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{{Infobox Crew
{{subpage tabs}}
|image       = [[Image:W.jpg|250px]]
{{real world}}
|crew name  = Stephen Russell Davies
{{Infobox Person
|episode    = [[#Selected Credits|see all episodes section]]
|image     = RTDAllons-y.jpg
|birth date = [[27th April|27 April]] [[1963]] (age 46) <br> [[Swansea]], [[Wales]] <br>
|aka        = Stephen Russell Davies
|alias      = Russell T Davies
|birth date = [[27 April (people)|27 April]] [[1963 (people)|1963]]
|works      = [[Doctor Who]] <br> [[Torchwood]] <br> [[The Sarah Jane Adventures]] <br> Queer as Folk <br>
|job title  = [[Executive producer]], [[head writer]]
|imdb_id    = nm0203961
|story      = [[#Selected credits|See all episodes section]]
|non dwu    = ''{{iw|queerasfolk|Queer as Folk (UK TV series)|Queer as Folk}}'', ''Cucumber'', ''Years and Years'', ''It's A Sin''
|time      = 2005-2011; 2020-present<!--Beginning with his involvement in various Lockdown! short stories and the Farewell, Sarah Jane episode-->
|imdb      = 0203961
|clip      = Russell T Davies & Steven Moffat Talk Rose and The Day of the Doctor Doctor Who
|clip2      = BBC Writersroom Interviews- Russell T Davies
|clip3      = In conversation with Russell T Davies
}}
}}
{{real world}}
'''Russell T Davies OBE''' (born '''Stephen Russell Davies''' on [[27 April (people)|27 April]] [[1963 (people)|1963]]<ref name="DWDVDF 133">[[DWDVDF 133]]</ref>) took over as [[head writer]] and [[executive producer]] on ''[[Doctor Who]]'' beginning with the [[60th Anniversary Specials]] in 2023 and continuing with the renumbered [[Season 1 (Doctor Who 2023)|season 1]] in 2023-24, having previously held this role from [[Series 1 (Doctor Who 2005)|series 1]] in 2005 to [[Series 4 (Doctor Who 2005)|series 4]] in 2007-10. He was creator and executive producer of spin-off series ''[[Torchwood (TV series)|Torchwood]]'' and ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]'', having written or co-written six episodes of ''Torchwood'' and three episodes (two stories) of ''The Sarah Jane Adventures''. He also executive produced the ''[[Tales of the TARDIS]]'' series for [[BBC iPlayer]], and ''[[The Daleks in Colour (TV story)|The Daleks in Colour]]'' for [[BBC Four]]. Prior to this, in 1996, he had written the [[Virgin New Adventures]] novel ''[[Damaged Goods (novel)|Damaged Goods]]''.
'''Russell T Davies, OBE''' (sometimes spelled '''Russell T. Davies''', born Stephen Russell Davies, [[27th April]] [[1963]]) is a successful television writer and producer responsible for the revival of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' and the creation of ''[[Torchwood]]'' and ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]''. From [[2003]] to mid-[[2009]] he was the [[head writer]] and one of the [[Executive Producer|executive producers]] of the [[BBC Wales]] version of ''Doctor Who''.
 
He is the single most prolific producer of televised entertainment in [[Doctor Who universe|DWU]] history. His position is virtually unassailable because he was producing ''Torchwood'', ''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' and ''Doctor Who'' simultaneously.
 
A [[Wales|Welshman]] himself, his commitment to producing ''Doctor Who'' in Wales has led to a massive expansion of the television production capacity in that nation. His deliberate inclusion of recognisable Welsh landmarks in ''Doctor Who'' has increased tourism in the country. As such, his net impact on the economy of Wales is profound.
 
For his ''Doctor Who'' stories, Davies invested more time in the emotional bonds with his characters. Thus resulting in the Tenth Doctor and Rose's love for each other, Martha's one-sided affection for the Doctor and Donna's strong friendship with the Doctor. All of which led at the end of his original tenure as head writer to the Doctor deciding to not take on companions for a while to save himself heartbreak.
 
== Biography ==
=== Early life ===
Stephen Russell Davies was born in [[Swansea]] on [[27 April (people)|27 April]] [[1963 (people)|1963]]<ref name="DWDVDF 133" />. As a child, Davies was almost always referred to by his middle name, leading him to become professionally known by that name.<ref>"T is for Television: The Small Screen Adventures of Russell T Davies" Reynolds & Hearn Ltd.</ref>
=== Previous work ===
Russell's first major success was the [[CBBC]] fantasy adventure serial {{wi|Dark Season}}, which contained strong similarities to ''[[Doctor Who]]''. Davies would create another children's supernatural drama series, {{wi|Century Falls}}. He created the award-winning original ''{{iw|queerasfolk|Queer as Folk (UK TV series)|Queer as Folk}}'' (which includes several {{iw|queerasfolk|Doctor Who|references to ''Doctor Who''}}) and a supernatural drama for adults, {{wi|The Second Coming (TV serial)|The Second Coming}}, which starred the future [[Ninth Doctor]], [[Christopher Eccleston]], as a reborn Christ.
 
=== ''Doctor Who'' and related work ===
Davies' first professional involvement in ''Doctor Who'' was in 1996, when he wrote the [[Virgin New Adventures]] novel ''[[Damaged Goods (novel)|Damaged Goods]]''. The novel connected to Davies' previous work by featuring a cameo by [[Marcie Hatter]] from ''Dark Season''.
 
==== Revival and work on spin-offs ====
After 2005, when the newly revived ''Doctor Who'' franchise executive produced by Davies flourished, Davies created two spin-off series: ''[[Torchwood (TV series)|Torchwood]]'' and ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]''. He wrote or co-wrote the debut episodes of each. Unlike ''Doctor Who'', his writing involvement in these two shows has been minimal (in ''[[Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale]]'' Davies writes that he was to have written ''[[Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang (TV story)|Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang]]''; he provided a pre-credits sequence involving a [[Blowfish]] driving through [[Cardiff]]). Davies was also a regular contributor to ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'', for which he wrote a regular column in which he often dropped hints about upcoming stories, usually in the form of random snatches of dialogue or listing words that would appear in the script.
 
==== Departure ====
On 20 May 2008, Davies publicly announced his departure from ''Doctor Who''. After the fourth series' specials ended with ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]'' in January 2010, from [[Series 5 (Doctor Who 2005)|series 5]], also airing in 2010, Davies was succeeded by [[Steven Moffat]] in his role as ''Doctor Who'' head writer and executive producer. Davies continued to executive produce ''Torchwood'' until its [[Series 4 (Torchwood)|fourth series]] and ''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' until its [[Series 5 (SJA)|fifth series]], both aired in 2011. Davies was also an executive producer for ''[[Sarah Jane's Alien Files]]''.
 
==== Further work on spin-offs ====
In 2015, Davies's 1996 novel ''[[Damaged Goods (novel)|Damaged Goods]]'' was [[Damaged Goods (audio story)|adapted for audio]] by [[Big Finish Productions]].
 
Davies worked with Big Finish Productions in the creation of ''Torchwood'' audio series ''[[Aliens Among Us]]'', helping co-create its characters.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bigfinish.com/news/v/new-series-5-of-torchwood-aliens-among-us |title=New Series 5 of Torchwood: Aliens Among Us! |date of source=6 May 2017 |website name=[[Big Finish]] |accessdate=6 May 2018}}</ref><ref>[[BFX]]: ''[[Aliens Among Us 3]]''</ref>
 
==== Other projects ====
His BAFTA-nominated and BAFTA-Cymru winning series ''It's a Sin'' aired in 2021.
 
==== Return as writer ====
He wrote the novelisation of his first ''Doctor Who'' episode, ''[[Rose (novelisation)|Rose]]'', for the revived [[Target Books]] line, and contributed to the ''[[Doctor Who: Lockdown!]]'' event with various short stories and the performed webcast story ''[[Farewell, Sarah Jane (webcast)|Farewell, Sarah Jane]]''.
 
He returned as lead writer of the series beginning with the last scene of ''[[The Power of the Doctor (TV story)|The Power of the Doctor]]'' with the [[Fourteenth Doctor]], filmed several months after the [[Thirteenth Doctor]]'s actor [[Jodie Whittaker]] finished her part of her [[regeneration]] scene. As production on his era began, his regular showrunner column in ''Doctor Who Magazine'' resumed after it had been taken over by Steven Moffat and [[Chris Chibnall]] in the interim.
 
Following ''The Power of the Doctor'', Davies' first performed ''Doctor Who'' work to be broadcast in November 2023 was the ''[[Tales of the TARDIS]]'' spin-off series, which he wrote scenes for the [[Fifth Doctor]] and [[Tegan Jovanka]] which bookended [[Earthshock (TotT TV story)|a version]] of the 1982 serial ''[[Earthshock (TV story)|Earthshock]]''. This was followed by a ''[[Children in Need]]'' short episode with the Fourteenth Doctor called ''[[Destination: Skaro (TV story)|Destination: Skaro]]''. The mini-episode bridged ''The Power of the Doctor'' and that month's ''[[The Star Beast (TV story)|The Star Beast]]'', which was his first full episode of ''Doctor Who'' in 13 years.
 
==== Inclusion of LGBT characters ====
With the exception of his work in children's television, he has written an openly and proudly [[gay]] character in all his work, and ''[[Doctor Who]]'' is no exception when it comes to [[queer representation]]. His novel ''Damaged Goods'' features gay sex, and on television he was the first to write about a confirmed transgender side character (''[[The End of the World (TV story)|The End of the World]]'') and confirmed male (''[[Aliens of London (TV story)|Aliens of London]]'') and female [[homosexuality]] (''[[Gridlock (TV story)|Gridlock]]''). He continued to show transgender representation with the teenage character [[Rose Noble]]. (''[[The Star Beast (TV story)|The Star Beast]]'') While [[Steven Moffat]] holds the distinction of being the first writer to write about [[bisexuality]] (''[[The Doctor Dances (TV story)|The Doctor Dances]]'') on screen, Russell T Davies created [[Jack Harkness|Captain Jack]], the first openly omnisexual character in televised ''Doctor Who''. Several episodes of ''Doctor Who'' and ''Torchwood'' have featured same-sex couples, most notably ''Torchwood'' which established a relationship between Captain Jack and [[Ianto Jones]] in the second season.


His written contributions to ''Doctor Who'' are formidable. Davies is easily the most prolific writer for the BBC Wales version of ''Doctor Who''. He has also written more televised ''stories'' than any other writer since [[1963]]. Including material written for ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]'' and ''[[Torchwood]]'' he has also written more hours of television set in the [[Whoniverse]] than anyone else. However, unless he contributes to ''Doctor Who'' after [[2009]], he will remain second to [[Robert Holmes]] in terms of the total number of hours of television written specifically for ''Doctor Who.'' Between the broadcast of ''[[Midnight (TV story)|Midnight]]'' in 2008 and the final chapter of ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]'' in 2010, Davies became the only person to have written or co-written 9 consecutive broadcast episodes (not including one parody mini-episode and episodes of ''Torchwood'').
==== ''Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale'' ====
In February 2007, Davies and ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' writer [[Benjamin Cook]] agreed to exchange e-mails with the intention of creating a series of articles for [[DWM]] on the creation of select episodes from the then upcoming Series 4. This correspondence soon grew well beyond the confines of the magazine and in the autumn of 2008 the 512-page ''[[Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale]]'' was published. A second edition featuring some three hundred pages of additional material covering production of his final stories for ''Doctor Who'' was published in January 2010.


Beyond televised ''Doctor Who'', he has also written both fictional and non-fictional prose relevant to ''Doctor Who''.
==== Significant additions to the ''Doctor Who'' universe ====
Russell T Davies came up with the concept of the [[Torchwood Institute]], the [[Slitheen]], the [[Judoon]] and the [[Cult of Skaro]]. He established a major piece of backstory, the [[Last Great Time War]] and the resulting destruction of [[Gallifrey]] and the [[Time Lord]] race.


A [[Welsh]]man himself, his commitment to producing ''Doctor Who'' in Wales has led to a massive expansion of the television production capacity of that nation. His deliberate inclusion of recognizable Welsh landmarks in ''[[Doctor Who]]'' has also notably increased tourism in the country. His net impact on the economy of Wales is therefore profound.
He also created the Doctor's [[companion]]s [[Rose Tyler]], [[Jack Harkness]] (in conjunction with episode writer Steven Moffat), [[Martha Jones]], [[Donna Noble]], [[Mickey Smith]], and [[Ruby Sunday]] (as well as several one-off companions).
==Biography==
===Previous work===
Russell's first major success was the [[CBBC]] fantasy adventure serial ''[[Wikipedia:Dark Season|Dark Season]]'', which contained strong similarities to ''[[Doctor Who]]''. Davies would go on to create a further children's supernatural drama series, ''[[Wikipedia:Century Falls|Century Falls]]''. He then went on to create the award-winning original ''[[Wikipedia:Queer As Folk|Queer As Folk]]'' (later adapted into an American version) and an supernatural drama for adults entitle ''[[Wikipedia:The Second Coming (TV serial)|The Second Coming]]'' which starred the future [[Ninth Doctor]] [[Christopher Eccleston]] as a re-born Christ.


===''Doctor Who'' and related work===
He devised the concepts, formats and regular characters (other than [[Sarah Jane Smith]]) for ''[[Torchwood (TV series)|Torchwood]]'' and ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]'' and established the idea of producing mini-episodes for special events, which he resumed doing on his first year back as showrunner.
====Revival and work on spin-offs====
Davies' first professional involvement in ''Doctor Who'' was in [[1996]], when he wrote the [[Virgin New Adventures]] novel ''[[Damaged Goods]]''. He wrote ''[[Rose (TV story)|Rose]]'', the debut episode of the 2005 revival, made him the first writer of original licensed spin-off fiction to also write for the official TV series and he would go on to commission other colleagues in this area to write for the show, including [[Mark Gatiss]], [[Robert Shearman]], [[Paul Cornell]], [[Gareth Roberts]] and [[Steven Moffat]].


As the newly revived franchise flourished, Davies created two spin-off series: ''[[Torchwood]]'' and ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]'', writing or co-writing the debut episodes of both, but unlike ''Doctor Who'' his writing involvement in these two shows has been minimal (in ''[[Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale]]'', however, Davies writes that he was to have written the opening episode of ''Torchwood'' [[Series 2 (Torchwood)|Series 2]], which he ultimately did not. Davies is also a regular contributor to ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'', for which he writes a regular column in which he often drops hints about upcoming stories, usually in the form of random snatches of dialogue or listing words that will appear in the script.
He cast [[Christopher Eccleston]] as the [[Ninth Doctor]], [[David Tennant]] as the [[Tenth Doctor|Tenth]] and [[Fourteenth Doctor]]s, and [[Ncuti Gatwa]] as the [[Fifteenth Doctor]] as well as their associated companions.


====Departure====
On his watch Davies reintroduced numerous television characters that first appeared before the first RTD era to new audiences. The characters and races he reintroduced were the [[Auton]]s, the [[Nestene Consciousness]], [[Dalek]]s, [[Sarah Jane Smith]], [[K9]], [[Cybermen (Pete's World)|Cybermen]], [[Macra]], [[the Master]], [[Sontaran]]s, [[Davros]], [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart]], [[Jo Grant]], [[the Toymaker]], and [[Melanie Bush]]. He also introduced [[Pat Mills]]<!--Gibbons has admitted that John Wagner did not work on the original Star Beast comic, and Wagner is not credited as the creator of the Meep and Wrarth nor as the 2023 episode adaptation's "from a story by"--> and [[Dave Gibbons]]' characters [[Beep the Meep|the Meep]] and the [[Wrarth Warrior]]s to non-comic-reading audiences in the [[2023 specials]]. The [[Fifth Doctor]] made a return appearance in an episode produced by Davies and another produced and written by Davies and his script for ''[[The Next Doctor (TV story)|The Next Doctor]]'' incorporated a sequence incorporating footage of the first ten Doctors.
On the [[20th May]], [[2008]], Davies publicly announced his departure from ''Doctor Who''. He '''''continued '''''to be [[Executive Producer]] for the [[2009 Specials (Doctor Who)|2009 specials]] before being succeeded by staff writer [[Steven Moffat]] for [[Series 5 (Doctor Who)|Series 5]] in [[2010]]. He is also executive producing the 2009 series of ''[[Children of Earth|Torchwood]]'' and ''The Sarah Jane Adventures''. He has stated that he will not write for ''Doctor Who'' again after the 2009 specials. However, at a Q&A session following a preview screening of one of the 2009 ''Torchwood'' episodes, Davies indicated that not only is he planning to stay with ''Torchwood'' for another decade if needs be, but the hopes to see further crossovers between that show and ''Doctor Who''.<ref>[http://www.denofgeek.com/television/266944/torchwood_series_4_ready_to_go.html Den of Geek: Torchwood Series 4 'Ready to Go'], accessed 26th July 2009.</ref> His future involvement with future seasons of ''Sarah Jane Adventures'' remains unconfirmed. However, his biographical blurb in the ''[[Doctor Who Storybook 2010]]'' indicates that Davies will be staying on to oversee both ''Torchwood'' and ''The Sarah Jane Adventures''.


====Inclusion of LGBT characters====
Although it has been a part of ''Doctor Who'' lore since its earliest days (see [[TV]]: ''[[The Aztecs (TV story)|The Aztecs]]'', for example), it was during Davies' tenure that the concept of certain events and people being "fixed points in time" and unalterable was solidified. This concept is important in explaining why events such as the Second World War and the Iraq War still occurred in the Whoniverse, though this seems to apply mainly to Earth-based events and not events such as Dalek invasions.
With the exception of his work in children's television, he has written an openly and proudly gay character in all his work, and Doctor Who is no exception. He became the first writer to write about confirmed transsexuality (''[[The End of the World]]'') and confirmed male (''[[Aliens of London]]'') and female homosexuality (''[[Gridlock]]''), [[Steven Moffat]] holds the distinction of being the first writer to write about bisexuality (''[[The Doctor Dances]]'') but Russell T Davies was the one who created [[Jack Harkness|Captain Jack]], the first openly omnisexual character in televised ''Doctor Who''. Several episodes of both ''Doctor Who'' and ''Torchwood'' have featured same-sex couples, most notably ''Torchwood'' which established a relationship between Captain Jack and [[Ianto Jones]] in the second season.


== Other information ==
* In 2008, Davies was awarded an {{w|OBE}}, the second ''Doctor Who'' producer to receive one ([[Verity Lambert]] received an OBE in 2002). <ref>[http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/honoured-for-services-to-dr-who-and-saturday-nights-846928.html Honoured: for services to Dr Who and Saturday nights, accessed 15-June-2008]</ref>
* In an interview he stated the [[Christmas]] episode slot was his favourite of the year.
* Davies is a skilled cartoonist and many ''Doctor Who''-related examples of his work can be found in ''[[Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale]]''.
* In 2009, Davies became one of the only ''Doctor Who''-related personnel to be depicted in a fictional and non-parody context when Robert Degas portrayed him in the comedy ''Hudson and Pepperdine Save the Planet'', an instalment of ''Afternoon Play'' which was broadcast on [[BBC Radio 4]] on 19 August 2009.<ref>http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b009y1st</ref>
* The premiere episode of the 2008 BBC Wales series ''Merlin'' carries a "Special Thanks" credit for Davies, acknowledging his impact on reshaping Saturday evening television through ''Doctor Who''.
* His favourite classic series story is ''[[The Ark in Space (TV story)|The Ark in Space]]'', while his favourite Doctor is [[Tom Baker]]; he has also expressed admiration for [[Robert Holmes]], the writer of ''[[The Ark in Space (TV story)|The Ark in Space]]'' and many classic stories.
* He did not wish to write even a single line for the [[Eleventh Doctor]], as he felt he was [[Steven Moffat]]'s character; the new Doctor's dialogue after the regeneration in ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time, Part 2]]'' was left blank for Moffat to fill in. However, he did eventually write for the Eleventh Doctor in the ''Sarah Jane Adventures'' episode ''[[Death of the Doctor (TV story)|Death of the Doctor]]''. Eleventh Doctor actor Matt Smith commented that Davies was "very good on writing Doctors" and that he immediately understood who Smith's Doctor was.
* In ''The Writer's Tale'', Davies reveals he was asked by ''[[Star Wars]]'' creator George Lucas to write a story for the popular animated spinoff series ''Star Wars: The Clone Wars'', but turned him down.


====''[[Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale]]''====
== Television credits ==
In February 2007, Davies and ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' writer [[Benjamin Cook]] agreed to begin exchanging e-mails with the intent of creating a series of articles for DWM on the creation of select episodes from the then-upcoming Series 4. This correspondence soon grew well beyond the confines of a magazine and in the fall of 2008 the 512-page ''[[Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale]]'' was published. A second edition featuring some 300 pages of additional material covering production of his final stories for ''Doctor Who'' is scheduled for publication in January 2010.
=== As writer ===
==== ''Doctor Who'' ====
===== Series 1 =====
* ''[[Rose (TV story)|Rose]]''
* ''[[The End of the World (TV story)|The End of the World]]''
* ''[[Aliens of London (TV story)|Aliens of London]]'' / ''[[World War Three (TV story)|World War Three]]''
* ''[[The Long Game (TV story)|The Long Game]]''
* ''[[Boom Town (TV story)|Boom Town]]''
* ''[[Bad Wolf (TV story)|Bad Wolf]]'' / ''[[The Parting of the Ways (TV story)|The Parting of the Ways]]''


====Significant additions to the Doctor Who Universe====
===== Series 2 =====
Russell T Davies came up with the concept of the [[Torchwood Institute]], the [[Slitheen]], the [[Judoon]] and the [[Cult of Skaro]], and established a major piece of backstory, the [[Last Great Time War]] and the resulting destruction of [[Gallifrey]] and the [[Time Lord]] race.
* ''[[The Christmas Invasion (TV story)|The Christmas Invasion]]''
* ''[[New Earth (TV story)|New Earth]]''
* ''[[Tooth and Claw (TV story)|Tooth and Claw]]''
* ''[[Love & Monsters (TV story)|Love & Monsters]]''
* ''[[Army of Ghosts (TV story)|Army of Ghosts]]'' / ''[[Doomsday (TV story)|Doomsday]]''


He also created the Doctor's [[companion]]s [[Rose Tyler]], [[Jack Harkness]] (in conjunction with episode writer Steven Moffat), [[Martha Jones]], [[Donna Noble]] and [[Mickey Smith]] (as well as several one-off companions).
===== Series 3 =====
* ''[[The Runaway Bride (TV story)|The Runaway Bride]]''
* ''[[Smith and Jones (TV story)|Smith and Jones]]''
* ''[[Gridlock (TV story)|Gridlock]]''
* ''[[Utopia (TV story)|Utopia]]'' / ''[[The Sound of Drums (TV story)|The Sound of Drums]]'' / ''[[Last of the Time Lords (TV story)|Last of the Time Lords]]''


He devised the concepts, formats and regular characters (other than those originating in ''Doctor Who'') for ''[[Torchwood]]'' and ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]'', and also established the idea of producing canonical mini-episodes for special events.
===== Series 4 =====
* ''[[Voyage of the Damned (TV story)|Voyage of the Damned]]''
* ''[[Partners in Crime (TV story)|Partners in Crime]]''
* ''[[Midnight (TV story)|Midnight]]''
* ''[[Turn Left (TV story)|Turn Left]]''
* ''[[The Stolen Earth (TV story)|The Stolen Earth]]'' / ''[[Journey's End (TV story)|Journey's End]]''
* ''[[The Next Doctor (TV story)|The Next Doctor]]''
* ''[[Planet of the Dead (TV story)|Planet of the Dead]]'' (co-written with [[Gareth Roberts]])
* ''[[The Waters of Mars (TV story)|The Waters of Mars]]'' (co-written with [[Phil Ford]])
* ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]''


He decided on the casting of [[Christopher Eccleston]] and [[David Tennant]] as the [[Ninth Doctor|Ninth]] and [[Tenth Doctor]]s, respectively, as well as their associated companions.
===== Series 13 =====
* ''[[The Power of the Doctor (TV story)|The Power of the Doctor]]'' (co-written with [[Chris Chibnall]], single scene, uncredited)


Under his watch numerous original-series characters have been reintroduced to new audiences, including [[Sarah Jane Smith]], [[K-9]], [[the Master]], [[Davros]], the [[Dalek]]s, the [[Cybermen]], Brigadier [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|Lethbridge-Stewart]], [[UNIT]], and the [[Sontaran]]s, among others. The [[Fifth Doctor]] made a return appearance in an episode produced by Davies, and his script for ''[[The Next Doctor]]'' incorporated a landmark sequence incorporating footage of all 10 Doctors to date.
===== 60th Anniversary Specials =====
* ''[[The Star Beast (TV story)|The Star Beast]]''
* ''[[Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)|Wild Blue Yonder]]''
* ''[[The Giggle (TV story)|The Giggle]]''


Although it has been a part of ''Doctor Who'' lore since its earliest days (see [[DW]]: ''[[The Aztecs]]'', for example), it was during Davies' tenure that the concept of certain events and people being "fixed points in time" and unable to be altered was solidified. This concept is important in explaining why events such as the Second World War and 9/11 still occurred in the Whoniverse, though this seems to apply mainly to earth-based events and not events such as Dalek invasions.
===== Season 1 =====
* ''[[The Church on Ruby Road (TV story)|The Church on Ruby Road]]''
* ''[[Space Babies (TV story)|Space Babies]]''
* ''[[The Devil's Chord (TV story)|The Devil's Chord]]''
* ''[[73 Yards (TV story)|73 Yards]]''
* ''[[The Legend of Ruby Sunday (TV story)|The Legend of Ruby Sunday]]''
* ''[[Empire of Death (TV story)|Empire of Death]]''


==Other information==
===== Minisodes =====
*In [[2008]], Davies was awarded an [[Wikipedia:OBE|OBE]], the second Doctor Who producer to receive one ([[Verity Lambert]] received an OBE in [[2002]]). <ref>[http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/honoured-for-services-to-dr-who-and-saturday-nights-846928.html Honoured: for services to Dr Who and Saturday nights, accessed 15-June-2008]</ref>
* ''[[Born Again (TV story)|Born Again]]''
* ''[[Music of the Spheres (TV story)|Music of the Spheres]]''
* ''[[The Daleks & Davros (TV story)|The Daleks & Davros]]''
* ''[[Destination: Skaro (TV story)|Destination: Skaro]]''
* ''[[Pantheon of Discord (audio story)|Pantheon of Discord]]''
* [[Untitled 1 (Doctor Who at the Proms 2024 audio story)|Untitled ''Doctor Who at the Proms'' 2024 Dalek skit]]
* [[Untitled 2 (Doctor Who at the Proms 2024 audio story)|Untitled ''Doctor Who at the Proms'' 2024 Mrs Flood skit]]


*In an interview he stated the [[Christmas]] episode slot was his favourite of the year.
==== ''Torchwood'' ====
===== Series 1 =====
* ''[[Everything Changes (TV story)|Everything Changes]]''


*Davies is also a skilled cartoonist, and many ''Doctor Who''-related examples of his work can be found in ''[[Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale]]''.
===== Children of Earth =====
* ''[[Children of Earth: Day One (TV story)|Children of Earth: Day One]]''
* ''[[Children of Earth: Day Three (TV story)|Children of Earth: Day Three]]'' (co-written with [[James Moran]])
* ''[[Children of Earth: Day Five (TV story)|Children of Earth: Day Five]]''


*In 2009, Davies became one of the only ''Doctor Who''-related personnel to be depicted in a fictional and non-parody context when Robert Degas portrayed him in the comedy ''Hudson and Pepperdine Save the Planet'', an installment of ''Afternoon Play'' which was broadcast on [[BBC Radio 4]] on 19th August 2009.[http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b009y1st]
===== Miracle Day =====
* ''[[The New World (TV story)|The New World]]''
* ''[[The Blood Line (TV story)|The Blood Line]]''


*The premiere episodes of the 2008 BBC Wales series, ''Merlin'', carries a "Special Thanks" credit for Davies, acknowledging his impact on reshaping Saturday evening television through ''Doctor Who''.
==== ''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' ====
===== Series 1 =====
* ''[[Invasion of the Bane (TV story)|Invasion of the Bane]]'' (co-written with [[Gareth Roberts]])


==Selected credits==
===== Series 3 =====
===Writing===
* ''[[Death of the Doctor (TV story)|Death of the Doctor]]''
====Television====
=====[[Doctor Who]]=====
======[[Series 1 (Doctor Who)|Series 1]]======
*''[[Rose (TV story)|Rose]]''
*''[[The End of the World]]''
*''[[Aliens of London]]''
*''[[World War Three]]''
*''[[The Long Game]]''
*''[[Boom Town]]''
*''[[Bad Wolf (TV story)|Bad Wolf]]''
*''[[The Parting of the Ways]]''


======[[Series 2 (Doctor Who)|Series 2]]======
==== ''Tales of the TARDIS'' ====
*''[[The Christmas Invasion]]''
* ''[[Earthshock (TotT TV story)|Earthshock]]''
*''[[New Earth (TV story)|New Earth]]''
* ''[[Pyramids of Mars (TotT TV story)|Pyramids of Mars]]''
*''[[Tooth and Claw]]''
*''[[Love & Monsters]]''
*''[[Army of Ghosts]]''
*''[[Doomsday]]''


======[[Series 3 (Doctor Who)|Series 3]]======
=== As script editor ===
*''[[The Runaway Bride]]''
* ''[[The Shrink (TV story)|The Shrink]]''
*''[[Smith and Jones]]''
*''[[Gridlock]]''
*''[[Utopia (TV story)|Utopia]]''
*''[[The Sound of Drums]]''
*''[[Last of the Time Lords]]''


======[[Series 4 (Doctor Who)|Series 4]]======
=== As executive producer ===
*''[[Voyage of the Damned]]''
{{pcred|executive producer}}
*''[[Partners in Crime]]''
==== As actor ====
*''[[Midnight (TV story)|Midnight]]''
* ''[[The Gathering (TV story)|The Gathering]]'' - [[Radio announcer (The Gathering)|Radio announcer]]
*''[[Turn Left]]''
* ''[[The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot (TV story)|The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot]]'' - himself
*''[[The Stolen Earth]]''
*''[[Journey's End]]''


======[[2009 specials]]======
== Prose fiction ==
*''[[The Next Doctor]]''
=== Virgin New Adventures Novels ===
*''[[Planet of the Dead (TV story)|Planet of the Dead]]''
* ''[[Damaged Goods (novel)|Damaged Goods]]''
:''Co-written with [[Gareth Roberts]]''
*''[[The Waters of Mars]]''
:''Co-written with [[Phil Ford]]''
*''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]''


======Mini-episodes======
=== Target novelisations ===
*''[[Children in Need Special]]'' (2005)
* ''[[Rose (novelisation)|Rose]]''
*''[[Music of the Spheres]]'' (2008)
*''[[Tonight's the Night]]'' special scene (2009)


=====[[Torchwood]]=====
=== Short stories ===
======[[Series 1 (Torchwood)|Series 1]]======
==== ''Doctor Who Annual'' ====
*''[[Everything Changes]]''
* ''[[Meet the Doctor (DWAN 2006 short story)|Meet the Doctor]]''
* ''[[Meet Rose (short story)|Meet Rose]]''


======[[Series 2 (Torchwood)|Series 2]]======
==== Online ====
*''[[Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang]]'' (uncredited contribution<ref>According to ''The Writer's Tale'', Davies was to have written this episode but was unable to complete the work due to competing workload related to ''Doctor Who''. The opening scene of the episode was devised by Davies for his incomplete script and remained in the final episode.</ref>)
* ''[[Doctor Who and the Time War (short story)|Doctor Who and the Time War]]''
* ''[[Revenge of the Nestene (short story)|Revenge of the Nestene]]''


======[[Series 3 (Torchwood)|Series 3]]======
==== Nonfiction ====
*''[[Children of Earth]]'' (with [[John Fay]] and [[James Moran]])
* ''[[The Writer's Tale]]'' (with [[Benjamin Cook]])
* ''[[The Writer's Tale: The Final Chapter]]'' (with Benjamin Cook)


=====[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]=====
== Audio ==
======Premiere======
* ''[[Damaged Goods (audio story)|Damaged Goods]]'' (adapted to audio by [[Jonathan Morris]])
*''[[Invasion of the Bane]]''
:''Co-written with [[Gareth Roberts]]''


====Prose====
=== ''Doctor Who: Lockdown'' ===
=====Fiction=====
* ''[[Farewell, Sarah Jane (webcast)|Farewell, Sarah Jane]]''
======Novels======
* ''[[The Secret of Novice Hame (webcast)|The Secret of Novice Hame]]''
======[[Virgin New Adventures]]======
*''[[Damaged Goods]]''


=====Nonfiction=====
=== Other ===
*''[[Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale]]'' (with [[Benjamin Cook]])
* He had a regular column in ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' during both of his eras as the showrunner.
: Two editions of this book were published. The second edition, issued in January 2010, included more than 300 pages of additional material.
* Davies has also written short pieces for the various [[Doctor Who annual|''Doctor Who'' annual]] and ''[[Doctor Who Storybook]]'' published from 2005 onwards, most notably several instalments of ''[[A Letter from the Doctor]]''.
* He wrote the introduction for the 2011 republication of ''[[Doctor Who and the Auton Invasion]]''.


====Other====
== External links ==
*Regular column in ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]''.
{{imdb name|id=0203961}}
*Davies has also written short pieces for the various ''[[Doctor Who Annual]]'' and ''[[Doctor Who Storybook]]'' published from [[2005]] onwards, most notably several instalments of "[[A Letter from the Doctor]]".
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/7453623.stm BBC News - Profile: Russell T Davies]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20050322182022/http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/news/drwho/2004/08/10/13635.shtml BBC.co.uk website interview with Russell T Davies, 10 January 2004]


==External Links==
== Footnotes ==
*[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/7453623.stm BBC News - Profile: Russell T Davies]
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==Footnotes==
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[[Category:Prose writers]]
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[[Category:People interviewed on Doctor Who: Unleashed]]
[[Category:Tales of the TARDIS writers]]

Latest revision as of 20:26, 3 November 2024

RealWorld.png

Russell T Davies OBE (born Stephen Russell Davies on 27 April 1963[1]) took over as head writer and executive producer on Doctor Who beginning with the 60th Anniversary Specials in 2023 and continuing with the renumbered season 1 in 2023-24, having previously held this role from series 1 in 2005 to series 4 in 2007-10. He was creator and executive producer of spin-off series Torchwood and The Sarah Jane Adventures, having written or co-written six episodes of Torchwood and three episodes (two stories) of The Sarah Jane Adventures. He also executive produced the Tales of the TARDIS series for BBC iPlayer, and The Daleks in Colour for BBC Four. Prior to this, in 1996, he had written the Virgin New Adventures novel Damaged Goods.

He is the single most prolific producer of televised entertainment in DWU history. His position is virtually unassailable because he was producing Torchwood, The Sarah Jane Adventures and Doctor Who simultaneously.

A Welshman himself, his commitment to producing Doctor Who in Wales has led to a massive expansion of the television production capacity in that nation. His deliberate inclusion of recognisable Welsh landmarks in Doctor Who has increased tourism in the country. As such, his net impact on the economy of Wales is profound.

For his Doctor Who stories, Davies invested more time in the emotional bonds with his characters. Thus resulting in the Tenth Doctor and Rose's love for each other, Martha's one-sided affection for the Doctor and Donna's strong friendship with the Doctor. All of which led at the end of his original tenure as head writer to the Doctor deciding to not take on companions for a while to save himself heartbreak.

Biography

Early life

Stephen Russell Davies was born in Swansea on 27 April 1963[1]. As a child, Davies was almost always referred to by his middle name, leading him to become professionally known by that name.[2]

Previous work

Russell's first major success was the CBBC fantasy adventure serial Dark Season, which contained strong similarities to Doctor Who. Davies would create another children's supernatural drama series, Century Falls. He created the award-winning original Queer as Folk (which includes several references to Doctor Who) and a supernatural drama for adults, The Second Coming, which starred the future Ninth Doctor, Christopher Eccleston, as a reborn Christ.

Doctor Who and related work

Davies' first professional involvement in Doctor Who was in 1996, when he wrote the Virgin New Adventures novel Damaged Goods. The novel connected to Davies' previous work by featuring a cameo by Marcie Hatter from Dark Season.

Revival and work on spin-offs

After 2005, when the newly revived Doctor Who franchise executive produced by Davies flourished, Davies created two spin-off series: Torchwood and The Sarah Jane Adventures. He wrote or co-wrote the debut episodes of each. Unlike Doctor Who, his writing involvement in these two shows has been minimal (in Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale Davies writes that he was to have written Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang; he provided a pre-credits sequence involving a Blowfish driving through Cardiff). Davies was also a regular contributor to Doctor Who Magazine, for which he wrote a regular column in which he often dropped hints about upcoming stories, usually in the form of random snatches of dialogue or listing words that would appear in the script.

Departure

On 20 May 2008, Davies publicly announced his departure from Doctor Who. After the fourth series' specials ended with The End of Time in January 2010, from series 5, also airing in 2010, Davies was succeeded by Steven Moffat in his role as Doctor Who head writer and executive producer. Davies continued to executive produce Torchwood until its fourth series and The Sarah Jane Adventures until its fifth series, both aired in 2011. Davies was also an executive producer for Sarah Jane's Alien Files.

Further work on spin-offs

In 2015, Davies's 1996 novel Damaged Goods was adapted for audio by Big Finish Productions.

Davies worked with Big Finish Productions in the creation of Torchwood audio series Aliens Among Us, helping co-create its characters.[3][4]

Other projects

His BAFTA-nominated and BAFTA-Cymru winning series It's a Sin aired in 2021.

Return as writer

He wrote the novelisation of his first Doctor Who episode, Rose, for the revived Target Books line, and contributed to the Doctor Who: Lockdown! event with various short stories and the performed webcast story Farewell, Sarah Jane.

He returned as lead writer of the series beginning with the last scene of The Power of the Doctor with the Fourteenth Doctor, filmed several months after the Thirteenth Doctor's actor Jodie Whittaker finished her part of her regeneration scene. As production on his era began, his regular showrunner column in Doctor Who Magazine resumed after it had been taken over by Steven Moffat and Chris Chibnall in the interim.

Following The Power of the Doctor, Davies' first performed Doctor Who work to be broadcast in November 2023 was the Tales of the TARDIS spin-off series, which he wrote scenes for the Fifth Doctor and Tegan Jovanka which bookended a version of the 1982 serial Earthshock. This was followed by a Children in Need short episode with the Fourteenth Doctor called Destination: Skaro. The mini-episode bridged The Power of the Doctor and that month's The Star Beast, which was his first full episode of Doctor Who in 13 years.

Inclusion of LGBT characters

With the exception of his work in children's television, he has written an openly and proudly gay character in all his work, and Doctor Who is no exception when it comes to queer representation. His novel Damaged Goods features gay sex, and on television he was the first to write about a confirmed transgender side character (The End of the World) and confirmed male (Aliens of London) and female homosexuality (Gridlock). He continued to show transgender representation with the teenage character Rose Noble. (The Star Beast) While Steven Moffat holds the distinction of being the first writer to write about bisexuality (The Doctor Dances) on screen, Russell T Davies created Captain Jack, the first openly omnisexual character in televised Doctor Who. Several episodes of Doctor Who and Torchwood have featured same-sex couples, most notably Torchwood which established a relationship between Captain Jack and Ianto Jones in the second season.

Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale

In February 2007, Davies and Doctor Who Magazine writer Benjamin Cook agreed to exchange e-mails with the intention of creating a series of articles for DWM on the creation of select episodes from the then upcoming Series 4. This correspondence soon grew well beyond the confines of the magazine and in the autumn of 2008 the 512-page Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale was published. A second edition featuring some three hundred pages of additional material covering production of his final stories for Doctor Who was published in January 2010.

Significant additions to the Doctor Who universe

Russell T Davies came up with the concept of the Torchwood Institute, the Slitheen, the Judoon and the Cult of Skaro. He established a major piece of backstory, the Last Great Time War and the resulting destruction of Gallifrey and the Time Lord race.

He also created the Doctor's companions Rose Tyler, Jack Harkness (in conjunction with episode writer Steven Moffat), Martha Jones, Donna Noble, Mickey Smith, and Ruby Sunday (as well as several one-off companions).

He devised the concepts, formats and regular characters (other than Sarah Jane Smith) for Torchwood and The Sarah Jane Adventures and established the idea of producing mini-episodes for special events, which he resumed doing on his first year back as showrunner.

He cast Christopher Eccleston as the Ninth Doctor, David Tennant as the Tenth and Fourteenth Doctors, and Ncuti Gatwa as the Fifteenth Doctor as well as their associated companions.

On his watch Davies reintroduced numerous television characters that first appeared before the first RTD era to new audiences. The characters and races he reintroduced were the Autons, the Nestene Consciousness, Daleks, Sarah Jane Smith, K9, Cybermen, Macra, the Master, Sontarans, Davros, Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart, Jo Grant, the Toymaker, and Melanie Bush. He also introduced Pat Mills and Dave Gibbons' characters the Meep and the Wrarth Warriors to non-comic-reading audiences in the 2023 specials. The Fifth Doctor made a return appearance in an episode produced by Davies and another produced and written by Davies and his script for The Next Doctor incorporated a sequence incorporating footage of the first ten Doctors.

Although it has been a part of Doctor Who lore since its earliest days (see TV: The Aztecs, for example), it was during Davies' tenure that the concept of certain events and people being "fixed points in time" and unalterable was solidified. This concept is important in explaining why events such as the Second World War and the Iraq War still occurred in the Whoniverse, though this seems to apply mainly to Earth-based events and not events such as Dalek invasions.

Other information

  • In 2008, Davies was awarded an OBE, the second Doctor Who producer to receive one (Verity Lambert received an OBE in 2002). [5]
  • In an interview he stated the Christmas episode slot was his favourite of the year.
  • Davies is a skilled cartoonist and many Doctor Who-related examples of his work can be found in Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale.
  • In 2009, Davies became one of the only Doctor Who-related personnel to be depicted in a fictional and non-parody context when Robert Degas portrayed him in the comedy Hudson and Pepperdine Save the Planet, an instalment of Afternoon Play which was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on 19 August 2009.[6]
  • The premiere episode of the 2008 BBC Wales series Merlin carries a "Special Thanks" credit for Davies, acknowledging his impact on reshaping Saturday evening television through Doctor Who.
  • His favourite classic series story is The Ark in Space, while his favourite Doctor is Tom Baker; he has also expressed admiration for Robert Holmes, the writer of The Ark in Space and many classic stories.
  • He did not wish to write even a single line for the Eleventh Doctor, as he felt he was Steven Moffat's character; the new Doctor's dialogue after the regeneration in The End of Time, Part 2 was left blank for Moffat to fill in. However, he did eventually write for the Eleventh Doctor in the Sarah Jane Adventures episode Death of the Doctor. Eleventh Doctor actor Matt Smith commented that Davies was "very good on writing Doctors" and that he immediately understood who Smith's Doctor was.
  • In The Writer's Tale, Davies reveals he was asked by Star Wars creator George Lucas to write a story for the popular animated spinoff series Star Wars: The Clone Wars, but turned him down.

Television credits

As writer

Doctor Who

Series 1
Series 2
Series 3
Series 4
Series 13
60th Anniversary Specials
Season 1
Minisodes

Torchwood

Series 1
Children of Earth
Miracle Day

The Sarah Jane Adventures

Series 1
Series 3

Tales of the TARDIS

As script editor

As executive producer

As actor

Prose fiction

Virgin New Adventures Novels

Target novelisations

Short stories

Doctor Who Annual

Online

Nonfiction

Audio

Doctor Who: Lockdown

Other

External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 DWDVDF 133
  2. "T is for Television: The Small Screen Adventures of Russell T Davies" Reynolds & Hearn Ltd.
  3. New Series 5 of Torchwood: Aliens Among Us!. Big Finish (6 May 2017). Retrieved on 6 May 2018.
  4. BFX: Aliens Among Us 3
  5. Honoured: for services to Dr Who and Saturday nights, accessed 15-June-2008
  6. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b009y1st