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{{Infobox ClassicTV|
{{title dab away}}
story name= Terror of the Autons |
{{real world}}
image= [[Image:Auton_in_disguise.jpg|250px]]|
{{ImageLinkTV}}
series=[[Doctor Who]] -<br/>[[TV stories|TV Stories]] |
{{Infobox Story SMW
number= [[Season 8]]|
|image = Auton Police Escort.jpg
story number= 55|
|series = [[Doctor Who television stories|''Doctor Who'' television stories]]
doctor=[[Third Doctor]] |
|season number = Season 8 (Doctor Who 1963)|
companions= [[Jo Grant]] (Introduction)<br/>[[Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart]]<br/>[[Mike Yates|Captain Mike Yates]] (Introduction)<br/>[[Sergeant Benton]]|
|season serial number = 1
enemy= [[Nestene]]<br>[[Auton|Autons]]<br/> [[The Master (UNIT years)|The Master]] (Introduction) |
|story number = 55
year= [[Earth]]; circa [[1970s]] |
|doctor =Third Doctor  
writer= [[Robert Holmes]] |
|companions = [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|The Brigadier]], [[John Benton|Benton]], [[Mike Yates|Yates]], [[Jo Grant|Jo]]
director= [[Barry Letts]] |
|featuring = [[Adelphi]]
producer= [[Barry Letts]] |
|enemy = {{Delgado|c}}, [[Auton]]s
broadcast date= [[2nd January]] - [[23rd January]] [[1971]] |
|setting = [[Tarminster]], [[20th century]]
format= 4 25-minute Episodes |
|writer = Robert Holmes
production code= [[List of production codes|EEE]]|
|director = [[Barry Letts]]
previous story= [[Inferno]]|
|producer= [[Barry Letts]]
next story= [[The Mind of Evil]] }}
|novelisation = Doctor Who and the Terror of the Autons (novelisation)
'''''Terror of the Autons''''' was the first story of [[Season 8]]. It was notable for being a "gentle reboot" of the [[Jon Pertwee|Pertwee]] era, offering a number of elements which would remain prevalent for the next three seasons. It marked the debut of three new recurring characters, [[Jo Grant]], [[Mike Yates]] and [[the Master]]. Furthermore, it was the first story in which Sgt. [[Benton]]'s portrayer, [[John Levene]], was given an annual contract, rather than employment as a day player. It also introduced what became [[UNIT]]'s standard, green uniforms — the replacements for what [[Barry Letts]] disparagingly called the "chocolates" of [[Season 7]] — and a new UNIT laboratory which would be used by the [[Third Doctor]] until the end of his exile.  
|epcount = 4
|broadcast date = 2 January - 23 January 1971
|network = BBC1
|format = 4x25-minute episodes
|serial production code = [[List of production codes|EEE]]
|prev = Inferno (TV story)|Inferno (TV story)
|next = The Mind of Evil (TV story)
|clip = New assistant, Jo Grant - Dr Who - BBC sci-fi
|clip2 = Death by plastic chair - Doctor Who - Terror of the Autons - BBC
|clip3 = Escaping the grenade - Doctor Who Terror of the Autons - BBC
}}
'''''Terror of the Autons''''' was the first serial of [[Season 8 (Doctor Who 1963)|season 8]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. The story featured the introductions of [[Katy Manning]] as [[Jo Grant]], [[Richard Franklin]] as Captain [[Mike Yates]] and [[Roger Delgado]] as {{Delgado}}, the latter becoming a very prominent character in ''Doctor Who'' mythos.


It also featured the first return of the [[Auton]]s since [[Spearhead from Space|their debut]] in [[Season 7]], and the first direct contact between [[the Doctor]] and [[Time Lord|his people]] since the end of [[Season 6]]. It was one of very few stories — and the first since ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'' — in which each new episode drew more viewers than the one that had preceded it. Finally, it was also the only televised ''Doctor Who'' story to be at least partially adapted as [[DWM Issue 164|a non-parodic comic strip]].
It was notable for being a "gentle reboot" of the Pertwee era, offering a number of elements which would remain prevalent for the next three seasons. Jo became the Doctor's new [[companion]], while the Master made himself the most persistent archenemy of the Doctor for the remainder of this season and a major antagonist long after his first appearance.
==Synopsis==
[[Image:Master TARDIS.jpg|thumb|The Master Arrives.]]
The Master arrives on Earth at a circus run by a man named Rossini and steals a dormant Nestene energy unit from a museum. He reactivates it using a radio telescope and uses his hypnotic abilities to take control of a small plastics firm run by the Farrel family, where he organises the production of deadly Auton dolls, chairs and daffodils.


Humanoid Auton dummies distribute the daffodils - designed to spray a suffocating plastic film over their victim's mouth and nose - by giving them away free to members of the public in a fake promotional campaign.
Furthermore, it was the first story in which [[John Levene]], playing Sergeant [[John Benton]], was given an annual contract, rather than employment as a day player. It also introduced what became [[UNIT]]'s standard khaki uniforms, the replacements for the custom-made beige uniforms of [[Season 7 (Doctor Who 1963)|season 7]] which [[Barry Letts]] disparagingly called the "chocolates", as well as a new UNIT laboratory which was used by the [[Third Doctor]] until the end of his [[Exile on Earth|exile]].


The Master plans to activate the flowers with a signal from the radio telescope, which he will then use to bring the main Nestene Consciousness to Earth. The Doctor manages to persuade the Master that the Nestenes will have no further use for him once they arrive. The two Time Lords then work together to send the Consciousness back into space.
It also featured the first return of the [[Auton]]s since [[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|their debut]] in season 7 and the first direct contact between [[the Doctor]] and [[Time Lord|his people]] since the end of [[Season 6 (Doctor Who 1963)|season 6]]. It was one of very few stories — and the first since ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'' in [[1967 (releases)|1967]] — in which each new episode drew more viewers than the one that had preceded it.


==Plot==
The Autons and the Nestene Consciousness did not appear on television again until ''[[Rose (TV story)|Rose]]'', the first episode of the revived series, in [[2005 (releases)|2005]].
==='''Episode One'''===


Circus manager Rossini sees a horsebox materialize in the field near the circus tent. Out steps [[the Master]], who quickly overpowers him via hypnosis. He enlists Rossini into helping him steal a [[Nestene]] meteorite (leftover from [[Spearhead from Space]]) from a nearby museum.
== Synopsis ==
The [[Earth]] is endangered by a renegade [[Time Lord]] known as {{Delgado}}, who steals a dormant [[Nestene Consciousness|Nestene]] [[energy unit]] from a museum. He reactivates it using the facilities of a [[radio telescope]], then uses his hypnotic abilities to take control of a small plastics manufacturer, Farrel Autoplastics, where he organises the production of deadly [[Auton]] artefacts, including [[plastic]] [[doll]]s, [[chair]]s and [[daffodil]]s.


[[Liz Shaw]] having returned to Cambridge, [[the Brigadier]] assigns [[UNIT]] trainee [[Jo Grant|Josephine Grant]] to be [[Third Doctor|the Doctor’s]] new assistant. She immediately makes a bad first impression when she extinguishes a small fire on the Doctor’s lab bench, destroying the Doctor’s dematerialization circuit. Dismayed at her lack of qualifications, he attempts to fire her but cannot bring himself to do so.
The Master has an evil scheme to destroy humanity and to silence his old foe, the Doctor, forever. He plans to awaken the awesome power of the Nestenes, a ruthlessly aggressive alien life form.


The Master appears at a deep space radio telescope, overpowering Professor Phillips and his assistant Goodge. He connects the Nestene meteorite to the telescope and transmits a signal.
The Nestenes can control anything made of plastic, including killer Autons: plastic mannequins, faceless but possessing a shared consciousness. The Autons form an army of invasion, easily controlled by the Master himself. This is the terrible threat facing Earth — the terror of the Autons.


Investigating the theft of the meteorite and the disappearance of the scientists, the Doctor arrives at the radio telescope. Outside the control tower, a [[Time Lord]] arrives to warn the Doctor of the arrival of the Master to Earth, and alerts him to a booby trap inside. Disarming it, he discovers the shrunken body of Goodge in a lunchbox.
Aided by [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|the Brigadier]], and by new companion [[Jo Grant]], only the [[Third Doctor]] can combat their evil power, but first he must defeat the Master...


At a small plastics firm, production manager McDermott confronts the owner, young Rex Farrel, about the mysterious Colonel Masters (the Master, of course) and the new line of products he has commissioned them into producing.  
== Plot ==
=== Episode one ===
[[File:Master's Tardis Debut.jpg|thumb|left|[[The Master's TARDIS]] arrives on Earth...]]
[[International Circus]] manager [[Luigi Rossini]], real name Lew Russell, witnesses a horsebox materialise out of thin air in a field near his Big Top. Out steps {{Delgado}}, who quickly overpowers him by [[hypnosis]]. He enlists Rossini to help him steal a [[Nestene]] energy unit left over from [[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|the previous invasion]] from the [[National Space Museum]], where it is on display as part of an exhibition.


The Doctor correctly surmises that the Master is in league with the Nestenes, and obtains a list of nearby plastic factories. Jo, against the Doctor’s will, goes off to investigate, and arrives at Farrel’s factory. She is quickly discovered by the Master and hypnotized. She returns to UNIT with a crate that apparently contains the Nestene meteorite, but as she attempts to open it the Doctor quickly realizes it’s a bomb…
[[Liz Shaw]] has returned to Cambridge, having decided the [[Third Doctor|Doctor]] doesn't really need her, so [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|the Brigadier]] assigns [[UNIT]] trainee [[Jo Grant|Josephine Grant]] as the Time Lord's new assistant. She immediately makes a bad first impression, by extinguishing a small fire on the Doctor's [[Laboratory|lab]] bench, thereby ruining three months work on his malfunctioning [[dematerialisation circuit]]. Dismayed at her lack of qualifications, he insists that the Brigadier reassign her. The Brigadier concedes, but only if the Doctor will tell her himself. The Doctor attempts to fire her, but faced with Jo's kindly and innocent disposition, he is unable to bring himself to do so.


==='''Episode Two'''===
The Master infiltrates a deep space radio telescope at [[Beacon Hill Research Establishment|Beacon Hill]], overpowering Professor Philips and his assistant, [[Albert Goodge|Goodge]]. He connects the stolen energy unit to the telescope and uses it to channel power from the Nestene Consciousness in space into the surviving unit.


The Doctor grabs the crate and tosses it out the window before it explodes. He identifies that Jo has been hypnotizes by the Master, and attempts to work through it.
Investigating the theft of the energy unit and the disappearance of the scientists, the Doctor arrives at the radio telescope. Outside the control tower, a [[Adelphi|Time Lord]] arrives, "inconspicuously" dressed as a businessman in a discreet suit and [[bowler hat]], complete with [[umbrella]], but hovering in mid-air. He warns the Doctor of the Master's arrival on Earth and alerts him to a booby trap inside the door he is about to open. His warning delivered, the Time Lord vanishes, briefly reappearing to wish the Doctor good luck. Disarming the trap, the Doctor opens Goodge's lunchbox, only to find his [[Matter condensation|shrunken]] corpse inside.


McDermott confronts the Master about his apparent domination over the Farrel factory. The Master invites him to sit in one of their new products, a self-inflating plastic chair, which comes alive and smothers him. Farrel is impressed with its effectiveness, but the Master realizes that they should explore smaller products.
At a small plastics factory, production manager James McDermott confronts the owner, young Rex Farrel, about the mysterious Colonel Masters and the new line of products he has commissioned them to manufacture which are against the factory's normal protocols. Farrel goes looking for the colonel and finds him in the process of activating [[Auton]]s.


Rex’s father, the retired founder of the factory, is very upset over McDermott’s death and the arrival of “Colonel Masters.” After his attempt at hypnotizing Mr Farrel fails, the Master gives him a new sample product, a demonic looking plastic doll. He takes it home, where it comes to life and kills him.
The Doctor realises that the Master is in league with the Nestenes, and the Brigadier (based on previous experience of their methods) obtains a list of nearby plastics factories. Jo is assigned to investigate some of these, including Farrel Autoplastics. On arrival, she is quickly discovered by the Master and hypnotised. She returns to UNIT with a padlocked crate that apparently once contained the Nestene energy unit, but as she begins to unlock it, the Doctor realises it's a [[bomb]] and shouts for Yates and Benton to stop her. But Jo is determined to open it...


UNIT scouts spot the missing Professor Philips at Rossini’s circus. The Doctor goes to investigate but leaves Jo behind. The Doctor is quickly captured, as the Master left Philips at the circus to lure the Doctor there. The circus’s strongman Tony is menacing him in a trailer, but Jo (who followed the Doctor) knocks him out. Philips enters with a grenade in his hand, but the Doctor manages to work through his hypnosis. Philips detonates the grenade outside, killing himself. The Doctor and Jo find the Master’s TARDIS (the Horse box) and are confronted by an angry mob of circus employees, led by Rossini. They are rescued from the mob by an arriving police car, but instead of being taken back to UNIT, they arrive in a remote quarry. The Doctor discovers that the policemen are actually Autons in disguise.
=== Episode two ===
The Doctor throws the crate through the window, into the canal, where it explodes harmlessly.


==='''Episode Three'''===
[[File:McDermott Murdered by Nestene Chair.jpg|left|thumb|The Master's Nestene chair suffocates McDermott.]]
At the plastics factory, McDermott confronts the Master about his interference with production. The Master invites him to sit in one of their new products, a self-inflating plastic chair, which comes alive, collapses and suffocates the hapless McDermott. Rex Farrel is impressed with its effectiveness, but the Master realises that they should explore smaller products — noting that a simpler plastic device could kill humans with more efficiency.


The Doctor struggles with the two Autons, causing the car to veer and crash. He and Jo escape from the car, relentlessly pursued by the Autons. The Brigadier and Captain Yates arrive and rescue them.
At UNIT headquarters, the Doctor frees Jo from the Master's control. She can remember very little about what happened to her, but the Doctor realises the bomb must have been the work of the Master. However, Jo cannot even recall at which factory she met him, due to the [[amnesia]] induced by the post-hypnotic suggestion.


Back at the lab, the Doctor replaces his non-functional dematerialization circuit with the one he stole from the Master's TARDIS. Alas, they are incompatible. The Doctor's fury is abated when he realizes that as long as he has the Master's demat circuit, he's stuck on Earth too.
The factory's [[retire]]d owner, the elder Mr. Farrel, is very upset over the death of Mr McDermott, who Rex claims had suddenly died while trying out the plastic chair; and at the presence of "Colonel Masters". When an attempt at hypnotising Farrel Senior fails, the Master surreptitiously turns his car's heater to its hottest setting, then shows Farrel a new sample product: a demonic-looking plastic doll, and flings it on the back seat as Farrel leaves. The doll is activated by heat and suddenly comes to life as the heater warms the car's interior, but Farrel takes notice of the heat and switches it off; the doll becomes dormant again. However, at his home Farrel leaves the doll near a radiator. The doll comes to life a second time and kills him, lunging at his throat with its fangs. His wife screams when she happens upon his [[murder|dead]] body.


The Master is pleased with the factory's latest product, a realistic-looking plastic daffodil. The Autons, led by Farrel, don enormous carnival masks and matching yellow suits and tour the countryside handing daffodils out to the public.
Sergeant Benton locates the missing Professor Philips' car, and the subsequent enquiries lead UNIT to Rossini's circus. The Doctor insists on investigating it personally, despite the Brigadier's offer of an escort. Jo is ordered to remain at HQ. However, eager to prove she's not as useless as advertised, Jo hides in [[Bessie]], the Doctor's vintage car, and so accompanies him without his knowledge. At the circus, the Doctor investigates the Master's TARDIS, which is disguised as a horsebox, but he is quickly captured by Rossini; the Master left Professor Philips at the circus to lure the Doctor there. Meanwhile, trying to find the Doctor, Jo sees Professor Philips. She telephones the Brigadier at HQ, who tells her to stay put until he arrives. But Jo again disobeys and goes to find the Doctor. The circus strongman, Tony, is menacing him inside a trailer, but Jo sneaks into the trailer and knocks Tony out by shattering a [[vase]] on his head. The Doctor is upset that Jo didn't listen to him, but she points out that he needed her to rescue him.


The Brigadier is alerted to a rash of unexplained asphyxiation deaths all over England. Jo's memory is jogged by the mention of Mr Farrel among the casualties. They meet Mr Farrel’s grieving widow and take the doll for examination; meanwhile a mysterious repairman replaces the cord on the Doctor’s lab phone.
Professor Philips, under the Master's hypnosis, enters, holding a [[grenade]]. The Doctor attempts to reason with him, knowing Philips is still on some level trying to resist doing something against his nature. Philips breaks loose from the trance and tries to abandon the grenade outside, but it detonates, killing him.


While the Doctor and Brigadier investigate the now-abandoned plastics factory and discover a leftover plastic daffodil (and narrowly elude an Auton), Yates and Jo accidentally discover that the doll is activated by heat while using the Doctor’s Bunsen burner to make cocoa.  
The Doctor and Jo find the Master's TARDIS (still disguised as a horsebox) but are confronted by an angry mob of circus employees led by Rossini. Rossini furiously accuses the Doctor of robbing the caravan and killing one of the circus hands with a bomb. He clubs the Doctor over the head before he can react, and the mob swarm toward him and Jo. They are rescued by an arriving [[police car]]. The Brigadier and Captain Yates arrive at the circus moments later, see what is happening, and follow them. But instead of being taken back to town, the Doctor and Jo arrive in a remote quarry. The Doctor, suspicions aroused, asks one of the officers to show his warrant card but is met with blank eyes. He peels off a face mask and reveals that the "[[policemen]]" are [[Auton policeman|Autons in disguise]]...


The Master telephones the Doctor at his lab to say goodbye. He activates a signal and the Doctor’s phone cord comes to life, wraps itself around him, and begins to choke him.
=== Episode three ===
The Doctor struggles with the two Autons, causing the car to crash. He and Jo escape from the car, only to be relentlessly hunted through the quarry by the Autons. But the Brigadier and Captain Yates arrive and rescue them.


==='''Episode Four'''===
[[File:Incompatible Dematerilisation Circuit.jpg|thumb|right|An annoyed Doctor learns his TARDIS is staying grounded.]]
Back at his lab, the Doctor replaces his non-functional dematerialisation circuit with the one he has stolen from the Master's TARDIS, but they are incompatible. The Doctor's frustration abates when he realises that, as long as he has the Master's circuit, the Master, too, is trapped on Earth.


The Brigadier disconnects the phone, cutting off the signal. The Doctor and Jo accidentally discover that the plastic daffodils, which are activated by radio waves, emit an asphyxiating film over peoples’ noses and mouths. The Master arrives at the Doctor’s lab, armed with his shrinking device, ready to kill him. The Doctor shows that he is holding the Master’s dematerialization circuit, which would be destroyed if he used it. Jo breaks the stalemate when she blurts out that UNIT has identified the coach bus and is planning an airstrike. The Master then alters his plan, kidnapping them and leaving them tied up in the bus to be killed in the strike. The Brigadier and Benton see this and cancel the airstrike just in time. The Doctor communicates to UNIT by tapping a Morse Code message on the bus brake pedal, while Jo impresses the Doctor with her skills at escapology.
Meanwhile, the Master is pleased by the factory's latest product, a realistic-looking plastic daffodil. The Autons, now wearing enormous carnival masks and matching [[yellow]] suits as an impenetrable disguise, tour the countryside handing out thousands of these daffodils to the general public.


While the Autons hold off a UNIT force led by Yates and Benton, the Doctor and Brigadier confront the Master at the radio telescope as he opens the signal for the Nestene invasion force. The Doctor convinces him that he’ll be expendable once the Nestenes arrive, and together they reverse the radio signal, expelling the force into deep space. The Autons drop dead, their signal cut off. The Master manages to escape, but without his dematerialization circuit he's trapped on Earth. The Doctor admits that since they are now both stranded, he looks forward to their next meeting.
The Brigadier is alerted to a rash of unexplained deaths all over [[England]]. Jo's memory is jogged by the mention of Mr Farrel among the casualties. They meet his grieving widow and take away the hideous doll for examination. Meanwhile, a mysterious telephone engineer (actually the Master in disguise) replaces the cord on the Doctor's lab [[telephone]]. It seems the Doctor has simply ordered a longer flex because he paces about whilst on the phone, but the repairman's behaviour suggests otherwise.


==Cast==
The Doctor and the Brigadier investigate the now-abandoned plastics factory and discover a leftover plastic daffodil (and narrowly elude a killer Auton). Meanwhile, Jo and Captain Yates accidentally reactivate the doll with the heat from the Doctor's [[Bunsen burner]], which they have borrowed to make [[cocoa]]. The doll attacks Jo, but Yates shoots it to pieces with his sidearm.
*[[Third Doctor |The Doctor]] - [[Jon Pertwee]]
*[[Jo Grant]] - [[Katy Manning]]
*[[Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart]] - [[Nicholas Courtney]]
*Sergeant [[Benton]] - [[John Levene]]
*Captain [[Mike Yates]] - [[Richard Franklin]]
*[[The Master]] - [[Roger Delgado]]
*[[Rossini (Terror of the Autons)|Rossini]] - [[John Baskcomb]]
*Professor [[George Philips]] - [[Christopher Burgess]]
*[[Museum Attendant]] - [[Dave Carter]]
*[[Time Lord]] - [[David Garth]]
*[[Auton]] Leader - [[Pat Gorman]]
*[[John Farrel|Farrel Senior]] - [[Stephen Jack]]
*[[Auton]] Voice - [[Hayden Jones]]
*[[Farrel|Mrs. Farrel]] - [[Barbara Leake]]
*Policeman - [[Bill McGuirk]]
*Radio Telescope Director - [[Frank Mills]]
*[[Goodge]] - [[Andrew Staines]]
*Telephone Mechanic - [[Norman Stanley]]
*[[Tony (Terror of the Autons)|Strong Man]] - [[Roy Stewart]]
*[[McDermott]] - [[Harry Towb]]
*[[Brownrose]] - [[Dermot Tuohy]]
*Auton Policeman - [[Terry Walsh]]
*[[Rex Farrel]] - [[Michael Wisher]]


==Crew==
The Master telephones the Doctor from a call box, and the Doctor asks what he wants. The Master has simply called to say goodbye. He activates a signal device, and the Doctor's newly installed plastic telephone cord comes to life. It wraps itself around his throat and starts squeezing the life out of him...
*[[Film Cameraman]] - [[John Baker]]
*[[Assistant Floor Manager]] - [[Bruce Best]]
*[[Film Editor]] - [[Geoffrey Botterill]]
*Circus Sequences provided by [[Robert Brothers]]
*[[Script Editor]] - [[Terrance Dicks]]
*[[Studio Sound]] - [[Colin Dixon]]
*[[Title Music]] - [[Ron Grainer]] and the [[BBC Radiophonic Workshop]], arranged by [[Delia Derbyshire]]
*Stunts - [[HAVOC stunt group]]
*[[Visual Effects]] - [[Michealjohn Harris]]
*[[Make-Up]] - [[Jan Harrison]]
*[[Special Sounds]] - [[Brian Hodgson]]
*[[Writer]] - [[Robert Holmes]]
*[[Production Assistant]] - [[Nicholas John]]
*[[Producer]] - [[Barry Letts]]
*[[Director]] - [[Barry Letts]] (not credited)
*[[Studio Lighting]] - [[Eric Monk]]
*[[Incidental Music]] - [[Dudley Simpson]]
*[[Costumes]] - [[Ken Trew]]
*[[Designer]] - [[Ian Watson]]


==References==
=== Episode four ===
[[Image:Terroroftheautons_title.jpg|thumb|The Doctor gets to know Jo and Mike.]]
[[File:Daffodil Nestene Autojet.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor and Jo witness the daffodil come alive.]]
* This is the first story to feature [[Mike Yates]], [[Jo Grant]], and [[the Master]].
The Brigadier hears the Doctor shouting for help and pulls the phone cable from the wall, cutting off the signal. The Doctor reminds the Brigadier that the Nestenes can put life into anything made of plastic. Then, examining the daffodil, the Doctor and Jo accidentally discover that it's activated by radio waves. The daffodil sprays an asphyxiating plastic film over Jo's nose and mouth, but the Doctor removes it in time to prevent suffocation. They realise the daffodils are to be activated by a signal from the Radio Telescope; the wave of unexplained deaths were shortwave radio users who activated the daffodils prematurely. Although he now knows the cause of the deaths, the Doctor is puzzled by the fact that plastic film was not found on any of the bodies. On a hunch, he breathes hard on the plastic, and it shortly dissolves away into nothing. The [[carbon dioxide]] expelled from the dying victim's lungs acted to remove the evidence of murder. Moments later, a voice greets the Doctor from the lab stairwell. He turns around to face his old enemy.
* First appearance of the [[Tissue Compression Eliminator]] (as it would come to be called).
* The Doctor says he regards military intelligence a contradiction in terms. He boils away the contents of weapon of the Master's so that the military cannot get a hold of it and try to duplicate it.  
* This is Jo Grant's first appearance. An uncle pulled some strings to get her a job at [[UNIT]].
* This is the Master's first appearance. The [[Time Lord]] who appears to the Doctor informs him that the Master is on Earth, and the Doctor recognizes him by that name. The Master has special abilities including [[hypnosis]] that can make people act against their usual nature. (He hypnotises Jo)
*[[The Master's TARDIS]] is disguised as a horsebox, and uses a Mark Two [[dematerialization circuit]], as opposed to the Doctor's Mark One, they are not compatible.
*The [[Lamadines]] are a species with nine opposable digits who pioneered [[steady state micro welding]].


==Story Notes==
The Master trains his [[Tissue Compression Eliminator]] on the Doctor, ready to shrink him to death. The Doctor shows that he is holding the Master's dematerialisation circuit, which will be destroyed if he fires. Jo breaks the stalemate when she blurts out that UNIT has identified the Autons' whereabouts and are planning an airstrike. The Master alters his plan, kidnapping them and taking them to the quarry as hostages, to prevent the airstrike. The Brigadier and Benton see this and cancel the strike just in time. But Jo now impresses the Doctor with her skills at [[escapology]].
* This story had a working title of; '''The Spray of Death'''.
* Although credited, Bill McGuirk (Policeman) does not actually appear in the story; his scenes having been cut prior to broadcast.


===Ratings===
While the Autons are holding off a UNIT force led by Yates and Benton. On his way up to the control room, the Master pushes a scientist off the railing to his death. The Doctor and the Brigadier confront the Master in the radio telescope control room where he hopes to open a channel for the Nestene invasion force. But the Doctor convinces the Master that he'll be expendable once the Nestenes arrive. Together they reverse the radio signal, expelling the force into deep space. With the signal cut off, the Autons collapse. Unfortunately, the Doctor and the Brigadier are overcome by feedback, and when they recover the Master has fled.
*Episode 1 - 7.3 million viewers
*Episode 2 - 8.0 million viewers
*Episode 3 - 8.1 million viewers
*Episode 4 - 8.4 million viewers


===Myths===
The Master escapes to the coach the Autons have been using. Cornered by UNIT troops, he emerges with his hands up. The Doctor warns the Brigadier the untrustworthy Master is trying to trick them. He feints a surrender, but draws his tissue compression eliminator. Captain Yates shoots him dead. The dubious Doctor examines the body and reveals it is actually Rex Farrel, disguised by a latex facemask. He was hypnotised to be a decoy and callously thrown to the wolves. The real Master escapes in the coach.
*The production team had initially envisioned the new regular villain for the series as a female character, possibly called the Controller, to be played by [[Susan Jameson]]. ''(The role was always envisioned as a male character called the Master, and Roger Delgado was the only actor considered for it.)''


===Filming Locations===
UNIT later find the abandoned coach, but of the Master there is no sign. Jo suggests he has left Earth. But the Doctor has outsmarted him, having actually handed him the faulty dematerialisation circuit from the Doctor's own TARDIS, keeping the Master's. Now that both he and the Master are stranded on Earth, the Doctor admits that he will rather be looking forward to their next meeting.
*St. Peter's Court, Chalfont St. Peter, Buckinghamshire
*Hodgemoor Woods, Chalfont St. Giles, Buckinghamshire
*Lee Valley Ice Centre, Leyton, London (Location of Rossini's circus)
*Zouches Farm Relay Station, Caddington, Bedfordshire (Location used for exterior of [[Beacon Hill Research Establishment]])
*Church Lane car park, Chalfont St. Peter, Buckinghamshire
*Queen's Wharf, Hammersmith, London (Exterior location of the Master's bomb exploding outside UNIT lab, in water)
*Totternhoe Lime and Stone Co Ltd, Totternhoe, Dunstable (The quarry the Doctor and Jo are taken to)
*Ecomold (formerly Thermo Plastics Ltd), Luton Road, Dunstable (Farrell's Plastics Factory)
*[[BBC Television Centre]] (Studio 8 and 6), Shepherd's Bush, [[London]]


===Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors===
== Cast ==
*Why do the Time Lords confine themselves to simply warning the Doctor about the Master's arrival rather than arresting and trying him? Surely his actions are no less criminal in their eyes than the Doctor's. ''The Time Lords often have ulterior motives, which involve letting events play out with minimal interference on their part.''
* [[Third Doctor|Doctor Who]] - [[Jon Pertwee]]
*All elements of [[CSO]] have a lot of flaring/fuzzing around the edges of the CSOed image (a museum, the outside of a radio telescope, a lunchbox interior, a lab, the interior of two cars and the coach, a phone box, a kitchen, a quarry and everywhere the killer doll goes). ''Well you cannot expected a fairly new technique to be perfect''
* [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|Brigadier Lethbridge Stewart]] - [[Nicholas Courtney]]
*In episode one the Doctor could have got to the volatizer by hopping in through the open window (which is how the Master must have got out having set the trap).
* {{Delgado|c}} - [[Roger Delgado]]
*The ease with which the Doctor manages to convince the Master to change sides at the end of the story is a little unconvincing. The Master is supposed to be a genuis and self-preservation is one of his greatest strengths. Surely he must have already considered the possibilty of the Nestene Consciousness turning on him prior to this. ''Thats proberly why he got convinced so easily.''
* [[Jo Grant]] - [[Katy Manning]]
*The Doctor intuitively leaps to the conclusion that Jo is opening a bomb at the end of episode one. ''(He's a rather smart fellow.)''
* [[Mike Yates|Captain Mike Yates]] - [[Richard Franklin]]
*At the start of episode three, neither Auton policeman is killed, but only one returns to the Master and Farrell. What happened to the other one? ''(The fact that we only see one on screen doesn't mean that the other isn't elsewhere nearby.)''
* [[John Benton|Sergeant Benton]] - [[John Levene]]
*Why does the Master try to blow up the radio telescope anyway? He needs it in order to carry out his invasion plans. ''(He claims that he didn't expect it to actually kill the Doctor, and refers to it as a "calling card" of sorts. Had it actually worked, he would've undoubtedly been delighted at the death of the Doctor and happily found a similar facility to carry out that part of his plan.)''
* [[Rex Farrel]] - [[Michael Wisher]]
*The Doctor tells Yates to stand back while he defuses the volatizer. He might have clarified just how far back to stand. He says later that the volatizer had the destructive capability of a 15-megaton bomb
* [[George McDermott|McDermott]] - [[Harry Towb]]
*Jo can't remember where she heard the voice that told her to set off the bomb. The Master only told her to forget meeting him. She was supposed to remember meeting Mr. Farrell and to return with a negative report, that everything was in order. ''(This is consistent. She remembers meeting Farrell, but it doesn't stand out from all the other plastic facilities she visited that day. She doesn't know which one she met the Master at.)''
* [[Adelphi|Time Lord]] - [[David Garth]]
*At the climax of the episode, the policeman turns around with a very normal face. Cut to the Doctor, then back to a very obviously fake face.
* [[Radio telescope director|Radio Telescope Director]] - [[Frank Mills]]
*The Doctor discovers that carbon dioxide from the lungs dissolves the film that the daffodils shoot at people's faces, ostensibly explaining why the film was not found on any of the victims. If that's true, why didn't the victims' own breath dissolve it in time to let them breathe again? If it's a delayed reaction, then the victims would already have suffocated and not have had any breath left to dissolve the film.  ''the stuff proberly abzorbs the carbon dioxide then after a while it dissolves.''
* [[George Philips|Professor Philips]] - [[Christopher Burgess]]
*How does the Master disguise himself as someone of a different height? And, indeed, why disguise himself at all? ''(Disguising himself is prudent. He can't be sure how much UNIT knows, and therefore if someone there might be able to recognize him. His hypnotic ability is one method at his disposal to have also appeared taller to those he met.)''
* [[Albert Goodge|Goodge]] - [[Andrew Staines (actor)|Andrew Staines]]
* [[Luigi Rossini|Rossini]] - [[John Baskcomb]]
* [[Museum attendant (Terror of the Autons)|Museum Attendant]] - [[Dave Carter]]
* [[John Farrel|Farrell Senior]] - [[Stephen Jack]]
* [[Mary Farrel|Mrs. Farrell]] - [[Barbara Leake]]
* [[Tony (Terror of the Autons)|Strong Man]] - [[Roy Stewart]]
* [[Brownrose]] - [[Dermot Tuohy]]
* {{Delgado|n=Telephone Mechanic}} - [[Norman Stanley]]
* [[Policeman (Terror of the Autons)|Policeman]] - [[Bill McGuirk]] ''(credited for episode three, but does not appear)''
* [[Auton policeman|Auton Policeman]] - [[Terry Walsh]]
* [[Auton leader (Terror of the Autons)|Auton Leader]] - [[Pat Gorman]]
* [[Auton]] Voice - [[Hayden Jones|Haydn Jones]]


==Continuity ==
=== Uncredited cast ===
*This is a sequel to [[DW]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space]]''.
* Auton - [[Tom O'Leary]] ([[TCH 16]])
*The Nestene Consciousness appear again in [[PDA]]: ''[[Synthespians™]]'', ''[[Business Unusual]]'' and [[DW]]: ''[[Rose (TV story)|Rose]]''.
* [[Troll doll|Troll Doll]] - [[Tommy Reynolds]] ([[DWM 311]])
*Part of the Master and the Doctor's relationship is explored in [[MA]]: ''[[The Dark Path]]''.
* Man with [[elephant]]s - [[Bobby Roberts]] (TCH 16)
*Not counting those meant to pass as humans, such as [[Channing]] and [[Mickey Smith (Auton)]], this is the only story in which Autons speak.
* Double for the Brigadier - [[Marc Boyle]] (TCH 16)
* Stuntman/Auton Policeman - [[Billie Horrigan]] (TCH 16)
* Auton Policeman - [[Dinny Powell]] (TCH 16)
* Stunt Double for Captain Yates - Dinny Powell (TCH 16)
* Auton Daffodil Men - [[Paul Warren]] ([[DWM 311]]), [[Les Clark]], [[Bob Blaine]], [[Ian Elliott]], [[Stuart Harwood]], [[Charles Pickess]], [[Mike Stevens]], [[Brian Gilman]], [[Nick Hobbs]] (TCH 16)
* Housewives - [[Sheila Power]], [[Sylvia Lane]], [[Eve Aubrey]] (TCH 16)
* Coach Driver - [[Stanley Hollingsworth]] (TCH 16)
* Motorcyclist - [[Roy Street]] (TCH 16)
* UNIT Soldier - [[Les Conrad]] (TCH 16)
* Stunt Double for Doctor Who - [[Terry Walsh]] (TCH 16)
* Stuntmen/UNIT Soldiers - [[Derek Ware]], [[Stuart Fell]] (TCH 16)


==DVD, Video and Other Releases==
== Crew ==
===VHS Release===
* [[Writer]] - [[Robert Holmes]]
*Released as a recolourised edition based on black and white and colour source material in the UK April [[1993]] and Australia/New Zealand June [[1993]] (BBC catalog #4957), US/Canada June [[1995]] (WHV catalog #E1276) in episodic format.
* [[Doctor Who theme|Title Music]] - [[Ron Grainer]] and [[BBC Radiophonic Workshop]]
:*This release was part of the 30th Anniversary celebrations releases.
* [[Incidental Music]] - [[Dudley Simpson]]
*This was a color restored version of the story completed by the [[Doctor Who Restoration Team]].
* Circus Sequences by Courtesy of [[Robert Brothers]]
* [[Film Cameraman]] - [[John Baker (cameraman)|John Baker]]
* [[Film Editor]] - [[Geoffrey Botterill]]
* [[Visual Effects]] - [[Michael John Harris]]
* [[Costumes]] - [[Ken Trew]]
* [[Make-up]] - [[Jan Harrison]]
* [[Studio lighting|Lighting]] - [[Eric Monk]]
* [[Studio sound|Sound]] - [[Colin Dixon]]
* [[Special sounds|Special Sound]] - [[Brian Hodgson]] and [[BBC Radiophonic Workshop]]
* [[Script Editor]] - [[Terrance Dicks]]
* [[Designer (crew)|Designer]] - [[Ian Watson]]
* [[Director (crew)|Director]] - [[Barry Letts]] (uncredited)
* [[Producer]] - Barry Letts
* Action by [[HAVOC (stunt team)|HAVOC]]


==Novelisation==
=== Uncredited crew ===
[[Image:1TerrorAutons.jpg|right|75px]]
* [[Grams operator|Grams Operator]] - [[Linton Howell Hughes]] ([[INFO]]: ''Terror of the Autons'')
:''Main article: [[Doctor Who and the Terror of the Autons]]''
* [[Facilities booker|Facilities Booker]] - [[Jennie Betts]] ([[INFO]]: ''Terror of the Autons'')
* [[Artists booker|Artists Booker]] - [[Sybil Cave]] ([[INFO]]: ''Terror of the Autons'')
* [[Visual effects assistant|Effects Assistants]] - [[Peter Pegrum]], [[Peter Logan]] ([[INFO]]: ''Terror of the Autons'')
* [[Inlay operator|Inlay Operators]] - [[Alan Rixon]], [[John McPherson]] ([[INFO]]: ''Terror of the Autons'')
* [[Technical manager|Technical Managers]] - [[Ray Hider]], [[Graham Sothcott|Graham Southcott]] ([[INFO]]: ''Terror of the Autons'')
* [[Vision Mixer]] - [[Shirley Coward]] ([[INFO]]: ''Terror of the Autons'')
* [[Props buyer|Props Buyer]] - [[Maurice Watson]] ([[INFO]]: ''Terror of the Autons'')
* [[Production secretary|Production Secretary]] - [[Sarah Newman]] ([[INFO]]: ''Terror of the Autons'')
* [[Floor assistant|Floor Assistant]] - [[Edward Pugh]] ([[INFO]]: ''Terror of the Autons'')
* [[Pre-production secretary|Pre-Production Secretary]] - [[Penny Forster]] ([[INFO]]: ''Terror of the Autons'')


*Novelised as ''[[Doctor Who and the Terror of the Autons]]'' in [[1974]] by [[Terrance Dicks]].
== Worldbuilding ==
[[File:Terroroftheautons title.jpg|thumb|The Doctor with Jo and Mike.]]
* The Doctor uses the term "[[Touché]]".
* The Doctor sings "[[I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire]]".
* The [[Lamadine]]s are a species with nine opposable digits who pioneered [[steady state micro welding]].
* [[The Master's TARDIS]] is disguised as a [[horse box]].
* Jo's uncle at the [[United Nations]] in New York pulled some strings to get her a job with [[UNIT]].
* The [[tea lady]] is one of the few people allowed in the Doctor's lab.
* The Master's degree in [[cosmic science]] was of a higher class than the Doctor's.
* The Master's TARDIS is described by the Doctor as being a Mark II.


==External Links==
== Story notes ==
*{{bbcepguideclassic|terrorautons/|Terror of the Autons}}
* This story is notable for not giving a screen credit to its director. It was in fact directed by the show's then producer, [[Barry Letts]], but BBC staff regulations in the 1970s prohibited a staff producer from also receiving a screen credit for directing. This was one of the ways in which producers were discouraged from engaging themselves to direct the programmes they produced, as this was potentially open to abuse. Letts obtained special permission from his boss, the Head of Series and Serials, to direct one story each season (because, obviously, he was being paid twice on each such episode: once as its producer, and a second fee as its director).
*{{outpostgallifrey|3e|Terror of the Autons}}
* This story had the working title ''The Spray of Death''. It was changed when it was pointed out that the plot element of the plastic flowers was not introduced until the third episode.
*{{dwrefguide|who_3e.htm|Terror of the Autons}}
* There was originally a sequence in episode three where an unsuspecting policeman stumbles upon the Auton coach and is murdered after discovering that the Daffodil Men aren't human. [[Bill McGuirk]], who played the unfortunate constable, was still listed in the credits, despite all of his material winding up on the cutting room floor.
*{{briefhistory|serials/eee.html|Terror of the Autons}}
* The ''[[Radio Times]]'' programme listing for episode one was accompanied by a black-and-white photograph labelled "DOCTOR WHO in The Terror of The Autons" showing the Doctor demonstrating his steady-state micro-welding equipment to the Brigadier, with the accompanying caption "Old allies — Brigadier and Doctor — meet an old enemy: 5.15". ''(original published text)'' That for episode two was accompanied by a black-and-white photograph labelled "DOCTOR WHO in The Terror of The Autons" showing Jo being rescued from the angry circus mob by two policemen, with the accompanying caption "Jo Grant finds it's a tough life as the Doctor's assistant: 5.15". ''(original published text)''
*{{locguide|terroroftheautons|Terror of the Autons}}
* [[Terry Walsh]] (Auton Policeman) is uncredited on-screen for episode two, but is credited as "Policeman" in ''Radio Times''.
*[http://www.eofftv.com/episodes/d/doctor_who/3rd_doctor/terror_of_the_autons_main.htm '''Terror of the Autons''' entry at Encyclopedia of Fantastic Film and Television]
* In episodes one and two, [[Jon Pertwee]] is credited as "Doctor Who", while in episodes three and four, he is credited as "Dr. Who".
* When filming the Doctor and Jo's escape from the Autons in the quarry in episode three, one of the cars accidentally rammed into stuntman [[Terry Walsh]] (who was playing one of the Auton policemen) and knocked him off the top of the hill he was standing on. However, because he was able to stand up and continue the scene immediately, and due to the resulting fall being so spectacular, the incident was retained in the finished episode. This was the car which appeared to be driven at the Auton by [[Richard Franklin]] (Captain Yates), but for the crucial shot of the impact another of the stuntmen was actually driving it: he was supposed to just miss Walsh, but slightly mistimed the stunt.
** This differs from the account given by Barry Letts in the DVD commentary. He claimed that Walsh being hit by the car and falling down the hill was planned. He also added that Walsh wasn't initially supposed to do that particular stunt but pleaded with Letts to allow him to do it, even though he knew he wouldn't be paid any extra for doing it.
* In the scene where the Troll Doll attacks Jo, [[Barry Letts]] had intended to film a shot of the doll running across the workbench. However [[Tommy Reynolds]] passed out due to the intense heat of being in the costume and so this idea had to be abandoned.
* When [[Michael Wisher]] (Rex Farrel) "died" in episode four, his motionlessness was so convincing that the crew briefly wondered if the heat of the mask he was wearing had made him pass out. ([[DWM 311]])
* While filming the Doctor and Jo's escape from the Auton policemen in the quarry, on location, which was virtually [[Katy Manning]]'s first scene in her first ever ''Doctor Who'' serial (all the location filming was carried out weeks before the studio scenes were recorded), the short-sighted Katy tripped and sprained her ankle. Production assistant [[Nicholas John]] took her to hospital, and joked about the producer having to replace her. Manning took this seriously and when [[Jon Pertwee]] found out he told off John for upsetting his new co-star. (DWM 311)
* [[Nicholas Courtney]] suffered a sudden illness — an attack of depression — during filming, so his dialogue was rewritten to reduce the Brigadier's involvement. A double stood in for Courtney on location, with filming arranged so the Brigadier was either seen only from behind, obscured by another character or strategically out of camera shot. (There is a scene in the finished version of episode three where Courtney's double is clearly shown to be wearing non-military white socks.) Fortunately, Courtney was able to return to filming within a few days. (DWM 311)
* [[Barry Letts]] remarked in the [[DVD]] commentary that, following the cliffhanger where the Doctor and Jo discover the policemen who saved them are Autons, he received a letter of complaint from Scotland Yard.
* [[Hayden Jones]] (Auton Voice), who is credited on-screen as Haydn Jones, was originally hired to do the alien voices and play the telephone mechanic. However, after he won the larger role of [[Lenny Vosper]] in [[The Mind of Evil (TV story)|the next serial]], the part of the mechanic was recast with [[Norman Stanley]]. (DWM 311)
* When we see Farrell Senior and Mrs. Farrell at their home in episode two, before the killer doll attack, part of the set furnishings for their sitting room includes a famous window (the ''round'' window) borrowed from the contemporary BBC television children's series ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Play_School_(British_TV_series) Play School]'' (1964-1988).
* In the original script, the Master's bomb went off when the Doctor tried to open the box by remote control. [[Terrance Dicks]] reworked it to make Jo more prominent.
* Initially, the troll dolls played a much greater role in the story's climax, and explained the Master's interest in the circus, which would have been used to distribute the toys.
* Originally, it was the Brigadier who was strangled by the phone cord, as he tried to tell the police the truth about the troll dolls.
* In the original script, the daffodils (and the troll dolls) would be animated when the temperature reached a certain level — a level which would be obtained thanks to a fortuitous oncoming heat wave in Britain. Feeling that this made the story's setting illogical — it would make more sense for the Master to carry out his plan in a tropical locale — it was decided to replace this with a broadcast activation signal.
* The Master originally used an Auton disguised as himself as a decoy in the climax.
* The story originally ended with the Doctor avowing that the Master would stay on Earth "until I destroy him. Or until he destroys me". The BBC's Head of Serials [[Ronnie Marsh]] objected to this, as it made the Doctor seem too bloodthirsty. So it was changed to the Doctor saying that he's looking forward to their next encounter — which makes him seem callous, considering the carnage.
* [[Robert Holmes]] claimed that the basics for the serial were all around him — a detergent company was giving away flowers, he remembered warnings about plastic bags killing children, and plastic chairs and ugly troll dolls were all the rage.
* [[Barry Letts]] requested that the sequence where Yates yells to the Doctor, "We've got him now!", be reshot because [[Richard Franklin]]'s performance was too over-the-top. Franklin was grateful for this.
* A line cut from the script explained that the Master had been helped to escape imprisonment.
* [[Robert Holmes]] was reluctant to write the serial, as he disliked reusing old monsters, preferring to create a new idea for each story.
* The scene where the Autons pursue the Doctor and Jo in a quarry was originally meant to take place in a woodland environment.
* [[Terrance Dicks]] added the scenewhere the Master animates an Auton because the title meant that an Auton needed to appear somewhere in the first episode.
* The Time Lord originally explained to the Doctor that the Master had been helped to escape imprisonment.
* [[Katy Manning]] revealed on ''[[Behind the Sofa (documentary series)|Behind the Sofa]]'' that as an animal lover, she was upset filming at the circus and wanted to liberate all the animals.


=== Ratings ===
* Episode one - 7.3 million viewers
* Episode two - 8.0 million viewers
* Episode three - 8.1 million viewers
* Episode four - 8.4 million viewers


{{season 8}}
=== Myths ===
* The production team had initially envisioned the new regular villain for the series as a female character, possibly called the Controller, to be played by [[Susan Jameson]]. ''(The role was always envisaged as a male character called the Master, and Roger Delgado was the only actor considered for it.)''
* A fan myth that the Doctor calls the Master by his real name (i.e. a Gallifreyan name) arose due to a remark made by the Doctor in episode one. But in fact what he says to the Time Lord, played by David Garth, is "that jackanapes", which is an antiquated term of abuse. These instances of bowdlerised language in the 1963-1989 series reflect the broadcasting and timeslot norms of the era. Younger viewers who are used to looser standards of acceptable language in family-friendly shows often find this language to be a source of humour or as something to be ridiculed.


=== Filming locations ===
* Lee Valley Ice Centre, Leyton, London (Location of Rossini's circus)
* Queen's Wharf, Hammersmith, London (Exterior location of the Master's bomb exploding outside UNIT lab, in water)
* St. Peter's Court, Chalfont St. Peter, Buckinghamshire
* Hodgemoor Woods, Chalfont St. Giles, Buckinghamshire
* Church Lane car park, Chalfont St. Peter, Buckinghamshire
* Zouches Farm Relay Station, Caddington, Bedfordshire (Location used for exterior of [[Beacon Hill Research Establishment]])
* Totternhoe Lime and Stone Co Ltd, Totternhoe, Dunstable, Bedfordshire (The quarry the Doctor and Jo are taken to)
* Ecomould (formerly Thermo Plastics Ltd), Luton Road, Dunstable, Bedfordshire (Farrel's plastics factory)
* [[BBC Television Centre]] (Studio 8 and 6), [[Shepherd's Bush]], [[London]]


=== Production errors ===
{{discontinuity}}
* All elements containing [[CSO]] have a lot of flaring/fuzzing around the edges of the CSO image (a museum, the outside of a radio telescope, a lunchbox interior, a lab, the interior of two cars and the coach, a phone box, a kitchen, a quarry, and everywhere the killer doll goes). This was a limitation of the CSO technology at the time.
* Near the end of episode one, when Jo grabs the padlock on the zinc box as she attempts to find a key that will open it, the lock is obviously unlocked and slips open several times before Jo acknowledges her success.
* Near the beginning of episode three, the actual interior of the TARDIS police box prop can be clearly seen from the outside.
* In episode four, when the Doctor and Jo are being held prisoners on the coach, one of the Auton's hands is missing a white glove and, as that Auton picks up the Doctor, a human hand is clearly visible for a few seconds.
* In episode four, as Katy Manning walks around the bench with the deadly daffodil on, a production assistant's hand is seen placing a clear plastic face mask on the bench for her to grab and cover her mouth with, for the next shot showing Jo suffocating.
* All four episodes contain errors in the closing title credits. Rex Farrel's surname is consistently spelled "Farrel" (with one 'l') on all episodes, but both of his parents (played by Barbara Leake and Stephen Jack) have their surname spelled differently throughout (with two 'l's).


{{Master stories}}
=== Updated Special Effects ===
[[File:Nestene 2021 design.jpg|thumb|right|The 2021 design of the [[Nestene Consciousness]].]]
The story received an '''Updated Special Effects''' version in the [[8 March (releases)|8 March]] [[2021 (releases)|2021]] release of [[Season 8 (Doctor Who 1963)|Season 8]] in ''[[The Collection]]''. The effects were done by [[Chris Petts]] and [[Sally Clayton]].{{Store variant data|variant=Updated Special Effects|release date =8 March 2021}}


[[Category:Third Doctor episodes]]
==== Deviations from original serial ====
[[Category:The Master episodes]]
* Various CSO backgrounds were updated.
[[Category:UNIT episodes]]
* The doll was replaced with a CGI duplicate.
[[Category:Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart episodes]]
* The Master's eyes are more visible in the scene where he takes off his disguise.
* A new design of the [[Nestene Consciousness]] appears at the end of the story.
 
== Continuity ==
* The Doctor tells Jo that Captain Yates had the job of clearing up the mess caused by the Autons during their previous invasion. ([[TV]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]'')
* The story is set, in part, in the fictional town of [[Tarminster]]. In [[TV]]: ''[[The Mark of the Berserker (TV story)|The Mark of the Berserker]]'', [[Sarah Jane Smith]] visits a hospital in the same town. The town is also mentioned on the [[Harold Saxon]] promotional website, which states that [[Lucy Saxon's father]] was Lord Cole of Tarminster.
* The Nestene Consciousness and the Autons appeared previously in [[TV]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]'' and next again in [[TV]]: ''[[Rose (TV story)|Rose]]''. The Nestene Consciousness also appeared in other media in [[PROSE]]: ''[[Synthespians™ (novel)|Synthespians™]]'' and [[PROSE]]: ''[[Business Unusual (novel)|Business Unusual]]''. The Autons also appear in [[AUDIO]]: ''[[Brave New Town (audio story)|Brave New Town]]'' and [[TV]]: ''[[The Pandorica Opens (TV story)|The Pandorica Opens]]''.
* Part of the Master and the Doctor's relationship is explored in [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Dark Path (novel)|The Dark Path]]''.
* The [[Fourth Doctor]] and {{ainley}} later confront one another on top of another [[Pharos Project|radio telescope]] on [[1 March]] [[1981]]. The Doctor slipped and fell, resulting in [[Fourth Doctor's regeneration|his regeneration]] into his [[Fifth Doctor|fifth incarnation]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Logopolis (TV story)|Logopolis]]'')
* A [[Northern Ireland|Northern Irish]] UNIT soldier named [[Francis Cleary]] was assigned to guard the Master's TARDIS at the circus. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Who Killed Kennedy (novel)|Who Killed Kennedy]]'')
* A “Mister Campbell” is the unseen head of UNIT’s Scientific Supplies Section. Jo, at one point, calls him a “jolly Scotsman” while requisitioning equipment for the Doctor. The latter complains to the Brigadier when he discovers that UNIT doesn’t have a “scanning molecular structure analyser “ in stock.
* Jo was 19 ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Other Woman (audio story)|The Other Woman]]'') or 21 ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Carpenter Butterfly Baronet (short story)|/Carpenter/Butterfly/Baronet]]'') when she met the Doctor.
* The Master claimed to be [[Rhodesia]]n under his false identity of Colonel Masters. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Face of the Enemy (novel)|The Face of the Enemy]]'')
* The Doctor claims Jo has ruined "three months of work" when she squirts the dematerialisation circuit with a fire extinguisher, implying it's been three months since he arrived on Earth and has been trying to repair the TARDIS. ([[TV]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]'') However, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Carpenter Butterfly Baronet (short story)|/Carpenter/Butterfly/Baronet]]'') suggests that Jo was born in 1951 and joined UNIT in 1972 at the age of twenty one ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Sacrifice of Jo Grant (audio story)|The Sacrifice of Jo Grant]]'') after calling in a favour from her uncle, implying the Doctor has been on Earth for almost two years at the occurrence of this episode, while ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Other Woman (audio story)|The Other Woman]]'') says she was nineteen and fits with the Doctor's "three months" comment, placing the episode sometime in 1970.
 
== Comic strip adaptation ==
* The opening scenes of episode one were adapted as a comic strip published in ''Doctor Who Magazine'' in September 1990, which was published as part of a larger article on the production of the story.
 
== Home video releases ==
=== DVD release ===
This story was released as ''Doctor Who: Terror of the Autons''
 
Released:
* Region 2: 9th May 2011
* Region 1: 10th May 2011
* Region 4: 2nd June 2011
 
===== Special features =====
* Commentary by [[Katy Manning]] ([[Jo Grant]]), [[Nicholas Courtney]] ([[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|The Brigadier]]), and Producer/Director [[Barry Letts]]
* ''[[Life on Earth (documentary)|Life on Earth]]'' - Actors Katy Manning and [[Richard Franklin]] ([[Mike Yates|Yates]]) recount the production of ''Terror of the Autons'' with the help of [[Jon Pertwee]] (through an archive interview), Script Editor [[Terrance Dicks]] and Producer Barry Letts, along with new series Producer [[Phil Collinson]]
* ''[[The Doctor's Moriarty (documentary)|The Doctor's Moriarty]]'' - A look at one of [[the Doctor]]'s oldest enemies, [[the Master]]
* ''[[Plastic Fantastic (documentary)|Plastic Fantastic]]'' - How did the writers of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' take something as everyday as plastic and turn it against us?
* ''[[Radio Times]]'' listings (DVD-ROM)
* Promotional material for ''Doctor Who'' Sugar Smacks and [[Nestlé]] products
* Production information subtitles
* Photo gallery
* Coming soon trailer - ''[[Frontios (TV story)|Frontios]]''
 
Notes:
* It is only available in the UK and Australia as part of the Mannequin Mania box set, released with a special edition of ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]''.
 
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true">
Terror.jpg|DVD Region 2 UK cover
Terror of the autons us dvd.jpg|DVD Region 1 US cover
Terror of the Autons Australian DVD cover.jpg|DVD Region 4 Australian cover
Bbcdvd119-uk.jpg|Mannequin Mania Region 2 UK cover
Mannequin Mania.jpg|Mannequin Mania Region 4 Australian cover
File:The Master (box set).jpg|thumb|The Master Box-Set
</gallery>It was released as [[DWDVDF 101|issue 101]] of ''[[Doctor Who DVD Files]]''.
 
=== Digital releases ===
This story is available:
* in [[iTunes]] stores ([[Australia]], [[Canada]], [[France]], [[Germany]], [[UK]] and [[US]]) as part of the ''Doctor Who'' ('''not''' ''Doctor Who: The Classic Series'') collection ''Monsters: The Master'', which additionally includes both parts of the story ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]'';
* in non-continental iTunes stores (Australia, Canada, UK and US) as a stand-alone season of ''Doctor Who: The Classic Series'';
* on [[Amazon (service)|Amazon Video]] (UK) as Season 55 of ''Doctor Who (Classic)'' series;
* for streaming through [[BritBox]] (Canada and US) as part of Season 8 of ''Classic Doctor Who''.
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true">
File:iTunes_Terror_of_the_Autons_cover.jpg|''Terror of the Autons'' iTunes cover
File:iTunes_Monsters_Master_cover.jpg|''Monsters: The Master'' collection iTunes cover
</gallery>
 
=== Video releases ===
* This story was released in colour, in episodic format, by combining the surviving source materials (a professional black-and-white film recording and an off-air NTSC colour video recording); it was released in the UK in April [[1993 (releases)|1993]], in Australia/New Zealand in June [[1993 (releases)|1993]] (BBC catalogue #4957), and in USA/Canada in June [[1995 (releases)|1995]] (WHV catalogue #E1276).
:* This release was part of the 30th anniversary celebration releases.
* This was a restored colour version of the story, created by the [[Doctor Who Restoration Team]] recombining the BBC library's black-and-white telerecording with the colour signal from a non-professional NTSC off-air recording made in the USA by a fan.<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true">
File:Terror of the Autons VHS UK cover.jpg|VHS UK cover
File:Terror of the Autons VHS Australian cover.jpg|VHS Australian cover
File:Terror of the Autons VHS US cover.jpg|VHS US cover
</gallery>
 
== External links ==
* {{bbcepguideclassic|terrorautons/|Terror of the Autons}}
* {{radiotimes|2009-10-13/terror-of-the-autons|Terror of the Autons}}
{{dwcast}}
{{dwrefguide|who_3e.htm|Terror of the Autons}}
* {{briefhistory|serials/eee.html|Terror of the Autons}}
* {{locguide|terroroftheautons|Terror of the Autons}}
* [http://www.eofftv.com/episodes/d/doctor_who/3rd_doctor/terror_of_the_autons_main.htm '''Terror of the Autons''' entry at Encyclopedia of Fantastic Film and Television]
{{DWTV}}
{{Revised editions of Doctor Who TV stories}}
{{The Master (TotA) stories}}
{{Auton stories}}
{{UNIT stories}}
{{TitleSort}}
[[fr:Terror of the Autons]]
[[ro:Terror of the Autons]]
[[ru:Террор автонов]]
 
[[Category:Doctor Who (1963) television stories]]
[[Category:Four part serials]]
[[Category:The Master (Terror of the Autons) television stories]]
[[Category:Nestene/Auton television stories]]
[[Category:Season 8 stories]]
[[Category:Stories set in England]]
[[Category:Stories set in England]]
[[Category:1971 television stories]]
[[Category:Stories set in the 20th century]]
[[Category:Time Lord television stories]]
[[Category:UNIT television stories]]
[[Category:The Monster Collection: The Master stories]]

Latest revision as of 20:03, 3 November 2024

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Terror of the Autons was the first serial of season 8 of Doctor Who. The story featured the introductions of Katy Manning as Jo Grant, Richard Franklin as Captain Mike Yates and Roger Delgado as the Master, the latter becoming a very prominent character in Doctor Who mythos.

It was notable for being a "gentle reboot" of the Pertwee era, offering a number of elements which would remain prevalent for the next three seasons. Jo became the Doctor's new companion, while the Master made himself the most persistent archenemy of the Doctor for the remainder of this season and a major antagonist long after his first appearance.

Furthermore, it was the first story in which John Levene, playing Sergeant John Benton, was given an annual contract, rather than employment as a day player. It also introduced what became UNIT's standard khaki uniforms, the replacements for the custom-made beige uniforms of season 7 which Barry Letts disparagingly called the "chocolates", as well as a new UNIT laboratory which was used by the Third Doctor until the end of his exile.

It also featured the first return of the Autons since their debut in season 7 and the first direct contact between the Doctor and his people since the end of season 6. It was one of very few stories — and the first since The Tomb of the Cybermen in 1967 — in which each new episode drew more viewers than the one that had preceded it.

The Autons and the Nestene Consciousness did not appear on television again until Rose, the first episode of the revived series, in 2005.

Synopsis[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Earth is endangered by a renegade Time Lord known as the Master, who steals a dormant Nestene energy unit from a museum. He reactivates it using the facilities of a radio telescope, then uses his hypnotic abilities to take control of a small plastics manufacturer, Farrel Autoplastics, where he organises the production of deadly Auton artefacts, including plastic dolls, chairs and daffodils.

The Master has an evil scheme to destroy humanity and to silence his old foe, the Doctor, forever. He plans to awaken the awesome power of the Nestenes, a ruthlessly aggressive alien life form.

The Nestenes can control anything made of plastic, including killer Autons: plastic mannequins, faceless but possessing a shared consciousness. The Autons form an army of invasion, easily controlled by the Master himself. This is the terrible threat facing Earth — the terror of the Autons.

Aided by the Brigadier, and by new companion Jo Grant, only the Third Doctor can combat their evil power, but first he must defeat the Master...

Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]

Episode one[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Master's TARDIS arrives on Earth...

International Circus manager Luigi Rossini, real name Lew Russell, witnesses a horsebox materialise out of thin air in a field near his Big Top. Out steps the Master, who quickly overpowers him by hypnosis. He enlists Rossini to help him steal a Nestene energy unit left over from the previous invasion from the National Space Museum, where it is on display as part of an exhibition.

Liz Shaw has returned to Cambridge, having decided the Doctor doesn't really need her, so the Brigadier assigns UNIT trainee Josephine Grant as the Time Lord's new assistant. She immediately makes a bad first impression, by extinguishing a small fire on the Doctor's lab bench, thereby ruining three months work on his malfunctioning dematerialisation circuit. Dismayed at her lack of qualifications, he insists that the Brigadier reassign her. The Brigadier concedes, but only if the Doctor will tell her himself. The Doctor attempts to fire her, but faced with Jo's kindly and innocent disposition, he is unable to bring himself to do so.

The Master infiltrates a deep space radio telescope at Beacon Hill, overpowering Professor Philips and his assistant, Goodge. He connects the stolen energy unit to the telescope and uses it to channel power from the Nestene Consciousness in space into the surviving unit.

Investigating the theft of the energy unit and the disappearance of the scientists, the Doctor arrives at the radio telescope. Outside the control tower, a Time Lord arrives, "inconspicuously" dressed as a businessman in a discreet suit and bowler hat, complete with umbrella, but hovering in mid-air. He warns the Doctor of the Master's arrival on Earth and alerts him to a booby trap inside the door he is about to open. His warning delivered, the Time Lord vanishes, briefly reappearing to wish the Doctor good luck. Disarming the trap, the Doctor opens Goodge's lunchbox, only to find his shrunken corpse inside.

At a small plastics factory, production manager James McDermott confronts the owner, young Rex Farrel, about the mysterious Colonel Masters and the new line of products he has commissioned them to manufacture which are against the factory's normal protocols. Farrel goes looking for the colonel and finds him in the process of activating Autons.

The Doctor realises that the Master is in league with the Nestenes, and the Brigadier (based on previous experience of their methods) obtains a list of nearby plastics factories. Jo is assigned to investigate some of these, including Farrel Autoplastics. On arrival, she is quickly discovered by the Master and hypnotised. She returns to UNIT with a padlocked crate that apparently once contained the Nestene energy unit, but as she begins to unlock it, the Doctor realises it's a bomb and shouts for Yates and Benton to stop her. But Jo is determined to open it...

Episode two[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Doctor throws the crate through the window, into the canal, where it explodes harmlessly.

The Master's Nestene chair suffocates McDermott.

At the plastics factory, McDermott confronts the Master about his interference with production. The Master invites him to sit in one of their new products, a self-inflating plastic chair, which comes alive, collapses and suffocates the hapless McDermott. Rex Farrel is impressed with its effectiveness, but the Master realises that they should explore smaller products — noting that a simpler plastic device could kill humans with more efficiency.

At UNIT headquarters, the Doctor frees Jo from the Master's control. She can remember very little about what happened to her, but the Doctor realises the bomb must have been the work of the Master. However, Jo cannot even recall at which factory she met him, due to the amnesia induced by the post-hypnotic suggestion.

The factory's retired owner, the elder Mr. Farrel, is very upset over the death of Mr McDermott, who Rex claims had suddenly died while trying out the plastic chair; and at the presence of "Colonel Masters". When an attempt at hypnotising Farrel Senior fails, the Master surreptitiously turns his car's heater to its hottest setting, then shows Farrel a new sample product: a demonic-looking plastic doll, and flings it on the back seat as Farrel leaves. The doll is activated by heat and suddenly comes to life as the heater warms the car's interior, but Farrel takes notice of the heat and switches it off; the doll becomes dormant again. However, at his home Farrel leaves the doll near a radiator. The doll comes to life a second time and kills him, lunging at his throat with its fangs. His wife screams when she happens upon his dead body.

Sergeant Benton locates the missing Professor Philips' car, and the subsequent enquiries lead UNIT to Rossini's circus. The Doctor insists on investigating it personally, despite the Brigadier's offer of an escort. Jo is ordered to remain at HQ. However, eager to prove she's not as useless as advertised, Jo hides in Bessie, the Doctor's vintage car, and so accompanies him without his knowledge. At the circus, the Doctor investigates the Master's TARDIS, which is disguised as a horsebox, but he is quickly captured by Rossini; the Master left Professor Philips at the circus to lure the Doctor there. Meanwhile, trying to find the Doctor, Jo sees Professor Philips. She telephones the Brigadier at HQ, who tells her to stay put until he arrives. But Jo again disobeys and goes to find the Doctor. The circus strongman, Tony, is menacing him inside a trailer, but Jo sneaks into the trailer and knocks Tony out by shattering a vase on his head. The Doctor is upset that Jo didn't listen to him, but she points out that he needed her to rescue him.

Professor Philips, under the Master's hypnosis, enters, holding a grenade. The Doctor attempts to reason with him, knowing Philips is still on some level trying to resist doing something against his nature. Philips breaks loose from the trance and tries to abandon the grenade outside, but it detonates, killing him.

The Doctor and Jo find the Master's TARDIS (still disguised as a horsebox) but are confronted by an angry mob of circus employees led by Rossini. Rossini furiously accuses the Doctor of robbing the caravan and killing one of the circus hands with a bomb. He clubs the Doctor over the head before he can react, and the mob swarm toward him and Jo. They are rescued by an arriving police car. The Brigadier and Captain Yates arrive at the circus moments later, see what is happening, and follow them. But instead of being taken back to town, the Doctor and Jo arrive in a remote quarry. The Doctor, suspicions aroused, asks one of the officers to show his warrant card but is met with blank eyes. He peels off a face mask and reveals that the "policemen" are Autons in disguise...

Episode three[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Doctor struggles with the two Autons, causing the car to crash. He and Jo escape from the car, only to be relentlessly hunted through the quarry by the Autons. But the Brigadier and Captain Yates arrive and rescue them.

An annoyed Doctor learns his TARDIS is staying grounded.

Back at his lab, the Doctor replaces his non-functional dematerialisation circuit with the one he has stolen from the Master's TARDIS, but they are incompatible. The Doctor's frustration abates when he realises that, as long as he has the Master's circuit, the Master, too, is trapped on Earth.

Meanwhile, the Master is pleased by the factory's latest product, a realistic-looking plastic daffodil. The Autons, now wearing enormous carnival masks and matching yellow suits as an impenetrable disguise, tour the countryside handing out thousands of these daffodils to the general public.

The Brigadier is alerted to a rash of unexplained deaths all over England. Jo's memory is jogged by the mention of Mr Farrel among the casualties. They meet his grieving widow and take away the hideous doll for examination. Meanwhile, a mysterious telephone engineer (actually the Master in disguise) replaces the cord on the Doctor's lab telephone. It seems the Doctor has simply ordered a longer flex because he paces about whilst on the phone, but the repairman's behaviour suggests otherwise.

The Doctor and the Brigadier investigate the now-abandoned plastics factory and discover a leftover plastic daffodil (and narrowly elude a killer Auton). Meanwhile, Jo and Captain Yates accidentally reactivate the doll with the heat from the Doctor's Bunsen burner, which they have borrowed to make cocoa. The doll attacks Jo, but Yates shoots it to pieces with his sidearm.

The Master telephones the Doctor from a call box, and the Doctor asks what he wants. The Master has simply called to say goodbye. He activates a signal device, and the Doctor's newly installed plastic telephone cord comes to life. It wraps itself around his throat and starts squeezing the life out of him...

Episode four[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Doctor and Jo witness the daffodil come alive.

The Brigadier hears the Doctor shouting for help and pulls the phone cable from the wall, cutting off the signal. The Doctor reminds the Brigadier that the Nestenes can put life into anything made of plastic. Then, examining the daffodil, the Doctor and Jo accidentally discover that it's activated by radio waves. The daffodil sprays an asphyxiating plastic film over Jo's nose and mouth, but the Doctor removes it in time to prevent suffocation. They realise the daffodils are to be activated by a signal from the Radio Telescope; the wave of unexplained deaths were shortwave radio users who activated the daffodils prematurely. Although he now knows the cause of the deaths, the Doctor is puzzled by the fact that plastic film was not found on any of the bodies. On a hunch, he breathes hard on the plastic, and it shortly dissolves away into nothing. The carbon dioxide expelled from the dying victim's lungs acted to remove the evidence of murder. Moments later, a voice greets the Doctor from the lab stairwell. He turns around to face his old enemy.

The Master trains his Tissue Compression Eliminator on the Doctor, ready to shrink him to death. The Doctor shows that he is holding the Master's dematerialisation circuit, which will be destroyed if he fires. Jo breaks the stalemate when she blurts out that UNIT has identified the Autons' whereabouts and are planning an airstrike. The Master alters his plan, kidnapping them and taking them to the quarry as hostages, to prevent the airstrike. The Brigadier and Benton see this and cancel the strike just in time. But Jo now impresses the Doctor with her skills at escapology.

While the Autons are holding off a UNIT force led by Yates and Benton. On his way up to the control room, the Master pushes a scientist off the railing to his death. The Doctor and the Brigadier confront the Master in the radio telescope control room where he hopes to open a channel for the Nestene invasion force. But the Doctor convinces the Master that he'll be expendable once the Nestenes arrive. Together they reverse the radio signal, expelling the force into deep space. With the signal cut off, the Autons collapse. Unfortunately, the Doctor and the Brigadier are overcome by feedback, and when they recover the Master has fled.

The Master escapes to the coach the Autons have been using. Cornered by UNIT troops, he emerges with his hands up. The Doctor warns the Brigadier the untrustworthy Master is trying to trick them. He feints a surrender, but draws his tissue compression eliminator. Captain Yates shoots him dead. The dubious Doctor examines the body and reveals it is actually Rex Farrel, disguised by a latex facemask. He was hypnotised to be a decoy and callously thrown to the wolves. The real Master escapes in the coach.

UNIT later find the abandoned coach, but of the Master there is no sign. Jo suggests he has left Earth. But the Doctor has outsmarted him, having actually handed him the faulty dematerialisation circuit from the Doctor's own TARDIS, keeping the Master's. Now that both he and the Master are stranded on Earth, the Doctor admits that he will rather be looking forward to their next meeting.

Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]

Uncredited cast[[edit] | [edit source]]

Crew[[edit] | [edit source]]

Uncredited crew[[edit] | [edit source]]

Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Doctor with Jo and Mike.

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

  • This story is notable for not giving a screen credit to its director. It was in fact directed by the show's then producer, Barry Letts, but BBC staff regulations in the 1970s prohibited a staff producer from also receiving a screen credit for directing. This was one of the ways in which producers were discouraged from engaging themselves to direct the programmes they produced, as this was potentially open to abuse. Letts obtained special permission from his boss, the Head of Series and Serials, to direct one story each season (because, obviously, he was being paid twice on each such episode: once as its producer, and a second fee as its director).
  • This story had the working title The Spray of Death. It was changed when it was pointed out that the plot element of the plastic flowers was not introduced until the third episode.
  • There was originally a sequence in episode three where an unsuspecting policeman stumbles upon the Auton coach and is murdered after discovering that the Daffodil Men aren't human. Bill McGuirk, who played the unfortunate constable, was still listed in the credits, despite all of his material winding up on the cutting room floor.
  • The Radio Times programme listing for episode one was accompanied by a black-and-white photograph labelled "DOCTOR WHO in The Terror of The Autons" showing the Doctor demonstrating his steady-state micro-welding equipment to the Brigadier, with the accompanying caption "Old allies — Brigadier and Doctor — meet an old enemy: 5.15". (original published text) That for episode two was accompanied by a black-and-white photograph labelled "DOCTOR WHO in The Terror of The Autons" showing Jo being rescued from the angry circus mob by two policemen, with the accompanying caption "Jo Grant finds it's a tough life as the Doctor's assistant: 5.15". (original published text)
  • Terry Walsh (Auton Policeman) is uncredited on-screen for episode two, but is credited as "Policeman" in Radio Times.
  • In episodes one and two, Jon Pertwee is credited as "Doctor Who", while in episodes three and four, he is credited as "Dr. Who".
  • When filming the Doctor and Jo's escape from the Autons in the quarry in episode three, one of the cars accidentally rammed into stuntman Terry Walsh (who was playing one of the Auton policemen) and knocked him off the top of the hill he was standing on. However, because he was able to stand up and continue the scene immediately, and due to the resulting fall being so spectacular, the incident was retained in the finished episode. This was the car which appeared to be driven at the Auton by Richard Franklin (Captain Yates), but for the crucial shot of the impact another of the stuntmen was actually driving it: he was supposed to just miss Walsh, but slightly mistimed the stunt.
    • This differs from the account given by Barry Letts in the DVD commentary. He claimed that Walsh being hit by the car and falling down the hill was planned. He also added that Walsh wasn't initially supposed to do that particular stunt but pleaded with Letts to allow him to do it, even though he knew he wouldn't be paid any extra for doing it.
  • In the scene where the Troll Doll attacks Jo, Barry Letts had intended to film a shot of the doll running across the workbench. However Tommy Reynolds passed out due to the intense heat of being in the costume and so this idea had to be abandoned.
  • When Michael Wisher (Rex Farrel) "died" in episode four, his motionlessness was so convincing that the crew briefly wondered if the heat of the mask he was wearing had made him pass out. (DWM 311)
  • While filming the Doctor and Jo's escape from the Auton policemen in the quarry, on location, which was virtually Katy Manning's first scene in her first ever Doctor Who serial (all the location filming was carried out weeks before the studio scenes were recorded), the short-sighted Katy tripped and sprained her ankle. Production assistant Nicholas John took her to hospital, and joked about the producer having to replace her. Manning took this seriously and when Jon Pertwee found out he told off John for upsetting his new co-star. (DWM 311)
  • Nicholas Courtney suffered a sudden illness — an attack of depression — during filming, so his dialogue was rewritten to reduce the Brigadier's involvement. A double stood in for Courtney on location, with filming arranged so the Brigadier was either seen only from behind, obscured by another character or strategically out of camera shot. (There is a scene in the finished version of episode three where Courtney's double is clearly shown to be wearing non-military white socks.) Fortunately, Courtney was able to return to filming within a few days. (DWM 311)
  • Barry Letts remarked in the DVD commentary that, following the cliffhanger where the Doctor and Jo discover the policemen who saved them are Autons, he received a letter of complaint from Scotland Yard.
  • Hayden Jones (Auton Voice), who is credited on-screen as Haydn Jones, was originally hired to do the alien voices and play the telephone mechanic. However, after he won the larger role of Lenny Vosper in the next serial, the part of the mechanic was recast with Norman Stanley. (DWM 311)
  • When we see Farrell Senior and Mrs. Farrell at their home in episode two, before the killer doll attack, part of the set furnishings for their sitting room includes a famous window (the round window) borrowed from the contemporary BBC television children's series Play School (1964-1988).
  • In the original script, the Master's bomb went off when the Doctor tried to open the box by remote control. Terrance Dicks reworked it to make Jo more prominent.
  • Initially, the troll dolls played a much greater role in the story's climax, and explained the Master's interest in the circus, which would have been used to distribute the toys.
  • Originally, it was the Brigadier who was strangled by the phone cord, as he tried to tell the police the truth about the troll dolls.
  • In the original script, the daffodils (and the troll dolls) would be animated when the temperature reached a certain level — a level which would be obtained thanks to a fortuitous oncoming heat wave in Britain. Feeling that this made the story's setting illogical — it would make more sense for the Master to carry out his plan in a tropical locale — it was decided to replace this with a broadcast activation signal.
  • The Master originally used an Auton disguised as himself as a decoy in the climax.
  • The story originally ended with the Doctor avowing that the Master would stay on Earth "until I destroy him. Or until he destroys me". The BBC's Head of Serials Ronnie Marsh objected to this, as it made the Doctor seem too bloodthirsty. So it was changed to the Doctor saying that he's looking forward to their next encounter — which makes him seem callous, considering the carnage.
  • Robert Holmes claimed that the basics for the serial were all around him — a detergent company was giving away flowers, he remembered warnings about plastic bags killing children, and plastic chairs and ugly troll dolls were all the rage.
  • Barry Letts requested that the sequence where Yates yells to the Doctor, "We've got him now!", be reshot because Richard Franklin's performance was too over-the-top. Franklin was grateful for this.
  • A line cut from the script explained that the Master had been helped to escape imprisonment.
  • Robert Holmes was reluctant to write the serial, as he disliked reusing old monsters, preferring to create a new idea for each story.
  • The scene where the Autons pursue the Doctor and Jo in a quarry was originally meant to take place in a woodland environment.
  • Terrance Dicks added the scenewhere the Master animates an Auton because the title meant that an Auton needed to appear somewhere in the first episode.
  • The Time Lord originally explained to the Doctor that the Master had been helped to escape imprisonment.
  • Katy Manning revealed on Behind the Sofa that as an animal lover, she was upset filming at the circus and wanted to liberate all the animals.

Ratings[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Episode one - 7.3 million viewers
  • Episode two - 8.0 million viewers
  • Episode three - 8.1 million viewers
  • Episode four - 8.4 million viewers

Myths[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The production team had initially envisioned the new regular villain for the series as a female character, possibly called the Controller, to be played by Susan Jameson. (The role was always envisaged as a male character called the Master, and Roger Delgado was the only actor considered for it.)
  • A fan myth that the Doctor calls the Master by his real name (i.e. a Gallifreyan name) arose due to a remark made by the Doctor in episode one. But in fact what he says to the Time Lord, played by David Garth, is "that jackanapes", which is an antiquated term of abuse. These instances of bowdlerised language in the 1963-1989 series reflect the broadcasting and timeslot norms of the era. Younger viewers who are used to looser standards of acceptable language in family-friendly shows often find this language to be a source of humour or as something to be ridiculed.

Filming locations[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Lee Valley Ice Centre, Leyton, London (Location of Rossini's circus)
  • Queen's Wharf, Hammersmith, London (Exterior location of the Master's bomb exploding outside UNIT lab, in water)
  • St. Peter's Court, Chalfont St. Peter, Buckinghamshire
  • Hodgemoor Woods, Chalfont St. Giles, Buckinghamshire
  • Church Lane car park, Chalfont St. Peter, Buckinghamshire
  • Zouches Farm Relay Station, Caddington, Bedfordshire (Location used for exterior of Beacon Hill Research Establishment)
  • Totternhoe Lime and Stone Co Ltd, Totternhoe, Dunstable, Bedfordshire (The quarry the Doctor and Jo are taken to)
  • Ecomould (formerly Thermo Plastics Ltd), Luton Road, Dunstable, Bedfordshire (Farrel's plastics factory)
  • BBC Television Centre (Studio 8 and 6), Shepherd's Bush, London

Production errors[[edit] | [edit source]]

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.
  • All elements containing CSO have a lot of flaring/fuzzing around the edges of the CSO image (a museum, the outside of a radio telescope, a lunchbox interior, a lab, the interior of two cars and the coach, a phone box, a kitchen, a quarry, and everywhere the killer doll goes). This was a limitation of the CSO technology at the time.
  • Near the end of episode one, when Jo grabs the padlock on the zinc box as she attempts to find a key that will open it, the lock is obviously unlocked and slips open several times before Jo acknowledges her success.
  • Near the beginning of episode three, the actual interior of the TARDIS police box prop can be clearly seen from the outside.
  • In episode four, when the Doctor and Jo are being held prisoners on the coach, one of the Auton's hands is missing a white glove and, as that Auton picks up the Doctor, a human hand is clearly visible for a few seconds.
  • In episode four, as Katy Manning walks around the bench with the deadly daffodil on, a production assistant's hand is seen placing a clear plastic face mask on the bench for her to grab and cover her mouth with, for the next shot showing Jo suffocating.
  • All four episodes contain errors in the closing title credits. Rex Farrel's surname is consistently spelled "Farrel" (with one 'l') on all episodes, but both of his parents (played by Barbara Leake and Stephen Jack) have their surname spelled differently throughout (with two 'l's).

Updated Special Effects[[edit] | [edit source]]

The 2021 design of the Nestene Consciousness.

The story received an Updated Special Effects version in the 8 March 2021 release of Season 8 in The Collection. The effects were done by Chris Petts and Sally Clayton.

Deviations from original serial[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Various CSO backgrounds were updated.
  • The doll was replaced with a CGI duplicate.
  • The Master's eyes are more visible in the scene where he takes off his disguise.
  • A new design of the Nestene Consciousness appears at the end of the story.

Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]

Comic strip adaptation[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The opening scenes of episode one were adapted as a comic strip published in Doctor Who Magazine in September 1990, which was published as part of a larger article on the production of the story.

Home video releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

DVD release[[edit] | [edit source]]

This story was released as Doctor Who: Terror of the Autons

Released:

  • Region 2: 9th May 2011
  • Region 1: 10th May 2011
  • Region 4: 2nd June 2011
Special features[[edit] | [edit source]]

Notes:

  • It is only available in the UK and Australia as part of the Mannequin Mania box set, released with a special edition of Spearhead from Space.

It was released as issue 101 of Doctor Who DVD Files.

Digital releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

This story is available:

  • in iTunes stores (Australia, Canada, France, Germany, UK and US) as part of the Doctor Who (not Doctor Who: The Classic Series) collection Monsters: The Master, which additionally includes both parts of the story The End of Time;
  • in non-continental iTunes stores (Australia, Canada, UK and US) as a stand-alone season of Doctor Who: The Classic Series;
  • on Amazon Video (UK) as Season 55 of Doctor Who (Classic) series;
  • for streaming through BritBox (Canada and US) as part of Season 8 of Classic Doctor Who.

Video releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • This story was released in colour, in episodic format, by combining the surviving source materials (a professional black-and-white film recording and an off-air NTSC colour video recording); it was released in the UK in April 1993, in Australia/New Zealand in June 1993 (BBC catalogue #4957), and in USA/Canada in June 1995 (WHV catalogue #E1276).
  • This release was part of the 30th anniversary celebration releases.
  • This was a restored colour version of the story, created by the Doctor Who Restoration Team recombining the BBC library's black-and-white telerecording with the colour signal from a non-professional NTSC off-air recording made in the USA by a fan.
  • VHS UK cover

    VHS UK cover

  • VHS Australian cover

    VHS Australian cover

  • VHS US cover

    VHS US cover

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