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{{Infobox Story
{{Infobox Story SMW
|name            = Whatever Happened to<br />Susan Foreman?
|image          = DVD Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?.jpg
|image          =
 
|series          = {{wi|Whatever Happened to ...?}}
|number          = Series 1, Episode 5
|number          = Series 1, Episode 5
|doctor          =  
|doctor          =  
|companions      =  
|companions      =  
|main character  = [[Susan Foreman|Susan]], [[Researcher (Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?)|researcher]]
|featuring      = Ian Chesterton
|featuring2      = Barbara Wright
|featuring3      = Jo Grant
|enemy          =  
|enemy          =  
|setting        = [[Brussels]], [[London]], [[1994]]
|setting        = [[Brussels]], [[London]], [[1994]]
|writer          = [[Adrian Mourby]]
|writer          = Adrian Mourby
|director        =  
|director        =  
|producer        = [[Brian King]]
|producer        = [[Brian King]]
|publisher      = BBC Radio
|publisher      = BBC Radio
|release date    = [[9 July (releases)|9 July]] [[1994 (releases)|1994]]
|release date    = 9 July 1994
|format          = 25 minutes, 16 seconds
|format          = 25 minutes, 16 seconds
|production code =  
|production code =  
|isbn            =  
|series          = ''[[Whatever Happened to ...? (series)|Whatever Happened to ...?]]''
|prev =  
|prev           =  
|next =  
|next           =  
}}{{audio stub}}
}}
'''''Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?''''' was a {{w|mockumentary}} that aired on [[BBC Radio 4]] as the fifth instalment of [[Adrian Mourby]]'s {{w|Sony Award}}-winning first series of {{wi|Whatever Happened to ...?}}
'''''Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?''''' was an audio drama which aired on [[BBC Radio 4]] as the fifth instalment of [[Adrian Mourby]]'s {{w|Sony Award}}-winning first series of ''[[Whatever Happened to ...? (series)|Whatever Happened to ...?]]'' in [[1994 (releases)|1994]]. Like the other episodes, it examined the life of a fictional character through the realistic lens of a researcher conducting an interview with a subject — in this case, the original ''[[Doctor Who]]'' companion herself, [[Susan Foreman]], as played by [[Jane Asher]], offering a satirical look at her life following the events of ''[[The Dalek Invasion of Earth (TV story)|The Dalek Invasion of Earth]]''.


== Format ==
Upon its initial release, it is doubtful that the story was necessarily intended as a serious expansion of the [[Doctor Who universe|''Doctor Who'' universe]], notably committing multiple "continuity errors". However, its events were explicitly cited in ''[[Gallifrey: A Rough Guide (short story)|Gallifrey: A Rough Guide]]'' six years later as one of multiple conflicting accounts of Susan's origins.
Like the other episodes, it examined the life of a fictional character through the realistic lens of a researcher conducting an interview with a subject.  Consequently, its format forced the actors to play the scenes "straight", which in turn enhanced the parodic elements of the piece.  In  a sense, its structure removed Susan (played here by [[Jane Asher]]) from the [[Doctor Who universe|''Doctor Who'' universe]], allowing her metafictional comment upon it.


Its format also allowed the researcher to directly ask Susan many questions that naturally resulted from her appearances on ''Doctor Who''.  Whether or not one agreed with the answers, ''Whatever Happened'' was the first piece of performed ''Doctor Who'' to answer such things as:
== Summary ==
* Did the Doctor ever see Susan after the events of ''[[The Dalek Invasion of Earth]]''?
A [[researcher (Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?)|researcher]] interviews [[Susan Foreman]], and various people connected with her, about the true history of her travels in time and space, and how she went from there to her current, rather unexpected position as [[EC Commissioner for Education]].
* Who were Susan's parents, and why did they let her travel with her grandfather?
* Why did the Doctor choose 1963 London as a place to settle down?
* What became of Susan and Ian after they stopped travelling with the Doctor?
* Did Susan actually marry and stay in 2164 London the rest of her life?


== Inconsistencies with televised ''Doctor Who'' ==
== Plot ==
Although the questions were firmly rooted in events that happened — or rather didn't happen — within Susan's time on ''Doctor Who'', many of the answers given strayed from facts established in televised episodes. Humour was seen as preferable to fidelity to the programme's history. Also, as the show was written around [[1994]], not all of the Hartnell era would have been available on home video. Thus there is the legitimate question of whether Mourby was deliberately contradicting what was said on the show, or whether he was simply misremembering episodes he hadn't seen since the 1960s. Indeed, as a rough contemporary of [[Russell T Davies]], he might not have even seen any Susan [[serial]]s on their first transmission, and may not have had access to them all before he wrote ''Whatever Happened''.
A [[researcher (Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?)|researcher]] investigates the personal history of [[Susan Foreman]], interviewing her as well as multiple other people who knew her or [[the Doctor]]. Confessing that she "doesn't remember [[Gallifrey|Gally]] very well", Susan begins with her and her [[First Doctor|grandfather]]'s moving to [[London]], [[1963]]. She explains that she had previously been living with her parents, but they grew to think that the "very science-based" education she was getting on the planet was insufficient, particularly as regarded learning [[French (language)|French]]. However, they were too busy with their [[concept shop]] to take her to [[Earth]] themselves, and instead had her move there with the Doctor, who had recently [[retirement|retired]].


In any case, humour, and not faithfulness to the original show, was clearly the mission statement of the mockumentary. Here are a few discrepancies:
As Ian does recall, Susan's relaxed attitude about advanced science and history led him and Barbara to follow her home one night to [[76 Totter's Lane]], where they were confused to discover that she had apparently been living inside her [[police box]]. However, as far as Ian recalls, he woke up the next morning with Susan having disappeared; he would only see her again eight months later, when Susan, back in the 1960s, came to see him "with some… tale that [[Barbara Wright]] and [him] ha[d] been travelling in time with her, and that in two hundred years the Earth [wa]s going to be over-run by [[Dalek|little men in metal boxes]]". When she is told by the researcher that Ian still disbelieves her stories about the Daleks, Susan advises the researcher to go talk to [[Temmosus Skyedron]], a [[Thal]] who has also taken up residence on [[20th century]] [[Earth]], having become the [[EC Commissioner for Overproduction]] in [[1987]]. Temmosus is quite open about his recollections of Ian and Barbara's part in his people's [[Thal-Dalek battle|battle against the Daleks]].
* Susan claims [[Ian Chesterton]] and [[Barbara Wright]] returned to [[London]] in [[1963]], rather than the [[1965]] of ''[[The Chase]].''
* Susan says that Ian and Barbara's minds were wiped by the Doctor of their travels through time and space, however, this never actually occurred, though a similar fate was bestowed upon [[Zoe Heriot|Zoe]] and [[Jamie McCrimmon|Jamie]] in ''[[The War Games]]''.
* Susan somehow knows about Ian being knighted in ''[[The Crusade]]'', which post-dates her time in [[the Doctor's TARDIS]].
* Susan knows about [[Mechanus]], which again apparently contradicts ''[[The Chase]]''.
* Susan claims the Doctor is a "[[retire]]d time traveller", though this seems to contradict the fact that the First Doctor is actually young and just starting out on his travels.


Despite these, and other, "missteps", it should be added that a mainstream [[BBC Radio 4|Radio 4]] audience in 1994 would hardly have noticed any of these details. And even then, many of these errors can be rationalised by the fact Susan lived on Earth in the future, so may well have learned about Ian's knighthood, etc., at some point. In addition, according to the novel [[PROSE]]: ''[[Legacy of the Daleks]]'', Susan later in life began travelling in time on her own.
Susan then goes over the substance of her travels in time and space with the Doctor, Ian and Barbara, which eventually led them to a [[2164]] [[Earth]] that had been [[2150 Dalek invasion of Earth|invaded]] by the [[Dalek]]s. According to Susan, these Daleks came from the future, following the battle on Skaro; they'd intended to go back to before Ian and Barbara's time to destroy humanity and therefore undo their earlier defeat, but were prevented from doing so when their [[Dalek TARDIS|their TARDIS]] suffered a [[fluid link]] leak and they had to land in 2164 instead. There, the Doctor ended up locking Susan out of the TARDIS, advising her to marry freedom fighter [[David Campbell]]. Susan recounts how the Doctor had, by then, learned how to [[Regeneration|regenerate]], and bitterly speculates that he got rid of her more because he'd had enough of being a grandfather than because he actually thought that was what was best for her.


Overall, the play did ask questions and provide answers that seemed genuinely funny in the light of general, pre-DVD knowledge about the early years of ''Doctor Who''. Indeed, what fans might now view as "inaccuracies" with the piece did not stop it from helping the author win a prestigious Sony Silver Award for the series.
[[Jo Jones]], interviewed about the Doctor and his rejuvenations, later tells the interviewer that contrary to Susan's speculation about the nature of her grandfather's attachment to his later companions, "nothing ever happened" between her and [[Third Doctor|her Doctor]] although there was "a certain sexual tension in the air". She speculates that Susan was simply projecting due to her feelings of rejection. When the researcher quotes this statement to Susan, she angrily responds that "''of course'' I felt rejected! Imagine, your nearest relative throws you outside into a post-holocaust wasteland, and claims it's because your true path lies in the arms of some urban guerrilla". She explains that she briefly considered helping David rebuild even so, but couldn't find the courage, and instead contacted Gallifrey. [[Susan Foreman's godfather|Her godfather]]'s brother, [[Terry (Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?)|Terry]], agreed to pick her up "next time he was inspecting that part of the [[time waft]]". Insisting that she had to obey "[[real time]]" and thus return to Earth eight months after she'd left, he dropped her off in [[1964]].
 
She returned to Coal Hill School, where, much to her later regret, she quickly told the truth about her time-travelling adventures to her schoolmates. ''[[The Daily Sketch]]'', who were doing a series of lurid stories about teenage runaways, sent a reporter, [[Joey Oxford]], to try and get the "real story" out of Susan, who was, by then, staying in a [[YWCA]] until she got her life figured out. Oxford refused to believe her, even after she showed him trinkets she had retained from her travels in time and space. Desperate for someone to believe her, she visited Ian Chesterton, trying to jog his memories, but the space-time amnesia had not abated, and he instead called the police on her, hoping they'd simply warn her off. Instead, they searched her belongings, and misidentified the historical souvenirs as artefacts stolen from the [[British Museum]]. Sent to an "approved school" in [[Barking]], Susan later decided to put her space-time-travelling life behind her and try to build herself a life as a "normal girl", entering the British civil service as a typist around [[1972]] and subsequently becoming more and more involved with the [[European Commission]].
 
Surprised to learn that there were many other former time- and space-travellers in the E.C., she ended up marrying one, though they later divorced due to Susan's culturally-ingrained inability to [[lie]] preventing her from successfully concealing an extramarital affair from her husband. She subsequently became EC Commissioner for Education in her own right, intending to make the education system more robust to change history in time for the [[2150s Dalek invasion of Earth|2164 Dalek invasion]] so that Earth will be better-prepared.


== Cast ==
== Cast ==
Due to the way in which the credits were read at the end of the piece, only three parts can be absolutely confirmed.
* [[Susan Foreman]] - [[Jane Asher]]
* [[Susan Foreman]] - [[Jane Asher]]
* [[Ian Chesterton]] - [[James Grout]]
* [[Ian Chesterton]] - [[James Grout]]
* [[Claire Rayner]] - herself
* [[Claire Rayner (in-universe)|Claire Rayner]] - [[Claire Rayner|Herself]]
The remaining parts of [[Jo Grant]], [[Barbara Wright]], [[Temmosus]], [[Skyedron]], [[Joey Oxford]] and the researcher were played by [[June Barry]], [[Eva Haddon]], [[Andrew Sachs]], [[Peter Woodthorpe]] and [[Becky Harrison]].
* [[Temmosus Skyedron]] - [[Andrew Sachs]]
* Members of the cast ([[Ian Chesterton]], [[Jo Grant]], [[Barbara Wright]], [[Joey Oxford]], [[Researcher (Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?)|Researcher]]) - [[June Barry]], [[Eva Haddon]], [[Peter Woodthorpe]] and [[Becky Harrison]].


== Releases ==
== Worldbuilding ==
* It is available as a feature on the [[BBC Video]] DVD release of [[TV]]: ''[[The Dalek Invasion of Earth]]''.
* [[Susan Foreman|Susan]] was a member of [[Class 5B]] at [[Coal Hill School]].
* It is also included on the CD [[AUDIO]]: ''[[Doctor Who at the BBC Volume 3]]''.
* Susan claims that "everyone in [[the Galaxy|our galaxy]] speaks ''some'' [[French (language)|French]]", including in such systems as [[Alpha Centauri system|Alpha Centauri]].
* It has been periodically rebroadcast on BBC Radio since its initial release. Its most recent airing was on [[BBC Radio|BBC Radio 4 Extra]] on [[23 November]] [[2013]].
* In her [[Time Lord Academy|education]] on [[Gallifrey]], Susan successfully studied such subjects "[[astronomy]], [[thermonuclear dynamics]] and [[warping]]".
* Had she not resumed travelling through time and space instead, Susan was meant to sit her "mock [[O-level]]s".
* Susan describes the [[Time Lord]]s as "the people who control the [[space-time continuum]]". According to Susan, the Doctor spent his original lifetime as a [[commercial time traveller]] after being "blackballed" from becoming a proper [[Time Lord]] over his suspected interventionist leanings. After retiring, he studied for a [[doctor]]ate in [[botany]]. Because he was never officially made a proper Time Lord, he had to "hack into how it was done". Susan's account suggests that orthodox Time Lords regularly travel through time, but that many areas of particular historical importance are "restricted".
* In the 1960s, [[Claire Rayner (Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?)|Claire Rayner]] "did a spell" as an [[agony aunt]] for the teenage magazine ''[[Petticoat]]''. She received multiple letters from Susan, including one final one written from [[1794]], which Susan arranged would reach her through time.
* Susan is aware that the Doctor has travelled with [[Zoe Heriot|Zoe]], [[Sarah Jane Smith|Sarah Jane]], [[Jo Grant|Jo]], [[Ace]] and [[Romana]].
* Susan claims that she "always [fell] in love with someone" as a sixteen-year-old girl in her circumstances might be wont to do, with [[David Campbell]] in [[2164]] not having been at all unique; she notably mentions having been in love with a [[Menoptera (Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?)|Menoptera]]
* Susan understands that the Doctor is now in his [[seventh incarnation]].
* [[Skaro]] is allegedly located "six billion light years away" from Earth.
 
== Story notes ==
* This story contains a few minor departures from TV continuity, which are not flagged in such ways as to suggest that they were intended for comedic effect; these include Susan somehow knowing about Ian being knighted in ''[[The Crusade (TV story)|The Crusade]]'', which post-dated her time in [[the Doctor's TARDIS]], and her similarly knowing about [[Mechanus]], which again apparently contradicts ''[[The Chase (TV story)|The Chase]]''. It is also asserted that [[Ian Chesterton]] and [[Barbara Wright]] were returned to [[1963]], the day before they left, rather than [[1965]].
* The story also presents some contradictions with other non-TV accounts of the Doctors' companions' fates. [[Ian Chesterton|Ian]] and [[Barbara Wright|Barbara]] are shown to have had their memories of their travels in time locked at some point after returning to Earth as a result of [[space-time amnesia]], in contrast to ''[[Ian Chesterton: An Introduction (home video)|Ian Chesterton: An Introduction]]'' and ''[[The Power of the Doctor (TV story)|The Power of the Doctor]]'' (among others) where an elderly Ian was shown to recall his adventures perfectly well.
 
== Continuity ==
* A [[tour operator (Gallifrey: A Rough Guide)|tour operator]] in the [[post-War universe]] acknowledged the accounts claiming that [[Susan Foreman|Susan]]'s parents ran a [[concept shop]] on [[Gallifrey]] as one of Susan's possible origins. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Gallifrey: A Rough Guide (short story)|Gallifrey: A Rough Guide]]'')
* This account claims that the [[First Doctor]] moved to [[Earth]] as part of his [[retirement]]. [[Chronotis]] similarly moved to Earth when he retired. ([[TV]]: ''[[Shada (TV story)|Shada]]'')
* Susan and the Doctor settled on Earth in [[1963]], until they were followed back to [[the Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]] by [[Ian Chesterton]] and [[Barbara Wright]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[An Unearthly Child (TV story)|An Unearthly Child]]'') They then travelled to [[Skaro]], participating in a [[Thal-Dalek battle|battle]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Daleks (TV story)|The Daleks]]'') and then continued travelling "backwards and forwards in time" with the Doctor claiming that he had no control over the ship, although in retrospect Susan speculates that he might have been lying because they "always set down somewhere with a breathable atmosphere and compatible gravity". ([[TV]]: ''[[Marco Polo (TV story)|Marco Polo]]'', ''[[The Keys of Marinus (TV story)|The Keys of Marinus]]'', etc.)
* Susan recalls that Barbara became "very distant and superior" after "the [[Aztec]]s proclaimed her a reincarnation of the high priest [[Yetaxa]]". ([[TV]]: ''[[The Aztecs (TV story)|The Aztecs]]'')
* Susan recounts how in [[2164]], the Daleks "were trying to mine out the [[Earth]]'s core and replace it with a propulsion unit that would enable them to fly this planet round the galaxy", and how, following these events, she was locked out of the TARDIS by the Doctor, who advised her to start a family with young freedom fighter [[David Campbell]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Dalek Invasion of Earth (TV story)|The Dalek Invasion of Earth]]'')
* Susan mentions the [[Menoptera]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Web Planet (TV story)|The Web Planet]]'')
 
== CD and other releases ==
* It is available as a special feature on the DVD release of ''[[The Dalek Invasion of Earth (TV story)|The Dalek Invasion of Earth]]''.
* It was included on the CD ''[[Doctor Who at the BBC Volume 3]]''.
* It was included on the CD boxset ''[[The BBC Radio Episodes Collection]]''.
* It has been periodically rebroadcast on BBC Radio since its initial release. Its most recent airing was on [[BBC Radio|BBC Radio 4 Extra]] on [[23 November]] [[2013]].
 
<gallery>
File:Doctor Who Exploration Earth & Whatever Happened to Susan? 2011 CD cover.jpg|2011 CD cover.
File:The BBC Radio Episodes CD Box Set.jpg|2011 CD Boxset cover.
</gallery>


== External links ==
== External links ==
* {{tetrap|unbound/susan.html|Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?}}
{{tetrap|unbound/susan.html|Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?}}{{chakoteya|Extras/WH2SF.html|Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?}}
{{TitleSort}}
{{TitleSort}}


[[Category:BBC Radio audio stories]]
[[Category:1994 audio stories]]
[[Category:Stories that crossover with non-DWU series]]


[[fr:Doctor Who's Grand-daughter Susan]]
[[fr:Doctor Who's Grand-daughter Susan]]
[[Category:BBC Radio audio stories]]
[[Category:Parodies and pastiches]]
[[Category:Stories released in 1994]]

Latest revision as of 23:33, 17 November 2024

RealWorld.png

Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman? was an audio drama which aired on BBC Radio 4 as the fifth instalment of Adrian Mourby's Sony Award-winning first series of Whatever Happened to ...? in 1994. Like the other episodes, it examined the life of a fictional character through the realistic lens of a researcher conducting an interview with a subject — in this case, the original Doctor Who companion herself, Susan Foreman, as played by Jane Asher, offering a satirical look at her life following the events of The Dalek Invasion of Earth.

Upon its initial release, it is doubtful that the story was necessarily intended as a serious expansion of the Doctor Who universe, notably committing multiple "continuity errors". However, its events were explicitly cited in Gallifrey: A Rough Guide six years later as one of multiple conflicting accounts of Susan's origins.

Summary[[edit] | [edit source]]

A researcher interviews Susan Foreman, and various people connected with her, about the true history of her travels in time and space, and how she went from there to her current, rather unexpected position as EC Commissioner for Education.

Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]

A researcher investigates the personal history of Susan Foreman, interviewing her as well as multiple other people who knew her or the Doctor. Confessing that she "doesn't remember Gally very well", Susan begins with her and her grandfather's moving to London, 1963. She explains that she had previously been living with her parents, but they grew to think that the "very science-based" education she was getting on the planet was insufficient, particularly as regarded learning French. However, they were too busy with their concept shop to take her to Earth themselves, and instead had her move there with the Doctor, who had recently retired.

As Ian does recall, Susan's relaxed attitude about advanced science and history led him and Barbara to follow her home one night to 76 Totter's Lane, where they were confused to discover that she had apparently been living inside her police box. However, as far as Ian recalls, he woke up the next morning with Susan having disappeared; he would only see her again eight months later, when Susan, back in the 1960s, came to see him "with some… tale that Barbara Wright and [him] ha[d] been travelling in time with her, and that in two hundred years the Earth [wa]s going to be over-run by little men in metal boxes". When she is told by the researcher that Ian still disbelieves her stories about the Daleks, Susan advises the researcher to go talk to Temmosus Skyedron, a Thal who has also taken up residence on 20th century Earth, having become the EC Commissioner for Overproduction in 1987. Temmosus is quite open about his recollections of Ian and Barbara's part in his people's battle against the Daleks.

Susan then goes over the substance of her travels in time and space with the Doctor, Ian and Barbara, which eventually led them to a 2164 Earth that had been invaded by the Daleks. According to Susan, these Daleks came from the future, following the battle on Skaro; they'd intended to go back to before Ian and Barbara's time to destroy humanity and therefore undo their earlier defeat, but were prevented from doing so when their their TARDIS suffered a fluid link leak and they had to land in 2164 instead. There, the Doctor ended up locking Susan out of the TARDIS, advising her to marry freedom fighter David Campbell. Susan recounts how the Doctor had, by then, learned how to regenerate, and bitterly speculates that he got rid of her more because he'd had enough of being a grandfather than because he actually thought that was what was best for her.

Jo Jones, interviewed about the Doctor and his rejuvenations, later tells the interviewer that contrary to Susan's speculation about the nature of her grandfather's attachment to his later companions, "nothing ever happened" between her and her Doctor although there was "a certain sexual tension in the air". She speculates that Susan was simply projecting due to her feelings of rejection. When the researcher quotes this statement to Susan, she angrily responds that "of course I felt rejected! Imagine, your nearest relative throws you outside into a post-holocaust wasteland, and claims it's because your true path lies in the arms of some urban guerrilla". She explains that she briefly considered helping David rebuild even so, but couldn't find the courage, and instead contacted Gallifrey. Her godfather's brother, Terry, agreed to pick her up "next time he was inspecting that part of the time waft". Insisting that she had to obey "real time" and thus return to Earth eight months after she'd left, he dropped her off in 1964.

She returned to Coal Hill School, where, much to her later regret, she quickly told the truth about her time-travelling adventures to her schoolmates. The Daily Sketch, who were doing a series of lurid stories about teenage runaways, sent a reporter, Joey Oxford, to try and get the "real story" out of Susan, who was, by then, staying in a YWCA until she got her life figured out. Oxford refused to believe her, even after she showed him trinkets she had retained from her travels in time and space. Desperate for someone to believe her, she visited Ian Chesterton, trying to jog his memories, but the space-time amnesia had not abated, and he instead called the police on her, hoping they'd simply warn her off. Instead, they searched her belongings, and misidentified the historical souvenirs as artefacts stolen from the British Museum. Sent to an "approved school" in Barking, Susan later decided to put her space-time-travelling life behind her and try to build herself a life as a "normal girl", entering the British civil service as a typist around 1972 and subsequently becoming more and more involved with the European Commission.

Surprised to learn that there were many other former time- and space-travellers in the E.C., she ended up marrying one, though they later divorced due to Susan's culturally-ingrained inability to lie preventing her from successfully concealing an extramarital affair from her husband. She subsequently became EC Commissioner for Education in her own right, intending to make the education system more robust to change history in time for the 2164 Dalek invasion so that Earth will be better-prepared.

Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]

Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Susan was a member of Class 5B at Coal Hill School.
  • Susan claims that "everyone in our galaxy speaks some French", including in such systems as Alpha Centauri.
  • In her education on Gallifrey, Susan successfully studied such subjects "astronomy, thermonuclear dynamics and warping".
  • Had she not resumed travelling through time and space instead, Susan was meant to sit her "mock O-levels".
  • Susan describes the Time Lords as "the people who control the space-time continuum". According to Susan, the Doctor spent his original lifetime as a commercial time traveller after being "blackballed" from becoming a proper Time Lord over his suspected interventionist leanings. After retiring, he studied for a doctorate in botany. Because he was never officially made a proper Time Lord, he had to "hack into how it was done". Susan's account suggests that orthodox Time Lords regularly travel through time, but that many areas of particular historical importance are "restricted".
  • In the 1960s, Claire Rayner "did a spell" as an agony aunt for the teenage magazine Petticoat. She received multiple letters from Susan, including one final one written from 1794, which Susan arranged would reach her through time.
  • Susan is aware that the Doctor has travelled with Zoe, Sarah Jane, Jo, Ace and Romana.
  • Susan claims that she "always [fell] in love with someone" as a sixteen-year-old girl in her circumstances might be wont to do, with David Campbell in 2164 not having been at all unique; she notably mentions having been in love with a Menoptera
  • Susan understands that the Doctor is now in his seventh incarnation.
  • Skaro is allegedly located "six billion light years away" from Earth.

Story notes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • This story contains a few minor departures from TV continuity, which are not flagged in such ways as to suggest that they were intended for comedic effect; these include Susan somehow knowing about Ian being knighted in The Crusade, which post-dated her time in the Doctor's TARDIS, and her similarly knowing about Mechanus, which again apparently contradicts The Chase. It is also asserted that Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright were returned to 1963, the day before they left, rather than 1965.
  • The story also presents some contradictions with other non-TV accounts of the Doctors' companions' fates. Ian and Barbara are shown to have had their memories of their travels in time locked at some point after returning to Earth as a result of space-time amnesia, in contrast to Ian Chesterton: An Introduction and The Power of the Doctor (among others) where an elderly Ian was shown to recall his adventures perfectly well.

Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]

CD and other releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

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