Mara: Difference between revisions

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(→‎Mythology & Fiction: correcting info. Also, the Biblical references ''shouldn't be obvious'' as these themes exist in Indic religion anyway. It is not false, but this is an encylopedia so I chang)
 
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{{Infobox Species
{{Subpage tabs}}
|Species name    = Mara
{{wikipediainfo|Mara (demon)}}
|image           = [[Image:MaraTrueForm.jpg|250px]]
{{ImageLink}}
|type            = Serpentine
{{Infobox Individual
|aka            =  
|aka              = Evil Ones, the Father of Lies
|affiliation    =  
|image             = <gallery>
|origin         = [[Manussa]]
MaraTrueForm.jpg | ''Kinda'' 1982
|appearances    = <ul><li>[[DW]]: ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]''</li><li>[[DW]]: ''[[Snakedance]]''</li><li>[[BFA]]:''[[The Cradle of the Snake]]''</li></ul>
Cg mara.jpg | ''Kinda'' 2011
|mentions        = <ul><li>[[DW]]: ''[[The Visitation]]''</li><li>[[DW]]: ''[[Mawdryn Undead]]''</li><li>[[DW]]: ''[[Time Crash]]''</li><li>[[TW]]: ''[[Small Worlds]]''</li></ul>
</gallery>
|individuals    =
|species          = Psychevore
}}
|affiliation      = Fairies
'''The Mara''' were a species of serpentine individuals who tempted and bullied other beings into allowing themselves to be possessed. They principally dwelt on another plane of existence and used people's dream states to enter their minds. People affected by Mara typically developed a snake-shaped mark on the arm. When pulled fully into the physical world, they revealed what [[Fifth Doctor|the Doctor]] called their "true form", that of very large snakes.
|affiliation2      = The Pantheon
|origin           = [[Manussa (planet)|Manussa]]
|first cs          = Kinda (TV story)
|appearances      = {{appears}}
|clip              = The Mara revealed - Doctor Who Kinda - BBC
|actor            = Janet Fielding
|other actor      = Adrian Mills
|other actor2      = Martin Clunes
|other voice actor = [[Peter Davison]], [[Sarah Sutton]], [[Mark Strickson]]
}}{{you may|The Mara (short story)|n1=the poem}}
'''The Mara''' was/were a [[gestalt]] being/species that dwelt in the [[Dark Places of the Inside]] and sought physical existence by taking over a host in their [[dream]]. Because of its unclear nature, the Mara was simultaneously thought of as a "he", "it", and "they".  


The word "Mara" describes both the species and the individual members of that species.
== Biology ==
[[File:Kinda snake tattoo.JPG|left|thumb|The mark of the Mara. ([[TV]]: ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'')]]
Because the Mara was a kind of gestalt creature, it simultaneously had many forms and also none, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Dreaming (short story)|The Dreaming]]'') and was able to manifest within the Dark Places of the Inside, but required a host in the real world before it could manifest its true self. ([[TV]]: ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'')


==Profile==
The Mara was a [[psychevore]] that fed on raw emotion. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Left-Handed Hummingbird (novel)|The Left-Handed Hummingbird]]'')
The Mara was a being which fed on the suffering and madness of others. It tempted individuals into letting it control them and would create havoc and chaos to pleasure itself. Something the [[Kinda]] were able to understand is that life and death are a turning wheel, and it was the Mara who turned the wheel. In this thinking, wars would help the Mara as they created death and the true way to be free of the Mara was to find peace.


===History===
Hosts of the Mara developed a snake mark upon the arm and had reddened eyes and teeth, ([[TV]]: ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'') even glowing red eyes and the ability to share voices between hosts, ([[TV]]: ''[[Snakedance (TV story)|Snakedance]]'') although in one case the Mara possessed several individuals that developed red, moulted skin. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Dreaming (short story)|The Dreaming]]'') The Mara was [[snake]]-like in its true form. The marks themselves could become real Mara, ([[TV]]: ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'', ''[[Snakedance (TV story)|Snakedance]]'') developing like a rash until they burst from the skin and infected anyone they touched. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Dreaming (short story)|The Dreaming]]'')
====Early History====
The Mara was an entity created from the evil in the minds of [[Manussan|the people]] of the [[planet]] [[Manussa]] in the [[Scrampus system]]. It was given independent life via the Great Crystal, which the Manussans created in a [[zero gravity]] environment. The Mara then founded the [[Sumaran Empire]]. ([[DW]]: ''[[Snakedance]]'') It existed in the minds of its victims and can transfer itself in the form of a tattoo-like mark, to those who yielded to it. It was so evil that it cannot bear the sight of its own reflection. ([[DW]]: ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'')


On Manussa, the Mara was defeated and driven out by an ancestor of the future [[Federator]] and cast into the "dark places of the inside". ([[DW]]: ''[[Snakedance]]'')
[[File:Tegan snake tattoo.JPG|thumb|The mark begins to manifest. ([[TV]]: ''[[Snakedance (TV story)|Snakedance]]'')]]
[[Jack Harkness]] stated that he thought the [[Fairy|Fairies]] of [[Earth]] were "part Mara," explaining that the former could control the [[element]]s, i.e. [[fire]], [[water]], and [[air]], claiming they could "drag [the] air right out of our bodies." ([[TV]]: ''[[Small Worlds (TV story)|Small Worlds]]'')


[[Image:Mara.png|thumb|left|The mark of the Mara, signifying that the individual had become possessed]]
== Personality ==
The Mara was a spirit of [[chaos]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Cradle of the Snake (audio story)|The Cradle of the Snake]]'') It delighted in the pain and madness of others. It liked to play tricks on people, especially ones that even children could see through. It tempted individuals into letting it control them and would create havoc and chaos. The [[Kinda]] believed that life and death were a [[Wheel of Life|turning wheel]], and it was the Mara who turned the wheel. In this line of thought, wars would help the Mara, as they created death and the way to truly be free of the Mara was to find peace, ([[TV]]: ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'') or in other terms, find the "[[still point]]." ([[TV]]: ''[[Snakedance (TV story)|Snakedance]]'')


===Later History===
The [[Harriet Arbinger|harbinger]] of [[Sutekh]] called the Mara the "god of beasts". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Legend of Ruby Sunday (TV story)}}.
It was on the planet [[Deva Loka]] that the [[Fifth Doctor|the Doctor]], [[Tegan Jovanka|Tegan]] and [[Adric]] encountered the Mara. ([[Nyssa]], meanwhile, rested in the [[The Doctor's TARDIS|TARDIS]].) Tegan fell asleep listening to [[wind chime]]s and mentally entered the Dark Places of the Inside. The Mara manifested to her as the elderly game-playing couple [[Anatta]] and [[Anicca]], who insisted she could not possibly exist, and then as [[Dukkha]], who tempted and tormented her until she agreed to let the Mara take over her body. The Mara used her body to find and possess [[Aris]], one of the peaceful [[Kinda]] tribe, leaving Tegan. Kinda tradition did not allow men (other than "idiots") to speak. Aris called himself "Aris, He Who Has Voice" and began to rally them against [[Human]] colonists led by [[Hindle]]. The Doctor was able to prevent the humans detonating a bomb and managed to trap the Mara in a [[Circle of Mirrors|circle of mirrors]] and face itself, therefore, driving it back into the Dark Places of the Inside. ([[DW]]: ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'') Tegan remained very shaken by the experience, as she confided to Nyssa afterward. ([[DW]]: ''[[The Visitation]]'') Unknown to all, the Mara still had influence over Tegan. ([[DW]]: ''[[Snakedance]]'')


Late, the Mara guided Tegan to take the Doctor's TARDIS to Manussa, the birthplace of the Mara, where a ceremony was to be held to mark the 500th anniversary of its banishment. The Mara used Tegan, the showman [[Dugdale]], and the son of the Federator, [[Lon]], to obtain the [[Great Crystal]] to restore itself to physical itself. [[Fifth Doctor|The Doctor]] was guided by an old mystic named [[Dojjen]] who showed him how to find the "[[still point]]". When the Mara tried to make its return at the ceremony, the Doctor concentrated his thoughts with a small replica of the Great Crystal, and by finding the still point was able to repel the Mara. Then by grabbing the Great Crystal, the Doctor broke the Mara's hold over its controlled Manussans, and destroyed its new snake body. This time, the Mara had apparently been completely destroyed for good. ([[DW]]: ''[[Snakedance]]'')
== Biography ==
=== Early history ===
The Mara was an entity created from the [[evil]] in the minds of [[Manussan|the people]] of the [[planet]] [[Manussa (planet)|Manussa]] in the [[Scrampus System]]. It was given independent life via the Great Crystal, which the Manussans created in a [[zero gravity]] environment. The Mara then founded the [[Sumaran Empire]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Snakedance (TV story)|Snakedance]]'') It existed in the minds of its victims and could transfer itself in the form of a tattoo-like mark, to those who yielded to it. It was so evil that it could not bear the sight of its own reflection. ([[TV]]: ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'')
[[File:Fake Mara.JPG|thumb|A fake Mara used in [[Manussan]] celebration. ([[TV]]: ''[[Snakedance (TV story)|Snakedance]]'')]]
On Manussa, the Mara was defeated and driven out by the [[Federator]] and cast into the "Dark Places of the Inside". ([[TV]]: ''[[Snakedance (TV story)|Snakedance]]'')


==Minor References==
=== Legends ===
*[[Jack Harkness]] said that he sometimes thought the [[fairies]] were part Mara. ([[TW]]: ''[[Small Worlds]]'')
[[Jack Harkness]] described the Mara as "kind of malignant wraiths," claiming it was where the word "[[nightmare]]" came from, and that they suffocated people in their sleep. Jack speculated that the [[Fairy|fairies]] might be, in his words, "part Mara". ([[TV]]: ''[[Small Worlds (TV story)|Small Worlds]]'')
:''Whether this indicates a connection remains unknown, because the reference could have been to the real world mythological concept.''


*[[Tenth Doctor|The tenth incarnation]] of the Doctor mentions the Mara to [[Fifth Doctor|his fifth incarnation]] when they met. ([[DW]]: ''[[Time Crash]]'')
The Mara were the Evil Ones according to the Kinda, and turned the Great Wheel of Life. The curse of the Mara was the curse of time, as it was the Mara who started the clocks. No Mara could stand its own reflection and so would recoil, which the Doctor thought made sense considering its nature. ([[TV]]: ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'')


==Behind the scenes==
According to a [[Manussan]] legend, the Mara would return in a dream, which it did 500 years after its defeat. ([[TV]]: ''[[Snakedance (TV story)|Snakedance]]'')
===Origins===
====Mythology & Fiction====
*Writer [[Christopher Bailey]] derived the Mara from a demon of the same name in Buddhist mythology which, as in ''[[Doctor Who]]'', symbolizes temptation rather then evil(at least, in the sense of "sinfulness"). In ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'', [[Dukkha]], [[Panna]], [[Karuna]], [[Anatta]] and [[Anicca]]'s names and functions all derive from Buddhism as well. Dukkha is ''suffering'', and in ''[[Snakedance]]'', [[Tanha]] is ''restlessness''. The Mara is also apparently aware of its grotesque hideous features, which may account for the circle of mirrors.


*In addition, it seems to have parallels to the [[wikipedia:Book of Genesis|Book of Genesis]] in ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'', namely a serpent representing temptation in a forested paradise, complete with apples.
=== Escaping the Dark Places of the Inside ===
It was on the planet [[Deva Loka]] that the [[Fifth Doctor]], [[Tegan Jovanka|Tegan]] and [[Adric]] first encountered the Mara. Tegan fell asleep listening to [[wind chime]]s and mentally entered the Dark Places of the Inside. The Mara manifested to her as an elderly game-playing couple [[Anatta]] and [[Anicca]], who insisted she could not possibly exist, and then as [[Dukkha]], who tempted and tormented her until she agreed to let the Mara take over her body.


*The "[[Wikipedia:Mara (folklore)|Mara]]" mentioned in the ''[[Torchwood]]'' episode ''[[Small Worlds]]'' (quite possibly a deliberate reference to the ''[[Doctor Who]]'' Mara) come from Northern European mythology. The word "nightmare" comes from folklore about these Mara.
[[File:Dukkha.jpg|thumb|The Mara's psychic manifestion known as "[[Dukkha]]". ([[TV]]: ''[[Snakedance (TV story)|Snakedance]]'')]]
The Mara used her body to find and possess [[Aris]], one of the peaceful [[Kinda]] tribe, leaving Tegan. Kinda tradition did not allow men (other than "idiots") to speak. Aris called himself "Aris, He Who Has Voice", and began to rally them against [[human]] colonists led by [[Hindle]]. The Doctor was able to prevent the humans detonating a bomb and managed to trap the Mara in a [[circle of mirrors]] and face itself, therefore driving it back into the Dark Places of the Inside. ([[TV]]: ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'')


*The creation of the Mara as described in ''[[Snakedance]]'' has similarities to the origins of the Monster from the Id from the [[1956]] film ''[[Wikipedia:Forbidden Planet|Forbidden Planet]]''. (''Forbidden Planet'' also influenced the ''Doctor Who'' story ''[[Planet of Evil]]''.)
Tegan remained very shaken by the experience, as she confided to Nyssa afterward. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Visitation (TV story)|The Visitation]]'')


===Production===
=== Revenge on the Manussans ===
*According to interviews with Bailey in ''[[Doctor Who: The Unfolding Text]]'', the Mara in ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'' used temptation to behave in culturally disapproved-of ways. In [[Tegan]]'s case, sensuality (or even sexuality), in [[Aris]]'s case, aggression, which the [[Kinda]] regarded as abhorrent, especially when enacted by a male. Bailey did not welcome the addition of not-so-subtle indications of possession by the Mara, indicated by special effects, feeling instead that the acting of [[Janet Fielding]], who played Tegan, and others, put the point across more than adequately. He particularly disliked the imagery of glowing red eyes which, he said, seemed to hark back to the Christian notion of the Devil.
Unknown to all, the Mara still had influence over Tegan. It guided Tegan to take the Doctor's TARDIS to Manussa, the birthplace of the Mara, where a ceremony was to be held to mark the 500th anniversary of its banishment. The Mara used Tegan, the showman [[Dugdale]], and the son of the Federator, [[Lon]], to obtain the [[Great Crystal]] to restore itself to physical form. The [[Fifth Doctor]] was guided by an old mystic named [[Dojjen]] who showed him how to find the "[[still point]]". When the Mara tried to make its return at the ceremony, the Doctor concentrated his thoughts with a small replica of the Great Crystal, and by finding the still point was able to repel the Mara. Then by grabbing the Great Crystal, the Doctor broke the Mara's hold over its controlled Manussans, and destroyed its new snake body. This time, the Doctor believed the Mara had been destroyed for good. ([[TV]]: ''[[Snakedance (TV story)|Snakedance]]'')
*Though the Mara stories have a great deal of respect among fans, Mara's appearance as a very unrealistic giant snake (especially in ''Kinda'') has often been cited as an example of ''Doctor Who'''s budget letting it down.
*In the new trilogy of Fifth Doctor audio dramas featuring Tegan, Turlough, and Nyssa, the Mara will be returning in a story entitled ''The Cradle of the Snake, ''due to be released in September.


{{Wikipediainfo|Mara (demon)}}
The Doctor told Tegan that the Mara would always be present, though she wasn't certain if he was speaking [[metaphysics|metaphysically]] about the nature of [[evil]]. She viewed it as some terminal disease from which she could relapse at any moment. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Goth Opera (novel)|Goth Opera]]'')
{{season 19 aliens}}
 
{{Season 20 aliens}}
=== Final possession of Tegan ===
[[Category:Unique beings|Mara]]
However, the Mara had actually retreated into Tegan's mind a second time. Some time later, after the Doctor, Tegan, and [[Turlough]] had been reunited with Nyssa, ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Cobwebs (audio story)|Cobwebs]]'') it emerged to possess Tegan yet again. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Whispering Forest (audio story)|The Whispering Forest]]'') When the Doctor attempted to drive it out, it changed its tactics and entered into the Doctor's mind, leaving Tegan completely. It then consulted a book in the TARDIS library to find out about its history. Piloting the TARDIS to Manussa (under the pretence of having Tegan examined by a Manussan doctor), it landed the ship about one hundred years prior to the rise of the Sumaran Empire, and embarked on a scheme to bring about the subjugation of Manussa in that time period instead. In the process, while keeping the Doctor as its primary host, it possessed several Manussans. It used an experimental Manussan technology (using Manussan blue crystals) to project the thoughts of its hosts into solid matter, manifesting itself physically as a giant snake.
[[Category:Demons|Mara]]
 
[[Category:Fifth Doctor enemies|Mara]]
[[File:The Cradle of the Snake CD illustration.jpg|thumb|The Mara is trapped by cameras and televisions. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Cradle of the Snake (audio story)|The Cradle of the Snake]]'')]]
[[Category:Personifications of concepts|Mara]]
However, Tegan and Turlough were able to free the Doctor using a circle of television cameras and screens (similar to the circle of mirrors used on Deva Loka). The Doctor linked the crystal the Mara was using as a link to the material world to the TARDIS so he could reverse the creature's physical manifestation. However, the process required that the crystal be in physical contact with the Mara, and the giant snake, fueled by the despair of the many Manussans it had managed to possess, had swallowed the TARDIS whole. In the end, a young man who had been brought into existence by the crystal technology sacrificed himself by going out into the snake's belly with the crystal, destroying it by "restoring the balance", as one of the snakedancers put it. Before its destruction, the Mara had managed to possess not only numerous Manussans, but Nyssa and Turlough as well. The Doctor stated that the Mara could not be said to have been fully destroyed, as it was inside all human beings. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Cradle of the Snake (audio story)|The Cradle of the Snake]]'')
 
The Mara later resurfaced in a dream of Tegan’s in the [[21st century]], long after she had left the TARDIS. It attempted to possess her again by tempting her with a reunion with [[Nyssa]] but she refused. Upon awakening, Tegan defiantly told the Mara that it was nothing compared to the other monsters and horrors she had encountered, and she bluntly told it to get "back in [its] box". ([[WC]]: ''[[The Passenger (webcast)|The Passenger]]'')
 
=== Using Kamelion ===
Reaching out from Tegan's subconscious, the Mara was able to possess [[Kamelion]] aboard a space station, where he assumed the form of a [[Gorgon (mythology)|Gorgon]] and used his transformational powers to turn people to stone. The Fifth Doctor and Tegan were able to reverse the control and free Kamelion again. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Mark of the Medusa (short story)|Mark of the Medusa]]'')
 
=== Trenzalore ===
The [[Eleventh Doctor]] later encountered the Mara on [[Trenzalore]], roughly 750 years after he started protecting the planet, and the town of [[Christmas (town)|Christmas]]. The Mara possessed various townspeople, and used them to dig up the skeletal remains of [[Jalen Fellwood]]. It then used the dreams of the controlled people to give form to the skeleton, creating a new physical body. Because of the human skeleton, the result was a [[human]]-[[snake]] hybrid.
 
The Mara then possessed all of the children in the town's school, threatening first to use them to attack the adults, and then themselves, unless the Doctor did as it demanded. Unlike the other beings that invaded Christmas throughout the siege, the Mara wanted the Doctor to speak his true name and unleash another Great Time War, which was exactly what the other invaders wanted to avoid. However, the Mara's body had not yet entirely shed its human form, and was still drawing power from the body of Jalen Fellwood. The Doctor used this to his advantage when he filled the town's snow machine with salt, something that Fellwood believed held magical properties. The Mara, drawing power from this belief, melted as soon as the Doctor informed it of the snow's make up, releasing the town's population from its control. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Dreaming (short story)|The Dreaming]]'')
 
=== In fiction ===
==== Shakespeare ====
[[File:Antony and Cleopatra.jpg|thumb|The Mara is revealed, to [[Cleopatra]]'s surprise, in an early draft of Act V Scene II. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Antony and Cleopatra (short story)}})]]
The Mara was featured in an early draft of [[William Shakespeare]]'s [[play]] ''[[Antony and Cleopatra]]'' with its inclusion being the reason that an extract from this alternative version appeared in the [[Shakespeare Notebooks]].
 
In Act V Scene II, [[Clown (Antony and Cleopatra)|a clown]] delivered "the pretty worm of Nilus" to [[Cleopatra]] in a [[basket]], with which she intended to [[Suicide|kill herself]], but soon uncovered the basket to reveal the [[serpent]] as the Mara.
{{simplequote|The Mara offers you its hand. I follow the [[snake]] and the snake follows me. Such is fate. This worm's an [[ouroboros]] that eats its own [[tail]] and is never full. [[Fortune]] turns her [[wheel]]. [[Civilisation]]s rise and civilisations fall. And the worm eats all.|The [[Clown (Antony and Cleopatra)|clown]] in ''[[Antony and Cleopatra]]''|Antony and Cleopatra (short story)}}
The clown stated "my snake gives me [[power]]" and claimed to "serve it well", attempting multiple times to offer a similar arrangement to Cleopatra who rejected it on the basis of being "in thrall to no one". She explained that she feared not the [[asp]]'s bite but its promise when asked by the clown why she would not "ride with a snake to generation" having saddled to countless [[Emperor]]s. The clown then tried to tempt her by telling her all was not lost if she would take his hand and allow the snake to "take thee whole", saying she would again be [[Egypt]]'s [[queen]], but Cleopatra told him that what she most wished for was the restoration of her lover [[Mark Antony]], something the clown admitted could not be done. He attempted one last time to persuade her to "reach into the basket and find [[time]]'s [[jaw]]" but she simply told him to leave, a request with which he complied, wishing her "joy o'th' worm" as he left. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Antony and Cleopatra (short story)}})
 
==== ''Happy Deathday'' ====
In the [[video game]] ''[[Happy Deathday]]'', played by [[Izzy Sinclair]] on the [[Time-Space Visualiser]], the Mara was among a host of "every single [[enemy]]" that [[the Doctor]] had ever [[defeat]]ed, who were assembled by the [[Beige Guardian]] and pitted against the Doctor's first eight [[incarnation]]s. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Happy Deathday (comic story)|Happy Deathday]]'')
 
== Other references ==
[[Sutekh]] once referred to the Mara as the "god of beasts" and a member of [[the Pantheon]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Legend of Ruby Sunday (TV story)|The Legend of Ruby Sunday]]'')
 
== Behind the scenes ==
* According to the reference guide ''[[The Torchwood Archives]]'', the Fairies were part Mara; this was previously ambiguous after Harkness' statement.
* Writer [[Christopher Bailey]] derived the Mara from a demon of the same name in [[Buddhist]] [[philosophy]] which, as in ''[[Doctor Who]]'', symbolises [[temptation]] rather than [[evil]] (at least, in the sense of "[[sin]]fulness"). In ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'', [[Dukkha]], [[Panna]], [[Karuna]], [[Anatta]] and [[Anicca]]'s names and functions all derive from Buddhism as well. Dukkha is ''suffering'', and in ''[[Snakedance (TV story)|Snakedance]]'', [[Tanha]] is ''restlessness''. The Mara is also apparently aware of its grotesque hideous features, which may account for the circle of mirrors.
* According to interviews with Bailey in ''[[The Unfolding Text]]'', the Mara in ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]'' used temptation to behave in culturally disapproved-of ways. In [[Tegan]]'s case, sensuality (or even [[sexuality]]), in [[Aris]]'s case, aggression, which the [[Kinda]] regarded as abhorrent, especially when enacted by a male. Bailey did not welcome the addition of not-so-subtle indications of possession by the Mara, indicated by special effects, feeling instead that the acting of [[Janet Fielding]], who played Tegan, and others, put the point across more than adequately. He particularly disliked the imagery of glowing red eyes which, he said, seemed to hark back to the Christian notion of the Devil.
* On the DVD release of ''Kinda'', there is an option to replace the shots of the original prop snake with a [[CGI|computer-generated]] snake image. This CG version is used on the cover of the [[Eleventh Doctor]] anthology ''[[Tales of Trenzalore: The Eleventh Doctor's Last Stand]]''.
{{Shakespeare}}
{{Mara stories}}
{{Gods}}
[[Category:Demons]]
[[Category:Dream parasites]]
[[Category:Gestalt beings]]
[[Category:Individuals with psychic powers]]
[[Category:Members of the Pantheon]]
[[Category:Myths and legends from the real world]]
[[Category:Personifications of concepts]]
[[Category:Species in the Siege of Trenzalore]]
[[Category:Unique beings]]
[[Category:Antony and Cleopatra characters]]
[[Category:Dark Places of the Inside]]

Latest revision as of 00:38, 22 October 2024

Mara
You may be looking for the poem.

The Mara was/were a gestalt being/species that dwelt in the Dark Places of the Inside and sought physical existence by taking over a host in their dream. Because of its unclear nature, the Mara was simultaneously thought of as a "he", "it", and "they".

Biology[[edit] | [edit source]]

The mark of the Mara. (TV: Kinda)

Because the Mara was a kind of gestalt creature, it simultaneously had many forms and also none, (PROSE: The Dreaming) and was able to manifest within the Dark Places of the Inside, but required a host in the real world before it could manifest its true self. (TV: Kinda)

The Mara was a psychevore that fed on raw emotion. (PROSE: The Left-Handed Hummingbird)

Hosts of the Mara developed a snake mark upon the arm and had reddened eyes and teeth, (TV: Kinda) even glowing red eyes and the ability to share voices between hosts, (TV: Snakedance) although in one case the Mara possessed several individuals that developed red, moulted skin. (PROSE: The Dreaming) The Mara was snake-like in its true form. The marks themselves could become real Mara, (TV: Kinda, Snakedance) developing like a rash until they burst from the skin and infected anyone they touched. (PROSE: The Dreaming)

The mark begins to manifest. (TV: Snakedance)

Jack Harkness stated that he thought the Fairies of Earth were "part Mara," explaining that the former could control the elements, i.e. fire, water, and air, claiming they could "drag [the] air right out of our bodies." (TV: Small Worlds)

Personality[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Mara was a spirit of chaos. (AUDIO: The Cradle of the Snake) It delighted in the pain and madness of others. It liked to play tricks on people, especially ones that even children could see through. It tempted individuals into letting it control them and would create havoc and chaos. The Kinda believed that life and death were a turning wheel, and it was the Mara who turned the wheel. In this line of thought, wars would help the Mara, as they created death and the way to truly be free of the Mara was to find peace, (TV: Kinda) or in other terms, find the "still point." (TV: Snakedance)

The harbinger of Sutekh called the Mara the "god of beasts". (TV: The Legend of Ruby Sunday [+]Loading...["The Legend of Ruby Sunday (TV story)"].

Biography[[edit] | [edit source]]

Early history[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Mara was an entity created from the evil in the minds of the people of the planet Manussa in the Scrampus System. It was given independent life via the Great Crystal, which the Manussans created in a zero gravity environment. The Mara then founded the Sumaran Empire. (TV: Snakedance) It existed in the minds of its victims and could transfer itself in the form of a tattoo-like mark, to those who yielded to it. It was so evil that it could not bear the sight of its own reflection. (TV: Kinda)

A fake Mara used in Manussan celebration. (TV: Snakedance)

On Manussa, the Mara was defeated and driven out by the Federator and cast into the "Dark Places of the Inside". (TV: Snakedance)

Legends[[edit] | [edit source]]

Jack Harkness described the Mara as "kind of malignant wraiths," claiming it was where the word "nightmare" came from, and that they suffocated people in their sleep. Jack speculated that the fairies might be, in his words, "part Mara". (TV: Small Worlds)

The Mara were the Evil Ones according to the Kinda, and turned the Great Wheel of Life. The curse of the Mara was the curse of time, as it was the Mara who started the clocks. No Mara could stand its own reflection and so would recoil, which the Doctor thought made sense considering its nature. (TV: Kinda)

According to a Manussan legend, the Mara would return in a dream, which it did 500 years after its defeat. (TV: Snakedance)

Escaping the Dark Places of the Inside[[edit] | [edit source]]

It was on the planet Deva Loka that the Fifth Doctor, Tegan and Adric first encountered the Mara. Tegan fell asleep listening to wind chimes and mentally entered the Dark Places of the Inside. The Mara manifested to her as an elderly game-playing couple Anatta and Anicca, who insisted she could not possibly exist, and then as Dukkha, who tempted and tormented her until she agreed to let the Mara take over her body.

The Mara's psychic manifestion known as "Dukkha". (TV: Snakedance)

The Mara used her body to find and possess Aris, one of the peaceful Kinda tribe, leaving Tegan. Kinda tradition did not allow men (other than "idiots") to speak. Aris called himself "Aris, He Who Has Voice", and began to rally them against human colonists led by Hindle. The Doctor was able to prevent the humans detonating a bomb and managed to trap the Mara in a circle of mirrors and face itself, therefore driving it back into the Dark Places of the Inside. (TV: Kinda)

Tegan remained very shaken by the experience, as she confided to Nyssa afterward. (TV: The Visitation)

Revenge on the Manussans[[edit] | [edit source]]

Unknown to all, the Mara still had influence over Tegan. It guided Tegan to take the Doctor's TARDIS to Manussa, the birthplace of the Mara, where a ceremony was to be held to mark the 500th anniversary of its banishment. The Mara used Tegan, the showman Dugdale, and the son of the Federator, Lon, to obtain the Great Crystal to restore itself to physical form. The Fifth Doctor was guided by an old mystic named Dojjen who showed him how to find the "still point". When the Mara tried to make its return at the ceremony, the Doctor concentrated his thoughts with a small replica of the Great Crystal, and by finding the still point was able to repel the Mara. Then by grabbing the Great Crystal, the Doctor broke the Mara's hold over its controlled Manussans, and destroyed its new snake body. This time, the Doctor believed the Mara had been destroyed for good. (TV: Snakedance)

The Doctor told Tegan that the Mara would always be present, though she wasn't certain if he was speaking metaphysically about the nature of evil. She viewed it as some terminal disease from which she could relapse at any moment. (PROSE: Goth Opera)

Final possession of Tegan[[edit] | [edit source]]

However, the Mara had actually retreated into Tegan's mind a second time. Some time later, after the Doctor, Tegan, and Turlough had been reunited with Nyssa, (AUDIO: Cobwebs) it emerged to possess Tegan yet again. (AUDIO: The Whispering Forest) When the Doctor attempted to drive it out, it changed its tactics and entered into the Doctor's mind, leaving Tegan completely. It then consulted a book in the TARDIS library to find out about its history. Piloting the TARDIS to Manussa (under the pretence of having Tegan examined by a Manussan doctor), it landed the ship about one hundred years prior to the rise of the Sumaran Empire, and embarked on a scheme to bring about the subjugation of Manussa in that time period instead. In the process, while keeping the Doctor as its primary host, it possessed several Manussans. It used an experimental Manussan technology (using Manussan blue crystals) to project the thoughts of its hosts into solid matter, manifesting itself physically as a giant snake.

The Mara is trapped by cameras and televisions. (AUDIO: The Cradle of the Snake)

However, Tegan and Turlough were able to free the Doctor using a circle of television cameras and screens (similar to the circle of mirrors used on Deva Loka). The Doctor linked the crystal the Mara was using as a link to the material world to the TARDIS so he could reverse the creature's physical manifestation. However, the process required that the crystal be in physical contact with the Mara, and the giant snake, fueled by the despair of the many Manussans it had managed to possess, had swallowed the TARDIS whole. In the end, a young man who had been brought into existence by the crystal technology sacrificed himself by going out into the snake's belly with the crystal, destroying it by "restoring the balance", as one of the snakedancers put it. Before its destruction, the Mara had managed to possess not only numerous Manussans, but Nyssa and Turlough as well. The Doctor stated that the Mara could not be said to have been fully destroyed, as it was inside all human beings. (AUDIO: The Cradle of the Snake)

The Mara later resurfaced in a dream of Tegan’s in the 21st century, long after she had left the TARDIS. It attempted to possess her again by tempting her with a reunion with Nyssa but she refused. Upon awakening, Tegan defiantly told the Mara that it was nothing compared to the other monsters and horrors she had encountered, and she bluntly told it to get "back in [its] box". (WC: The Passenger)

Using Kamelion[[edit] | [edit source]]

Reaching out from Tegan's subconscious, the Mara was able to possess Kamelion aboard a space station, where he assumed the form of a Gorgon and used his transformational powers to turn people to stone. The Fifth Doctor and Tegan were able to reverse the control and free Kamelion again. (PROSE: Mark of the Medusa)

Trenzalore[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Eleventh Doctor later encountered the Mara on Trenzalore, roughly 750 years after he started protecting the planet, and the town of Christmas. The Mara possessed various townspeople, and used them to dig up the skeletal remains of Jalen Fellwood. It then used the dreams of the controlled people to give form to the skeleton, creating a new physical body. Because of the human skeleton, the result was a human-snake hybrid.

The Mara then possessed all of the children in the town's school, threatening first to use them to attack the adults, and then themselves, unless the Doctor did as it demanded. Unlike the other beings that invaded Christmas throughout the siege, the Mara wanted the Doctor to speak his true name and unleash another Great Time War, which was exactly what the other invaders wanted to avoid. However, the Mara's body had not yet entirely shed its human form, and was still drawing power from the body of Jalen Fellwood. The Doctor used this to his advantage when he filled the town's snow machine with salt, something that Fellwood believed held magical properties. The Mara, drawing power from this belief, melted as soon as the Doctor informed it of the snow's make up, releasing the town's population from its control. (PROSE: The Dreaming)

In fiction[[edit] | [edit source]]

Shakespeare[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Mara is revealed, to Cleopatra's surprise, in an early draft of Act V Scene II. (PROSE: Antony and Cleopatra [+]Loading...["Antony and Cleopatra (short story)"])

The Mara was featured in an early draft of William Shakespeare's play Antony and Cleopatra with its inclusion being the reason that an extract from this alternative version appeared in the Shakespeare Notebooks.

In Act V Scene II, a clown delivered "the pretty worm of Nilus" to Cleopatra in a basket, with which she intended to kill herself, but soon uncovered the basket to reveal the serpent as the Mara.

"The Mara offers you its hand. I follow the snake and the snake follows me. Such is fate. This worm's an ouroboros that eats its own tail and is never full. Fortune turns her wheel. Civilisations rise and civilisations fall. And the worm eats all."The clown in Antony and Cleopatra [src]

The clown stated "my snake gives me power" and claimed to "serve it well", attempting multiple times to offer a similar arrangement to Cleopatra who rejected it on the basis of being "in thrall to no one". She explained that she feared not the asp's bite but its promise when asked by the clown why she would not "ride with a snake to generation" having saddled to countless Emperors. The clown then tried to tempt her by telling her all was not lost if she would take his hand and allow the snake to "take thee whole", saying she would again be Egypt's queen, but Cleopatra told him that what she most wished for was the restoration of her lover Mark Antony, something the clown admitted could not be done. He attempted one last time to persuade her to "reach into the basket and find time's jaw" but she simply told him to leave, a request with which he complied, wishing her "joy o'th' worm" as he left. (PROSE: Antony and Cleopatra [+]Loading...["Antony and Cleopatra (short story)"])

Happy Deathday[[edit] | [edit source]]

In the video game Happy Deathday, played by Izzy Sinclair on the Time-Space Visualiser, the Mara was among a host of "every single enemy" that the Doctor had ever defeated, who were assembled by the Beige Guardian and pitted against the Doctor's first eight incarnations. (COMIC: Happy Deathday)

Other references[[edit] | [edit source]]

Sutekh once referred to the Mara as the "god of beasts" and a member of the Pantheon. (TV: The Legend of Ruby Sunday)

Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • According to the reference guide The Torchwood Archives, the Fairies were part Mara; this was previously ambiguous after Harkness' statement.
  • Writer Christopher Bailey derived the Mara from a demon of the same name in Buddhist philosophy which, as in Doctor Who, symbolises temptation rather than evil (at least, in the sense of "sinfulness"). In Kinda, Dukkha, Panna, Karuna, Anatta and Anicca's names and functions all derive from Buddhism as well. Dukkha is suffering, and in Snakedance, Tanha is restlessness. The Mara is also apparently aware of its grotesque hideous features, which may account for the circle of mirrors.
  • According to interviews with Bailey in The Unfolding Text, the Mara in Kinda used temptation to behave in culturally disapproved-of ways. In Tegan's case, sensuality (or even sexuality), in Aris's case, aggression, which the Kinda regarded as abhorrent, especially when enacted by a male. Bailey did not welcome the addition of not-so-subtle indications of possession by the Mara, indicated by special effects, feeling instead that the acting of Janet Fielding, who played Tegan, and others, put the point across more than adequately. He particularly disliked the imagery of glowing red eyes which, he said, seemed to hark back to the Christian notion of the Devil.
  • On the DVD release of Kinda, there is an option to replace the shots of the original prop snake with a computer-generated snake image. This CG version is used on the cover of the Eleventh Doctor anthology Tales of Trenzalore: The Eleventh Doctor's Last Stand.