The Sarah Jane Adventures: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary
m (Bot: Cosmetic changes)
 
(11 intermediate revisions by 10 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{retitle|''The Sarah Jane Adventures''}}
{{real world}}
{{Infobox Merchandise
|name        = ''The Sarah Jane Adventures''
|image        = Sarah Jane Adventures Logo.jpg
|aka          =
|designer    =
|publisher    = BBC Wales
|type        = TV series
|price        =
|release date = [[1 January (releases)|1 January]] [[2007 (releases)|2007]] - [[18 October (releases)|18 October]] [[2011 (releases)|2011]], [[19 April (releases)|19 April]] [[2020 (releases)|2020]] (webcast)
|trailer      =
|clip        = Sarah Jane Remembers the Doctor Invasion of the Bane The Sarah Jane Adventures
|clip2        =
|clip3        =
}}{{you may|The Sarah Jane Adventures (audio series)|n1=the BBC audio series|Sarah Jane Smith (audio series)|n2= the Big Finish audio series}}
{{Big toc}}
'''''The Sarah Jane Adventures''''' — often abbreviated as simply '''''SJA''''' — was a [[Doctor Who spin-offs|spin-off]] series of ''[[Doctor Who]]'', produced by [[BBC Wales]] for [[CBBC]]. It ran from [[2007 (releases)|2007]] to [[2011 (releases)|2011]], over the course of five series.


All stories except for [[Invasion of the Bane (TV story)|the pilot episode]] were presented in a [[serial]]ized format, with each serial being composed of two, 25-minute episodes. Created by [[Russell T Davies]] after a positive experience working with [[Elisabeth Sladen]] on the ''Doctor Who'' episode ''[[School Reunion (TV story)|School Reunion]]'', it concerned itself with [[Sarah Jane Smith|Sarah Jane]]'s life after her initial encounter with the [[Tenth Doctor]]. The series featured regular appearances by several teenage cast members, their parents, a computer named [[Mr Smith]], and [[K9 Mark IV|K9]]. Aimed at a younger audience than ''[[Doctor Who]]'', its [[UK]] timeslot was typically around 16:30 on Mondays and Tuesdays, on CBBC.


''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' is a British science fiction television programme that was produced by BBC Cymru Wales for CBBC, created by Russell T Davies, and starring Elisabeth Sladen. The programme is a spin-off of the long-running BBC science fiction programme ''Doctor Who'' and is aimed at a younger audience than ''Doctor Who''. It focuses on the adventures of Sarah Jane Smith, an investigative journalist who, as a young woman, had numerous adventures across time and space with the Doctor. Following Sladen's sudden death from cancer, the BBC confirmed that the show would not return for a sixth series.
In its [[series 4 (SJA)|fourth year]], it spawned a one-series, "{{w|clip show}}" spin-off of its own, named ''[[Sarah Jane's Alien Files]]''. For 2010 only, there were some days where it was possible to find about an hour's worth of ''SJA'' programming on CBBC.


The series debuted on BBC One with a 60-minute special, "Invasion of the Bane", on 1 January 2007, and broadcast until Sladen’s death in 2011. It was nominated for a British Academy Children's Award in 2008 in the Drama category, and for a BAFTA Cymru in 2009 in the Children's Drama category. The programme won a Royal Television Society 2010 award for Best Children's Drama.
In celebration of the 10th Anniversary of the show, a special one-off event was held by a group known as "the Attic", to gather the cast and crew for celebration on [[29th July]] [[2017]].<ref>http://sarahjanetv.blogspot.dk/2017/01/sjas-10th-anniversary.html?m=1</ref><ref>http://www.theattic.wales</ref> Two months later, a selection of episodes were aired on [[24 September (releases)|24 September]] [[2017 (releases)|2017]].<ref>http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/doctorwho/entries/c26df947-8f49-4580-becb-df02872c45c8</ref> In [[2018 (releases)|2018]] every episode was re-released on the [[BBC iPlayer]].<ref>https://twitter.com/cbbc/status/967781488988078081</ref>


== Series ==
== Premise ==
A full series of ten 25-minute episodes began on 24 September 2007. The first series consisted of five two-part stories, and a second series, comprising six two-part stories, began airing on 29 September 2008. A third series, once again comprising six two-part stories to make a total of twelve episodes, with Russell T Davies serving as executive producer, aired from 15 October 2009 to 20 November 2009.
The show followed [[Sarah Jane Smith]] sometime after she met the [[Tenth Doctor]] in ''[[School Reunion (TV story)|School Reunion]]''. Like [[UNIT]] and [[Torchwood]], Sarah Jane had decided to deal with aliens in her own way. She was assisted by teenagers from her neighbourhood who unknowingly involve themselves in her life, such as [[Maria Jackson]], [[Clyde Langer]], and [[Rani Chandra]]. Also, through her adventures, Sarah Jane entered motherhood by adopting former alien-created tools, such as her son [[Luke Smith]] and daughter [[Sky Smith]]. She was assisted in knowledge of alien life and technology by her super-computer, [[Mr Smith]] and robot dog [[K9 Mark IV]].


The fourth series was aired from 11 October 2010. An episode of another spin-off series, ''Sarah Jane's Alien Files'', was shown immediately after each of the first episodes of the stories. Filming for three of six two-part serials planned for the fifth series was completed prior to Elisabeth Sladen's death on 19 April 2011. The BBC stated that no further episodes would be filmed. The fifth series was broadcast starting 3 October 2011 on Mondays and Tuesdays. It finished just two weeks later on 18 October 2011.
=== In detail ===
The series was set largely in and around [[Bannerman Road]], [[Ealing]] — the street on which Sarah Jane lived. As shown in the [[Invasion of the Bane (TV story)|initial, New Year's Day special]], Sarah Jane was a somewhat wealthy and mostly reclusive eccentric. Her somewhat lavish house, car and lifestyle were paid for by her work as a freelance [[journalist]], and an inheritance from [[Lavinia Smith|the aunt]] established in [[The Time Warrior (TV story)|her first ''Doctor Who'' appearance]] and [[A Girl's Best Friend (TV story)|the pilot]] for Sarah Jane's first [[K9 and Company|spin-off series]].


== Background and development ==
In the opening narrative, she acquired [[Luke Smith|an adopted son]] named Luke, a highly-evolved [[human]] who had been manufactured by the [[Bane (Invasion of the Bane)|Bane]]. Her hitherto lonely life was also invaded by [[Maria Jackson|Maria]], a girl who had just moved into the house across the road. As [[Series 1 (SJA)|series 1]] began, Luke started attending school with Maria, and they picked up a third friend, named [[Clyde Langer]]. Initially, then, the format of the series was about the three school-aged kids having [[alien]]-fighting adventures with Sarah Jane, whilst trying to keep [[Alan Jackson|Maria's divorced dad]] and [[Chrissie Jackson|mum]] unaware of their activities. Major subplots included: Maria and Alan Jackson's attempts to have a productive relationship with Chrissie, in the wake of the divorce; Sarah Jane's efforts to be a good mother; Clyde's attempts to help the socially awkward Luke "be cool"; the gradual uncovering of [[Mr Smith]]'s true nature; and Alan's discovery of what exactly happened at [[13 Bannerman Road|Sarah Jane's house]].
In 2006, Children's BBC expressed an interest in producing a ''Doctor Who'' spin-off. Their initial idea was "a drama based on the idea of a young ''Doctor Who''", but Russell T Davies vetoed this. "Somehow, the idea of a fourteen year old Doctor, on Gallifrey inventing sonic screwdrivers, takes away from the mystery and intrigue of who he is and where he came from," said Davies. He suggested instead a series based on the Doctor's former companion Sarah Jane Smith.


The character of Sarah Jane Smith, played by Sladen, appeared in ''Doctor Who'' from 1973 to 1976, alongside both Jon Pertwee as the Third Doctor and Tom Baker as the Fourth Doctor. A pilot episode for another ''Doctor Who'' spin-off series, ''K-9 and Company'', made in 1981, featured Sarah Jane and the robot dog K9; however, a full series was never commissioned. Sarah Jane and K9 returned to ''Doctor Who'' in various media many times over the years, most notably in the 20th anniversary special ''The Five Doctors'' (1983), and in episodes "School Reunion" (2006), "The Stolen Earth" / "Journey's End" (2008) and "The End of Time" (2010).
Early in [[series 2 (SJA)|series 2]], however, the show obviously scaled back the importance of adults other than Sarah Jane. The Jacksons were dropped from the series, replaced by [[Rani Chandra]], and her parents [[Gita Chandra|Gita]] and [[Haresh Chandra|Haresh]]. Unlike the Jacksons, however — who were almost always a significant part of the narrative — the Chandras were much de-emphasised, and often used as mere comic relief. For instance, it took Haresh two series to amass as many appearances as Alan had enjoyed in a single series. Also, the Chandras were often in just one of the two episodes of a story — as in ''[[Death of the Doctor (TV story)|Death of the Doctor]]'' — whereas Alan was typically in both parts. Moreover, the Chandras were all but unused in [[series 4 (SJA)|series 4]], appearing together in [[The Vault of Secrets (TV story)|just one serial]]. Clyde's parents were featured in one story, but it was a story which hardly utilised Sarah Jane. For the most part, parental involvement dropped significantly after [[Alan Jackson]] accepted a job in [[Washington DC]] early in series 2, and was little more than incidental after [[Prisoner of the Judoon|the series 3 premiere]].


Sarah Jane is frequently voted the most popular ''Doctor Who'' companion by both ''Doctor Who'' fans and members of the general public. That a Sarah Jane series was being developed was first confirmed in the BBC's in-house newsletter, ''Ariel'', in early August 2006. These early rumours were associated with the working title ''Sarah Jane Investigates''.
Over time, even Sarah Jane's new, maternal role was scaled back. [[Luke Smith]]'s presence began to be scaled back in [[series 3 (SJA)|series 3]], such that he was largely absent from several episodes. By [[series 4 (SJA)|series 4]], he was said to be in university a year earlier than the two other kids and was thus reduced to a recurring guest star. Practically speaking, the show's format for the last two series featured Sarah Jane, Clyde, Rani and Mr Smith as the major characters, with everyone else reduced to supporting roles.


K9's only appearances in the show's first two series were a cameo in the special and an appearance in the last episode of the first series. This was due to the concurrent development of the independently produced children's series, ''K-9'', which features a remodelled version of K9 with only indirect nods to ''Doctor Who''. However, in 2009, K9 appeared with ''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' cast in a sketch for ''Comic Relief'', and K9 appeared in six episodes of the third series, followed by two more appearances in the fourth series. He did not appear at all in Series 5.
Common character "beats" that reverberated during the time that Rani was on the show included: the greater involvement of [[the Doctor]] in Sarah Jane's life; Haresh's role as the headmaster of the kids' school; the contentious relationship between Sarah Jane's two computers, [[Mr Smith]] and [[K9 Mark IV|K9]]; Luke's continued communication with an off-screen Maria; the recurring threat of [[the Trickster]]; and a certain level of subtle romantic tension between Clyde and Rani.


=== Production ===
== Development highlights ==
Production on the full series began in April 2007. Two of the five two-part stories were scripted by the special's co-writer Gareth Roberts. ''Bad Girls'' and ''New Captain Scarlet'' writer Phil Ford wrote two stories and Phil Gladwin wrote one. Creator and executive producer Russell T Davies was going to write one story but was forced to drop out due to other work commitments.
The development of ''SJA'' never attracted the same level of minute coverage of its parent programme. Whereas the production of ''individual Doctor Who'' stories was often known in great detail, behind-the-scenes information about ''SJA'' was considerably harder to come by.


== Tenth anniversary ==
The project appeared to have started in 2006, slightly prior to the broadcast of ''School Reunion''. At that time, the [[CBBC]] expressed an interest in producing a ''Doctor Who'' spin-off. Their initial idea was "a drama based on the idea of a young Doctor Who", but Russell T. Davies vetoed this. ''"Somehow, the idea of a fourteen-year-old [[the Doctor|Doctor]], on [[Gallifrey]] inventing [[sonic screwdriver]]s, takes away from the mystery and intrigue of who he is and where he came from,"'' said Davies. He suggested instead a series based on the Doctor's former [[companion]] [[Sarah Jane Smith]]. Reports of a spin-off series first emerged around the time of ''[[School Reunion (TV story)|School Reunion]]'' original airing, with the series having the working title of ''Sarah Jane Investigates''. Indeed, Sladen herself was still calling the programme ''Sarah Jane Investigates'' as late as an October 2006 BBC interview.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/norfolk/content/articles/2006/10/30/doctor_who_elisabeth_sladen_oct06_feature.shtml Lis Sladen talks to BBC Norfolk in October 2006]</ref>
For the tenth anniversary of the show, an event was held 29 July 2017 at Cardiff University Students' Union, with proceeds going to Ty Hafan Hospice for Children. A total of £6643.35 was raised by the sale of tickets to the event and merchandise. Members of the cast and crew that took part in the event were Tommy Knight, Anjli Mohindra, Yasmin Paige, Sinead Michael, Mina Anwar, Katy Manning, Paul Marc Davis, Phil Ford, Gary Russell, Joe Lidster, Sam Watts, Richard Wisker, Cheryl Rowlands, Scott Handcock, Brian Miller, John Leeson, Mat Irvine and Chris Johnson. The event was recorded and was released onto DVD and Blu-ray and could be bought exclusively through the event's website.


== Cast and crew ==
That said, some production milestones were known:
Main cast of series 1 (left to right) Maria, Luke, Sarah Jane and Clyde
* ''SJA'' was invited to submit a sketch for [[Comic Relief]]'s Red Nose Day appeal in 2009. This made ''SJA'' the first ''Doctor Who'' spin-off to spawn a mini-episode. ''[[From Raxacoricofallapatorius with Love (TV story)|From Raxacoricofallapatorius with Love]]'' had a viewership of over 9 million, making its audience about 9 times greater than the best audience in ''SJA'' history, and about 15 times greater than the ''average'' SJA audience.
In addition to Sladen, the first series of the programme stars Yasmin Paige as Maria Jackson, Sarah Jane's 13-year-old neighbour in Ealing, west London, and Tommy Knight as a boy named Luke, who is adopted by Sarah Jane at the conclusion of the introductory story. The third member of Sarah Jane's young entourage is 14-year-old called Clyde Langer, played by Daniel Anthony, who is introduced in the first episode of the proper series. Actress Porsha Lawrence Mavour briefly played Maria's friend, Kelsey Harper, in the 2007 New Year's Day special ''Invasion of the Bane'' which was created before the start of the series. Maria and her family are written out of the series in the first story of the second series, ''The Last Sontaran'', but Maria and her father return briefly in the second part of ''The Mark of the Berserker''. In the second story of that series, ''The Day of the Clown'', several new regular cast members are introduced: Rani Chandra and her parents, Haresh, and Gita (played by Anjli Mohindra, Ace Bhatti, and Mina Anwar, respectively).
* In a speech to [[BAFTA]] members in March 2009, Davies revealed that production of Series 3 had nearly been cancelled on three occasions due to budget cuts to children's programming at the BBC.<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/7952655.stm</ref>
Main cast of series 2–5 (left to right) Rani, Luke, Sarah Jane, Clyde and Sky (Series 5 only)
* The ''SJA'' broadcast schedule dramatically altered in [[series 3 (SJA)|series 3]]. Previously aired at the rate of one episode a week, the show switched to a one [[serial]] a week rate. This chopped the series broadcast duration in half.
Joseph Millson appears throughout the first series as Maria's recently separated father, Alan, with Chrissie Jackson, Maria's mother, played by Juliet Cowan. One other regular is Alexander Armstrong of comedy duo Armstrong and Miller, who provides the voice of Mr Smith, an extraterrestrial computer in Sarah Jane's attic. The 2007 special featured Samantha Bond as the scheming villain Mrs Wormwood and Jamie Davis as her PR agent Davey. The first series included among its guest cast Jane Asher as Sarah Jane's childhood friend Andrea Yates, Floella Benjamin as Professor Rivers, who returned in Series 2, Series 3 and Series 5, and Phyllida Law as Bea Nelson-Stanley. The second series guest starred Bradley Walsh as an evil alien clown in the story ''The Day of the Clown'' and Russ Abbot as a sinister astrologer in ''Secrets of the Stars''. Also appearing in the second series were Gary Beadle and Jocelyn Jee Esien, who portrayed Clyde's parents Paul and Carla in ''The Mark of the Berserker''; Esien reprised her role briefly in Series 4 and more prominently in series 5. Nicholas Courtney guest starred in ''Enemy of the Bane'' as classic ''Doctor Who'' character Sir Alistair Lethbridge-Stewart, and Samantha Bond also returned as Wormwood for the episode.
* Series 3 also saw a change in the episodic format, with the pre-titles sequence being shortened because of the addition of an opening narration by [[Clyde Langer]] that showed brief clips from the then-current series. This sequence was reused for the 4th and 5th series, with adjustments to the narration to reflect changes in the cast of characters in Series 5.
* The third series received a major ratings boost with a guest appearance by [[David Tennant]] as the Doctor, and maintained its momentum throughout the season, consistently scoring higher-than-average viewership for the time period and also scoring high [[Appreciation Index]] numbers. The same thing occurred in [[series 4 (SJA)|series 4]] following [[Matt Smith]]'s episodes.
* According to [[DWM 412]], the fourth season was in pre-production from August 2009. On [[4 March (releases)|4 March]] 2010, the BBC officially announced that production had been commissioned, with filming expected to begin by the end of March.<ref>[http://gallifreynewsbase.blogspot.com/2010/01/sarah-jane-adventures-series-4.html Doctor Who News Page - Series 4 Confirmed], accessed 18 January 2010.</ref>
* Production of the series underwent a scheduling change in 2010, with Series 4 and the first half of Series 5 produced in one production block during the spring-summer of 2010, and filming of the rest of Series 5 planned to follow at a later date. ([[DWM 425]]) Ultimately, however, only the three stories of Series 5 filmed in 2010 were completed, as Sladen's death prevented the remainder from being produced.
* On [[24 June (releases)|24 June]] 2010, BBC News reported that production of ''Doctor Who'' and ''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' was to relocate to the currently-under-construction [[Roath Lock|BBC Wales "drama village"]] in Cardiff in 2012, a strong indication that further seasons beyond series 5 were anticipated.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10402789 Work starts on BBC Wales drama village in Cardiff Bay], BBC News, 24 June 2010.</ref> However, the sudden death of Elisabeth Sladen permanently suspended production of the show.


The original executive producers for ''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' were Phil Collinson, Russell T Davies and Julie Gardner. Susie Liggat produced the pilot, but Matthew Bouch worked as producer of the series. Co-writer Gareth Roberts, writing in ''Doctor Who Magazine'', said, "We're all determined that this will be a big, full-blooded drama; that nobody should ever think of it as 'just' a children's programme." Sue Nott was the executive producer of the second series for CBBC.
== Production team ==
=== Producers ===
The original [[executive producer]]s for ''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' were [[Russell T Davies]] and [[Julie Gardner]]. [[Susie Liggat]] [[producer|produced]] ''[[Invasion of the Bane (TV story)|Invasion of the Bane]]'', but [[Matthew Bouch]] took over for Liggat for series 1 "proper". [[Phil Collinson]] held the title of "Series Producer" during the first year. [[Gareth Roberts]] — a sort of "uncredited producer" — said of the initial series, {{quote|We're all determined that this will be a big, full-blooded drama; that nobody should ever think of it as 'just' a children's programme. |Roberts in [[DWM 375]]}}


In December 2007, the BBC released a statement that Julie Gardner would be replaced by Piers Wenger as executive producer for ''Doctor Who'' in January 2009, but that she would continue to executive-produce ''Torchwood'' and ''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' through 2008.
Bouch remained a producer through [[series 2 (SJA)|series 2]]. For [[series 3 (SJA)|the following year]], [[Nikki Wilson]] replaced him, and [[Piers Wenger]], [[Julie Gardner]]'s replacement as Head of Drama at [[BBC Wales]], joined Gardner and Davies as executive producers.


The fourth series in 2010 was executive produced by Russell T Davies and Nikki Wilson, and the producers were Brian Minchin and frequent writer Phil Ford. During this series, Cyril Nri was introduced as a new recurring character called The Shopkeeper. The production team remained in place for the completed episodes of Series 5, which were shot concurrently with Series 4. The show's abbreviated fifth and final series introduced a new main character named Sky, played by Sinead Michael. The episode that introduced Sky also featured a return appearance by the Shopkeeper, but the fact that the second half of the series was never produced left his story arc, as well as other ongoing plot points, unresolved. A special edition of ''Doctor Who Magazine'', ''The Sarah Jane Companion Volume 3'', published in August 2012, detailed the plotlines of the three unfilmed stories.
By the [[series 4 (SJA)|fourth series]], however, both Gardner and Wenger were no longer credited on the show. RTD was the only exec who remained of the initial main production team. [[Brian Minchin]] had become the [[producer]] and [[Nikki Wilson]] was now RTD's producing partner. She was also the only executive producer actually resident in [[Wales]] since RTD was living in [[Los Angeles]] during the production of the last two series of ''SJA'', executive producing ''[[Torchwood: Miracle Day]]''.


=== Cast ===
Other important production figures included [[Phil Ford]], who was credited as "[[co-producer]]" after [[series 1 (SJA)|series 1]], and [[Debbi Slater]], who served in a variety of key production positions over the five series, including those of [[associate producer]] and [[production manager]].
{| class="fandom-table"
! rowspan="2" |Actor
! rowspan="2" |Character
! colspan="6" |Series
|-
!1
!2
!3
!4
!5
|-
|Elisabeth Sladen
|Sarah Jane Smith
| colspan="5" |Main
|-
|Yasmin Paige
|Maria Jackson
| colspan="1" |Main
| colspan="1" |Featured
| colspan="3" |
|-
|Tommy Knight
|Luke Smith
| colspan="3" |Main
| colspan="2" |Featured
|-
|Alexander Armstrong
|Mr Smith (voice)
| colspan="6" |Main
|-
|John Leeson
|K9 (voice)
| colspan="1" |Guest
| colspan="1" |
| colspan="1" |Main
| colspan="1" |Recurring
| colspan="1" |
|-
|Joseph Millson
|Alan Jackson
| colspan="2" |Recurring
| colspan="3" |
|-
|Juliet Cowan
|Chrissie Jackson
| colspan="1" |Recurring
| colspan="1" |Guest
| colspan="3" |
|-
|Daniel Anthony
|Clyde Langer
| colspan="5" |Main
|-
|Anjli Mohindra
|Rani Chandra
| colspan="1" |
| colspan="4" |Main
|-
|Mina Anwar
|Gita Chandra
| colspan="1" |
| colspan="3" |Recurring
| colspan="1" |Guest
|-
|Ace Bhatti
|Haresh Chandra
| colspan="1" |
| colspan="4" |Recurring
|-
|Sinead Michael
|Sky Smith
| colspan="4" |
|Main
|}


=== ''Doctor Who'' characters ===
=== Other departments ===
Including K9 and Sarah Jane, some characters from the past or current run of ''Doctor Who'' have appeared in ''The Sarah Jane Adventures''.
The writing staff was fairly stable throughout the programme's run. The job of the [[head writer]] was effectively shared between [[Phil Ford]], [[Gareth Roberts]] and Russell T Davies for most of the five years — though none of these men actually got a ''credit'' as "head writer". Davies did intend to write more stories for the show but on different occasions was forced to pull out being busy with writing Torchwood and Doctor Who, this meant he only ever was credited for writing two stories. [[Joseph Lidster]], Clayton Hickman and [[Rupert Laight]] were also frequent contributors.
{| class="sortable fandom-table"
!Actor
!Character
!Duration
!Episodes
|-
|Lachele Carl
|Trinity Wells
|2007–2008
|''Revenge of the Slitheen'' and ''Secrets of the Stars''
|-
|Jason Mohammad
|Newsreader
|2007, 2011
|''Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane?'', ''The Lost Boy'' and The Man Who Never Was
|-
|Anthony Debaeck
|French newsreader
|2008
|''Secrets of the Stars''
|-
|Nicholas Courtney
|Brigadier Sir Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart
|2008
|''Enemy of the Bane''
|-
|Nicholas Briggs
|The Judoon (voice)
|2009
|''Prisoner of the Judoon''
|-
|David Tennant
|The Tenth Doctor
|2009
|''The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith''
|-
|Katy Manning
|Jo Jones (née Grant)
|2010
|''Death of the Doctor''
|-
|Matt Smith
|The Eleventh Doctor
|2010
|''Death of the Doctor''
|}
Numerous others have been referenced in dialogue. Several former companions of the Doctor are referenced in the story ''Death of the Doctor'', and the episode also includes brief on-screen flashbacks showing the Third, Fourth and Tenth Doctors. Companion Harry Sullivan is referenced separately in dialogue on several occasions and a photograph of the character is visible in one episode. In an issue of ''Doctor Who Magazine'', Sophie Aldred was read an email from Russell T. Davies, in which he declared his plans to bring Ace into a story had the show continued, and she was alluded to at the end of ''The Death of the Doctor'' when the fates of Harry Sullivan, Ian Chesterton, Barbara Wright, Ben Jackson, Polly, Tegan Jovanka, and Ace are revealed. The episode ''Sky'' was originally to have featured the Eleventh Doctor, but Matt Smith was not available.


== Episodes ==
[[Production designer|Production design]] was handled in the first year by [[Ed Thomas]], alongside [[Tim Dickel]] for the series proper, though these duties were eventually given to others in the ''[[Doctor Who]]'' art department — chiefly [[Arwel Wyn Jones]], who formally succeeded Thomas, and eventually to [[Keith Dunne]]. Likewise, the initial [[casting director]] was [[Andy Pryor]], but he, too, allowed primary casting responsibilities to eventually fall to his ''Doctor Who'' junior, [[Andy Brierley]].
Main article: List of The Sarah Jane Adventures serials


''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' was first seen by its original British audience in the form of a 60-minute New Year's Day special in 2007, titled "Invasion of the Bane", which was co-written by Russell T Davies and Gareth Roberts. "Invasion of the Bane" was not a pilot, although the story does contains many conventional introductory elements common to pilots. Creator Russell T Davies has commented upon the exceptional broadcast situation, saying "''Sarah Jane Adventures'' is slightly unusual in that it was commissioned before we'd written the script. If we'd written a load of rubbish, they'd still have had to make it." He refers to "Invasion of the Bane" simply as the "first episode". The story focused on Sarah Jane's investigation of a popular and addictive soft drink called ''Bubble Shock!''.
Though the [[theme music]] was by [[Murray Gold]], most of the [[incidental music]] was actually by [[Sam Watts|Sam]] and [[Dan Watts]], [[composer]]s not previously connected with the [[Doctor Who universe|DWU]]. Similarly, the [[cinematographer|cinematography]] was initially handled by ''Doctor Who'' regular, [[Rory Taylor]], but the most prolific director of photography eventually came to be [[Mark Waters]].


Series one of the show aired in September of that year, consisting of five two-part half-hour stories. Individual half-hour episodes aired once a week on BBC One, with episodes airing a week ahead on children's digital channel CBBC. The final part aired in November 2007. The second series started in September 2008 using the same format, with six stories instead of five, ending the series in December. The third series started 15 October 2009, twice weekly (Thursdays and Fridays) on BBC One from 15 October to 20 November. The fourth series aired from 11 October 2010. The first of each story pair was accompanied by an episode of ''Sarah Jane's Alien Files'', a set of 25-minute episodes in which a member of the cast updates Mr. Smith's database about certain aliens. It accompanied series 4 of the programme.
== Episodes ==
{{Main|List of The Sarah Jane Adventures television stories}}


Due to the illness of Elisabeth Sladen, and her death on 19 April 2011, filming for the second half of the fifth series, which was due to air in the autumn of 2011, was postponed and later cancelled. Filming for three stories of the fifth series had been finished, and thus post-production on these stories was completed. The final series was aired from 3 to 18 October 2011 on CBBC and ended with a tribute to Elisabeth Sladen in the form of a video montage of scenes from the series and a couple of episodes of ''Doctor Who'' and the ending text "And the story goes on... forever."
== Cast ==
=== Main ===
Ordered in terms of most number of appearances, the main cast consisted of
* [[Sarah Jane Smith]] - [[Elisabeth Sladen]]
* [[Clyde Langer]] - [[Daniel Anthony]]
* [[Mr Smith]] - [[Alexander Armstrong]]
* [[Luke Smith]] - [[Tommy Knight]] (series 1-3; recurring 4-5)
* [[Maria Jackson]] - [[Yasmin Paige]] (series 1; recurring 2)
* [[Rani Chandra]] - [[Anjli Mohindra]] (series 2-5)
* [[K9 Mark IV]] - [[John Leeson]] (series 3; recurring 1 and 4)
* [[Sky Smith]] - [[Sinead Michael]] (series 5)


The script of the unfilmed ''Sarah Jane Adventures'' episode ''The Thirteenth Floor'' was rewritten and broadcast as an episode of ''Wizards vs Aliens''.
=== Recurring ===
* [[Haresh Chandra]] - [[Ace Bhatti]] (series 2-5)
* [[Gita Chandra]] - [[Mina Anwar]] (series 2-5)
* [[Alan Jackson]] - [[Joseph Millson]] (series 1-2)
* [[Chrissie Jackson]] - [[Juliet Cowan]] (series 1-2)


=== ''Farewell, Sarah Jane'' ===
== Cast changes ==
On 19 April 2020 a special 13-minute webcast mini episode entitled ''Farewell, Sarah Jane'' aired on ''Doctor Who''<nowiki/>'s social media channels as a tribute to Elisabeth Sladen. During this story, it was implied that Sarah Jane had been killed while preventing an alien invasion. As such, a memorial service was held, attended by Luke, Clyde, Rani, Sky and Maria, accompanied by their friends and families (among them several of the Doctor's former companions). Apart from an interruption from, and final confrontation with, the Trickster, the memorial went smoothly, and the group prepare to leave 13 Bannerman Road once more. Rani, however, stays behind, and, in her final conversation with Mr. Smith, expresses her hopes that Sarah Jane is travelling with the Doctor (who was absent, since her death would have broken both his (or her) hearts, according to Jo Grant) once again. It was written by Russell T Davies.
Casting decisions were not routinely discussed in the press with anything like the ferocity that ''Doctor Who'' casting announcements were. As a result, many cast changes were often the subject of fan speculation more than fact.


The story acted as an epilogue to the series narrated by Jacob Dudman and featured Tommy Knight, Daniel Anthony, Anjli Mohindra, Katy Manning, Mina Anwar all in their respective roles from the series and also included Sophie Aldred, who portrayed Ace, a companion to the Seventh Doctor. The episode's credits thanked Sacha Dhawan, Scott Handcock and Stuart Humphryes.
=== The kids ===
During the life of ''SJA'', three kids were edged out of the production, but no official statements were issued by the [[British Broadcasting Corporation]] about any of these cast changes.


== Critical response ==
[[Kelsey Hooper]] was apparently the original "third kid" in ''[[Invasion of the Bane (TV story)|Invasion of the Bane]]'', but she was quietly replaced in series 1 "proper" by [[Clyde Langer]]. No reason was ever given by the BBC for this cast change. However, it is possible to believe that Kelsey was never actually intended as a permanent cast member since ''Invasion'' actually wrote her out as unable to handle the "Sarah Jane Smith lifestyle" in its final scenes.
''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' has been generally well received by critics and the viewing public. At the end of the first series, Abi Grant of ''The Daily Telegraph'' wrote: "With the debate about the future of children's TV still rumbling on, this is what the BBC does best, and despite lacking the production values of ''Doctor Who'', it's still top tea-time programming." Daniel Martin of ''The Guardian'' described the show as looking very promising and more convincing than another ''Doctor Who'' spinoff ''Torchwood''. Review website ''DVD Talk'' called the series "wonderful", "thoughtful" and "imaginative children's entertainment" that was highly recommended. The series also received praise for its willingness to tackle "darker themes [such as] Alzheimer's, homelessness and loss."


At Metacritic, the first series received a generally favourable score of 66 out of 100 based on five critics. As the series progressed reviews became slightly more positive with ''DVD Talk'' reviewer David Cornelius saying that the "second series is even better than the first." However Eric Profancik from ''DVD Verdict'' stated that the second series suffered from "poor scripts and horrible acting", criticising it for having "simple plots, too many conveniences and having corny humour." Series three is described by Guy Clapperton of review site ''ScreenJabber.com'' as being slightly braver than its predecessors, while ''Bullz-eye.com'' described it as "a sweet, fun little show, with some neat ideas" with "its heart very much in the right place." Reviews for the final series were sympathetic for the series' end and the unavoidably incomplete nature of the series (following the death of Elisabeth Sladen) and its story arcs. Stephen Kelly from ''The Guardian'' said that it was "a fitting tribute to Elisabeth Sladen" and has occupied a "unique place in the Whoniverse".
[[Maria Jackson]] was the next kid to leave. Though she appeared on much of the [[series 2 (SJA)|series 2]] publicity material, and appeared or was heard in three of that year's stories (being referred to in two others), she ceased to be a regular after the first story of the second season. Though rumours have swirled for years about why this character — and, by necessity, her parents — were written out, the BBC has never offered up an explanation for the actor's departure. However, actress [[Yasmin Paige]] left the role during her GCSE year and decided she would concentrate on her studies<ref>[https://www.digitalspy.com/tv/cult/a131145/sarah-jane-adventures-season-two-preview/ Digital Spy]</ref>, though it is not clear if she chose to dedicate herself to her scholarly life on a permanent basis and not return to the series.


== Awards and nominations ==
Finally, [[Luke Smith]] was absent for some episodes of [[series 3 (SJA)|series 3]] (due to Tommy Knight taking his GSCE exams at the time) and most of the rest of the programme's run - he only appears prominently in the series 4 opener and finale (with video call appearances in a number of intermediate episodes) - though he was still touted as a main cast member in official BBC press packs through the end of the series. Actor [[Tommy Knight]] was also clearly part of what was essentially the last thing the BBC filmed about the series, the April 2011 Liz Sladen tribute, ''[[My Sarah Jane: A Tribute to Elisabeth Sladen (CON episode)|My Sarah Jane]]''. This indicated, though perhaps didn't absolutely confirm, that Luke's reduced role was amenable to both the BBC and Knight himself.
{| class="fandom-table"
!Year
!Ceremony
!Category
!Outcome
!Notes
|-
| rowspan="2" |2008
|''Royal Television Society''
|Children's Drama
|Nominated
|
|-
|''British Academy Children's Awards''
|Drama
|Nominated
|
|-
| rowspan="2" |2009
|''British Academy Children's Awards''
|Drama
|Nominated
|
|-
|''Royal Television Society''
|Children's Drama
|Nominated
|
|-
| rowspan="3" |2010
|''British Academy Children's Awards''
|Drama, Writer, BAFTA Kid's Vote
|Nominated
|
|-
|''Royal Television Society''
|Children's Drama
|Nominated
|
|-
|''BAFTA Cymru''
|Interactive
|Won
|
|-
| rowspan="3" |2011
|''British Academy Children's Awards''
|Drama, Writer, BAFTA Kid's Vote
|Nominated
|
|-
|''Royal Television Society''
|Children's Drama
|Won
|
|-
|''BAFTA Cymru''
|Children’s Programme
|Won
|
|-
| rowspan="3" |2012
|''British Academy Children's Awards''
|BAFTA Kid's Vote, Writer
|Nominated
|
|-
|''BAFTA Cymru''
|Children’s Programme
|Nominated
|
|-
|''Royal Television Society''
|Children's Drama
|Nominated
|
|}


== International broadcast ==
=== K9 ===
BBC Worldwide's children's channel in Canada, BBC Kids, began broadcasting ''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' with "Invasion of the Bane" on 13 January 2008, airing the rest of the series back-to-back on Sundays thereafter. The South African channel SABC 2 started airing the series beginning on 9 February 2008. The Hong Kong channel ATV World, which has also aired ''Doctor Who'' and ''Torchwood'', aired this series starting 17 February 2008. The first series began airing on Sci Fi in the USA beginning on 11 April 2008, but this is the only series broadcast on American television as of Summer 2010, though later series have continued to be released on DVD in America without a prior television broadcast. In Australia, ''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' started on 31 October 2008 on Nickelodeon Australia. In Brazil, the show started airing on 19 November 2012 on TV Cultura, right after their broadcast of ''Doctor Who series 6'' ended. It also screens in New Zealand on Nickelodeon New Zealand, and in Belgium on Ketnet. In 2013 the show started airing on JeemTV in Arabic. Various seasons of the series has also been broadcast multiple times on the Swedish children's Channel 'Barnkanalen' in Swedish.
Another casting issue was never well understood. K9's appearances were sporadic throughout the five year run of ''SJA''. Since K9 was owned by [[writer]] [[Bob Baker]], its appearances had to be specifically negotiated with the writer. Just as ''[[School Reunion (TV story)|School Reunion]]'' had raised Sarah Jane's profile, it had also ignited interest in having a K9 spin-off. Baker ''may'' have withheld rights for K9's use in ''SJA'' so as not to compromise then-ongoing negotiations for a K9 series. Why the dog was so heavily used in [[series 3 (SJA)|series 3]], but otherwise little more than a featured cameo in the other series, was never the subject of an official, public announcement.


== Merchandising ==
== Series ==
''SJA'' debuted on [[BBC One]] with a [[Invasion of the Bane (TV story)|60-minute special]] on [[1 January (releases)|1 January]] 2007. A full [[Series 1 (SJA)|series]] of ten 30-minute episodes followed later in the year.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2006/09_september/14/sarah.shtml BBC Press Releases - Russell T Davies creates new series for CBBC, starring Doctor Who's Sarah Jane Smith (accessed 11th February 2009)]</ref> The [[Series 2 (SJA)|second series]] had twelve 30-minute episodes and aired in the autumn of 2008, followed by [[Series 3 (SJA)|a third]] in late 2009. A [[From Raxacoricofallapatorius with Love (TV story)|mini-episode]] for charity also aired in early 2009. Meanwhile, [[Series 4 (SJA)|series four]] went into production in March 2010. At the same time, what was expected to be the first half of the [[Series 5 (SJA)|fifth series]] was produced as part of the Series 4 recording block, with the second half of the series initially planned for production in early 2011.<ref>[http://gallifreynewsbase.blogspot.com/2010/01/sarah-jane-adventures-series-4.html Doctor Who News Page - Series 4 Confirmed], accessed 18 January 2010.</ref>


=== Toys ===
However, because [[Elisabeth Sladen]] died on [[19 April (releases)|19 April]] 2011, <ref>http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-13137674</ref> series 5 was truncated to just those three serials that had been completed in 2010.<ref>http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/dw/news/bulletin_110504_03/The_Sarah_Jane_Adventure</ref> The series, therefore, ended because Sladen died, and no parties to the production of the series wished to continue without her. A decision was made to leave the story open-ended, with a caption rounding off the final episode's montage, saying "And the story goes on... forever."
Character Options have been awarded a licence to produce ''The Sarah Jane Adventure'' play sets, action figures, and a 'Sonic Lipstick' toy. Four 2-figure sets have been released: Sarah Jane and Star Poet; Sarah Jane and General Kudlak; Sarah Jane and Child Slitheen and Sarah Jane and Graske. Also released are Sarah Jane's Sonic Lipstick with Watch Scanner and Alien Communicator. Character Options have now discontinued the range due to lack of customer interest.


=== Battles in Time Trading Cards Adventurer Set ===
== International broadcasts ==
The '''''Adventurer The Sarah Jane Adventures''''' series of ''Doctor Who: Battles in Time'' trading cards was a bonus set of 10 limited edition, additional cards (plus one cover card) released exclusively with Issue 62 and packaged in a clear plastic wrap.
Series 1 aired on [[Syfy|the Sci-Fi Channel]] in the US and [[BBC Kids]] in Canada in 2007. In January 2010, Series 2 began airing on BBC Kids. No [[US]] broadcast of anything past series 1 ever occurred, and Canada never saw any episode past the second series. ''[[Invasion of the Bane (TV story)|Invasion of the Bane]]'' was broadcast in [[Australia]] on [[ABC1]]. Nevertheless, in both Australia and [[New Zealand]], the show started airing in January 2010 on Nickelodeon, though only Series 1-4 were broadcast. It also aired in [[Brazil]] on [[TV Cultura]] in [[2012 (releases)|2012]].


With the ''Doctor Who: Battles in Time'' (magazine) being extended beyond its original number of proposed issues, the ''Adventurer The Sarah Jane Adventures'' cards saw the series expanded once more by the inclusion of this popular spin-off series which frequently crossed-over to the parent series.
== Merchandising ==
 
:''Merchandising specifics are given on individual series pages, such as [[series 1 (SJA)]].''
The '''Adventurer''' series consisted of 10 individual '''Common''' cards referenced by the prefix SJA, cards also showed their individual series number 01-10
The programme attracted some manufacturing interest. Aside from the obvious retail of the episodes themselves, ''SJA''-themed product ranges included:
{| class="fandom-table"
* [[Character Options SJA action figures|an action figure line]] coincident with [[series 1 (SJA)|series 1]]
|+
* Role-playing toy replicas of Sarah Jane's [[sonic lipstick]] and [[scanner watch]]
!Card No.
* [[:Category:SJA novelisations|novelisations]] of selected ''SJA'' episodes through [[series 3 (SJA)|series 3]]
!Card Name
* [[:category:SJA audiobooks|a range of original-to-audio stories]]
|-
|0
|Introductory Card
|-
|1
|Sarah Jane Smith (and Friends)
|-
|2
|Mrs Wormwood
|-
|3
|Commander Kaagh
|-
|4
|The Gorgon
|-
|5
|The Trickster (with the Graske)
|-
|6
|Korst Gogg Thex Lutiven-Day Slitheen
|-
|7
|General Kudlak
|-
|8
|Odd Bob
|-
|9
|Mr Smith
|-
|10
|The Brigadier
|}
 
=== Audio adventures ===
Ten audiobooks have been released on CD, all but the last two read by the series lead, Elisabeth Sladen, who read them in the first person in character as Sarah Jane. The final two books, released in November 2011 after Sladen's death, were read by Daniel Anthony and Anjli Mohindra, respectively, though not as their characters.


The first two were the first time that BBC Audiobooks had commissioned new content for exclusive release on audio.
== External links ==
{{official website|www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qgb3}}
{{YouTube|channel/UCyR7dNvcTYL1kmjnHghr0CQ}}


A 20-minute mini-episode in two parts called "The Monster Hunt" written by Trevor Baxendale and read by Anjli Mohindra was made especially for the Monster Hunt game on the ''Sarah Jane Adventures'' website. Two more comics were released "Return of the Krulius" and "Defending Bannerman Road". All comics were available as a pdf and a free mp3 download on the official Sarah Jane Adventures website.
== Footnotes ==
{| class="fandom-table"
{{reflist|2}}
!Title
{{SJATV}}
!Author
{{Spin-offs}}
!Release date
{{TitleSort}}
!Reader
|-
|''The Glittering Storm''
|Stephen Cole
| rowspan="2" |5 November 2007
| rowspan="8" |Elisabeth Sladen
|-
|''The Thirteenth Stone''
|Justin Richards
|-
|''The Time Capsule''
|Peter Anghelides
| rowspan="2" |13 November 2008
|-
|''The Ghost House''
|Stephen Cole
|-
|''The White Wolf''
|Gary Russell
| rowspan="2" |3 September 2009
|-
|''The Shadow People''
|Scott Handcock
|-
|''Deadly Download''
|Jason Arnopp
| rowspan="2" |7 October 2010
|-
|''Wraith World''
|Cavan Scott & Mark Wright
|-
|''Children of Steel''
|Martin Day
| rowspan="2" |10 November 2011
|Daniel Anthony
|-
|''Judgement Day''
|Scott Gray
|Anjli Mohindra
|-
|''The Sarah Jane Adventures Collection''(Complete Audio Collection)
|Stephen Cole
Justin Richards
Gary Russell
Cavan Scott
Mark Wright
Peter Anghelides
Jason Arnopp
Martin Day
Scott Gray
|24 November 2011
|Elisabeth Sladen
Daniel Anthony
Anjli Mohindra
|}
 
=== Comics ===
Five ''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' comics were released on the official ''Sarah Jane Adventures'' website. Four of them were comic adventures with audio narration by Anjli Mohindra. A pdf document and a MP3 audio track was available to download of the comics. An online version of ''The Silver Bullet'', presented, in full, a comic written and drawn by Clyde and briefly seen in, the episode ''The Curse of Clyde Langer''.
{| class="fandom-table"
!Title
!Author
!Artist
!Release date
!Read by
!Link
|-
|Monster Hunt: The Beginning
|Trevor Baxendale
|
|2009
|Anjli Mohindra
|Monster Hunt: The Beginning on the BBC website
|-
|Monster Hunt: The Ending
|Trevor Baxendale
|
|2009
|Anjli Mohindra
|
|-
|Return of the Krulius
|Trevor Baxendale
|Neil Roberts
|2009
|Anjli Mohindra
|
|-
|Defending Bannerman Road
|Trevor Baxendale
|
|2010
|Anjli Mohindra
|
|-
|The Silver Bullet
|
|
|2011
|
|The Silver Bullet on the BBC website
|}
 
=== Novelisations ===
''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' merchandising revived the concept of the novelisation, which had been part of the ''Doctor Who'' franchise from the 1970s to the 1990s (principally under the editorship of author and former ''Who'' script editor Terrance Dicks). The first series and most of the second were adapted in this way, but later series saw only a few releases and a transition from print to e-books.
{| class="fandom-table"
!Title
!Author
!Release date
|-
|''Invasion of the Bane''
|Terrance Dicks
|1 November 2007
|-
|''Revenge of the Slitheen''
|Rupert Laight
|1 November 2007
|-
|''Eye of the Gorgon''
|Phil Ford
|1 November 2007
|-
|''Warriors of Kudlak''
|Gary Russell
|1 November 2007
|-
|''Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane?''
|Rupert Laight
|6 November 2008
|-
|''The Lost Boy''
|Gary Russell
|6 November 2008
|-
|''The Last Sontaran''
|Phil Ford
|6 November 2008
|-
|''The Day of the Clown''
|Phil Ford
|6 November 2008
|-
|''The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith''
|Gareth Roberts
|5 November 2009
|-
|''The Nightmare Man'' (e-book only)
|Joseph Lidster
|25 November 2010
|-
|''Death of the Doctor'' (e-book only)
|Gary Russell
|25 November 2010
|}
In September 2010, Pearson Education published four simplified novelisations based on stories from the third series:
{| class="sortable fandom-table"
!Title
!Author
|-
|''Judoon Afternoon'' (''Prisoner of the Judoon'')
|Trevor Baxendale
|-
|''Haunted House'' (''The Eternity Trap'')
|Trevor Baxendale
|-
|''Painting Peril'' (''Mona Lisa's Revenge'')
|Trevor Baxendale
|-
|''Blathereen Dream'' (''The Gift'')
|Trevor Baxendale
|}
 
=== Magazines and Books ===
Although there has never been a Sarah Jane Adventures magazine there have been three special editions of the Doctor Who Magazine, focused on the Sarah Jane Adventures, as well as regular mentions in the standard editions of Doctor Who Magazine.
{| class="fandom-table"
!Title
!Publisher
!Release date
|-
|''The Sarah Jane Adventures: Quiz Book''
|Penguin Character Books Ltd
|5 November 2009
|-
|''Impossible Worlds, Impossible Things: Cultural Perspectives onDoctor Who, Torchwood and the Sarah Jane Adventures''
|Cambridge Scholars Publishing
|1 May 2010
|}
 
=== Home media ===
 
==== DVD= ====
{| class="fandom-table"
!Release name
!Region 2
!Region 4
!Region 1
!Notes/extras
|-
|''Invasion of the Bane''
|29 October 2007
|12 January 2009
<small>Re-released 2 March 2010</small>
|<small>Not released individually</small>
|Elisabeth Sladen interview, Blue Peter Visits The Set, CBBC trailers, interactive Sarah Jane biography with ''Doctor Who'' clips, Character And Alien Profiles, behind the scenes Photo Gallery.
|-
|''The Complete First Series''<small>Also includes "Invasion of the Bane"</small>
|10 November 2008
|4 June 2009
<small>Re-released 5 January 2010</small>
|7 October 2008
|Interviews, Blue Peter Set Visit, CBBC trailers, outtakes (accessed via a quiz), Characters, Tools and Aliens Profiles, behind the scenes Photo Gallery.
|-
|''The Complete Second Series''
|9 November 2009
|3 June 2010
<small>Re-released 2 March 2011</small>
|10 November 2009
|''From Raxacoricofallapatorious with Love'' (accessed via a quiz), ''Me & My Movie'' with Tommy Knight (behind the scenes clips), CBBC trailers, Character, Tools & Alien profiles, Photo galleries.
|-
|''The Complete Third Series''
|1 November 2010
|2 March 2011
<small>Re-released 2 June 2011</small>
|4 January 2011
|No Blu-ray release despite being filmed in HD.
|-
|''The Complete Fourth Series''
|31 October 2011
|1 March 2012
|6 December 2011
|UK release includes ''Pyramids of Mars'' as a bonus feature in tribute to Elisabeth Sladen.
|-
|''The Fifth Series''
|6 February 2012
|5 July 2012
|12 June 2012
|Includes the documentary ''Goodbye Bannerman Road: Remembering Elisabeth Sladen''.
|-
|''The Complete Series 1–5''
|6 February 2012
|Not Released
|Not Released
|Includes all of the features that are included in Series 1,2,3,4 and 5 boxsets.
|-
|''Doctor Who'': ''The Green Death''
(Special Edition)
|5 August 2013
|7 August 2013
|13 August 2013
|The Special Edition release of this ''Doctor Who'' serial contains ''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' story ''Death of the Doctor'' as a bonus feature with commentary by creator Russell T. Davies and actress Katy Manning.
|-
|The Attic: Sarah Jane Adventures 10th Anniversary Reunion
|29 July 2017 <small>Region Free</small>
|Not released
|Not released
|Released for charity as part of the 10th Anniversary to help raise money for Ty Hafan Children's Hospice. The set includes footage from the day, guest panels, interviews, behind the scenes of the event and bonus features.
|}
 
==== Blu-ray= ====
{| class="fandom-table"
!Release name
!UK release date
(region B)
!Australian release date
(region B)
!North American release date
(region A)
!Notes/extras
|-
|''The Complete Fourth Series''
|31 October 2011
<small>Region Free</small>
|Not released
|Not released
|UK release includes ''Pyramids of Mars'' as a bonus feature in tribute to Elisabeth Sladen (in Standard Definition)
|-
|''The Fifth Series''
|6 February 2012
<small>Region Free</small>
|Not released
|Not released
|Includes the documentary ''Goodbye Bannerman Road: Remembering Elisabeth Sladen''.
|-
|The Attic: Sarah Jane Adventures 10th Anniversary Reunion
|29 July 2017 <small>Region Free</small>
|Not released
|Not released
|Released for charity as part of the 10th Anniversary to help raise money for Ty Hafan Children's Hospice. The set includes footage from the day, guest panels, interviews, behind the scenes of the event and bonus features.
|-
|''Doctor Who: The Collection: Season 10''
|8 July 2019
|13 November 2019
|15 October 2019
|Includes ''Death of the Doctor'' as a bonus feature with commentary by creator Russell T. Davies and actress Katy Manning.
|-
|''Doctor Who: The Complete David Tennant Collection''
|Not released
|Not released
|17 September 2019
|Includes ''The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith'' as a bonus feature.
|-
|''Doctor Who: The Specials'' <small>(steelbook)</small>
|21 October 2019
|Not released
|Not released
|Includes ''The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith'' as a bonus feature.
|}
 
== Notes ==
 
# '''^''' Paige is billed as a series regular in the first serial before leaving by its conclusion. She appears once more in ''The Mark of the Berserker''.
# '''^''' Despite Knight's exit as a series regular in the first serial of Series 4, he continues to be billed as such in recurring appearances.
# '''^''' K9 guest stars in the New Year's special as well as the series finale.
# '''^''' K9 leaves in the first serial before returning in the finale.


[[es:The Sarah Jane Adventures]]
[[es:The Sarah Jane Adventures]]
Line 646: Line 138:
[[ro:Aventurile lui Sarah Jane Smith]]
[[ro:Aventurile lui Sarah Jane Smith]]
[[ru:Приключения Сары Джейн]]
[[ru:Приключения Сары Джейн]]
[[Category:Television overviews]]
[[Category:Television overviews]]
[[Category:SJA]]
[[Category:SJA]]

Latest revision as of 20:25, 3 November 2024

RealWorld.png

The Sarah Jane Adventures — often abbreviated as simply SJA — was a spin-off series of Doctor Who, produced by BBC Wales for CBBC. It ran from 2007 to 2011, over the course of five series.

All stories except for the pilot episode were presented in a serialized format, with each serial being composed of two, 25-minute episodes. Created by Russell T Davies after a positive experience working with Elisabeth Sladen on the Doctor Who episode School Reunion, it concerned itself with Sarah Jane's life after her initial encounter with the Tenth Doctor. The series featured regular appearances by several teenage cast members, their parents, a computer named Mr Smith, and K9. Aimed at a younger audience than Doctor Who, its UK timeslot was typically around 16:30 on Mondays and Tuesdays, on CBBC.

In its fourth year, it spawned a one-series, "clip show" spin-off of its own, named Sarah Jane's Alien Files. For 2010 only, there were some days where it was possible to find about an hour's worth of SJA programming on CBBC.

In celebration of the 10th Anniversary of the show, a special one-off event was held by a group known as "the Attic", to gather the cast and crew for celebration on 29th July 2017.[1][2] Two months later, a selection of episodes were aired on 24 September 2017.[3] In 2018 every episode was re-released on the BBC iPlayer.[4]

Premise[[edit] | [edit source]]

The show followed Sarah Jane Smith sometime after she met the Tenth Doctor in School Reunion. Like UNIT and Torchwood, Sarah Jane had decided to deal with aliens in her own way. She was assisted by teenagers from her neighbourhood who unknowingly involve themselves in her life, such as Maria Jackson, Clyde Langer, and Rani Chandra. Also, through her adventures, Sarah Jane entered motherhood by adopting former alien-created tools, such as her son Luke Smith and daughter Sky Smith. She was assisted in knowledge of alien life and technology by her super-computer, Mr Smith and robot dog K9 Mark IV.

In detail[[edit] | [edit source]]

The series was set largely in and around Bannerman Road, Ealing — the street on which Sarah Jane lived. As shown in the initial, New Year's Day special, Sarah Jane was a somewhat wealthy and mostly reclusive eccentric. Her somewhat lavish house, car and lifestyle were paid for by her work as a freelance journalist, and an inheritance from the aunt established in her first Doctor Who appearance and the pilot for Sarah Jane's first spin-off series.

In the opening narrative, she acquired an adopted son named Luke, a highly-evolved human who had been manufactured by the Bane. Her hitherto lonely life was also invaded by Maria, a girl who had just moved into the house across the road. As series 1 began, Luke started attending school with Maria, and they picked up a third friend, named Clyde Langer. Initially, then, the format of the series was about the three school-aged kids having alien-fighting adventures with Sarah Jane, whilst trying to keep Maria's divorced dad and mum unaware of their activities. Major subplots included: Maria and Alan Jackson's attempts to have a productive relationship with Chrissie, in the wake of the divorce; Sarah Jane's efforts to be a good mother; Clyde's attempts to help the socially awkward Luke "be cool"; the gradual uncovering of Mr Smith's true nature; and Alan's discovery of what exactly happened at Sarah Jane's house.

Early in series 2, however, the show obviously scaled back the importance of adults other than Sarah Jane. The Jacksons were dropped from the series, replaced by Rani Chandra, and her parents Gita and Haresh. Unlike the Jacksons, however — who were almost always a significant part of the narrative — the Chandras were much de-emphasised, and often used as mere comic relief. For instance, it took Haresh two series to amass as many appearances as Alan had enjoyed in a single series. Also, the Chandras were often in just one of the two episodes of a story — as in Death of the Doctor — whereas Alan was typically in both parts. Moreover, the Chandras were all but unused in series 4, appearing together in just one serial. Clyde's parents were featured in one story, but it was a story which hardly utilised Sarah Jane. For the most part, parental involvement dropped significantly after Alan Jackson accepted a job in Washington DC early in series 2, and was little more than incidental after the series 3 premiere.

Over time, even Sarah Jane's new, maternal role was scaled back. Luke Smith's presence began to be scaled back in series 3, such that he was largely absent from several episodes. By series 4, he was said to be in university a year earlier than the two other kids and was thus reduced to a recurring guest star. Practically speaking, the show's format for the last two series featured Sarah Jane, Clyde, Rani and Mr Smith as the major characters, with everyone else reduced to supporting roles.

Common character "beats" that reverberated during the time that Rani was on the show included: the greater involvement of the Doctor in Sarah Jane's life; Haresh's role as the headmaster of the kids' school; the contentious relationship between Sarah Jane's two computers, Mr Smith and K9; Luke's continued communication with an off-screen Maria; the recurring threat of the Trickster; and a certain level of subtle romantic tension between Clyde and Rani.

Development highlights[[edit] | [edit source]]

The development of SJA never attracted the same level of minute coverage of its parent programme. Whereas the production of individual Doctor Who stories was often known in great detail, behind-the-scenes information about SJA was considerably harder to come by.

The project appeared to have started in 2006, slightly prior to the broadcast of School Reunion. At that time, the CBBC expressed an interest in producing a Doctor Who spin-off. Their initial idea was "a drama based on the idea of a young Doctor Who", but Russell T. Davies vetoed this. "Somehow, the idea of a fourteen-year-old Doctor, on Gallifrey inventing sonic screwdrivers, takes away from the mystery and intrigue of who he is and where he came from," said Davies. He suggested instead a series based on the Doctor's former companion Sarah Jane Smith. Reports of a spin-off series first emerged around the time of School Reunion original airing, with the series having the working title of Sarah Jane Investigates. Indeed, Sladen herself was still calling the programme Sarah Jane Investigates as late as an October 2006 BBC interview.[5]

That said, some production milestones were known:

  • SJA was invited to submit a sketch for Comic Relief's Red Nose Day appeal in 2009. This made SJA the first Doctor Who spin-off to spawn a mini-episode. From Raxacoricofallapatorius with Love had a viewership of over 9 million, making its audience about 9 times greater than the best audience in SJA history, and about 15 times greater than the average SJA audience.
  • In a speech to BAFTA members in March 2009, Davies revealed that production of Series 3 had nearly been cancelled on three occasions due to budget cuts to children's programming at the BBC.[6]
  • The SJA broadcast schedule dramatically altered in series 3. Previously aired at the rate of one episode a week, the show switched to a one serial a week rate. This chopped the series broadcast duration in half.
  • Series 3 also saw a change in the episodic format, with the pre-titles sequence being shortened because of the addition of an opening narration by Clyde Langer that showed brief clips from the then-current series. This sequence was reused for the 4th and 5th series, with adjustments to the narration to reflect changes in the cast of characters in Series 5.
  • The third series received a major ratings boost with a guest appearance by David Tennant as the Doctor, and maintained its momentum throughout the season, consistently scoring higher-than-average viewership for the time period and also scoring high Appreciation Index numbers. The same thing occurred in series 4 following Matt Smith's episodes.
  • According to DWM 412, the fourth season was in pre-production from August 2009. On 4 March 2010, the BBC officially announced that production had been commissioned, with filming expected to begin by the end of March.[7]
  • Production of the series underwent a scheduling change in 2010, with Series 4 and the first half of Series 5 produced in one production block during the spring-summer of 2010, and filming of the rest of Series 5 planned to follow at a later date. (DWM 425) Ultimately, however, only the three stories of Series 5 filmed in 2010 were completed, as Sladen's death prevented the remainder from being produced.
  • On 24 June 2010, BBC News reported that production of Doctor Who and The Sarah Jane Adventures was to relocate to the currently-under-construction BBC Wales "drama village" in Cardiff in 2012, a strong indication that further seasons beyond series 5 were anticipated.[8] However, the sudden death of Elisabeth Sladen permanently suspended production of the show.

Production team[[edit] | [edit source]]

Producers[[edit] | [edit source]]

The original executive producers for The Sarah Jane Adventures were Russell T Davies and Julie Gardner. Susie Liggat produced Invasion of the Bane, but Matthew Bouch took over for Liggat for series 1 "proper". Phil Collinson held the title of "Series Producer" during the first year. Gareth Roberts — a sort of "uncredited producer" — said of the initial series,

We're all determined that this will be a big, full-blooded drama; that nobody should ever think of it as 'just' a children's programme. Roberts in DWM 375

Bouch remained a producer through series 2. For the following year, Nikki Wilson replaced him, and Piers Wenger, Julie Gardner's replacement as Head of Drama at BBC Wales, joined Gardner and Davies as executive producers.

By the fourth series, however, both Gardner and Wenger were no longer credited on the show. RTD was the only exec who remained of the initial main production team. Brian Minchin had become the producer and Nikki Wilson was now RTD's producing partner. She was also the only executive producer actually resident in Wales since RTD was living in Los Angeles during the production of the last two series of SJA, executive producing Torchwood: Miracle Day.

Other important production figures included Phil Ford, who was credited as "co-producer" after series 1, and Debbi Slater, who served in a variety of key production positions over the five series, including those of associate producer and production manager.

Other departments[[edit] | [edit source]]

The writing staff was fairly stable throughout the programme's run. The job of the head writer was effectively shared between Phil Ford, Gareth Roberts and Russell T Davies for most of the five years — though none of these men actually got a credit as "head writer". Davies did intend to write more stories for the show but on different occasions was forced to pull out being busy with writing Torchwood and Doctor Who, this meant he only ever was credited for writing two stories. Joseph Lidster, Clayton Hickman and Rupert Laight were also frequent contributors.

Production design was handled in the first year by Ed Thomas, alongside Tim Dickel for the series proper, though these duties were eventually given to others in the Doctor Who art department — chiefly Arwel Wyn Jones, who formally succeeded Thomas, and eventually to Keith Dunne. Likewise, the initial casting director was Andy Pryor, but he, too, allowed primary casting responsibilities to eventually fall to his Doctor Who junior, Andy Brierley.

Though the theme music was by Murray Gold, most of the incidental music was actually by Sam and Dan Watts, composers not previously connected with the DWU. Similarly, the cinematography was initially handled by Doctor Who regular, Rory Taylor, but the most prolific director of photography eventually came to be Mark Waters.

Episodes[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: List of The Sarah Jane Adventures television stories

Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main[[edit] | [edit source]]

Ordered in terms of most number of appearances, the main cast consisted of

Recurring[[edit] | [edit source]]

Cast changes[[edit] | [edit source]]

Casting decisions were not routinely discussed in the press with anything like the ferocity that Doctor Who casting announcements were. As a result, many cast changes were often the subject of fan speculation more than fact.

The kids[[edit] | [edit source]]

During the life of SJA, three kids were edged out of the production, but no official statements were issued by the British Broadcasting Corporation about any of these cast changes.

Kelsey Hooper was apparently the original "third kid" in Invasion of the Bane, but she was quietly replaced in series 1 "proper" by Clyde Langer. No reason was ever given by the BBC for this cast change. However, it is possible to believe that Kelsey was never actually intended as a permanent cast member since Invasion actually wrote her out as unable to handle the "Sarah Jane Smith lifestyle" in its final scenes.

Maria Jackson was the next kid to leave. Though she appeared on much of the series 2 publicity material, and appeared or was heard in three of that year's stories (being referred to in two others), she ceased to be a regular after the first story of the second season. Though rumours have swirled for years about why this character — and, by necessity, her parents — were written out, the BBC has never offered up an explanation for the actor's departure. However, actress Yasmin Paige left the role during her GCSE year and decided she would concentrate on her studies[9], though it is not clear if she chose to dedicate herself to her scholarly life on a permanent basis and not return to the series.

Finally, Luke Smith was absent for some episodes of series 3 (due to Tommy Knight taking his GSCE exams at the time) and most of the rest of the programme's run - he only appears prominently in the series 4 opener and finale (with video call appearances in a number of intermediate episodes) - though he was still touted as a main cast member in official BBC press packs through the end of the series. Actor Tommy Knight was also clearly part of what was essentially the last thing the BBC filmed about the series, the April 2011 Liz Sladen tribute, My Sarah Jane. This indicated, though perhaps didn't absolutely confirm, that Luke's reduced role was amenable to both the BBC and Knight himself.

K9[[edit] | [edit source]]

Another casting issue was never well understood. K9's appearances were sporadic throughout the five year run of SJA. Since K9 was owned by writer Bob Baker, its appearances had to be specifically negotiated with the writer. Just as School Reunion had raised Sarah Jane's profile, it had also ignited interest in having a K9 spin-off. Baker may have withheld rights for K9's use in SJA so as not to compromise then-ongoing negotiations for a K9 series. Why the dog was so heavily used in series 3, but otherwise little more than a featured cameo in the other series, was never the subject of an official, public announcement.

Series[[edit] | [edit source]]

SJA debuted on BBC One with a 60-minute special on 1 January 2007. A full series of ten 30-minute episodes followed later in the year.[10] The second series had twelve 30-minute episodes and aired in the autumn of 2008, followed by a third in late 2009. A mini-episode for charity also aired in early 2009. Meanwhile, series four went into production in March 2010. At the same time, what was expected to be the first half of the fifth series was produced as part of the Series 4 recording block, with the second half of the series initially planned for production in early 2011.[11]

However, because Elisabeth Sladen died on 19 April 2011, [12] series 5 was truncated to just those three serials that had been completed in 2010.[13] The series, therefore, ended because Sladen died, and no parties to the production of the series wished to continue without her. A decision was made to leave the story open-ended, with a caption rounding off the final episode's montage, saying "And the story goes on... forever."

International broadcasts[[edit] | [edit source]]

Series 1 aired on the Sci-Fi Channel in the US and BBC Kids in Canada in 2007. In January 2010, Series 2 began airing on BBC Kids. No US broadcast of anything past series 1 ever occurred, and Canada never saw any episode past the second series. Invasion of the Bane was broadcast in Australia on ABC1. Nevertheless, in both Australia and New Zealand, the show started airing in January 2010 on Nickelodeon, though only Series 1-4 were broadcast. It also aired in Brazil on TV Cultura in 2012.

Merchandising[[edit] | [edit source]]

Merchandising specifics are given on individual series pages, such as series 1 (SJA).

The programme attracted some manufacturing interest. Aside from the obvious retail of the episodes themselves, SJA-themed product ranges included:

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

Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]