons of the new series would also incorporate non-UK support.
** Ironically, [[The Three Doctors (TV story)|the previous milestone celebration story]] was first broadcast months in advance of the actual anniversary date, while the British airing of this one was two days belated.
* The companion-hallucination cameos were last-minute additions to the script, and Dicks had already completed his first draft of the script when Tom Baker pulled out of the project.
* The ''[[Radio Times]]'' programme listing was accompanied by black-and-white full-length photographic cut-out images of a Dalek from ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'' (printed back to front for artistic reasons), with a comic strip-style speech bubble reading "EXTERMINATE! EXTERMINATE!", and K9 from ''[[The Invisible Enemy (TV story)|The Invisible Enemy]]'', with a speech bubble reading "NEGATIVE NEGATIVE". The accompanying caption read "The dreaded Daleks return, they are determined to ruin Doctor Who's 20th-anniversary celebrations and to wipe out the world. Can K9 help? 7.20 p.m." ''(original published text)'' A caption headed ''Children in Need'', topped with the telethon's then current logo, also appeared alongside the programme listing in ''Radio Times'' for the London, Wales and North West regions, which read “The BBC's annual appeal for Children in Need all over the country begins in earnest at 6.55. And Doctor Who will be dropping in to join Terry later in the evening. But which one?” ''(original published text)''
* [[William Hartnell]] was deceased by this time, and [[Tom Baker]] declined to return to his role as the [[Fourth Doctor]]. An early idea to incorporate footage of Hartnell and Baker into the story's action in a way similar to the contemporary film ''Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid'' was abandoned in favour of hiring actor [[Richard Hurndall]] to give his own impression of the [[First Doctor]], while clips of Baker and [[Lalla Ward]] from the unfinished and (at the time) never-before-seen story "''[[Shada (TV story)|Shada]]''" were used to show only the Fourth Doctor's abduction and return, without any interaction between himself and the other Doctors. For a publicity cast photo, a figure from [[Madame Tussauds]] of Baker as the Doctor was used although according to discussion on the Special Edition DVD, Baker himself was at one point supposed to take part in the photo shoot, but pulled out.
* [[Elisabeth Sladen]] said she wished she hadn't filmed the shot of her rolling down the embankment because it didn't look very good afterwards.
* This story was first broadcast via satellite on [[23 November]] [[1983]] to [[North America]]n viewers, before its transmission in the [[UK]]. However, this version had a number of small edits. UK viewers saw the unedited version during Children in Need broadcast on [[25 November]] 1983 as well as a short pre-recorded interview with Peter Davison and Terry Wogan shown directly after.
* [[Robert Holmes]] was initially commissioned to write the special. The special initially had the working title ''The Six Doctors'' because it originally included a robot impostor of one of the Doctors. The story would've detailed the Cybermen attempting to become "Cyberlords" by extracting a certain gene from the Doctor(s) genetic code and assimilating it within their own. Holmes, however, was unable to come up with a workable script, so [[Terrance Dicks]] was commissioned to write the piece. Ironically, the story immediately preceding ''The Five Doctors'', [[TV]]: ''[[The King's Demons (TV story)|The King's Demons]]'', did, in fact, introduce a robot character, [[Kamelion]], with the ability to impersonate others. However, despite being introduced in that story as a new companion, not only is Kamelion not referenced or seen once in ''The Five Doctors'', the character disappeared from the series for a full year because of technical difficulties, and there is no evidence he was ''ever'' intended to make so much as a cameo in this story, despite this apparently picking directly up from the previous story, in which he joined the TARDIS crew.<ref>http://www.shannonsullivan.com/doctorwho/serials/6k.html</ref>
* [[Terrance Dicks]] is said to have been displeased with [[Eric Saward]]'s changes to his original story. He especially felt the [[Cyberman (Mondas)|Cybermen]], for whom Saward had a particular fondness, were overused in the finished story.
** The idea of a villain altering the genetic code of a Doctor was later implemented into Holmes's story ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]''.
* A 102 minute Special Edition of the story was released on VHS in 1995 with extended scenes and dialogue added or deleted, and some of the [[visual effects]] and the voice of [[Rassilon]] redone. The resulting version continues to receive mixed reactions from fans.
** The concept of Cybermen extracting the Doctor's genetic code would appear in ''[[The Timeless Children (TV story)|The Timeless Children]]'' in the form of the [[CyberMaster]]s. Other similarities to ''The Five Doctors'' in ''The Timeless Children'' include it also being set on Gallifrey and featuring the Master using an army of Cybermen to his own ends.
* This was only the second time in the series' history that there was a pre-credits sequence. ''[[Castrovalva (TV story)|Castrovalva]]'' (1982) was the first such story. Subsequently, ''[[Time and the Rani]]'' (1987) and ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks]]'' (1988) also featured pre-credits teasers. The pre-credits sequence became a regular occurrence starting with the 2005 series episode ''[[The End of the World (TV story)|The End of the World]]''.
* ''The Five Doctors'' was co-produced with the Australian Broadcasting Commission who put in $A60,000, although under the terms of the agreement no credit to the co-producer appeared on-screen. (When the story was released by BBC Video in edited form in 1985 and in unedited form in 1990, the credit "A Co-production with ABC, Australia" appeared on the rear sleeve in both instances.) This was the first and only occurrence of this during the classic series. Later, the [[Doctor Who (TV story)|1996 TV movie]] and the first four seasons of the new series would also incorporate non-UK support.
* This serial explicitly indicated in dialogue that the Davison incarnation of the Doctor was in fact the ''fifth'', officially discounting fan speculation dating back to ''[[The Brain of Morbius]]'' that the First Doctor wasn't actually the first. Amusingly, Terrance Dicks wrote both stories.
* The companion illusion cameos were last-minute additions to the script.
* Just as the Doctor is (almost) never referred to as "Doctor Who", so too are the terms First Doctor, Second Doctor, etc. never actually uttered on screen. This episode comes closest to breaking that precedent when the First Doctor asks the Fifth, "Regeneration?" and the Fifth replies "Fourth".
* [[Tom Baker]] didn't appear in the story. He declined to return to his role as the [[Fourth Doctor]], as he felt it was too soon after his departure from the show (a decision he later said he regretted). An early idea to incorporate footage of Hartnell and Baker into the story's action in a way similar to the contemporary film ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_Men_Don%27t_Wear_Plaid Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid]'' was abandoned in favour of hiring [[Richard Hurndall]] to give his own impression of the First Doctor, while clips of Baker and [[Lalla Ward]] from the (at the time) unfinished and never-before-seen story ''[[Shada (TV story)|Shada]]'' were used to show only the Fourth Doctor's abduction and return, without any interaction between himself and the other Doctors.
* The [[Quark]]s were set to return in this story, but were removed from the script at an early stage and replaced by the [[Raston Warrior Robot]].
* For a publicity photo session, a waxwork figure of [[Tom Baker]] as the Doctor from [[Madame Tussauds]] was used, although there exist multiple conflicting reasons as to why. According to discussion on the Special Edition DVD, Baker himself was at one point supposed to take part in the photo shoot, but pulled out. However, [[John Nathan-Turner]] stated in interviews that the waxwork figure was kept on standby on the off-chance Baker was a no-show on the day — as Baker did not attend, the figure was used.
* This story marks the end of a long series of linked storylines that began with ''[[The Leisure Hive]]''. Each story had been linked in some way, either as direct continuations, or in more subtle ways such as dialogue references to previous events. In this case, ''The Five Doctors'' is linked to ''[[The King's Demons]]'' and earlier stories by the fact it resolves the subplot of the Doctor finally arriving at the Eye of Orion.
* [[Terrance Dicks]] had already completed his first draft of the script when Tom Baker pulled out of the project. In discussion on the Special Edition DVD, Dicks said that this version of the story originally had the Fourth Doctor betray his other selves as he felt that this version was the most likely to do so. After Baker pulled out, he came up with the idea of the Fourth Doctor being trapped in the time vortex, thus endangering the existence of his other selves. This, he felt, brought more dramatic tension because of the possibility that the Doctors could cease to exist if they didn't defeat the villain. In [[Doctor Who The Handbook: The Fifth Doctor|the ''Fifth Doctor Handbook'']], Dicks is quoted as saying:
* Commander [[Maxil]], last seen in ''[[Arc of Infinity (TV story)|Arc of Infinity]]'', was at one point to have appeared. The character was dropped from the final script, most likely due to actor [[Colin Baker]]'s imminent appointment as the [[Sixth Doctor]].
** "My feeling is that it all worked better the way it ended up. Five Doctors were just too many to handle but four worked very nicely, and you do at least see Tom. The other thing that I found quite amazing was how well the scenes from ''Shada'' fitted in. I'll swear that if you didn't know, you would think it was written for the special."
* Two versions of the end sequences were made. For the original broadcast version The Doctors/Companions were returned using TARDIS holograms and the accompanying dematrialization sound effect, for the Special Edition version the Doctors/Companions were returned via a Timescoop effect after they entered the TARDIS. Both versions used different footage from Shada to show Tom Bakers Doctor's return to earth.
* This story was first broadcast via satellite on [[23 November (releases)|23 November]] [[1983 (releases)|1983]] to [[North America]]n viewers, before its transmission in the [[UK]]. However, this version had a number of small edits. UK viewers saw the unedited version during ''Children in Need'' broadcast on [[25 November (releases)|25 November]] 1983, as well as a short pre-recorded interview with Peter Davison and Terry Wogan shown directly after.
* Discounting the Brigadier, this story has the distinction of marking the first time companions from different eras had met and interacted. This would occur only once more in the original series, in ''[[The Two Doctors]]'' when [[Peri Brown|Peri]] and [[Jamie McCrimmon|Jamie]] meet, and has occurred several times in the 2005-present revival.
* [[Terrance Dicks]] has said he was displeased with [[Eric Saward]]'s changes to his original story. He especially felt the [[Cyberman|Cybermen]], for whom Saward had a particular fondness, were overused in the finished story. He also said that he was happy to create the Raston Warrior Robots and have them destroy the Cybermen because he wasn't as fond of the Cybermen. On the Special Edition DVD, he says that he really had to fight for the inclusion of a Dalek in the special despite the fact they were so iconic in the series.
* Dicks' original script featured [[Auton]]s with the Third Doctor saving Sarah Jane from them in Bessie. This was cut as there was not enough time to film it, and was replaced with Sarah falling down a hill. Eric Saward said afterwards simply 'It was a lot simpler.'
* The story was repeated as a four-part overseas version from 14 August to 17 August 1984. The ''Radio Times'' programme listing for part one was accompanied by one of the publicity photos taken of the Doctors, in black and white (Peter Davison sitting astride K9 with his hat on its head, surrounded by the other actors and the waxwork figure of Tom Baker), with the accompanying caption "Five reincarnations of the inter-world commuter — [[Patrick Troughton]], [[Richard Hurndall]], [[Peter Davison]], [[Tom Baker]], [[Jon Pertwee]] — ''Doctor Who'': 6.15".
* This story was the first ever in which the [[Dalek]]s and the [[Cybermen]] both featured (though they did not meet). This would not occur again until the [[Series 2 (Doctor Who)|Series 2]] finale ''[[Army of Ghosts]]''/''[[Doomsday]]'' in [[2006]] (excluding the Cyberman head seen in ''[[Dalek (TV story)|Dalek]]''). They would feature in the same stories again in [[DW]]: ''[[The Pandorica Opens (TV story)|The Pandorica Opens]]'', [[VG]]: ''[[Return to Earth]]'', [[SP]]: ''[[Doctor Who: The Monsters Are Coming!|The Monsters Are Coming!]]'' and [[VG]]: ''[[The Mazes of Time]]'', although ''The Five Doctors'' sees the only time the [[Cybermen (Mondas)|Mondasian Cybermen]] have features in one such story. All the others appear to have been the [[Cybus Industries|Cybus]] [[Cybermen (Pete's World)|variant]].
* This was only the second time in the series' history that there was a pre-credits sequence. ''[[Castrovalva (TV story)|Castrovalva]]'' was the first such story. Subsequently, ''[[Time and the Rani (TV story)|Time and the Rani]]'' and ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]'' also featured pre-credits teasers. This idea was re-used in the [[Doctor Who (TV story)|1996 TV movie]]. The pre-credits sequence became a regular occurrence starting with the 2005 series episode ''[[The End of the World (TV story)|The End of the World]]'', and the animated reconstruction of ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'', a story preceding ''Castrovalva '' by more than 15 years, also featured one.
* This marks the only time the [[Third Doctor]] ever came close to meeting with the Cybermen on screen. He only observes them, however, and avoids any encounter. He would meet them again in [[CC]]: ''[[The Blue Tooth]]''.
* This serial explicitly indicated in dialogue that the Davison incarnation of the Doctor was in fact the ''[[Fifth Doctor|fifth]]'', apparently discounting fan speculation dating back to ''[[The Brain of Morbius (TV story)|The Brain of Morbius]]'' that the First Doctor was not actually the first. [[Terrance Dicks]] wrote both stories although ''The Brain of Morbius'' was extensively rewritten by Robert Holmes to the point that Dicks wanted his name removed from the final story and it was credited to the pseudonym Robin Bland. However, 2020's ''[[The Timeless Children (TV story)|The Timeless Children]]'' took the view that there were indeed many previous incarnations prior to the [[First Doctor|William Hartnell incarnation]] that the Doctor was unaware of.
* The Brigadier's line "''Wonderful Chap, all of them''" Is a slightly edited version of a line he said in [[The Three Doctors]], "''Wonderful Chap, Both of him''".
* The [[Quark]]s were set to return in this story, but were removed from the script at an early stage and replaced by the [[Raston Warrior Robot]], which is the only new "monster" featured in the special, and was itself a last-minute addition, after Eric Saward told Terrance Dicks that the Third Doctor and Sarah needed to encounter one more obstacle before reaching the tower.
* Footage of Sarah Jane and K9 from early in this story was later used in the 2009 episode [[SJA]]: ''[[The Mad Woman in the Attic]]''.
* Commander [[Maxil]] and [[Thalia|Chancellor Thalia]], last seen in ''[[Arc of Infinity (TV story)|Arc of Infinity]]'', was at one point to have appeared. The character was dropped from the final script when [[Colin Baker]] and [[Elspet Gray]] proved unavailable. Their roles were given to the Commander and Chancellor Flavia.
* In the blooper reel added in the twenty-fifth anniversary edition, a clip has the director shouting for a reshoot. Peter Davison says in response, "shit". The Dalek also said "Bugger, I lost them!" in another blooper. And Jon Pertwee also said "shit" when Bessie failed to go. He added that his car was a sod to drive at the moment.
* Discounting the Brigadier, this story has the distinction of marking the first time companions from different eras had met and interacted. This would occur only once more in the original series, in ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'' when [[Peri Brown|Peri]] and [[Jamie McCrimmon|Jamie]] meet. It has occurred several times in the 2005-present revival.
* The [[Raston Warrior Robot]] costume is a silver repaint of one of the [[Cyberman android]]s' costumes from [[DW]]: ''[[Earthshock]]''.
* [[Terrance Dicks]]' original script had Sarah Jane arrive in the Death Zone amidst a ruined replica of a high street, where a collection of fallen mannequins was revealed to be a battalion of [[Auton]]s, leading to her rescue by the Third Doctor in Bessie. It was scrapped for being too long and costly and was replaced with Sarah falling down a hill. [[Eric Saward]] said afterwards simply, "It was a lot simpler," despite [[Elisabeth Sladen]] stating her embarrassment of it.
* Peter Davison would later parody the Fifth Doctor's "I am being diminished" speech in the second episode of the second series of his black comedy, ''[[wikipedia:Rigor Mortis (radio)|Rigor Mortis]]''. Davison's character, a workaholic pathologist, doesn't respond well to a sudden drought of deaths. Undergoing a form of withdrawal, he says: "I am being diminished, whittled away, piece by piece. A doctor is the sum of his contributions to humanity, you know; a pathologist even more so."
* This story was the first in which the [[Dalek]]s and the Cybermen both featured (though they did not meet). This would not occur again until the [[Series 2 (Doctor Who 2005)|Series 2]] finale ''[[Army of Ghosts (TV story)|Army of Ghosts]]''/''[[Doomsday (TV story)|Doomsday]]'' in 2006 (excluding the Cyberman head seen in ''[[Dalek (TV story)|Dalek]]''). They would feature in the same stories again in [[TV]]: ''[[The Pandorica Opens (TV story)|The Pandorica Opens]]'', [[GAME]]: ''[[Return to Earth (video game)|Return to Earth]]'', and [[GAME]]: ''[[The Mazes of Time (video game)|The Mazes of Time]]'', although ''The Five Doctors'' sees the only time the Mondasian Cybermen have featured in one such story. All the others appear to be the [[Cybus Industries|Cybus]] variant.
* Most of the credits theme is a slightly remixed version of the original credits theme. When it gets to (and past) the middle eight, though, it reverts back to Davison's.
* This marks the only time the [[Third Doctor]] ever comes close to meeting with the Cybermen on-screen. He only observes them, however, and avoids any encounter. He would meet them again in [[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Blue Tooth (audio story)|The Blue Tooth]]''.
* The Brigadier's line, "Wonderful chap, all of them," is a slightly altered version of a line he said in ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'', "Wonderful chap, both of him".
* Footage of Sarah Jane and K9 from early in this story was later used in the 2009 episode [[TV]]: ''[[The Mad Woman in the Attic (TV story)|The Mad Woman in the Attic]]''.
* In the blooper reel added in the twenty-fifth anniversary edition, a clip has the director shouting for a reshoot. [[Peter Davison]] says in response, "Shit." The Dalek also said, "Bugger, I lost them!" in another blooper. [[Jon Pertwee]] also said, "Shit," when Bessie failed to go. He added that his car was a sod to drive at the moment.
** In another blooper, Pertwee remarks "Well, that's the end of the Master" after [[Nicholas Courtney]] (in character as the Brigadier) knocks [[Anthony Ainley]] (in character as the Master) to the ground. Richard Hurndall then jokingly suggests that Courtney "kick him in the cobblers next time." Coincidentally, ''[[The Mark of the Rani (TV story)|The Mark of the Rani]]'' would see the titular villain knee the Master in the groin near the end of its second part.
* The [[Raston Warrior Robot]] costume is a silver repaint of one of the [[Cyberman android]]s' costumes from [[TV]]: ''[[Earthshock (TV story)|Earthshock]]''.
* [[Peter Davison]] would later parody the Fifth Doctor's "I am being diminished" speech in the second episode of the second series of his black comedy, {{wi|Rigor Mortis (radio)|Rigor Mortis}}. Davison's character, a workaholic pathologist, doesn't respond well to a sudden drought of deaths. Undergoing a form of withdrawal, he says: "I am being diminished, whittled away, piece by piece. A doctor is the sum of his contributions to humanity, you know; a pathologist even more so."
* In early drafts of the script, some of the Doctor and companion combinations were different. Originally, the Fourth Doctor would have been paired with [[Sarah Jane]], the Third Doctor with the [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|Brigadier]] and the [[Second Doctor]] with Jamie. When [[Frazer Hines]] proved unavailable for more than a cameo appearance the script had to be altered, pairing the Second Doctor with [[Victoria Waterfield]]. This was revised again when [[Deborah Watling]] became unavailable and Tom Baker decided not to appear, resulting in the pairings as they were screened.
* [[Wendy Padbury]] was [[Pregnancy|pregnant]] during the recording and the costume she wore was in part designed to, in her words, "hide the bump". Sadly, she miscarried soon after wrapping. ([[DOC]]: [[MM VHS 7]])
* The scenes in which the Second and Third Doctors are captured were reused and put on new backgrounds to show [[Clara Oswald]] going throughout the Doctor's timeline. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Name of the Doctor (TV story)|The Name of the Doctor]]'')
* This was the first TV story to air as a single (albeit extended) episode since [[Season 3 (Doctor Who 1963)|Season 3]]'s ''[[Mission to the Unknown (TV story)|Mission to the Unknown]]'' in [[1965 (releases)|1965]].
* In its 11 November [[1983]] article on the special episode, the Associated Press erroneously gave it the title ''Doctor Who: The Ultimate Celebration'' instead of ''The Five Doctors''.[http://cuttingsarchive.org/index.php/Special_salute_set_for_%27Dr._Who%27s_anniversary]
* The 90-minute original version remains, {{as of|2019|lc=y}}, the longest single ''Doctor Who'' "episode" ever broadcast. Although the 1996 TV movie aired in a 120-minute time slot in the US and Canada, the actual film itself was only (depending on the edit viewed) 85 or 86 minutes, just shy of the run time of ''The Five Doctors''. This does not take into account omnibus edits of serials originally broadcast as 25- or 45-minute episodes.
* [[Steven Moffat]] is the only writer to use the numbering of the Doctors in the script of a televised episode, as he wrote "Tenth Doctor" and "Eleventh Doctor" in his script for ''[[The Day of the Doctor (TV story)|The Day of the Doctor]]''. The script for this episode used the actors' names, calling them "The Hartnell Doctor", "The Troughton Doctor", "The Pertwee Doctor", "The Baker Doctor" and "The Davison Doctor".
* The First Doctor was supposed to take a zig-zag approach across the chessboard trap, but [[Richard Hurndall]] walked in a straight line. There was not enough time to reshoot the scene (they were already 17 minutes into overtime), so this version was ultimately used regardless.
* A large number of other characters were planned to appear, but the actors were unavailable:
** [[William Russell]] was invited to make a cameo as [[Ian Chesterton|Ian]], but declined.
** [[Ben Jackson|Ben]] and [[Polly]] were considered to appear, but [[Anneke Wills]] was living overseas at the time and couldn't be located.
** The continuity error of the Second Doctor remembering an incident that happened moments before his regeneration was a last-minute replacement for the original reason he recognised his old companions as illusions. This would have featured [[Victoria Waterfield|Victoria]] saying "The Brigadier's right", but the Doctor remembering that he was a Colonel when she met him. But [[Deborah Watling]] turned down ''The Five Doctors'' in favour of ''The Dave Allen Show'' and the replacement line was hastily added.
** [[Benton]] was supposed to make a cameo at UNIT HQ, now promoted to sergeant major. [[John Levene]] turned it down, as he objected to the script requiring Benton to not recognise the Second Doctor. Levene felt this was unfaithful to his character, who he felt would not forget the Second Doctor. When the production refused to amend the script, Levene declined to participate. He also felt that the pay wasn't enough.
** [[Jo Grant|Jo]] was supposed to appear, but [[Katy Manning]] was living in [[Australia]] at the time.
** [[Harry Sullivan|Harry]] was supposed to appear, but [[Ian Marter]] was working in [[New Zealand]] at the time.
** [[Louise Jameson]] wanted to reprise her role as [[Leela]] again, but they couldn't fit her into the story.
** [[Romana]] was supposed to appear, but Lalla Ward turned it down, unwilling to work with [[Tom Baker]] again. Archive footage from ''[[Shada (TV story)|Shada]]'' was ultimately used to represent her. [[Mary Tamm]] wasn't asked to reprise her role.
* [[John Nathan-Turner]]'s first choice of director for the story was [[Waris Hussein]], but he was in America at the time and was unable to accept the offer. Nathan-Turner then asked another veteran director, [[Douglas Camfield]], to direct but he also declined. Camfield was also very ill with heart disease, and this may have affected his decision not to direct the production. He died of a heart attack early in 1984. Ultimately, Nathan-Turner ended up having Peter Moffatt directing the story.
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Gray_(actor) Charles Gray] was offered the role of Rassilon, but turned it down.
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denis_Quilley Denis Quilley] and [[Leonard Sachs]] were both asked to play Borusa before [[Philip Latham]] was cast.
* [[Peter Davison]] and [[Patrick Troughton]] had previously co-starred in the ''[[All Creatures Great and Small]]'' episode "Hair of the Dog".
* [[John Nathan-Turner]] named this as one of his favourite episodes during his tenure. He was particularly pleased about the Raston Warrior Robot scene, which he directed himself.
* K9's cameo role is as such because [[Terrance Dicks]] did not enjoy writing him into stories and so asked to make his contribution as minimal as possible. (It also proved impractical to use K9 in the location filming in Wales, the same reason he was often written out of stories when he was actively part of the TARDIS.)
* Originally, it was the Fourth Doctor who uncovered the conspiracy on Gallifrey. When [[Tom Baker]] declined to participate, it was given to the Fifth Doctor.
* [[Carole Ann Ford]] wasn't pleased that she had to trip over her own ankles after the Doctor teleported to Gallifrey.
* In [[April]] [[2013]], [[Carole Ann Ford]] revealed that [[John Nathan-Turner]] had initially insisted that Susan not refer to the Doctor as her grandfather: "You will not believe why. They said, 'We don't really want people to perceive him as having had sex with someone, to father a child.' I just screamed with hysterical laughter and said, 'In that case, I'm not doing it.'" The script was changed to include mentions of the characters' relationship.
* Originally, Tegan was to make [[tea]] for the First Doctor, but [[Janet Fielding]] refused, so it was changed to Turlough doing it.
* [[Keith Hodiak]] once urinated in the Raston Warrior Robot costume. This left a stain that had to be dried with a hair dryer.
* [[Richard Hurndall]] didn't watch any of [[William Hartnell]]'s episodes for fear of mimicry.
* [[Ian Levine]] suggested [[Richard Hurndall]] after seeing him in the ''[[Blake's 7 (series)|Blake's 7]]'' episode ''[[w:c:blakes7:Assassin (episode)|Assassin]]''.
* When [[Eric Saward]] contacted [[Terrance Dicks]] about writing the special, he was at a convention in [[New Orleans]] and awoke at seven o'clock in the morning after a party the previous night. Dicks agreed and then announced to the convention that he was writing the special. When he returned to England, Dicks claimed that Saward told him to write something to compete with [[Robert Holmes]]' script. Dicks angrily stormed out. Saward came back more politely and Dicks agreed, knowing his reputation was as a fixer.
* The Yeti costume used in the serial was last used in ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]''. It had decayed badly in 15 years of storage, requiring dim lighting and selective camera angles during filming.
* Originally, the Master was the main villain, but [[Terrance Dicks]] thought that was too obvious. He felt that the least obvious choice was Borusa.
* The end credits featured a specially-mixed version of the theme music, which began with [[Delia Derbyshire]]'s original 1960s arrangement and then segued into the [[Peter Howell]] arrangement being used by the series at the time (the former being played at a slightly higher speed to match the tempo and pitch of the latter). This arrangement was only used on this one occasion and was the last time that the Derbyshire version was heard during the show's original run. A unique arrangement of the opening credits music was also used, which ended in a brief coda phrase that was never used in any other serial.
* This was the final story to be shot using 2-Inch videotape before it was swapped out for the more light-weight 1-inch format. The last time the format was used was in ''[[Resurrection of the Daleks (TV story)|Resurrection of the Daleks]]''.
* [[John Nathan-Turner]] had stated that he intended to resign from his position as producer after production of this story and regretted in later years that he hadn't taken that opportunity. ([[DCOM]]: ''[[Showtime: The Life of John Nathan-Turner (documentaries)|Showtime: The Life of John Nathan-Turner]]'')
* [[Anthony Ainley]] and [[Wendy Padbury]] had previously co-starred in the horror film ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Blood_on_Satan%27s_Claw Blood on Satan's Claw].''
* In the hidden audio commentary for the DVD's re-release in 2008, [[Phil Collinson]] mistakenly identifies [[Zoe Heriot]] as [[Victoria Waterfield]].
* [[Geoffrey Bayldon]] was considered to play the First Doctor, but [[John Nathan-Turner]] felt that he was too recognisable from his roles in ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catweazle Catweazle]'' and ''[[Worzel Gummidge]]''.
* The Yeti replaced an anonymous one-eyed subterranean monster.
* The Eye of Orion scenes had to be remonted, as the original footage had been irreparably damaged. [[Mark Strickson]] had not expected to be needed for the rest of the location shoot, and had gone on a driving holiday with no means of contacting him. The production team had to resort to radio appeals, before they finally reached Strickson via a family member and summoned him back to Wales.
* In the original script, the Third Doctor constructed a makeshift hang-glider using the Raston Robot's spare equipment and his own cloak, and flew across the chasm. Unfortunately, the Visual Effects Department had been unable to construct a convincing prop, and [[Jon Pertwee]] refused to go ahead with the scene, which he felt to be preposterous. [[Peter Moffatt]] and [[John Nathan-Turner]] came up with him throwing a line across to the Dark Tower.
* There was concern that the salary necessary to secure [[Jon Pertwee]] for both studio and location work would be beyond the project's budget. Pertwee ultimately agreed to take a pay cut because he was so eager to play the Doctor again.
* [[John Nathan-Turner]] directed some second unit shots for the Raston Warrior Robot scene due to the large amount of material to be captured.
* The Third Doctor's rescue of Sarah Jane from the precipice posed difficulties. [[Peter Moffatt]] had been unable to locate a suitably steep incline, and was forced to try to achieve the effect using camera trickery, albeit with limited success.
* The Dalek was assembled from surviving components constructed during the [[1960s]]. For its destruction, the skirt section from a “goon” Dalek, built for ''[[Planet of the Daleks (TV story)|Planet of the Daleks]]'', was substituted.
* [[Terrance Dicks]] had indicated that the apparition of Rassilon should be dressed in the manner of the Time Lords seen in ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'', but this approach was not pursued by costume designer [[Colin Lavers]].
* The clip from ''[[The Dalek Invasion of Earth (TV story)|The Dalek Invasion of Earth]]'' was added so that [[William Hartnell]] would have a presence in the special. The footage was sepia-tinted by video effects designer [[Dave Chapman]] to make the transition from monochrome to colour less jarring. This was eliminated in the four part version.
* For the Fourth Doctor and Romana's release from the time vortex, an extract from ''[[Shada (TV story)|Shada]]'' part one, in which the pair approached the gates of [[University of Cambridge|Cambridge University]], had initially been selected. However, [[John Nathan-Turner]] was keen to depict all of the Doctors departing in the TARDIS, and so a clip from part three was used instead. Unfortunately, it did not match up as well with the abduction sequence, which was also taken from the opening instalment and saw the two Time Lords punting on the [[River Cam]].[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catweazle]
* ''The Five Doctors'' marks the end of what is, as of 2023, the longest consecutive run of classic ''Doctor Who'' serials on Blu-ray. The run comprises all of [[Season 17 (Doctor Who 1963)|Season 17]], [[Season 18 (Doctor Who 1963)|18]], [[Season 19 (Doctor Who 1963)|19]] and [[Season 20 (Doctor Who 1963)|20]], ending with this story.
* During overseas broadcasts (and in occasional UK re-airings), this story was split up into four twenty-five-minute episodes. The cliffhangers consisted of Sarah Jane falling down the embankment, Turlough and Susan discovering the Cybermen outside the TARDIS, and the Master following the First Doctor and Tegan into the main floor of the Dark Tower.


=== Ratings ===
=== Ratings ===
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=== Myths ===
=== Myths ===
* The Five Doctors was to feature [[Omega]].
* The Five Doctors was to feature [[Omega]]. ''Though various past villains were considered for inclusion in this story, Omega was never one of them, other than the Second Doctor's dialogue reference. In addition, the character had appeared at the start of the previous season in [[Arc of Infinity (TV story)|Arc of Infinity]].''
* [[Richard Hurndall]] died immediately after the episode aired. He actually died some months later, in April 1984. ''. There is an associated rumour questioning whether he lived long enough to be paid for his work.''
* [[Richard Hurndall]] died before he was ever paid for his work on The Five Doctors. ''Hurndall was infact paid in full before his death in April 1984 - via five different payments made out to him with regards to The Five Doctors (four contractual, one expenses) in 1982 and 1983.''<ref>https://twitter.com/NothingLane/status/1271845398404116482</ref>
* The Master's real name is Jehosaphat. ''This originated from fan writers misunderstanding the Third Doctor uttering the word upon recognising the Master. In truth, is was a somewhat antiquated exclamation of surprise. A shortened version of "Jumping Jehosaphat!"''
* The Master's real name is [[Jehoshaphat]]. ''This originated from fan writers misunderstanding the Third Doctor uttering the word upon recognising the Master. In truth, it was a somewhat antiquated exclamation of surprise — a shortened version of "Jumping Jehoshaphat!"''
* Initially the First Doctor was to appear with Dodo and Steven, the Second Doctor with Jamie, the Third Doctor with Sarah, the Fourth Doctor with Romana II and [[K9 Mark II]] and the Fifth with Tegan and Turlough.
* In early drafts, the First Doctor was to appear with [[Dodo Chaplet|Dodo]] and [[Steven Taylor|Steven]], and [[K9]] was to accompany the Fourth Doctor and [[Romana II]] (or Sarah) throughout the episode. ''Susan was the only companion ever considered to appear alongside the First Doctor. While K9 was present throughout most of the draft scripts, none of them had him appearing in more than a small cameo, which indeed happened in the finished episode''
* Kamelion was supposed to appear for this story.
* [[Kamelion]] was supposed to appear for this story. ''He was never intended to take an active part in the story, due to the difficulty in operating the Kamelion prop. An explanation for his absence may have been in one of the draft scripts, though no firm evidence exists for this.''
* [[Maxil]] was supposed to appear for this story, but the plan was dropped because his actor, [[Colin Baker]], had been cast as the [[Sixth Doctor]] and his appearance as Maxil would have been considered a spoiler. ''Maxil was to have appeared in ''The Five Doctors'', but the character was dropped because Baker was unavailable, not because of his being cast as the Doctor; in fact, Baker wasn't offered the role of the Doctor until June 1983, well after production of ''The Five Doctors'' concluded.''


=== Filming locations ===
=== Filming locations ===
* Plas Brondanw, Llanfrothen, Penrhyndeudraeth, Gwynedd (Eye of Orion)
* Plas Brondanw, Llanfrothen, Penrhyndeudraeth, Gwynedd (Eye of Orion)
* Manod Quarry (now known as Cwt y Bugail Quarry (McAlpine)), Blaenau Ffestiniog, Gwynedd
* Manod Quarry
* Tilehouse Lane, Denham Green, Buckinghamshire (Third Doctor chase scene in Bessie)
* Tilehouse Lane, Denham Green, Buckinghamshire
* West Common Road, Uxbridge, Middlesex (Sarah Jane Smith's house)
* West Common Road, Uxbridge, Middlesex
* Carreg Y Foel Gron, Ffestiniog, Gwynedd (Location where Susan and the First Doctor see the TARDIS)
* Carreg Y Foel Gron, Ffestiniog, Gwynedd
* Cwm Bychan, Llanbedr, Gwynedd (Road in the Death Zone where the Third Doctor and Sarah drive)
* Cwm Bychan, Llanbedr, Gwynedd
* Denham Manor, Halings Lane, Denham Green (UNIT HQ)
* Denham Manor, Halings Lane, Denham Green (UNIT HQ)
* North Common Road, Uxbridge, Middlesex (Location where Sarah waits for the bus and is taken by the Time Scoop)
* North Common Road, Uxbridge, Middlesex
* [[Ealing Television Film Studios]], Ealing Green, Ealing
* [[Ealing Television Film Studios]], Ealing Green, Ealing
* [[BBC Television Centre]] ([[List of stories recorded at BBC Television Centre|TC6]]), Shepherd's Bush, [[London]]
* [[BBC Television Centre]]


=== Production errors ===
=== Production errors ===
{{discontinuity}}
{{discontinuity}}
* When the Cyberman attacks the Brigadier, the jeans of the actor playing the Cyberman are visible.
* When the Brigadier is attacked by a Cyberman, the jeans of the actor playing the Cyberman are visible.
* When the Dalek is chasing the First Doctor and Susan through the hall of mirrors, the top of the Dalek pops up a bit, pushed up by the actor inside.
* The long shot of the Third Doctor and Sarah sliding to the top of the tower reveals their slide rope doesn't go from a high location to a lower one, or from two positions along a straight line. Rather, the tower is actually above the position from which they start.
* The long shot of the Third Doctor and Sarah sliding to the top of the tower reveals their slide rope doesn't go from a high location to a lower one, or from two positions along a straight line. Rather, the tower is actually above the position from which they start.
* At one point in the caves, a boom mic is visible above the Second Doctor's and the Brigadier's head (and it stays there for around 3 seconds).
* At one point in the caves, a boom microphone is visible above the Second Doctor's and the Brigadier's head (and it stays there for around three seconds).
* When the Master arrives in the Death Zone, he is wearing a black cloak which he was not wearing when he stepped into the transmat.
* When the Master arrives in the Death Zone, he is wearing a black cloak which he was not wearing when he stepped into the transmat. Peter Davison and Terrance Dicks joked that the transmat functions included a "cloak dispenser" in their commentary on the 25th Anniversary DVD. (Alternately, since the Master's arrival in the Death Zone is not seen, he may have acquired it off-screen in between scenes.)
* After the Raston Warrior Robot defeats the Cybermen, there are several small fires burning on the ground; when the scene is cut for when the Robot jumps and vanishes, the fires disappear.
* The cables on the head of the Cyberman who watches the First Doctor and Susan approach the TARDIS are disconnected (the shot was removed from the Special Edition for this reason.)
* In the shot immediately between the ring reappearing on Rassilon's hand and Borusa turning to look at the empty space on the bier, an aerial shot shows the stone carving of Borusa is already in place, but the space it occupies is blank again in the next shot.


== Continuity ==
=== Special Edition ===
* Three incarnations of [[Borusa]] had previously met the Doctor on Gallifrey. ([[DW]]: ''[[The Deadly Assassin]]'', [[DW]]: ''[[The Invasion of Time]]'', [[DW]]: ''[[Arc of Infinity (TV story)|Arc of Infinity]]'')
'''''The Five Doctors Special Edition''''' was an expanded version of the story released on VHS in 1995 with extended scenes and dialogue added or deleted, and much of the [[visual effects]] redone. It was the first ''Doctor Who'' story to be released on [[DVD releases|DVD]] in [[1999 (releases)|1999]] and was re-released as a special feature on disc two of the [[The Five Doctors (TV story)|original version]]'s DVD release in [[2008 (releases)|2008]] to mark the episode's 25th anniversary.
* The Brigadier refers to [[Robot Yeti|Yeti]] ([[DW]]: ''[[The Web of Fear]]'') and [[Cyberman (Mondas)|Cybermen]] ([[DW]]: ''[[The Invasion]]''),
* The [[Second Doctor]] mentions [[Omega]]. ([[DW]]: ''[[The Three Doctors]]'')
* Sarah Jane is seen with K9. ([[KAC]]: ''[[A Girl's Best Friend]]'')
* The [[Eighth Doctor]] and the [[Fifth Doctor]] would later encounter a [[Raston Warrior Robot]] and at the [[Eye of Orion]]. ([[EDA]]: ''[[The Eight Doctors]]'')
* This story occurs after ([[DW]]: ''[[Mawdryn Undead]]'') from the Brigadier's point of view, given that he recognises Tegan and later the Fifth Doctor.
* The Time Lords offer the Master a complete life cycle, which they do later in their history. ([[DW]]: ''[[The Sound of Drums]]'')
* The First Doctor fails to recognise the Master, who says they went to the Academy together. This is the first direct reference to the fact the two enemies knew each other in their youth, a theme later picked up in [[DW]]: ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]'', among other stories.
* [[Borusa]] claims to want immortality. However, he offers [[The Master]] a new set of [[Regeneration]]s. If this is possible, then Borusa has no need to seek out immortality. While immortality might be technically feasible through this method, the procedure likely requires lengthy and difficult political approval -- otherwise, every Time Lord would lobby to obtain it. So, even if Borusa received a further 13 lives with the Time Lords' permission, he would most likely refused if he asked for more. But Borusa's goal isn't 26 or even 39 lives -- he wants an infinite number, and hence his plan to have the Doctors contact Rassilon on his behalf.
* The Doctor was Lord President of Gallifrey in ''[[The Invasion of Time]]''. He would later be offered the presidency again in [[DW]]: ''[[The Ultimate Foe]]'', though he declined. In [[DW]]: ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks]]'', the [[Seventh Doctor]] describes himself as President-Elect of the High Council of Time Lords, suggesting that he was made President again.
* Before he arrives in the [[Capitol]], the Master's transmat recall device sent the Fifth Doctor to an alternative Death Zone where he meet his former companions [[Ian Chesterton]], [[Steven Taylor]], [[Sara Kingdom]], [[Polly Wright]] and [[Nyssa]] and battles the [[Dalek]]s and the [[Sontaran]]s. ([[BFA]]: ''[[The Five Companions]]'')


== Perspectives ==
Among the many things changed is that new scenes were added that were cut from the original version bringing the runtime up to about 100 minutes. In addition some other scenes were reordered to match the script.
* It is implied that the Doctor and Susan have not met for a while and Susan is considerably more mature than she was when last seen, thus it must be after [[DW]]: ''[[The Dalek Invasion of Earth]]''. However, some feel the fact they do not have an emotional reunion implies they may have met again in the interim. Others say that the reunion seemed emotional enough given the circumstances, so no prior reunion is implied.
* The story hints several times that this is after the events of [[DW]]: ''[[The Three Doctors]]'' for The first three Doctors. The Second Doctor mentions [[Omega]] while reminiscing with the Brigadier, and also makes a comment about his replacement being "unpromising" when he is in UNIT headquarters. The Third Doctor refers to "that fellow in the check trousers and black frock-coat" when he meets the illusions of Mike Yates and Liz Shaw. The First Doctor refers to the Second as "the little fellow" and after learning who the Fifth Doctor was exclaims "so there are five of me now".
* The Brigadier refers to the [[Robot Yeti|Yeti]] ([[DW]]: ''[[The Web of Fear]]'') and the [[Cyberman (Mondas)|Cybermen]] ([[DW]]: ''[[The Invasion]]''). He also recognises the Fifth Doctor and Tegan, suggesting it is after [[DW]]: ''[[Mawdryn Undead]]''.
* For the Third Doctor, it takes place some time between [[DW]]: ''[[The Time Warrior]]'' and [[DW]]: ''[[Planet of the Spiders]]'' as he recognises Sarah Jane, who was his last companion before his regeneration.
* Sarah is at home with [[K9 Mark III|K9]], so it must be after the ''[[K9 and Company]]'' spinoff, but it is unknown what year it is for Sarah Jane, if [[Brendan Richards]] is staying with her or if her aunt [[Lavinia Smith]] has died.
* The Third Doctor reacts to Sarah's mimed description of the Fourth Doctor by saying, "Teeth and curls?" and telling her the change has not happened yet for him. The Third Doctor is presumably just interpreting her gestures. His accuracy has led some fans to infer from this an unseen encounter with the Fourth Doctor. In the short story [[The Touch of the Nurazh]] from the anthology [[Short Trips: Monsters]], an injury makes the Third Doctor begin to regenerate into his fourth incarnation but the process is reversed. This is witnessed by [[Jo Jones|Jo Grant]], and the theory is that she subsequently describes the Fourth Doctor's appearance to him. According to both [[Elisabeth Sladen]] and [[Terrance Dicks]], the "all teeth and curls" line was supposed to be Sarah's, but [[Jon Pertwee]] appropriated it for himself.
* The time-placement for the Fourth Doctor depends upon which version of ''The Five Doctors'' is viewed, and whether [[DW]]: ''[[Shada (TV story)|Shada]]'', despite being unbroadcast and incomplete, is considered canonical (which in turn relates to whether the [[Shada (webcast)|webcast version]] is considered canonical. In any event, [[Romana II|Romana]] is in her second incarnation, placing this between [[DW]]: ''[[Destiny of the Daleks]]'' and [[DW]]: ''[[Full Circle]]'' ''Shada'' was placed between [[DW]]: ''[[The Horns of Nimon]]'' and [[DW]]: ''[[The Leisure Hive]]''. According to the 1983 version of ''The Five Doctors'', it may be reasonably inferred that the events of ''Shada'' were disrupted due to both Romana and the [[Fourth Doctor]] being timescooped. The 1995 Special Edition, however, only has the Doctor timescooped, and after the defeat of Borusa, Rassilon returns the Doctor to just before the Timescoop took him away, which would allow the events of ''Shada'' to unfold.
* It is implied that the past Doctors do not retain memories of being involved in events where they meet their future selves. Otherwise, each of the later Doctors, starting with the Second Doctor, would have had foreknowledge of the outcome of events, having participated as their earlier selves. Furthermore, earlier Doctors would also have direct assurance that they survive beyond their current incarnation. This is retroactively supported by the 2006 episode [[DW]]: ''[[School Reunion]]'' in which dialogue between the [[Tenth Doctor]] and Sarah Jane strongly indicates that neither (or, at the least, Sarah Jane) remembers the events of ''The Five Doctors''. Further evidence is provided by the 2010 episode [[SJA]]: ''[[Death of the Doctor]]'', in which Sarah Jane references Tegan as if she'd never met her in ''The Five Doctors'' (though it's possible, given the circumstances, that she simply forgot the woman's name in the intervening years).
** However, in [[DW]]: ''[[Time Crash]]'', the plot's resolution hinges on the [[Tenth Doctor]] remembering the same experience as the [[Fifth Doctor]].
** There would be no contradiction with [[DW]]: ''[[Time Crash]]'', if the memories of events in ''The Five Doctors'' had been removed by the Time Lords, in order to cover up Borusa's abuse of the time scoop and the Death Zone.
** However, the Second Doctor refers to the Third as "unpromising", indicating that [[DW]]: ''[[The Three Doctors]]'' has already occurred in his personal timeline, making it appear that the Second Doctor remembers the events of that story and his future incarnation as well. The First Doctor also recognises the Second and Third Doctors but not the Fifth, suggesting he too recalls the events of [[DW]]: ''[[The Three Doctors]]''.
** It is also possible that anytime the Doctor crosses over with his own timeline he remembers past adventures with himself. Or the Time Lords erase these memories from the head of the Doctor until he is needed in multiple incarnations and then they allow the memories to be recalled in case those experiences are needed in the current adventure.


== Timeline ==
==== Deviations from original story ====
'''For the [[First Doctor - Timeline|First Doctor]]'''
[[File:Time Scoop.jpg|thumb|right|The Special Edition [[time scoop]].]]
* This story occurs after [[BE]]: ''[[Roses]]''
* The [[time scoop]] has a new design.
* This story occurs before [[DWAN]]: ''[[Peril in Mechanistria]]''
* [[Rassilon]] has a deeper voice.
* The [[temporal fission]] is depicted with the Doctors and companions leaving via a Timescoop effect after they entered the TARDIS.
* Different footage from ''Shada'' is used to show the Fourth Doctor's return to Earth. In this edition, it appears only the Doctor is kidnapped by the Timescoop, and he is returned to his and Romana's punt at the same moment he left.


'''For the [[Second Doctor - Timeline|Second Doctor]]'''
==== Other information ====
* If you accept the [[Season 6B]] theory, almost certainly takes place during that period
* [[Peter Moffatt]] disapproved of the Special Edition of the story which was later released on video, featuring updated special effects and reinstated scenes he had originally cut because he thought they were boring. [[John Nathan-Turner]] also spoke disparagingly of it, declaring that the changes it brought were unnecessary and ruined the overall quality of the story.{{Says who}}
* This story occurs after [[ST]]: ''[[The Man Who (Nearly) Killed Christmas]]''
* This story occurs before [[VG]]: ''[[Destiny of the Doctors]]''


'''For [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|The Brigadier]]'''
=== 40th Anniversary Edition ===
* This story occurs after [[DW]]: ''[[Mawdryn Undead]]''
'''''The Five Doctors 40th Anniversary Edition''''' was an adapted version of ''The Five Doctors'' with new special effects by [[Niel Bushnell]], created for the [[Season 20 (Doctor Who 1963)|Season 20]] ''[[The Collection]]'' boxset. Bushnell re-interpreted many visual elements of the story.
* This story occurs before [[DW]]: ''[[Battlefield]]''


'''For the [[Third Doctor - Timeline|Third Doctor]]'''
Some of the changes made by ''[[The Five Doctors Special Edition (home video)|The Five Doctors Special Edition]]'' were carried through, including [[Rassilon]]'s deepened voice.
* This story occurs after [[PHS]]: ''[[Doomcloud]]''
* This story occurs before [[PHS]]: ''[[Perils of Paris]]''


'''For [[Sarah Jane Smith - Timeline|Sarah Jane Smith]]'''
==== Deviations from original story ====
* This story occurs after [[BE]]: ''[[Farewells]]''
* Several planets are in the sky of the [[Eye of Orion]]
* This story occurs before [[TC]]: ''[[Harry Sullivan's War]]''
* The [[Time Scoop]] resembles a black stone obelisk.
* The ceiling of the [[Tomb of Rassilon]] is filled with a large statue of Rassilon carrying the [[Staff of Rassilon]] from [[TV]]: {{cs|The End of Time (TV story)}}.
* Rassilon's projection is given a technological filter.
* The [[temporal fission]] is depicted with the TARDISes spinning out of the stationary TARDIS.


'''For the [[Fourth Doctor - Timeline|Fourth Doctor]]'''
== Continuity ==
* This story takes place after [[DW]]: ''[[The Horns of Nimon]]''
* The Brigadier refers to the [[Robot Yeti|Yeti]] and the [[Cybermen]], whom he had encountered in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Web of Fear (TV story)}} and [[TV]]: {{cs|The Invasion (TV story)}} respectively.
* This story occurs during [[DW]]: ''[[Shada (TV story)|Shada]]''
* The [[Second Doctor]] mentions [[Omega]], and criticises the redecorating of UNIT HQ. Both of these are call-backs to [[TV]]: {{cs|The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors}}, with the latter reflecting the way he critiqued the [[Third Doctor]]'s redesigned TARDIS console room
* This story takes place before [[ST]]: ''[[Glass (short story)|Glass]]''
* Sarah is seen with [[K9 Mark III|K9]], whom she was gifted in [[TV]]: {{cs|A Girl's Best Friend (TV story)|A Girl's Best Friend}}.
* The Fourth Doctor gets stuck in a time eddy. The First Doctor previously got stuck in a time eddy in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors}}. However, unlike the Fourth, the First was able to communicate and assist.
* The Fourth Doctor and [[Romana II]]'s appearances were depicted using reused footage from [[TV]]: {{cs|Shada (TV story)}}, a partially-filmed story which had remained unbroadcast as of ''The Five Doctors'' airing. [[WC]]: {{cs|Shada (webcast)}} would later literalise this artifice, suggesting that the Doctor was genuinely plucked by the [[Time Scoop]] from the events of ''Shada'', thus causing the TV version of ''Shada'' to diegetically "not happen" to match its unfinished nature in the real world. This facilitated the webcast's plot device of the [[Eighth Doctor]] being made to pick up where his earlier self went off and go through the rest of the ''Shada'' plotline.
* The Second Doctor is wearing [[The Doctor's fur coat|his fur coat]], which he wore in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen}} and [[TV]]: {{cs|The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors}}. The coat would again be seen in the Second Doctor's cameo in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Name of the Doctor (TV story)}}, and be worn by other Doctors in [[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Beyond the Ultimate Adventure (audio story)|Beyond the Ultimate Adventure}}, [[TV]]: {{cs|Time and the Rani (TV story)|Time and the Rani}}, and [[COMIC]]: {{cs|A Cold Day in Hell! (comic story)|A Cold Day in Hell!}}.
* The [[Eighth Doctor]] and the [[Fifth Doctor]] would later encounter a [[Raston Warrior Robot]] at the [[Eye of Orion]], shortly after the Fifth Doctor's role in events here, as one of the vignettes within [[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Eight Doctors (novel)|The Eight Doctors}}.
* [[The Brigadier]] recognises [[Tegan Jovanka|Tegan]] and later the Fifth Doctor from [[TV]]: {{cs|Mawdryn Undead (TV story)|Mawdryn Undead}}.
* The [[Time Lord]]s offer the Master a new [[regeneration cycle]], something which he had previously come back to the homeworld to ''steal'' in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Deadly Assassin (TV story)}}. Acquiring new regenerations remained a point of motivation for the character in many subsequent appearances leading up to {{cs|Doctor Who (TV story)|the 1996 TV movie]]. The [[High Council]] being able to bestow regenerations upon people who previously lacked them would become a major plot point in the [[War in Heaven]] mythos, with the [[regen-inf]] recruits as seen in [[PROSE]]: {{cs|Dead Romance (novel)}} and [[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Book of the War (novel)}}, and also come into play at the climax of [[TV]]: {{cs|The Time of the Doctor (TV story)|The Time of the Doctor}}, where the dying [[Eleventh Doctor]] is granted an arbitrary number of additional lives by the deities in response to [[Clara Oswald]]'s impassioned plea.
* The [[Third Doctor]], currently familiar with a [[The Master (Terror of the Autons)|prior incarnation]] of [[the Master]], takes a moment to recognise the [[Tremas Master]], who came into existence after his tenure, towards the end of the [[Fourth Doctor]]'s lifetime. Upon recognising him as the Master, the Doctor asks if this is a "new regeneration"; the Master slyly replies "not exactly", alluding to the complexity of the process by which this new Master was born in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Keeper of Traken (TV story)|The Keeper of Traken}}, involving the powers of the [[Keeper of Traken]] and the [[possession]] of a [[Tremas|preexisting man]]'s [[Trakenite|non-Gallifreyan]] body.
* When the [[First Doctor]] fails to recognise the Master, he reminds him that they went to [[the Academy]]. The Master's status as a former schoolmate of the Doctor's had been established as early as [[TV]]: {{cs|Terror of the Autons (TV story)|Terror of the Autons}} and was frequently mentioned thereafter.
* The Doctor is called upon to once again become Lord President of Gallifrey. He ran for the position initially in order to save himself from trial in ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Deadly Assassin (TV story)|The Deadly Assassin}}, then briefly assumed the role in earnest in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Invasion of Time (TV story)|The Invasion of Time}}, only to resign by the story's conclusion. Although the [[Sixth Doctor]] was informed in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Ultimate Foe (TV story)|The Ultimate Foe}} that he had been booted from office ''in absentia'', the [[Seventh Doctor]] would again describe himself as "President-Elect of the High Council of Time Lords" in [[TV]]: {{cs|Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)|Remembrance of the Daleks}}.
* The Brigadier's says "Wonderful chap, all of them," referring to all five incarnations of The Doctor. He previously said "Wonderful chap, both of him", referring to his second and third incarnations in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors}}.
* The First Doctor appears annoyed when [[Tegan Jovanka|Tegan]] calls him "Doc", a gag previously used with him in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Time Meddler (TV story)|The Time Meddler}}. The running joke would recur in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Twin Dilemma (TV story)|The Twin Dilemma}}, [[TV]]: {{cs|The Ultimate Foe (TV story)|The Ultimate Foe}}, and [[TV]: {{cs|Dreamland (TV story)|Dreamland}}; the First Doctor's exact words in ''The Five Doctors'', "Kindly refrain from addressing me as ‘Doc’", would be specifically reused by the [[Sixth Doctor]] in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Twin Dilemma (TV story)|The Twin Dilemma}}.
* Rassilon is said to have achieved "timeless, perpetual bodily regeneration" granting him true [[immortality]]. A much less convenient form of [[perpetual regeneration]] was a plot point in [[TV]]: {{cs|Mawdryn Undead (TV story)|Mawdryn Undead}}.
* The [[Second Doctor]] calls the [[Third Doctor]] "Fancy pants", to which the Third Doctor replies "[[Scarecrow]]", continuing their somewhat antagonistic rapport from [[TV]]: {{cs|The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors}}. Ironically, [[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Night Walkers (comic story)}} showed animated scarecrows being used by the Time Lords to enact their sentence of [[forced regeneration]] on the Second Doctor.
* [[Sarah Jane Smith]] once again notes her fear of heights, prominently displayed in [[TV]]: {{cs|Genesis of the Daleks (TV story)|Genesis of the Daleks}}.
* [[Jerricho|The Castellan]] theorises that "the Doctor wants revenge" as a possible motive for deceiving the [[High Council]], implicitly referring to the Time Lords' recent attempt to execute the Doctor in [[TV]]: {{cs|Arc of Infinity (TV story)|Arc of Infinity}}.
* [[Rassilon]]'s body wears a more colourful version of the style of Time Lord robes previously depicted in [[TV]]: {{cs|The War Games (TV story)}}.
* The climax hinges on an intercession with a manifestation of Rassilon's [[mind]]. It had been mentioned to "still exist within the [[APC Net]]" in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Invasion of Time (TV story)}}, and the Fifth Doctor had previously been shown meeting with Rassilon's spirit within [[the Matrix]] during [[Melanicus]]'s hijack of the [[Event Synthesizer]] in [[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Tides of Time (comic story)|The Tides of Time}}.
* Romana would later recall during [[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Extermination (audio story)|Extermination}} that she was shocked that the Doctor ran away from his responsibilities when he was appointed Lord President.
* [[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Five Companions (audio story)}} serves as an interquel to this story, asserting that before the Fifth Doctor arrived in [[the Capitol]], the Master's transmat recall device sent him to a "spare" [[Death Zone]] where he met his former companions [[Ian Chesterton]], [[Steven Taylor]], [[Sara Kingdom]], [[Polly Wright]] and [[Nyssa]], battling the [[Dalek]]s and the [[Sontaran]]s.
* The Cybermen type seen here are described as [[CyberNeomorph]]s in [[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Ultimate Cybermen (audio story)|The Ultimate Cybermen}}.
* After the Tremas Master hands the [[Third Doctor]] the [[Seal of the High Council]] as proof of his legitimacy, the Doctor simply pockets it instead of returning it. Decades later, [[TV]]: {{cs|The Time of the Doctor (TV story)}} would reveal that the Doctor had kept it all along, with the [[Eleventh Doctor]] revealing he still held it, and mentioning how he "nicked it from the Master in the Death Zone" before he puts it to use as an interface to translate [[the Message]].
* An exchange between the First and Fifth Doctors is similar to the exchange between the [[Twelfth Doctor]] and the [[Eleventh General]], shortly before the Doctor shot the General, in [[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}.{{what?}}
* The Death Zone, noted as a place of "dangerous games", was one of the names from the Doctor's past which were scrambled by [[the Flux]] in [[GAME]]: {{cs|Flux Fixers (game)}}.


'''For the [[Fifth Doctor - Timeline|Fifth Doctor]]'''
== Home video and audio releases ==
* This story occurs after [[MA]]: ''[[The Crystal Bucephalus (novel)|The Crystal Bucephalus]]''
With three VHS releases, two DVD releases and a Laserdisc release, ''The Five Doctors'' is among one of the most reissued ''Doctor Who'' TV stories in the classic show's run.
* [[BFA]]: ''[[The Five Companions]]'' occurs during this story
* This story occurs before [[EDA]]: ''[[The Eight Doctors]]''


== Home video and audio releases ==
=== VHS Releases ===
=== VHS Releases ===
The Five Doctors had three separate VHS releases:
''The Five Doctors'' had three separate VHS releases:


It was released on video by BBC Enterprises in [[1985]]. This was the edited version screened in USA and had 2 minutes of footage edited out.
It was released on video by BBC Enterprises in 1985. This was the edited version screened in the USA and had two minutes of footage edited out.


<gallery hideaddbutton="true" position=center captionalign=center>
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true">
file:DSC01798.JPG|BBC Video 1985 Release (BBCV 2020) UK cover
The Five Doctors UK VHS 1985 2.jpg|BBC Video 1985 Release (BBCV 2020) UK cover by [[Andrew Skilleter]]
file:The Five Doctors VHS Australian folded out cover.jpg|VHS Australian cover (full cover)
File:The Five Doctors VHS Australian folded out cover.jpg|VHS Australian cover (full cover)
file:The Five Doctors VHS US cover.jpg|VHS US cover
File:The Five Doctors VHS US cover.jpg|VHS US cover
File:The Five Doctors VHS Norway.jpg|VHS Norwegian cover
</gallery>
</gallery>


It was released again by BBC Worldwide in 1990 in an unedited format.
It was released again by BBC Worldwide in 1990 in an unedited format. The Video Gift Set, exclusive to Boots shops, also contained a unique [[Dapol]] Dalek with the colour shown in promotions such as the back of [[Radio Times]]' [[Doctor Who 20th Anniversary Special]] (the pictured Dalek being from the [[Madame Tussauds]]' [[Doctor Who exhibition]]).
<gallery hideaddbutton="true" position=center captionalign=center>
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true">
file:The Five Doctors VHS UK unedited cover.jpg|VHS UK unedited cover
File:The Five Doctors VHS UK unedited cover.jpg|VHS UK unedited cover by [[Alister Pearson]]
File:The Five Doctors SE VHS Australian cover.jpg|VHS AUS cover
File:The Five Doctors 1990 VHS Au.jpg|VHS AUS cover
</gallery>
</gallery>


==== Box set ====
==== Box set ====
It was released on video by BBC Worldwide in [[1995]] as part of a boxed set in the UK, Australia and the US. This was the Extended/Special Edition version of the story. In all regions, this edition was notable for being twinned with ''[[The King's Demons]]''.  It was the only VHS release for ''Demons'', and indeed the only home video release of the two-part [[serial]] until the [[2010]] ''Demons'' [[DVD]].  
It was released on video by BBC Worldwide in 1995 as part of a boxed set in the UK, Australia and the US. This was the Extended/Special Edition version of the story. In all regions, this edition was notable for being twinned with ''[[The King's Demons (TV story)|The King's Demons]]'', which was never released on VHS on its own.


<gallery hideaddbutton="true" position=center captionalign=center>
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true">
file:The Five Doctors and The Kings Demons VHS UK cover.jpg|VHS UK box set cover
File:The Five Doctors and The Kings Demons VHS UK cover.jpg|VHS UK box set cover
file:The Five Doctors and The Kings Demons VHS box set Australian cover.jpg|VHS Australian box set cover
File:The Five Doctors and The Kings Demons VHS box set Australian cover.jpg|VHS Australian box set cover
file:The Five Doctors and The Kings Demons VHS US cover.jpg|VHS US Collector's Edition cover
File:The Five Doctors and The Kings Demons VHS US cover.jpg|VHS US Collector's Edition cover
</gallery>
</gallery>


=== Laserdisc releases ===
=== Laserdisc releases ===
* The original (broadcast) version of the story was released on Laserdisc in [[1994]].
* The original (broadcast) version of the story was released on laserdisc in [[1994]].
<gallery hideaddbutton="true" position=center captionalign=center>
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true">
file:Fivedoctorslaser.PNG|Laserdisc cover and disc. Released from 1994 (US)
File:Fivedoctorslaser.PNG|Laserdisc cover and disc. Released from 1994 (US)
</gallery>
</gallery>


=== DVD release ===
=== DVD release ===
'''The Five Doctors''' was the first ''Doctor Who'' DVD to be released by BBC Worldwide. It introduced several features that remain with the range today. The intro-theme music used into the DVDs was the Davison-era theme music, and remains for all DVDs.  
''The Five Doctors'' was the first ''[[Doctor Who]]'' DVD to be released by BBC Worldwide. It introduced several features that remain with the range today. The intro-theme music used into the DVDs was the Davison-era theme music, and remains for all DVDs.
While the original release of the DVD had no special features, it did feature a CGI created TARDIS console room (based on the one featured in this story).
While the original release of the DVD had no special features, it did feature a CGI created TARDIS console room (based on the one featured in this story).


==== First release ====
==== First release ====
In [[1999]] '''The Five Doctors''' was released on DVD by BBC Worldwide. This was the same Extended / Special Edition as the 1995 VHS release, with no additional features. Released in [[Australia]] [[2000]]. Only the North America release had commentary and the Who's Who features.
In 1999 ''The Five Doctors'' was released on DVD by BBC Worldwide. This was the same Extended / Special Edition as the 1995 VHS release, with no additional features. It was released in [[Australia]] 2000. Only the North America release had commentary and the Who's Who features. In the UK, because the DVD cover did not match the usual Region&nbsp;2 template, a matching version (by [[Lee Binding]] and [[Clayton Hickman]]) was released on the BBC Doctor Who website on 23 December 2004;<ref>Archived: [https://web.archive.org/web/20041230145918/http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/news/drwho/2004/12/23/16240.shtml]</ref> {{as of|July 2023}} this image can be downloaded using the Internet Archive Wayback Machine: [https://web.archive.org/web/20141229110208/http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/dvd/images/full/fivedoctors_new.jpg].


<gallery hideaddbutton="true" position=center captionalign=center>
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true">
file:Bbcdvd-the5doctors.png|UK cover
File:The Five Doctors DVD R2 1999.jpg|UK cover
file:6k-dvd3.jpg|Australian/New Zealand cover
Five doctors special edition oring uk dvd.jpg|UK slip-case cover
file:6k-dvd2.jpg|North American cover
File:6k-dvd3.jpg|Australian/New Zealand cover
File:6k-dvd2.jpg|North American cover
</gallery>
</gallery>


==== Second release ====
==== Second release ====
In [[2008]] '''The Five Doctors''' was re-released celebrating the story's 25th anniversary, in this case it was a dual DVD release showcasing the original version of the story and the Extended / Special Edition.
In 2008 ''The Five Doctors'' was re-released celebrating the story's 25th anniversary. In this case it was a dual DVD release showcasing the original version of the story and the Extended / Special Edition.


<gallery hideaddbutton="true" position=center captionalign=center>
===== Special features =====
file:The Five Doctors new cover.jpg|UK cover
* Commentary on 1983 TV version by [[Carole Ann Ford]] ([[Susan Foreman|Susan]]), [[Nicholas Courtney]] ([[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|The Brigadier]]), [[Elisabeth Sladen]] ([[Sarah Jane Smith|Sarah Jane]]) and [[Mark Strickson]] ([[Vislor Turlough|Turlough]])
file:The Five Doctors DVD Australian cover.jpg|Australian cover
* Commentary on 1995 Special Edition by [[Peter Davison]] ([[Fifth Doctor|The Doctor]]) and [[Terrance Dicks]] (Writer)
file:FiveDoctorsR12008.jpg|North American cover
* ''[[Celebration: Doctor Who in 1983 (documentary)|Celebration]]'' — A 52-minute look back at ''Doctor Who's'' 20th anniversary celebrations in 1983 hosted by [[Colin Baker]]
</gallery>
* ''[[The Ties that Bind Us (documentary)|The Ties that Bind Us]]'' - A 16-minute documentary examining the links to the show's past and future in ''The Five Doctors'' (right up to ''[[Last of the Time Lords (TV story)|Last of the Time Lords]]'') narrated by [[Paul McGann]]
* ''[[Five Doctors, One Studio]]'' — Raw video footage of the only studio recording session in which Davison, Pertwee, Troughton and Hurndall were all together on set
* Out-takes - Bloopers and gaffes from the making of the story
* ''[[(Not So) Special Effects]]'' — A look at a typical day's work for the visual FX crew on ''Doctor Who'', featuring raw footage of the filming of several special effects sequences
* Publicity Clips - The actors publicise ''The Five Doctors'' on ''Saturday Superstore'', ''[[Blue Peter (series)|Blue Peter]]'', ''[[Nationwide]]'' and ''Breakfast Time''
* Trails and Continuities - BBC1 trailers and continuity announcements from the story's original transmission, including the cliffhangers created for the four-episode version
* Isolated Music - The score for both versions is available on a separate music track
* ''[[Radio Times]]'' Billings (DVD-ROM PC/Mac)
* Photo Gallery
* Production Subtitles for both versions
* Coming Soon Trailer - ''[[The Invasion of Time (TV story)|The Invasion of Time]]''
* [[Easter Egg]]s:
** Bonus commentary on the 1983 TV version by [[David Tennant]], [[Helen Raynor]] and [[Phil Collinson]]. To access this hidden feature, press right at Companions Commentary in the Audio Options section of Disc One's Special Features menu to reveal a hidden ''Doctor Who'' logo.
** 1995 BBC Video ident featuring the BBC Logo being eaten by the Black Triangle. To access this hidden feature, press left at ''Nationwide'' on Disc Two's Special Features menu to reveal a hidden ''Doctor Who'' logo.


* Commentary track on 1983 version by [[Carole Ann Ford]], [[Nicholas Courtney]], [[Elisabeth Sladen]], [[Mark Strickson]].
Editing for the Special Edition VHS and DVD releases and 25th Anniversary DVD release was completed by the [[Doctor Who Restoration Team]].
* Commentary track on 1995 version by [[Peter Davison]] and [[Terrance Dicks]]
* ''Celebration'', a 52-minute documentary hosted by [[Colin Baker]] looking back at the 1983 anniversary year.
* ''[[The Ties that Bind Us]]'', a 26-minute documentary narrated by [[Paul McGann]] looking at the links between ''The Five Doctors'' and both past and future ''Doctor Who'' storylines (right up to ''[[Last of the Time Lords]]'')
* ''Five Doctors, One Studio'' - raw video footage of the only studio recording session in which Davison, Pertwee, Troughton and Hurndall were all together.
* Outtakes and bloopers.
* ''(Not So) Special Effects'' - raw footage of the filming of several special effects sequences.
* Publicity clips from ''Saturday Superstore'', ''Blue Peter'', ''Nationwide'' and ''Breakfast Time''.
* Isolated music track for both versions.
* Trails and continuities, including the cliffhangers created for the four-episode version.
* Photo gallery.
* Production notes subtitles option on both versions.
* DVD ROM feature: ''Radio Times'' listings.
* Easter eggs:
: Disc One- Go to Audio Options in the Special Features menu, go down to Companions Commentary and click right on your remote, you should get a green doctor who logo, click it to hear a commantary by some of the New Series Team; David Tennant, Helen Raynor and Phil Collinson


: Disc Two- Go to Nationwide on the DVD menu; hit left, a green logo should appear, click it and you get the clip of the BBC Logo being eaten by the Black Triangle as present on the original BBC Video release of the Special Edition.
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true">
 
File:The Five Doctors new cover.jpg|UK cover
* Editing for Special Edition VHS and DVD releases and 25th Anniversary DVD release completed by [[Doctor Who Restoration Team]].
File:The Five Doctors 2008 Region 2 DVD Cover Slipcase.jpg|UK slipcase cover
File:The Five Doctors DVD Australian cover.jpg|Australian cover
File:The Five Doctors 2008 Region 4 DVD Cover Slipcase.jpg|Australian slipcase cover
File:The five doctors.jpg|North American cover
File:The Five Doctors DVD Germany.jpg|German cover
</gallery>


=== Audio release ===
=== Audio release ===
A soundtrack album of the music from this serial was released by Silva Screen Records as ''The Five Doctors: Classic Music from the BBC Radiophonic Workshop Vol. 2'' (FILMCD 710).
[[Silva Screen]] Records released a CD, ''The Five Doctors: Classic Music from the BBC Radiophonic Workshop Volume 2'' (FILMCD 710), which contains a suite of music from this story. (The rest of the album contains music from other Fifth Doctor stories.)
 
== Novelisation==
[[file: Five_Doctors_novel.jpg|right|75px]]
:''Main article: [[The Five Doctors (novelisation)]]''
 
* This story was novelised as ''[[The Five Doctors (novelisation)|The Five Doctors]]'' by [[Terrance Dicks]] in [[1983]].




== External links ==
== External links ==
* {{bbcepguideclassic|fivedoctors/|The Five Doctors}}
* {{bbcepguideclassic|fivedoctors/|The Five Doctors}}
* {{dwrefguide|who_6k.htm|The Five Doctors}}
* {{radiotimes|2012-02-21/the-five-doctors}}
{{dwcast}}
{{dwrefguide|who_6k.htm|The Five Doctors}}
* {{briefhistory|serials/6k.html|The Five Doctors}}
* {{briefhistory|serials/6k.html|The Five Doctors}}
* {{locguide|fivedoctors|The Five Doctors}}
* {{locguide|fivedoctors|The Five Doctors}}
{{Lockx}}
== Footnotes ==
== Footnotes ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
{{reflist|group=note}}
{{DWTV}}
{{DWTV}}
{{Master stories}}
{{Revised editions of Doctor Who TV stories}}
{{SPEC|21.00|0DW}}
{{Tremas Master stories}}
{{Cyberman stories}}
{{Cyberman stories}}
{{Rassilon stories}}
{{Dalek stories}}
{{Dalek stories}}
{{TitleSort}}
{{TitleSort}}
{{StoryImages}}
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[[Category:Multi-Doctor stories]]
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[[Category:Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart television stories]]
[[Category:Sarah Jane Smith television stories]]
[[Category:Fifth Doctor television stories]]
[[Category:Season 20 stories]]
[[Category:Rassilon television stories]]
[[Category:Stories set on Gallifrey]]
[[Category:Yeti stories]]
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[[Category:Articles that were originally Wikipedia forks]]
[[Category:Doctor Who (1963) television stories]]
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[[Category:Anniversary stories]]
[[Category:Dalek television stories]]
[[Category:Dalek television stories]]
[[Category:The Master television stories]]
[[Category:Tremas Master television stories]]
[[Category:Time Lord television stories]]
[[Category:Time Lord television stories]]
[[Category:Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart television stories]]
[[Category:Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart television stories]]
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[[Category:Sarah Jane Smith television stories]]
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[[Category:First Doctor television stories]]
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[[Category:Season 6B]]
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[[Category:Raston Warrior Robot stories]]
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[[Category:Stories set in Cambridge]]
[[Category:K9 television stories]]
[[Category:K9 television stories]]
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[[Category:Stories set in the Rassilon Era]]
[[Category:Articles that were originally Wikipedia forks]]
[[Category:Television stories that use the Peter Howell theme]]
[[Category:Romana II television stories]]
[[Category:Television stories with unique variations of the Doctor Who theme]]
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[[Category:UNIT television stories]]

Latest revision as of 09:01, 10 November 2024

RealWorld.png

You may wish to consult The Five Doctors (disambiguation) for other, similarly-named pages.

The Five Doctors was the 20th Anniversary Special of Doctor Who. It was part of neither season 20 nor 21, but an original Children in Need special, presaging a connection between Doctor Who and the charity that became more regularised by Russell T Davies in the 21st century.

This Multi-Doctor story featured an unprecedented four incarnations of the Doctor on-screen at once. Incumbent Peter Davison, naturally, appeared as the Fifth Doctor, with Patrick Troughton and Jon Pertwee returning as the Second and Third Doctors, respectively. However, for the first time ever, the role of the First Doctor was given to Richard Hurndall, a look-alike actor and spiritual successor for the late William Hartnell, who had passed away on 23 April 1975.

Although the title billed five Doctors, Tom Baker declined to return as the Fourth Doctor. His Doctor's part in the special would be downplayed from a personal appearance to a limited role using previously-filmed, but never broadcast, footage from the then abandoned story Shada.

The Five Doctors also featured a record number of returning actors who had played companions to the Doctor over the years, although a few of the actors only appeared as illusions of these companions. Notable was Carole Ann Ford's return as a much older Susan Foreman, the first time she would play her character in an adult portrayal until her career in Big Finish Productions. Other appearances included Frazer Hines and Wendy Padbury as Jamie McCrimmon and Zoe Heriot, Caroline John and Richard Franklin as Liz Shaw and Mike Yates, and Nicholas Courtney as Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart. Finally, the story saw the return of Elisabeth Sladen as Sarah Jane Smith, along with K9 Mark III, a character introduced in the K9 and Company pilot A Girl's Best Friend. Though he originated from a show which was never picked up for a full season, he was transferred over to Doctor Who as the newest iteration of K9.

It was also the first story co-produced with overseas broadcasters. Though such arrangements have been commonplace since the 1996 telemovie, John Nathan-Turner's procurement of money from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation was a financial innovation. Even more impressively, the Australians paid $A60,000 towards the production while agreeing to forgo on-screen credit. It was similarly unique in that it was broadcast to American audiences on the actual anniversary date of the series, 23 November — two days before being aired to British audiences. (REF: The Fifth Doctor Handbook)

Its location work was completed in North Wales, with the Ffestiniog area doubling for Gallifrey. Though Wales inevitably provides the backdrops for most BBC Wales Doctor Who location work, it was at the time an unusual choice for the Doctor Who production team based in London.

It was one of the first Doctor Who serials to make extensive use of matte paintings. With the new Quantel Paintbox — whose use in Doctor Who had only hesitantly begun in season 18designer Malcolm Thornton replaced several model shots and glass shots with matte paintings via Paintbox. This became especially important, given the less-than-optimal weather in windy Wales. (REF: The Fifth Doctor Handbook)

This story premiered the new Mike Kelt-designed TARDIS console, which would be used through the rest of the 1980s. It further introduced a re-design of the entire console room, which would become the final control room design to be used during the run of the classic series. Thornton argued that, since a new console had been ordered by JN-T, the entire set should be regularised. He made each facet of the console correspond to a particular wall of the set and each TARDIS wall more angular. This made the set assemble in only one way, reducing assembly time.

Finally, this story was the last televised Doctor Who story to be written by Terrance Dicks.

Synopsis[[edit]]

I am being diminished, whittled away piece by piece. A man is the sum of his memories you know, a Time Lord even more so...

Plot[[edit]]

The Fifth Doctor, Tegan and Turlough are taking a break at the Eye of Orion, one of the most tranquil spots in the universe. In the TARDIS control room, the Doctor has just finished renovating the control console, which now has a more hi-tech look. Turlough is sketching. Tegan is enjoying the peaceful atmosphere. It's a change from their non-stop adventures that leave them no time to relax. The Doctor goes outside to join his companions and enjoy the peace and quiet. When Tegan wonders why it is so restful there, the Doctor explains that it is because of the bombardment of positive ions.

Elsewhere, in a hidden chamber, a dark figure — who shall be referred to as the Player — manipulates the controls of a forbidden device called the Time Scoop and kidnaps the First Doctor as he walks through a rose garden. The Player takes a figurine of the First Doctor from a window-shaped wall alcove and places it on one of five spots on a diorama, which lights up in response.

Back on the Eye of Orion, the Fifth Doctor feels a pain in his chest but dismisses the thought that anything is wrong with him as Turlough and Tegan look worriedly at him.

Elsewhen, Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart is at a UNIT reunion. He talks to his replacement, Colonel Charles Crichton, about his former scientific adviser, the Doctor; it seems that UNIT had been unable to track him down for the reunion. The Brigadier says, "Wonderful chap — all of them", which confuses the Colonel. Suddenly, the Second Doctor bursts through the door, having barged past the sergeant on duty, happy to see his old friend. They take a walk. As they walk and talk in the yard about their times together, the Second Doctor tells the Brigadier that he must go as he is bending the Laws of Time. However, they are snatched up by the Time Scoop. Models of them appear in the wall alcove and the Player puts them in the spot next to the First Doctor.

K9 tries to warn Sarah about the Time Scoop.

The Fifth Doctor feels another pain and collapses after reassuring Tegan and Turlough that everything's all right.

Elsewhen, the Third Doctor is driving his vintage car, Bessie. He notices the Time Scoop coming towards him. He tries to evade it, but is taken anyway; a figure of him appears in the wall alcove and placed into the next spot on the diorama.

The Fifth Doctor tells his companions he must get back to the TARDIS. There is something definitely wrong with his past and he is in immediate danger. As he puts it, "A man is the sum of his memories, a Time Lord even more so". He is near the TARDIS when he collapses in pain as his third incarnation is snatched. He tells his companions he has to find "my other selves..."

Sarah Jane Smith is about to leave home. K9 warns her not to. He senses there is danger and it somehow involves the Doctor. He suggests she take him with her. Unfortunately, her car is out of action and she has to take the bus. Believing K9 is overreacting, she dismisses his worry and heads off.

Somewhen else, the Fourth Doctor and Romana II are enjoying a punt along the River Cam in Cambridge. They are Time Scooped by the Player as well. However, to the growing anger of whoever is taking the Doctor's incarnations out of time, he cannot take figures of the Fourth Doctor and Romana from the wall alcove: they have been trapped in a time eddy in the time vortex and do not rematerialise. The Player angrily slams a black-gloved fist onto the control panel.

Waiting at the bus stop, Sarah is snatched by the Time Scoop, and her figurine placed in the diorama alongside the Third Doctor.

The Fifth Doctor and his companions have entered the TARDIS. After setting a destination on the console and starting the TARDIS off he collapses. He begins fading into the Time Stream, but Tegan and Turlough keep him in existence by encouraging him. The TARDIS lands, and the scanner shows a desolate, rocky landscape — the Death Zone on Gallifrey.

Model figurines of the Doctors and their companions in the Time Scoop's diorama.

All the Doctors and their companions, save the Fourth Doctor and Romana, have actually been deposited on a desolate, rocky landscape — the Death Zone on Gallifrey. Figures of the Fifth Doctor, Tegan and Turlough have been placed on the diorama section next to the First Doctor — the spot where the Fourth Doctor and Romana should have been placed is flashing.

Meanwhile, in the Capitol on Gallifrey, the Inner Council of Time Lords, headed by Lord President Borusa and consisting of Chancellor Flavia and the Castellan, are in session. Despite the recently regenerated and still arrogant Borusa's misgivings, the High Council has voted unanimously to call in the Tremas Master to go into the Death Zone to help the Doctor, who has been taken out of time and no longer exists in any of his regenerations. They explain that the Eye of Harmony is being drained by whoever is taking the Doctors out of time, endangering all of Gallifrey. Offered a pardon and a new cycle of regenerations if he rescues the Doctors, the Master accepts. He is given a copy of the Seal of the High Council by the Castellan to prove his credentials and a transmat recall device. He is transmatted to the Death Zone.

In the Zone, the Doctors face many dangers. The First Doctor finds himself in a corridor with mirrored walls and is reunited with his granddaughter, Susan. Their reunion is cut short when a Dalek arrives and tries to kill them. They trick the Dalek into destroying itself by pushing it into a dead end, where a beam from its energy weapon bounces back off the shiny walls and destroys it; as the Doctor points out, "It's very dangerous to fire energy weapons in an enclosed space!" The explosion has blasted a hole in the wall, out which is what the Doctor and Susan recognise as the Death Zone on Gallifrey.

The Second Doctor and the Brigadier escape from a squad of Cybermen, and the Third Doctor rescues Sarah from her fall down an embankment. Sarah is confused; she had watched the Third Doctor regenerate into the Fourth, but is glad to see the Doctor she once knew.

The Second and Third Doctors explain to their companions that in Gallifrey's past, known as the Dark Time, the Time Lords greatly misused their powers. A device called the Time Scoop plucked beings out of their times and placed them in the Death Zone, where they fought each other in a sort of gladiatorial game for the Time Lords' amusement and entertainment. The Doctors' goal now is to reach the Dark Tower, where the Time Lord founder Rassilon is entombed, although there is some doubt as to whether Rassilon is actually dead.

The Master meets and fails to convince the Third Doctor he is there to help. The Doctor thinks the Master's Seal of Rassilon is a forgery, and when the Master hands it over to try and prove it is genuine, the Doctor confiscates it, thinking the Master has stolen it and says "I'll return it at the first opportunity!" The Master flees when thunderbolts flash down from the sky. The Third Doctor only sees this as confirmation that this is all a plot of the Master's, especially when another thunderbolt disables Bessie. The Doctor and Sarah are forced to continue their journey on foot.

The First Doctor and Susan find and enter the TARDIS; the presence of the First Doctor seems to stabilise the Fifth for the moment. Together, they scan the tower and find three entrances — one at the apex of the tower, the main gate at the base and one underground, but a force field prevents the TARDIS's entry, or even it moving within the Death Zone. The Fifth Doctor takes Tegan and Susan towards the main gate but encounters the Master, who has no better luck convincing the Fifth Doctor of his bona fides than he had the Third. At that moment, the two are confronted by Cybermen. When they try to run away, the Master is knocked out by an explosion caused by a Cyber-gun blast. The Fifth Doctor finds the Master's recall device on his unconscious body and transmats himself to the Capitol. Tegan and Susan start back to the TARDIS to warn the others, but Susan trips and sprains her ankle; and needs Tegan's help.

In the Capitol, the Fifth Doctor is informed of the situation by the High Council. The Doctor realises he has done the Master an injustice and that they were found too easily by the Cybermen. Like the Daleks, the Cybermen were never brought to the Death Zone in the Dark Times because they fought too well. He opens the recall device and finds a homing beacon inside. The Castellan — who had given the device to the Master — is arrested, and Borusa orders the Commander to search the Castellan's office and living quarters.

Tegan and Susan have told the First Doctor what happened to the Fifth Doctor. The First Doctor decides to head for the main gate himself. Tegan insists on accompanying him, much to his dismay. Susan and Turlough remain in the TARDIS to wait for the Tower's force-field to be deactivated so they can move the ship there.

The Master, confronted by the Cybermen, offers himself as a guide to the Tower in order to save his own life.

While waiting for the First Doctor and Tegan to get to the Tower, thumping is heard outside the TARDIS; the scanner reveals a squad of Cybermen carrying a coffin-like box and lots of cables.

A box containing Black Scrolls of Rassilon, forbidden knowledge from the Dark Times has been found, supposedly in the Castellan's quarters. The scrolls spontaneously combust before anyone can examine them, and Borusa orders the Castellan to be taken for interrogation, authorising the use of the mind probe — much to the Castellan's horror. However, as the Castellan is escorted outside, there is the sound of a staser shot and a cry. The Doctor rushes out to find the Castellan dead, a gun by his hand; the Commander reports he was shot while trying to escape. President Borusa refuses to allow the Doctor to return to the Death Zone and orders Flavia to look after him.

The Second Doctor and the Brigadier are exploring a series of caves in the hope of reaching the lower entrance to the Tower when they encounter a Yeti, apparently left over from the previous games. Taking refuge in an alcove, the Doctor tries to chase the Yeti off with a firework, but only maddens it, causing it to collapse the entrance to the alcove. However, the Doctor detects a breeze blowing further back, and discovers the underground entrance to the Tower.

The Fifth Doctor voices his concerns to Chancellor Flavia. He says that while the Castellan was stubborn, he was devoted to his oath of office and could never have been a traitor and that his reaction to the Scrolls was not that of a guilty man, but sheer disbelief. He suspects that the traitor is still at large. Flavia decides to have a word with the Captain, while the Doctor will speak with Borusa.

The Raston Warrior Robot eliminates the Cybermen.

On the surface, the Third Doctor and Sarah come across a Raston Warrior Robot. According to the Doctor, it is "the most perfect killing machine ever devised". Able to move with blinding speed and fire bolts of metal at its targets, it detects its victims by motion. The Doctor and Sarah cannot move without attracting the robot's attention, but luck is on their side when a squad of Cybermen come over the ridge. The robot quickly eliminates the entire Cyber squad. Taking advantage of the distraction, the Doctor and Sarah run past the robot, taking some wire and spare bolts from its cave.

The First Doctor and Tegan reach the main door and open it using an entry coder hidden under a large bell.

After climbing a cliff, much to Sarah's dismay, the Doctor and Sarah find that there is no clear way across the empty space to the top of the tower. The Doctor uses the wire and bolts for a grappling hook. He and Sarah abseil across the gap to the top of the Tower, to the amusement of the Master far below.

On the main floor of the Tower, the First Doctor and Tegan find a red-and-white chessboard floor blocking their way. The Doctor quickly determines the chessboard is a trap — electrical bolts will destroy anyone attempting to cross unless they find the safe path. The Master appears at this point, warning them the Cybermen are close behind. While the Doctor and Tegan hide, the Master lures the Cybermen onto the chessboard, where all but the Cyber-Leader (who waited behind) are killed by the trap. He also tricks the Cyber-Leader into trying to cross with him before fatally blasting him with a Cyber-weapon. Enjoying this little piece of butchery, the Master blithely steps across the board, moving into the Tower after telling the Doctor that "it's as easy as pie." The Doctor realises that the Master means the Greek letter pi and the safe path is calculated by means of the mathematical constant. Armed with this knowledge, the Doctor and Tegan make their way across the trap.

In the Death Zone, the TARDIS is now surrounded by Cybermen, who start to assemble a bomb to blow it up. Inside, Turlough and Susan watch helplessly, not knowing what to do.

Jamie and Zoe appear.

The Second and Third Doctors encounter more obstacles while moving separately through the Tower, with the mind of Rassilon emitting intensifying fear. They also encounter what appear to be their previous companions, the Third meeting Captain Mike Yates and Liz Shaw and the Second Jamie McCrimmon and Zoe Heriot. The Doctors soon realise they are just phantoms to impede their progress through the Tower and the spectres vanish with a scream. The First Doctor blithely ignores the fear as an illusion, considering that "at my age, there's little left to fear!"

Finally, the first three Doctors reach the tomb: Rassilon's sepulchre. While the Brigadier, Sarah and Tegan get reacquainted, the three Doctors try to translate an inscription in Old High Gallifreyan on a pedestal near a control panel — arguing among themselves as usual.

The Fifth Doctor finds Borusa has vanished from the Council Chamber, but the guards insist the President could not have gotten by them at the only entrance. The transmat is out of power, so the Doctor deduces there must be a secret door and orders the guards to notify Flavia that the President has disappeared. After an intensive search, he realises that the Harp of Rassilon, standing in the Council Chamber, is the key and that a tune will open the door. He starts experimenting.

In the tomb, the Doctors have deciphered the inscription. Rassilon had discovered the secret of immortality. He was willing to share it with whoever overcame the obstacles to the tomb and took the ring from his body and put it on. However, a line troubles the First Doctor, who wonders just what it means: "To lose is to win and he who wins shall lose." The Master steps out of the shadows, brandishing his tissue compression eliminator, to claim immortality himself and to kill the Doctor "three times over", but the Brigadier moves up behind the Master and surprises him by saying "Nice to see you again!" The Third Doctor kicks the weapon out of the Master's hand, while the Brigadier delivers a powerful right-hook to the Master's jaw. The Master falls to the floor and stays there, knocked out cold, and is tied up by Sarah and Tegan.

The Fifth Doctor realises that the tune is shown in a painting of Rassilon playing the Harp, where the sheet music is clearly depicted. He plays the tune, which opens the door. The Doctor enters the secret chamber and finds the dark figure of the Player who has taken his other selves out of time: Borusa. The Lord President is not satisfied with ruling Gallifrey for all his remaining regenerations — he wants to be President Eternal and rule forever. Like the first three Doctors, Borusa has determined that Rassilon discovered the secret of immortality and he means to claim it, sending the Doctors into the Zone to clear the way of obstacles for him. Using the Coronet of Rassilon, Borusa overwhelms the Fifth Doctor's will, forcing him to obey his commands.

The Third Doctor fixes the control panel by reversing the polarity of the neutron flow, allowing the TARDIS to transport itself to the tomb just seconds before the Cybermen's bomb detonates.

Rassilon questions as to whether the Doctors also seek immortality.

The Second Doctor contacts the Capitol. The Fifth Doctor answers, still under Borusa's control, and tells his other selves to await his and Borusa's arrival. The First and Third Doctors are suspicious, but the Second doesn't believe them. Transmatting to the tomb with the Fifth Doctor, Borusa paralyses the Doctors' companions with the command "Be silent! Be silent, all of you! Do not move or speak until I give you leave!" Then, Borusa tries to control the minds of the First, Second and Third Doctors. However, they combine their wills against him to free the Fifth Doctor. As Borusa declares that Gallifrey will believe its President's word over that of the notorious renegades, a booming voice echoes through the chamber.

It is Rassilon, who appears as a large face in the air, demanding to know who disturbs him.

Borusa steps forward to claim his prize of immortality and, while the other Doctors protest, the First Doctor holds them back, telling Rassilon that Borusa deserves the prize. Rassilon instructs Borusa to take the ring from the body and put it on. Borusa does so, but finds himself paralysed as three stone faces carved into the side of Rassilon's bier briefly come to life; they are the others who sought immortality and received it: they are now frozen in stone forever. The ring vanishes from Borusa's finger and returns to Rassilon, while Borusa himself disappears and reappears as a stone face in an empty space on the bier. The faces, including Borusa's, then become stone once more. Borusa has found his immortality, but not the way he wanted it.

Rassilon asks the Doctors if they want immortality too — all four frantically say "No!" The Fifth Doctor asks that they all be returned to their proper time and the Fourth Doctor be freed from the time vortex. Rassilon does so, and the Fourth Doctor and Romana are freed from the time eddy and they both depart in the TARDIS. [note 1]. Then, Rassilon sends the Master — who is just coming to, and is grinning — back to his own time, saying "His sins will find their punishment in due time." After telling the Doctors to say their goodbyes, and that they have chosen wisely, Rassilon bids them farewell and vanishes, returning to his eternal rest as the companions find themselves released from Borusa's psychic hold. The First Doctor smugly tells the Fifth that he finally understood the proverb: "To lose is to win and he who wins shall lose." The prize was yet another trap — a means for Rassilon to discover who wanted immortality and were thus a danger to Gallifrey and get them out of the way.

The Doctors and their companions say their goodbyes to each other — with a few snipes between the Doctors — and re-enter the TARDIS, save for the Fifth Doctor, Tegan and Turlough. As the three watch, the Doctors and their companions are transported back to their proper times in offshoots of the TARDIS splitting off from the original; Rassilon has used temporal fission to send them home.[note 2] Flavia arrives with guards and tells the Doctor that with Borusa's disappearance, the Council has appointed the Doctor as President. The Doctor orders Flavia back to the Capitol, saying she has full deputy powers until his return and that he will follow in his TARDIS. When Flavia begins to protest, the Doctor firmly tells her that she should obey his commands as he is now is president. He then ushers Tegan and Turlough into the TARDIS and orders the guards to escort Flavia back to her duties. The Doctor runs back to the TARDIS, leaving Flavia calling after him.

In the TARDIS, Tegan and Turlough are concerned the Time Lords will send them home now the Doctor has become President, but the Doctor tells them that he has no intention of returning to Gallifrey. Tegan asks if the Doctor really intends to go on the run from his own people in a "rackety old TARDIS". The Doctor replies, smiling, "Why not? After all, that's how it all started..."

Cast[[edit]]

Crew[[edit]]

Uncredited Crew[[edit]]

Worldbuilding[[edit]]

Gallifrey[[edit]]

Individuals[[edit]]

Species[[edit]]

The Dalek mutant.
  • The Dalek's dome is blown off when it explodes, revealing the actual Dalek mutant inside — which quickly perishes.
  • The Cybermen are quickly destroyed by the Raston Warrior Robot.
  • A Yeti is in the Game.

People from the real world[[edit]]

  • Whilst punting down the river Cam, the Doctor rambles to Romana about Cambridge graduates, mentioning Isaac Newton.
  • The Brigadier surmises the circumstances of his getting to the Dark Tower as "like a cross between Guy Fawkes and Hallowe'en."

Technology[[edit]]

Culture[[edit]]

  • The Fifth Doctor misquotes a line from the novel Through the Looking-Glass, saying "Like Alice, I try to believe three impossible things before breakfast." The actual line is "Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast" and it is said by the White Queen, not Alice.

Influences[[edit]]

Story notes[[edit]]

  • This was the sole performance for Richard Hurndall as the First Doctor. His first line in the role was, "Susan? Surely, it's Susan?", and his last line was, "Come along, Susan."
  • The story united the then-current Fifth Doctor with his predecessors in an adventure which also featured several of his past and current companions and enemies.
  • This is the first televised story to credit William Hartnell, Patrick Troughton, Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker as "The Doctor" rather than "Dr. Who" or "Doctor Who," as had been the norm for the show's first 18 years.
  • In addition to its inclusion of a number of characters not normally seen together, this was the first episode of Doctor Who ever to premiere abroad. It was also the first Doctor Who narrative broadcast as a part of the UK's Children in Need charity telethon; the Modern Era would see the show contribute a number of mini-episodes and prequels to CiN, but this remains the franchise's most extravagant contribution.
  • For the first time in the history of the series, a previous incarnation of the Doctor is brought into an episode by having a different actor play him on screen; Richard Hurndall took over the role of the First Doctor, as William Hartnell had passed away in 1975. The Five Doctors would be the last time on screen that an actor would portray the First Doctor in a substantive way until 2013, as the use of archive footage of Hartnell and body/voice doubles would be used to show the First Doctor in TV: The Name of the Doctor and The Day of the Doctor. Indeed, nearly 30 years later in 2014, the First Doctor, as a child, made a brief appearance near the end of the episode Listen. The Five Doctors, however, marked the first time in which an adult incarnation of the Doctor was portrayed by a replacement actor; this was followed by Sylvester McCoy's brief appearance as the Sixth Doctor, originally portrayed by Colin Baker, in Time and the Rani and Paul McGann doubling for the War Doctor in The Night of the Doctor). In audio dramas, various actors portrayed the First Doctor from the late 2000s onward. In 2017, the adult First Doctor appeared properly in Doctor Who again in the Series 10 finale The Doctor Falls and the following Christmas special Twice Upon a Time, this time being played by David Bradley, who had played William Hartnell himself in the 50th anniversary special An Adventure in Space and Time. In this case, the First Doctor's change in appearance was explained by the Twelfth Doctor as the First Doctor's face being "all over the place" due to the First Doctor's impending regeneration.
  • This story introduced the idea that the Time Lords could grant a new regeneration cycle to a Time Lord at the end of their original cycle of twelve regenerations. In this case, it was offered to the Master, though he did not receive it. When the Master returned in the revived series, he had been granted a new regeneration cycle after being resurrected by the Time Lords to fight in the Last Great Time War. (TV: Utopia, The Sound of Drums, The Doctor Falls) On-screen, this ability to grant a new regeneration cycle was seen in The Time of the Doctor. In this case, the Time Lords, at the pleading of Clara Oswald, granted the Doctor a new regeneration cycle at the end of the life of his final incarnation. Subsequently, questions have been raised by several characters, including the Doctor himself and Rassilon, about how many regenerations the Time Lords gave him in this second cycle. To date, no definitive answer has been given, with the Doctor theorising that he can regenerate forever now. (TV: Kill the Moon, Hell Bent, The Doctor Falls)
  • This story officially commemorated the twentieth anniversary of Doctor Who.
  • The Radio Times programme listing was accompanied by black-and-white full-length photographic cut-out images of a Dalek from The Power of the Daleks (printed back to front for artistic reasons), with a comic strip-style speech bubble reading "EXTERMINATE! EXTERMINATE!", and K9 from The Invisible Enemy, with a speech bubble reading "NEGATIVE NEGATIVE". The accompanying caption read "The dreaded Daleks return, they are determined to ruin Doctor Who's 20th-anniversary celebrations and to wipe out the world. Can K9 help? 7.20 p.m." (original published text) A caption headed Children in Need, topped with the telethon's then current logo, also appeared alongside the programme listing in Radio Times for the London, Wales and North West regions, which read “The BBC's annual appeal for Children in Need all over the country begins in earnest at 6.55. And Doctor Who will be dropping in to join Terry later in the evening. But which one?” (original published text)
  • Elisabeth Sladen said she wished she hadn't filmed the shot of her rolling down the embankment because it didn't look very good afterwards.
  • Robert Holmes was initially commissioned to write the special. The special initially had the working title The Six Doctors because it originally included a robot impostor of one of the Doctors. The story would've detailed the Cybermen attempting to become "Cyberlords" by extracting a certain gene from the Doctor(s) genetic code and assimilating it within their own. Holmes, however, was unable to come up with a workable script, so Terrance Dicks was commissioned to write the piece. Ironically, the story immediately preceding The Five Doctors, TV: The King's Demons, did, in fact, introduce a robot character, Kamelion, with the ability to impersonate others. However, despite being introduced in that story as a new companion, not only is Kamelion not referenced or seen once in The Five Doctors, the character disappeared from the series for a full year because of technical difficulties, and there is no evidence he was ever intended to make so much as a cameo in this story, despite this apparently picking directly up from the previous story, in which he joined the TARDIS crew.[1]
    • The idea of a villain altering the genetic code of a Doctor was later implemented into Holmes's story The Two Doctors.
    • The concept of Cybermen extracting the Doctor's genetic code would appear in The Timeless Children in the form of the CyberMasters. Other similarities to The Five Doctors in The Timeless Children include it also being set on Gallifrey and featuring the Master using an army of Cybermen to his own ends.
  • The Five Doctors was co-produced with the Australian Broadcasting Commission who put in $A60,000, although under the terms of the agreement no credit to the co-producer appeared on-screen. (When the story was released by BBC Video in edited form in 1985 and in unedited form in 1990, the credit "A Co-production with ABC, Australia" appeared on the rear sleeve in both instances.) This was the first and only occurrence of this during the classic series. Later, the 1996 TV movie and the first four seasons of the new series would also incorporate non-UK support.
  • The companion illusion cameos were last-minute additions to the script.
  • Tom Baker didn't appear in the story. He declined to return to his role as the Fourth Doctor, as he felt it was too soon after his departure from the show (a decision he later said he regretted). An early idea to incorporate footage of Hartnell and Baker into the story's action in a way similar to the contemporary film Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid was abandoned in favour of hiring Richard Hurndall to give his own impression of the First Doctor, while clips of Baker and Lalla Ward from the (at the time) unfinished and never-before-seen story Shada were used to show only the Fourth Doctor's abduction and return, without any interaction between himself and the other Doctors.
  • For a publicity photo session, a waxwork figure of Tom Baker as the Doctor from Madame Tussauds was used, although there exist multiple conflicting reasons as to why. According to discussion on the Special Edition DVD, Baker himself was at one point supposed to take part in the photo shoot, but pulled out. However, John Nathan-Turner stated in interviews that the waxwork figure was kept on standby on the off-chance Baker was a no-show on the day — as Baker did not attend, the figure was used.
  • Terrance Dicks had already completed his first draft of the script when Tom Baker pulled out of the project. In discussion on the Special Edition DVD, Dicks said that this version of the story originally had the Fourth Doctor betray his other selves as he felt that this version was the most likely to do so. After Baker pulled out, he came up with the idea of the Fourth Doctor being trapped in the time vortex, thus endangering the existence of his other selves. This, he felt, brought more dramatic tension because of the possibility that the Doctors could cease to exist if they didn't defeat the villain. In the Fifth Doctor Handbook, Dicks is quoted as saying:
    • "My feeling is that it all worked better the way it ended up. Five Doctors were just too many to handle but four worked very nicely, and you do at least see Tom. The other thing that I found quite amazing was how well the scenes from Shada fitted in. I'll swear that if you didn't know, you would think it was written for the special."
  • This story was first broadcast via satellite on 23 November 1983 to North American viewers, before its transmission in the UK. However, this version had a number of small edits. UK viewers saw the unedited version during Children in Need broadcast on 25 November 1983, as well as a short pre-recorded interview with Peter Davison and Terry Wogan shown directly after.
  • Terrance Dicks has said he was displeased with Eric Saward's changes to his original story. He especially felt the Cybermen, for whom Saward had a particular fondness, were overused in the finished story. He also said that he was happy to create the Raston Warrior Robots and have them destroy the Cybermen because he wasn't as fond of the Cybermen. On the Special Edition DVD, he says that he really had to fight for the inclusion of a Dalek in the special despite the fact they were so iconic in the series.
  • The story was repeated as a four-part overseas version from 14 August to 17 August 1984. The Radio Times programme listing for part one was accompanied by one of the publicity photos taken of the Doctors, in black and white (Peter Davison sitting astride K9 with his hat on its head, surrounded by the other actors and the waxwork figure of Tom Baker), with the accompanying caption "Five reincarnations of the inter-world commuter — Patrick Troughton, Richard Hurndall, Peter Davison, Tom Baker, Jon PertweeDoctor Who: 6.15".
  • This was only the second time in the series' history that there was a pre-credits sequence. Castrovalva was the first such story. Subsequently, Time and the Rani and Remembrance of the Daleks also featured pre-credits teasers. This idea was re-used in the 1996 TV movie. The pre-credits sequence became a regular occurrence starting with the 2005 series episode The End of the World, and the animated reconstruction of The Power of the Daleks, a story preceding Castrovalva by more than 15 years, also featured one.
  • This serial explicitly indicated in dialogue that the Davison incarnation of the Doctor was in fact the fifth, apparently discounting fan speculation dating back to The Brain of Morbius that the First Doctor was not actually the first. Terrance Dicks wrote both stories although The Brain of Morbius was extensively rewritten by Robert Holmes to the point that Dicks wanted his name removed from the final story and it was credited to the pseudonym Robin Bland. However, 2020's The Timeless Children took the view that there were indeed many previous incarnations prior to the William Hartnell incarnation that the Doctor was unaware of.
  • The Quarks were set to return in this story, but were removed from the script at an early stage and replaced by the Raston Warrior Robot, which is the only new "monster" featured in the special, and was itself a last-minute addition, after Eric Saward told Terrance Dicks that the Third Doctor and Sarah needed to encounter one more obstacle before reaching the tower.
  • Commander Maxil and Chancellor Thalia, last seen in Arc of Infinity, was at one point to have appeared. The character was dropped from the final script when Colin Baker and Elspet Gray proved unavailable. Their roles were given to the Commander and Chancellor Flavia.
  • Discounting the Brigadier, this story has the distinction of marking the first time companions from different eras had met and interacted. This would occur only once more in the original series, in The Two Doctors when Peri and Jamie meet. It has occurred several times in the 2005-present revival.
  • Terrance Dicks' original script had Sarah Jane arrive in the Death Zone amidst a ruined replica of a high street, where a collection of fallen mannequins was revealed to be a battalion of Autons, leading to her rescue by the Third Doctor in Bessie. It was scrapped for being too long and costly and was replaced with Sarah falling down a hill. Eric Saward said afterwards simply, "It was a lot simpler," despite Elisabeth Sladen stating her embarrassment of it.
  • This story was the first in which the Daleks and the Cybermen both featured (though they did not meet). This would not occur again until the Series 2 finale Army of Ghosts/Doomsday in 2006 (excluding the Cyberman head seen in Dalek). They would feature in the same stories again in TV: The Pandorica Opens, GAME: Return to Earth, and GAME: The Mazes of Time, although The Five Doctors sees the only time the Mondasian Cybermen have featured in one such story. All the others appear to be the Cybus variant.
  • This marks the only time the Third Doctor ever comes close to meeting with the Cybermen on-screen. He only observes them, however, and avoids any encounter. He would meet them again in AUDIO: The Blue Tooth.
  • The Brigadier's line, "Wonderful chap, all of them," is a slightly altered version of a line he said in The Three Doctors, "Wonderful chap, both of him".
  • Footage of Sarah Jane and K9 from early in this story was later used in the 2009 episode TV: The Mad Woman in the Attic.
  • In the blooper reel added in the twenty-fifth anniversary edition, a clip has the director shouting for a reshoot. Peter Davison says in response, "Shit." The Dalek also said, "Bugger, I lost them!" in another blooper. Jon Pertwee also said, "Shit," when Bessie failed to go. He added that his car was a sod to drive at the moment.
    • In another blooper, Pertwee remarks "Well, that's the end of the Master" after Nicholas Courtney (in character as the Brigadier) knocks Anthony Ainley (in character as the Master) to the ground. Richard Hurndall then jokingly suggests that Courtney "kick him in the cobblers next time." Coincidentally, The Mark of the Rani would see the titular villain knee the Master in the groin near the end of its second part.
  • The Raston Warrior Robot costume is a silver repaint of one of the Cyberman androids' costumes from TV: Earthshock.
  • Peter Davison would later parody the Fifth Doctor's "I am being diminished" speech in the second episode of the second series of his black comedy, Rigor Mortis. Davison's character, a workaholic pathologist, doesn't respond well to a sudden drought of deaths. Undergoing a form of withdrawal, he says: "I am being diminished, whittled away, piece by piece. A doctor is the sum of his contributions to humanity, you know; a pathologist even more so."
  • In early drafts of the script, some of the Doctor and companion combinations were different. Originally, the Fourth Doctor would have been paired with Sarah Jane, the Third Doctor with the Brigadier and the Second Doctor with Jamie. When Frazer Hines proved unavailable for more than a cameo appearance the script had to be altered, pairing the Second Doctor with Victoria Waterfield. This was revised again when Deborah Watling became unavailable and Tom Baker decided not to appear, resulting in the pairings as they were screened.
  • Wendy Padbury was pregnant during the recording and the costume she wore was in part designed to, in her words, "hide the bump". Sadly, she miscarried soon after wrapping. (DOC: MM VHS 7)
  • The scenes in which the Second and Third Doctors are captured were reused and put on new backgrounds to show Clara Oswald going throughout the Doctor's timeline. (TV: The Name of the Doctor)
  • This was the first TV story to air as a single (albeit extended) episode since Season 3's Mission to the Unknown in 1965.
  • In its 11 November 1983 article on the special episode, the Associated Press erroneously gave it the title Doctor Who: The Ultimate Celebration instead of The Five Doctors.[2]
  • The 90-minute original version remains, as of 2019, the longest single Doctor Who "episode" ever broadcast. Although the 1996 TV movie aired in a 120-minute time slot in the US and Canada, the actual film itself was only (depending on the edit viewed) 85 or 86 minutes, just shy of the run time of The Five Doctors. This does not take into account omnibus edits of serials originally broadcast as 25- or 45-minute episodes.
  • Steven Moffat is the only writer to use the numbering of the Doctors in the script of a televised episode, as he wrote "Tenth Doctor" and "Eleventh Doctor" in his script for The Day of the Doctor. The script for this episode used the actors' names, calling them "The Hartnell Doctor", "The Troughton Doctor", "The Pertwee Doctor", "The Baker Doctor" and "The Davison Doctor".
  • The First Doctor was supposed to take a zig-zag approach across the chessboard trap, but Richard Hurndall walked in a straight line. There was not enough time to reshoot the scene (they were already 17 minutes into overtime), so this version was ultimately used regardless.
  • A large number of other characters were planned to appear, but the actors were unavailable:
    • William Russell was invited to make a cameo as Ian, but declined.
    • Ben and Polly were considered to appear, but Anneke Wills was living overseas at the time and couldn't be located.
    • The continuity error of the Second Doctor remembering an incident that happened moments before his regeneration was a last-minute replacement for the original reason he recognised his old companions as illusions. This would have featured Victoria saying "The Brigadier's right", but the Doctor remembering that he was a Colonel when she met him. But Deborah Watling turned down The Five Doctors in favour of The Dave Allen Show and the replacement line was hastily added.
    • Benton was supposed to make a cameo at UNIT HQ, now promoted to sergeant major. John Levene turned it down, as he objected to the script requiring Benton to not recognise the Second Doctor. Levene felt this was unfaithful to his character, who he felt would not forget the Second Doctor. When the production refused to amend the script, Levene declined to participate. He also felt that the pay wasn't enough.
    • Jo was supposed to appear, but Katy Manning was living in Australia at the time.
    • Harry was supposed to appear, but Ian Marter was working in New Zealand at the time.
    • Louise Jameson wanted to reprise her role as Leela again, but they couldn't fit her into the story.
    • Romana was supposed to appear, but Lalla Ward turned it down, unwilling to work with Tom Baker again. Archive footage from Shada was ultimately used to represent her. Mary Tamm wasn't asked to reprise her role.
  • John Nathan-Turner's first choice of director for the story was Waris Hussein, but he was in America at the time and was unable to accept the offer. Nathan-Turner then asked another veteran director, Douglas Camfield, to direct but he also declined. Camfield was also very ill with heart disease, and this may have affected his decision not to direct the production. He died of a heart attack early in 1984. Ultimately, Nathan-Turner ended up having Peter Moffatt directing the story.
  • Charles Gray was offered the role of Rassilon, but turned it down.
  • Denis Quilley and Leonard Sachs were both asked to play Borusa before Philip Latham was cast.
  • Peter Davison and Patrick Troughton had previously co-starred in the All Creatures Great and Small episode "Hair of the Dog".
  • John Nathan-Turner named this as one of his favourite episodes during his tenure. He was particularly pleased about the Raston Warrior Robot scene, which he directed himself.
  • K9's cameo role is as such because Terrance Dicks did not enjoy writing him into stories and so asked to make his contribution as minimal as possible. (It also proved impractical to use K9 in the location filming in Wales, the same reason he was often written out of stories when he was actively part of the TARDIS.)
  • Originally, it was the Fourth Doctor who uncovered the conspiracy on Gallifrey. When Tom Baker declined to participate, it was given to the Fifth Doctor.
  • Carole Ann Ford wasn't pleased that she had to trip over her own ankles after the Doctor teleported to Gallifrey.
  • In April 2013, Carole Ann Ford revealed that John Nathan-Turner had initially insisted that Susan not refer to the Doctor as her grandfather: "You will not believe why. They said, 'We don't really want people to perceive him as having had sex with someone, to father a child.' I just screamed with hysterical laughter and said, 'In that case, I'm not doing it.'" The script was changed to include mentions of the characters' relationship.
  • Originally, Tegan was to make tea for the First Doctor, but Janet Fielding refused, so it was changed to Turlough doing it.
  • Keith Hodiak once urinated in the Raston Warrior Robot costume. This left a stain that had to be dried with a hair dryer.
  • Richard Hurndall didn't watch any of William Hartnell's episodes for fear of mimicry.
  • Ian Levine suggested Richard Hurndall after seeing him in the Blake's 7 episode Assassin.
  • When Eric Saward contacted Terrance Dicks about writing the special, he was at a convention in New Orleans and awoke at seven o'clock in the morning after a party the previous night. Dicks agreed and then announced to the convention that he was writing the special. When he returned to England, Dicks claimed that Saward told him to write something to compete with Robert Holmes' script. Dicks angrily stormed out. Saward came back more politely and Dicks agreed, knowing his reputation was as a fixer.
  • The Yeti costume used in the serial was last used in The Web of Fear. It had decayed badly in 15 years of storage, requiring dim lighting and selective camera angles during filming.
  • Originally, the Master was the main villain, but Terrance Dicks thought that was too obvious. He felt that the least obvious choice was Borusa.
  • The end credits featured a specially-mixed version of the theme music, which began with Delia Derbyshire's original 1960s arrangement and then segued into the Peter Howell arrangement being used by the series at the time (the former being played at a slightly higher speed to match the tempo and pitch of the latter). This arrangement was only used on this one occasion and was the last time that the Derbyshire version was heard during the show's original run. A unique arrangement of the opening credits music was also used, which ended in a brief coda phrase that was never used in any other serial.
  • This was the final story to be shot using 2-Inch videotape before it was swapped out for the more light-weight 1-inch format. The last time the format was used was in Resurrection of the Daleks.
  • John Nathan-Turner had stated that he intended to resign from his position as producer after production of this story and regretted in later years that he hadn't taken that opportunity. (DCOM: Showtime: The Life of John Nathan-Turner)
  • Anthony Ainley and Wendy Padbury had previously co-starred in the horror film Blood on Satan's Claw.
  • In the hidden audio commentary for the DVD's re-release in 2008, Phil Collinson mistakenly identifies Zoe Heriot as Victoria Waterfield.
  • Geoffrey Bayldon was considered to play the First Doctor, but John Nathan-Turner felt that he was too recognisable from his roles in Catweazle and Worzel Gummidge.
  • The Yeti replaced an anonymous one-eyed subterranean monster.
  • The Eye of Orion scenes had to be remonted, as the original footage had been irreparably damaged. Mark Strickson had not expected to be needed for the rest of the location shoot, and had gone on a driving holiday with no means of contacting him. The production team had to resort to radio appeals, before they finally reached Strickson via a family member and summoned him back to Wales.
  • In the original script, the Third Doctor constructed a makeshift hang-glider using the Raston Robot's spare equipment and his own cloak, and flew across the chasm. Unfortunately, the Visual Effects Department had been unable to construct a convincing prop, and Jon Pertwee refused to go ahead with the scene, which he felt to be preposterous. Peter Moffatt and John Nathan-Turner came up with him throwing a line across to the Dark Tower.
  • There was concern that the salary necessary to secure Jon Pertwee for both studio and location work would be beyond the project's budget. Pertwee ultimately agreed to take a pay cut because he was so eager to play the Doctor again.
  • John Nathan-Turner directed some second unit shots for the Raston Warrior Robot scene due to the large amount of material to be captured.
  • The Third Doctor's rescue of Sarah Jane from the precipice posed difficulties. Peter Moffatt had been unable to locate a suitably steep incline, and was forced to try to achieve the effect using camera trickery, albeit with limited success.
  • The Dalek was assembled from surviving components constructed during the 1960s. For its destruction, the skirt section from a “goon” Dalek, built for Planet of the Daleks, was substituted.
  • Terrance Dicks had indicated that the apparition of Rassilon should be dressed in the manner of the Time Lords seen in The War Games, but this approach was not pursued by costume designer Colin Lavers.
  • The clip from The Dalek Invasion of Earth was added so that William Hartnell would have a presence in the special. The footage was sepia-tinted by video effects designer Dave Chapman to make the transition from monochrome to colour less jarring. This was eliminated in the four part version.
  • For the Fourth Doctor and Romana's release from the time vortex, an extract from Shada part one, in which the pair approached the gates of Cambridge University, had initially been selected. However, John Nathan-Turner was keen to depict all of the Doctors departing in the TARDIS, and so a clip from part three was used instead. Unfortunately, it did not match up as well with the abduction sequence, which was also taken from the opening instalment and saw the two Time Lords punting on the River Cam.[3]
  • The Five Doctors marks the end of what is, as of 2023, the longest consecutive run of classic Doctor Who serials on Blu-ray. The run comprises all of Season 17, 18, 19 and 20, ending with this story.
  • During overseas broadcasts (and in occasional UK re-airings), this story was split up into four twenty-five-minute episodes. The cliffhangers consisted of Sarah Jane falling down the embankment, Turlough and Susan discovering the Cybermen outside the TARDIS, and the Master following the First Doctor and Tegan into the main floor of the Dark Tower.

Ratings[[edit]]

  • 7.7 million viewers

Myths[[edit]]

  • The Five Doctors was to feature Omega. Though various past villains were considered for inclusion in this story, Omega was never one of them, other than the Second Doctor's dialogue reference. In addition, the character had appeared at the start of the previous season in Arc of Infinity.
  • Richard Hurndall died before he was ever paid for his work on The Five Doctors. Hurndall was infact paid in full before his death in April 1984 - via five different payments made out to him with regards to The Five Doctors (four contractual, one expenses) in 1982 and 1983.[2]
  • The Master's real name is Jehoshaphat. This originated from fan writers misunderstanding the Third Doctor uttering the word upon recognising the Master. In truth, it was a somewhat antiquated exclamation of surprise — a shortened version of "Jumping Jehoshaphat!"
  • In early drafts, the First Doctor was to appear with Dodo and Steven, and K9 was to accompany the Fourth Doctor and Romana II (or Sarah) throughout the episode. Susan was the only companion ever considered to appear alongside the First Doctor. While K9 was present throughout most of the draft scripts, none of them had him appearing in more than a small cameo, which indeed happened in the finished episode
  • Kamelion was supposed to appear for this story. He was never intended to take an active part in the story, due to the difficulty in operating the Kamelion prop. An explanation for his absence may have been in one of the draft scripts, though no firm evidence exists for this.
  • Maxil was supposed to appear for this story, but the plan was dropped because his actor, Colin Baker, had been cast as the Sixth Doctor and his appearance as Maxil would have been considered a spoiler. Maxil was to have appeared in The Five Doctors, but the character was dropped because Baker was unavailable, not because of his being cast as the Doctor; in fact, Baker wasn't offered the role of the Doctor until June 1983, well after production of The Five Doctors concluded.

Filming locations[[edit]]

  • Plas Brondanw, Llanfrothen, Penrhyndeudraeth, Gwynedd (Eye of Orion)
  • Manod Quarry
  • Tilehouse Lane, Denham Green, Buckinghamshire
  • West Common Road, Uxbridge, Middlesex
  • Carreg Y Foel Gron, Ffestiniog, Gwynedd
  • Cwm Bychan, Llanbedr, Gwynedd
  • Denham Manor, Halings Lane, Denham Green (UNIT HQ)
  • North Common Road, Uxbridge, Middlesex
  • Ealing Television Film Studios, Ealing Green, Ealing
  • BBC Television Centre

Production errors[[edit]]

If you'd like to talk about narrative problems with this story — like plot holes and things that seem to contradict other stories — please go to this episode's discontinuity discussion.
  • When the Brigadier is attacked by a Cyberman, the jeans of the actor playing the Cyberman are visible.
  • When the Dalek is chasing the First Doctor and Susan through the hall of mirrors, the top of the Dalek pops up a bit, pushed up by the actor inside.
  • The long shot of the Third Doctor and Sarah sliding to the top of the tower reveals their slide rope doesn't go from a high location to a lower one, or from two positions along a straight line. Rather, the tower is actually above the position from which they start.
  • At one point in the caves, a boom microphone is visible above the Second Doctor's and the Brigadier's head (and it stays there for around three seconds).
  • When the Master arrives in the Death Zone, he is wearing a black cloak which he was not wearing when he stepped into the transmat. Peter Davison and Terrance Dicks joked that the transmat functions included a "cloak dispenser" in their commentary on the 25th Anniversary DVD. (Alternately, since the Master's arrival in the Death Zone is not seen, he may have acquired it off-screen in between scenes.)
  • After the Raston Warrior Robot defeats the Cybermen, there are several small fires burning on the ground; when the scene is cut for when the Robot jumps and vanishes, the fires disappear.
  • The cables on the head of the Cyberman who watches the First Doctor and Susan approach the TARDIS are disconnected (the shot was removed from the Special Edition for this reason.)
  • In the shot immediately between the ring reappearing on Rassilon's hand and Borusa turning to look at the empty space on the bier, an aerial shot shows the stone carving of Borusa is already in place, but the space it occupies is blank again in the next shot.

Special Edition[[edit]]

The Five Doctors Special Edition was an expanded version of the story released on VHS in 1995 with extended scenes and dialogue added or deleted, and much of the visual effects redone. It was the first Doctor Who story to be released on DVD in 1999 and was re-released as a special feature on disc two of the original version's DVD release in 2008 to mark the episode's 25th anniversary.

Among the many things changed is that new scenes were added that were cut from the original version bringing the runtime up to about 100 minutes. In addition some other scenes were reordered to match the script.

Deviations from original story[[edit]]

The Special Edition time scoop.
  • The time scoop has a new design.
  • Rassilon has a deeper voice.
  • The temporal fission is depicted with the Doctors and companions leaving via a Timescoop effect after they entered the TARDIS.
  • Different footage from Shada is used to show the Fourth Doctor's return to Earth. In this edition, it appears only the Doctor is kidnapped by the Timescoop, and he is returned to his and Romana's punt at the same moment he left.

Other information[[edit]]

  • Peter Moffatt disapproved of the Special Edition of the story which was later released on video, featuring updated special effects and reinstated scenes he had originally cut because he thought they were boring. John Nathan-Turner also spoke disparagingly of it, declaring that the changes it brought were unnecessary and ruined the overall quality of the story.[says who?]

40th Anniversary Edition[[edit]]

The Five Doctors 40th Anniversary Edition was an adapted version of The Five Doctors with new special effects by Niel Bushnell, created for the Season 20 The Collection boxset. Bushnell re-interpreted many visual elements of the story.

Some of the changes made by The Five Doctors Special Edition were carried through, including Rassilon's deepened voice.

Deviations from original story[[edit]]

  • Several planets are in the sky of the Eye of Orion
  • The Time Scoop resembles a black stone obelisk.
  • The ceiling of the Tomb of Rassilon is filled with a large statue of Rassilon carrying the Staff of Rassilon from TV: The End of Time [+]Loading...["The End of Time (TV story)"].
  • Rassilon's projection is given a technological filter.
  • The temporal fission is depicted with the TARDISes spinning out of the stationary TARDIS.

Continuity[[edit]]

  • The Brigadier refers to the Yeti and the Cybermen, whom he had encountered in TV: The Web of Fear [+]Loading...["The Web of Fear (TV story)"] and TV: The Invasion [+]Loading...["The Invasion (TV story)"] respectively.
  • The Second Doctor mentions Omega, and criticises the redecorating of UNIT HQ. Both of these are call-backs to TV: The Three Doctors [+]Loading...["The Three Doctors (TV story)","The Three Doctors"], with the latter reflecting the way he critiqued the Third Doctor's redesigned TARDIS console room
  • Sarah is seen with K9, whom she was gifted in TV: A Girl's Best Friend [+]Loading...["A Girl's Best Friend (TV story)","A Girl's Best Friend"].
  • The Fourth Doctor gets stuck in a time eddy. The First Doctor previously got stuck in a time eddy in TV: The Three Doctors [+]Loading...["The Three Doctors (TV story)","The Three Doctors"]. However, unlike the Fourth, the First was able to communicate and assist.
  • The Fourth Doctor and Romana II's appearances were depicted using reused footage from TV: Shada [+]Loading...["Shada (TV story)"], a partially-filmed story which had remained unbroadcast as of The Five Doctors airing. WC: Shada [+]Loading...["Shada (webcast)"] would later literalise this artifice, suggesting that the Doctor was genuinely plucked by the Time Scoop from the events of Shada, thus causing the TV version of Shada to diegetically "not happen" to match its unfinished nature in the real world. This facilitated the webcast's plot device of the Eighth Doctor being made to pick up where his earlier self went off and go through the rest of the Shada plotline.
  • The Second Doctor is wearing his fur coat, which he wore in TV: The Abominable Snowmen [+]Loading...["The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)","The Abominable Snowmen"] and TV: The Ice Warriors [+]Loading...["The Ice Warriors (TV story)","The Ice Warriors"]. The coat would again be seen in the Second Doctor's cameo in TVThe Name of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Name of the Doctor (TV story)"], and be worn by other Doctors in AUDIO: Beyond the Ultimate Adventure [+]Loading...["Beyond the Ultimate Adventure (audio story)","Beyond the Ultimate Adventure"], TV: Time and the Rani [+]Loading...["Time and the Rani (TV story)","Time and the Rani"], and COMIC: A Cold Day in Hell! [+]Loading...["A Cold Day in Hell! (comic story)","A Cold Day in Hell!"].
  • The Eighth Doctor and the Fifth Doctor would later encounter a Raston Warrior Robot at the Eye of Orion, shortly after the Fifth Doctor's role in events here, as one of the vignettes within PROSE: The Eight Doctors [+]Loading...["The Eight Doctors (novel)","The Eight Doctors"].
  • The Brigadier recognises Tegan and later the Fifth Doctor from TV: Mawdryn Undead [+]Loading...["Mawdryn Undead (TV story)","Mawdryn Undead"].
  • The Time Lords offer the Master a new regeneration cycle, something which he had previously come back to the homeworld to steal in TV: The Deadly Assassin [+]Loading...["The Deadly Assassin (TV story)"]. Acquiring new regenerations remained a point of motivation for the character in many subsequent appearances leading up to {{cs|Doctor Who (TV story)|the 1996 TV movie]]. The High Council being able to bestow regenerations upon people who previously lacked them would become a major plot point in the War in Heaven mythos, with the regen-inf recruits as seen in PROSEDead Romance [+]Loading...["Dead Romance (novel)"] and PROSE: The Book of the War [+]Loading...["The Book of the War (novel)"], and also come into play at the climax of TV: The Time of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Time of the Doctor (TV story)","The Time of the Doctor"], where the dying Eleventh Doctor is granted an arbitrary number of additional lives by the deities in response to Clara Oswald's impassioned plea.
  • The Third Doctor, currently familiar with a prior incarnation of the Master, takes a moment to recognise the Tremas Master, who came into existence after his tenure, towards the end of the Fourth Doctor's lifetime. Upon recognising him as the Master, the Doctor asks if this is a "new regeneration"; the Master slyly replies "not exactly", alluding to the complexity of the process by which this new Master was born in TV: The Keeper of Traken [+]Loading...["The Keeper of Traken (TV story)","The Keeper of Traken"], involving the powers of the Keeper of Traken and the possession of a preexisting man's non-Gallifreyan body.
  • When the First Doctor fails to recognise the Master, he reminds him that they went to the Academy. The Master's status as a former schoolmate of the Doctor's had been established as early as TV: Terror of the Autons [+]Loading...["Terror of the Autons (TV story)","Terror of the Autons"] and was frequently mentioned thereafter.
  • The Doctor is called upon to once again become Lord President of Gallifrey. He ran for the position initially in order to save himself from trial in (TV: The Deadly Assassin [+]Loading...["The Deadly Assassin (TV story)","The Deadly Assassin"], then briefly assumed the role in earnest in TV: The Invasion of Time [+]Loading...["The Invasion of Time (TV story)","The Invasion of Time"], only to resign by the story's conclusion. Although the Sixth Doctor was informed in TV: The Ultimate Foe [+]Loading...["The Ultimate Foe (TV story)","The Ultimate Foe"] that he had been booted from office in absentia, the Seventh Doctor would again describe himself as "President-Elect of the High Council of Time Lords" in TV: Remembrance of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)","Remembrance of the Daleks"].
  • The Brigadier's says "Wonderful chap, all of them," referring to all five incarnations of The Doctor. He previously said "Wonderful chap, both of him", referring to his second and third incarnations in TV: The Three Doctors [+]Loading...["The Three Doctors (TV story)","The Three Doctors"].
  • The First Doctor appears annoyed when Tegan calls him "Doc", a gag previously used with him in TV: The Time Meddler [+]Loading...["The Time Meddler (TV story)","The Time Meddler"]. The running joke would recur in TV: The Twin Dilemma [+]Loading...["The Twin Dilemma (TV story)","The Twin Dilemma"], TV: The Ultimate Foe [+]Loading...["The Ultimate Foe (TV story)","The Ultimate Foe"], and [[TV]: Dreamland [+]Loading...["Dreamland (TV story)","Dreamland"]; the First Doctor's exact words in The Five Doctors, "Kindly refrain from addressing me as ‘Doc’", would be specifically reused by the Sixth Doctor in TV: The Twin Dilemma [+]Loading...["The Twin Dilemma (TV story)","The Twin Dilemma"].
  • Rassilon is said to have achieved "timeless, perpetual bodily regeneration" granting him true immortality. A much less convenient form of perpetual regeneration was a plot point in TV: Mawdryn Undead [+]Loading...["Mawdryn Undead (TV story)","Mawdryn Undead"].
  • The Second Doctor calls the Third Doctor "Fancy pants", to which the Third Doctor replies "Scarecrow", continuing their somewhat antagonistic rapport from TV: The Three Doctors [+]Loading...["The Three Doctors (TV story)","The Three Doctors"]. Ironically, COMIC: The Night Walkers [+]Loading...["The Night Walkers (comic story)"] showed animated scarecrows being used by the Time Lords to enact their sentence of forced regeneration on the Second Doctor.
  • Sarah Jane Smith once again notes her fear of heights, prominently displayed in TV: Genesis of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Genesis of the Daleks (TV story)","Genesis of the Daleks"].
  • The Castellan theorises that "the Doctor wants revenge" as a possible motive for deceiving the High Council, implicitly referring to the Time Lords' recent attempt to execute the Doctor in TV: Arc of Infinity [+]Loading...["Arc of Infinity (TV story)","Arc of Infinity"].
  • Rassilon's body wears a more colourful version of the style of Time Lord robes previously depicted in TV: The War Games [+]Loading...["The War Games (TV story)"].
  • The climax hinges on an intercession with a manifestation of Rassilon's mind. It had been mentioned to "still exist within the APC Net" in TV: The Invasion of Time [+]Loading...["The Invasion of Time (TV story)"], and the Fifth Doctor had previously been shown meeting with Rassilon's spirit within the Matrix during Melanicus's hijack of the Event Synthesizer in COMIC: The Tides of Time [+]Loading...["The Tides of Time (comic story)","The Tides of Time"].
  • Romana would later recall during AUDIO: Extermination [+]Loading...["Extermination (audio story)","Extermination"] that she was shocked that the Doctor ran away from his responsibilities when he was appointed Lord President.
  • AUDIO: The Five Companions [+]Loading...["The Five Companions (audio story)"] serves as an interquel to this story, asserting that before the Fifth Doctor arrived in the Capitol, the Master's transmat recall device sent him to a "spare" Death Zone where he met his former companions Ian Chesterton, Steven Taylor, Sara Kingdom, Polly Wright and Nyssa, battling the Daleks and the Sontarans.
  • The Cybermen type seen here are described as CyberNeomorphs in AUDIO: The Ultimate Cybermen [+]Loading...["The Ultimate Cybermen (audio story)","The Ultimate Cybermen"].
  • After the Tremas Master hands the Third Doctor the Seal of the High Council as proof of his legitimacy, the Doctor simply pockets it instead of returning it. Decades later, TV: The Time of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Time of the Doctor (TV story)"] would reveal that the Doctor had kept it all along, with the Eleventh Doctor revealing he still held it, and mentioning how he "nicked it from the Master in the Death Zone" before he puts it to use as an interface to translate the Message.
  • An exchange between the First and Fifth Doctors is similar to the exchange between the Twelfth Doctor and the Eleventh General, shortly before the Doctor shot the General, in TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"].[statement unclear]
  • The Death Zone, noted as a place of "dangerous games", was one of the names from the Doctor's past which were scrambled by the Flux in GAME: Flux Fixers [+]Loading...["Flux Fixers (game)"].

Home video and audio releases[[edit]]

With three VHS releases, two DVD releases and a Laserdisc release, The Five Doctors is among one of the most reissued Doctor Who TV stories in the classic show's run.

VHS Releases[[edit]]

The Five Doctors had three separate VHS releases:

It was released on video by BBC Enterprises in 1985. This was the edited version screened in the USA and had two minutes of footage edited out.

It was released again by BBC Worldwide in 1990 in an unedited format. The Video Gift Set, exclusive to Boots shops, also contained a unique Dapol Dalek with the colour shown in promotions such as the back of Radio Times' Doctor Who 20th Anniversary Special (the pictured Dalek being from the Madame Tussauds' Doctor Who exhibition).

Box set[[edit]]

It was released on video by BBC Worldwide in 1995 as part of a boxed set in the UK, Australia and the US. This was the Extended/Special Edition version of the story. In all regions, this edition was notable for being twinned with The King's Demons, which was never released on VHS on its own.

Laserdisc releases[[edit]]

  • The original (broadcast) version of the story was released on laserdisc in 1994.

DVD release[[edit]]

The Five Doctors was the first Doctor Who DVD to be released by BBC Worldwide. It introduced several features that remain with the range today. The intro-theme music used into the DVDs was the Davison-era theme music, and remains for all DVDs. While the original release of the DVD had no special features, it did feature a CGI created TARDIS console room (based on the one featured in this story).

First release[[edit]]

In 1999 The Five Doctors was released on DVD by BBC Worldwide. This was the same Extended / Special Edition as the 1995 VHS release, with no additional features. It was released in Australia 2000. Only the North America release had commentary and the Who's Who features. In the UK, because the DVD cover did not match the usual Region 2 template, a matching version (by Lee Binding and Clayton Hickman) was released on the BBC Doctor Who website on 23 December 2004;[3] As of July 2023 this image can be downloaded using the Internet Archive Wayback Machine: [4].

Second release[[edit]]

In 2008 The Five Doctors was re-released celebrating the story's 25th anniversary. In this case it was a dual DVD release showcasing the original version of the story and the Extended / Special Edition.

Special features[[edit]]
  • Commentary on 1983 TV version by Carole Ann Ford (Susan), Nicholas Courtney (The Brigadier), Elisabeth Sladen (Sarah Jane) and Mark Strickson (Turlough)
  • Commentary on 1995 Special Edition by Peter Davison (The Doctor) and Terrance Dicks (Writer)
  • Celebration — A 52-minute look back at Doctor Who's 20th anniversary celebrations in 1983 hosted by Colin Baker
  • The Ties that Bind Us - A 16-minute documentary examining the links to the show's past and future in The Five Doctors (right up to Last of the Time Lords) narrated by Paul McGann
  • Five Doctors, One Studio — Raw video footage of the only studio recording session in which Davison, Pertwee, Troughton and Hurndall were all together on set
  • Out-takes - Bloopers and gaffes from the making of the story
  • (Not So) Special Effects — A look at a typical day's work for the visual FX crew on Doctor Who, featuring raw footage of the filming of several special effects sequences
  • Publicity Clips - The actors publicise The Five Doctors on Saturday Superstore, Blue Peter, Nationwide and Breakfast Time
  • Trails and Continuities - BBC1 trailers and continuity announcements from the story's original transmission, including the cliffhangers created for the four-episode version
  • Isolated Music - The score for both versions is available on a separate music track
  • Radio Times Billings (DVD-ROM PC/Mac)
  • Photo Gallery
  • Production Subtitles for both versions
  • Coming Soon Trailer - The Invasion of Time
  • Easter Eggs:
    • Bonus commentary on the 1983 TV version by David Tennant, Helen Raynor and Phil Collinson. To access this hidden feature, press right at Companions Commentary in the Audio Options section of Disc One's Special Features menu to reveal a hidden Doctor Who logo.
    • 1995 BBC Video ident featuring the BBC Logo being eaten by the Black Triangle. To access this hidden feature, press left at Nationwide on Disc Two's Special Features menu to reveal a hidden Doctor Who logo.

Editing for the Special Edition VHS and DVD releases and 25th Anniversary DVD release was completed by the Doctor Who Restoration Team.

Audio release[[edit]]

Silva Screen Records released a CD, The Five Doctors: Classic Music from the BBC Radiophonic Workshop Volume 2 (FILMCD 710), which contains a suite of music from this story. (The rest of the album contains music from other Fifth Doctor stories.)


External links[[edit]]

Footnotes[[edit]]

  1. Only in the Original version. In the Special Edition version, they are both returned to the River Cam."
  2. Only in the Original version. In the Special Edition version, the Doctors and their companions are transported back to their proper times by the Time Scoop.