Talk:First Doctor: Difference between revisions

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<p style="text-align:center"><u>'''Hey, one episode shows the doctor at young age, it said that he ran away at a young age. How could he of fought in the war ?'''</u></p>
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== How detailed should things be ==
Hi, it has come to my attention that there is some disagreement regarding the extent to which the latest episode should be covered on this page. First of all, as always, I invite you to explain the thinking behind your edits here on the talk page. It is quite common that different edits are based on different ideologies and learning about the ''modi operandi'' of other editors was always very illuminating for me. [[User:Amorkuz|Amorkuz]] [[User talk:Amorkuz|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 23:33, January 4, 2018 (UTC)


: Meanwhile, let me leave my two cents. My firm belief is that all relevant information should be on the wiki but it should be curated according to the focus of each particular page to maximise usefulness for the readers. Detailed plots on story page is something that is sorely missing all too often. (Even so, plot does not equate to a transcript and should be shorter, more digested, if only for copyright reasons.) Care should be taken to treat all stories equally. Most recent stories should not be given more prevalence than older ones. Indeed, every most recent story soon ceases to be one. Things that seem important because they are fresh and emotionally raw for us now may well become mere footnotes in one-two years. All articles should be written from the point of view of a historian looking back (from the [[end of the universe]] for in-universe pages or from some unspecified future for BTS portions). Less blogging on the spur of the moment; more recording for posterity. A good mental exercise is to imagine reading this article right after the (imaginary potential) regeneration of the Thirteenth Doctor to see whether a particular detail still seems important then.


: Apart from this global posture, there is a peculiarity of this particular character. Personally, I settle on different level of details for blink-and-you-miss-them characters, guest characters, companions and Doctor's incarnations. How compact the information should be naturally depends on the total amount of information available. If one struggles to fill the height of the infobox with the available info on the character, there is no problem writing everything in excruciating detail (such as is known). On the contrary, the page of a Doctor incarnation is almost without exception extremely long. There are dozens of stories, from all media. Making sense of his/her life is hard enough when each story is represented by a short paragraph. Putting even a short plot of every story would, IMHO, make the page rather unusable for anyone. Thus, I generally am for brevity on pages such as this. Only the most basic of information. Veni-vedi-vici, followed by a link to a more detailed description on the stories page. [[User:Amorkuz|Amorkuz]] [[User talk:Amorkuz|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 23:56, January 4, 2018 (UTC)


::This one's actually pretty easy, since it's stated elsewhere on this wiki (and as usual, I don't remember where, but if I find it I will post it) that '''character pages''' should really only have no more than three sentences per story. We want to differentiate our character pages from our story/plot pages. There are several reasons for requiring this brevity (some of which are included in [[User:Amorkuz]]' statements above):
::* The longer a page is, the longer it takes to load, the harder it is to find specific information, and the harder it is to find a particular error to fix. A Doctor usually accumulates dozens of stories during his tenure, and he can accumulate far more than that after his actor has quit the job.
::* [[Tardis:Neutral point of view]] specifically tells us to treat all stories equally. That means we do not say that the TV stories should get more text per story while the other media are just fine with a couple of sentences per story.
::* This is a wiki, and I think that some people aren't aware of what a wiki's purpose really is. The goal of a wiki is to get readers clicking on as many links as possible (that's why we link so often on pages and why orphaned pages are '''bad'''). If someone is reading a Doctor's page, and wants more detail on one of his particular adventures, they can click on the story link. If someone wants just an overview of that Doctor, they don't have to wade through detailed descriptions of adventures they might not be interested in.
::Unfortunately, this guideline is not found at [[Tardis:Guide to writing Individuals articles]], but it probably should be. The closest I can find to a definitive statement is located at [[User talk:Shambala108/Archive 1#Zaroff]], but I will keep looking.  [[User:Shambala108|Shambala108]] [[User talk:Shambala108|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 01:17, January 5, 2018 (UTC)


'Rassilon Era' suggests the time on Gallifrey when Rassilon was alive - is this correct? The use of it here and on the other Doctor pages suggests that the Doctor came from a period when Rassilon was still alive. Do we know that for a fact? Or, does 'Rassilon Era' apply to all Gallifreyan time after Rassilon? What is the origin of this phrase in the TV story or in the books etc? --[[User:Mantrid|Mantrid]] 03:30, 14 Jul 2005 (UTC)
:: Well, I've always gone by the three paragraph mindset when recapping episode entries, with exception to "wham episodes" that go on longer. Still, 4 pages on word is a bit much for a single episode, especially when its only one hour long, and the First Doctor had serials that went on longer than that that are barely covered by one paragraph as it is.[[User:BananaClownMan|BananaClownMan]] [[User talk:BananaClownMan|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 09:43, January 5, 2018 (UTC)


it comes from the TVM. as well as a date, it gave the era. since I do not have a DVD of the TVM, I consulted the episode guide on the BBC site, which mentioned the Rassilon Era as one of the eras. presumbably this means the Gallifreyan present or in the 2005 series the post-Gallifreyan present.
:: Just for personal clarification, if we are really only meant to have three sentences per story for character articles, that means a lot of pages (particularly NewWho ones) need a major overhaul. The [[Eleventh Doctor]] alone has paragraphs on paragraphs for just single stories - ''[[The Eleventh Hour (TV story)]]'' alone has seven paragraphs dedicated to it. So is it necessary we shorten those pages to fit this three sentence rule? [[User:Snivystorm|Snivystorm]] [[User talk:Snivystorm|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 15:13, January 5, 2018 (UTC)
--[[User:*Stardizzy*|*Stardizzy*]] 04:13, 14 Jul 2005 (UTC)


**This website says the Rassilon Era is pre-Doctor. http://www.internationalhero.co.uk/o/origindr.htm --[[User:GingerM|MJP]] 15:34, 14 Jul 2005 (UTC)
::: Well, going by what [[User:Shambala108|Shambala108]] is saying, it seems more like a guidline than a rule; something to encourage recaps from getting out of hand and dwarfing the rest of the page. Like how looking when crossing the road is not strictly legal, but people are taught to treat it as such.[[User:BananaClownMan|BananaClownMan]] [[User talk:BananaClownMan|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 17:02, January 5, 2018 (UTC)


to use an analogy, Christian Era (CE) does not mean the time during which Jesus walked the Earth. it means the era dated by Christians as beginning at the birth of Jesus and continuing to now, versus BCE, meaning Before Christian Era.
:::: We kinda have to draw a line though, otherwise debates like this will keep cropping up: "is it only three sentences for episode stories, but three paragraphs for finales then four pages worth for special episodes?". We have to settle what length is acceptable and what isn't otherwise there will always be a clash between editors, like now and at some point down the road, disputing what is long enough and what is not. I personally have no problem dedicating a few paragraphs for each story, but this will (given not every editor will value each story as equal) create unbalance between stories. Also, as [[User:Amorkuz|Amorkuz]] mentioned, even a single paragraph given to every single story would make the length practically unbearable, particularly on the ever growing mobile users. [[User:Snivystorm|Snivystorm]] [[User talk:Snivystorm|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 17:13, January 5, 2018 (UTC)


besides which, the International Hero site mentioned the Rassilon era, not the Rassilon Era, as we would, say, talk about the Thatcher era or the Clinton era. not a formal designation, as such. --[[User:*Stardizzy*|*Stardizzy*]] 23:01, 14 Jul 2005 (UTC)
::::: "Three sentences per story" might be a good guideline but would be a horrible policy. Novels might well require more space than short stories. An audio short trip ''[[Rise and Fall (audio story)|Rise and Fall]]'' may not merit more than one sentence as opposed to ''[[The Daleks' Master Plan (TV story)|The Daleks' Master Plan]]'' that saw introduction of one companions and death of two companions. It was never my intention to put anyone into a straitjacket. It would just be good to try and mention every story, but only mention the highlights. [[User:Amorkuz|Amorkuz]] [[User talk:Amorkuz|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 21:09, January 5, 2018 (UTC)


*Actually CE stands for Common Era and BCE Before Common Era.--[[User:The Doctor|The Doctor]] 19:03, 15 Jul 2005 (UTC)
::::: So it all just depends? [[User:Snivystorm|Snivystorm]] [[User talk:Snivystorm|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 21:58, January 5, 2018 (UTC)


yes, it does mean Common Era. and I remember mentioning that in a comment in this very Wiki. [sighs]
:::::: I think what [[User:BananaClownMan|BananaClownMan]] described as a "three-sentence mindset" is a good approach, as long as one is not overzealous about it. I myself would try to fit the story description into three sentences. That is the benchmark given on the wiki. If I succeed, great. If not, then I ask myself why. What is this information that does not fit? Why is it important? Is it really significant when viewed as part of the whole life of the First Doctor? If yes, then I allow myself to add it.  


since writing the above, I did find that, yes, it did get confirmed in both the TVM and the DWM comic "The Final Chapter" that Rassilon Era refers to the Gallifreyan present. even though the dating system itself itself seems pretty inscrutable. --[[User:*Stardizzy*|*Stardizzy*]] 21:07, 15 Jul 2005 (UTC)
:::::: One of the reasons I don't want to treat it as an absolute maximum is that, having worked as an editor, I can see very well how to cheat it if need be. If it's only three sentences, I could make very elaborate long sentences. German philosophers, for instance, are famous for writing sentences that can be longer than a page. It is a bit harder to do in English, but still possible. This would satisfy the strict bound but violate its spirit. And vice versa, it would not make sense to artificially combine five rather short sentences into three longer ones at the expense of readability.  


Thanks for the clairfication on this point. I think it's important that we ramain canoncial in the info boxes. So, the fact that 'Rassilon Era' is mentioned in the TVM is the curcial point here. Had it ONLY been mentioned in [[The Final Chapter]] I don't think that would have been enough reason to make use of it. --[[User:Mantrid|Mantrid]] 17:06, 16 Jul 2005 (UTC)
:::::: Incidentally, I do believe that TUaT can easily be summarised in three sentences as far as the First Doctor is concerned. He didn't really do much. There is not a single action of his (action unique to this story) that would merit to be part of his biography. Perhaps, it would clarify things if I walked my way through mock-writing it. So I would put it something like this (I'm not checking details, so this cannot be used on the page):
::::::# When and where the story is set and what was the problem: e.g., after meeting the Twelfth Doctor on the way to his TARDIS mid-regeneration, the two of them experienced time freezing and encountered a Captain from WWI.
::::::# Statement that the problem was resolved, e.g., he helped the Twelfth Doctor figure out that the Captain was taken from time by glass people for archiving purposes and save his life.
::::::# Explanation what happened next, e.g., he then overcame his reluctance to change his persona, and returned to the South Pole to regenerate.
:::::: (This is obviously rubbish and used just as a benchmark.)
:::::: Is there something missing?
::::::* Rusty? Definitely not. First Doctor has no idea who that is.
::::::* Lethbridge-Stewart? Dunno, see above. Maybe. But I wouldn't. When Second Doctor meets Archibald's grandson, there is no indication that Archibald is in any way remembered.
::::::* Bill? Well, it's not really her. So again dubious. Did it really affect his life in any profound way?
::::::* Bonding with Twelve on the topic of non-regenerating? That could be argued and could even merit a fourth sentence. (Though I'm sure there are different opinions on the topic.)
::::::* His sexism? Should be on the page but not in the biography section. That's personality.
:::::: Hope this little analysis helps. [[User:Amorkuz|Amorkuz]] [[User talk:Amorkuz|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 23:47, January 5, 2018 (UTC)


I agree. --[[User:*Stardizzy*|*Stardizzy*]] 07:15, 17 Jul 2005 (UTC)
:::::::One thing I forgot to mention. It was ruled in [[Forum:Extended plots]] that editors are encouraged to write detailed plot summaries on '''story''' pages. This is where we want "extended" description of the plot, not on character pages. [[User:Shambala108|Shambala108]] [[User talk:Shambala108|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 00:28, January 6, 2018 (UTC)


==Split up some information?==
:::::::Yeah, I can get behind this, particularly the last point regarding placing extensive information on story pages than on character pages. When editing today (or yesterday depending on where one is in the world) I found recent story pages were comparatively bare than they were years ago, when it comes to plot at least. It would seem the root of the problem comes from editors piling all their effort into discussing the entirety of the story on character pages instead, as this incident shows. But yes, it is tough to place a precise policy on this when one can bend the rules to their limits. Maybe this matter warrants a full, wiki wide, discussion than simply us four discussing it on a talk page? [[User:Snivystorm|Snivystorm]] [[User talk:Snivystorm|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 01:08, January 6, 2018 (UTC)


Does the Doctor's pre-exile biography belong on a separate page? --[[User:***Stardizzy***|***Stardizzy***]] 01:02, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
==Listen==
Surely the appearance of the small Doctor from ''[[Listen (TV story)|Listen]]'' should be retained on this page, as ''[[The Timeless Children (TV story)|The Timeless Children]]'' explicitly reveals that the First Doctor, while not being the ''first'' incarnation of the Being later known as the Doctor, was forced to regenerate and grow up as a child, forced to go back to the Academy, and become a Time Lord again &mdash; with ''Listen'' having two adult Time Lords comment on the fact that they don't think he'll ever make it to the Academy, with one commenting that he doesn't want to be a Time Lord. Even with the Timeless Child twist, I think the implication is clear that this is still intended to be the William Hartnell incarnation of the Doctor!
[[User:Sabovia|Sabovia]] <sup>[[Message Wall:Sabovia|(Message Wall)]] | [[Special:Contributions/Sabovia|(Contributions)]]</sup> 15:00, March 8, 2020 (UTC)
:I completely agree. This is by all rates the First Doctor as a child. If this has been removed, it should be re-added. This IS definitely the First Doctor by all intents and purposes. The dialogue spoken to the kid by Clara about "fear makes companions of us all" is even later re-instated (from the Doctor's point of view) in ''An Unearthly Child'' to Barbara, Ian and Susan. This is not assumption, this is not speculation. That is a pure fact. Sorry admins and anyone else who potentially want to bicker and argue this, but that is how it is whether you want to admit it or not. --[[User:Danniesen|DCLM]] [[User talk:Danniesen|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 15:24, March 8, 2020 (UTC)
::The Timeless Child is irrelevant to this discussion. True, the child in ''Listen'' cannot be one of the Timeless Child's incarnations — but it could still be [[Patience's husband]] or any other pre-Hartnell incarnations from accounts ''not'' involving the Timeless Child, as detailed at [[The Doctor's early life]]. The Timeless Child story which would preclude the child in ''Listen'' being pre-hartnell is only one of several potential ways Hartnell could be something else than the first incarnation. For example, ''[[The Power of the Daleks (novelisation)|The Power of the Daleks]]'' refers to pre-Hartnell lives that the Second Doctor remembers quite well and keep mementos from. --[[User:Scrooge MacDuck|Scrooge MacDuck]] [[User talk:Scrooge MacDuck|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 15:37, March 8, 2020 (UTC)


==Medusa Cascade==
== Eye colour ==
The [[Tenth Doctor]] mentioned that he had visited the [[Medusa Cascade]] at the age of 90. Surely this falls within the Doctor's first incarnation? --[[User:Crainun]] 15:31, 30th July 2008
:I personally think it would. however, the Doctor gives wildly inconsistent accounts of his age at various points in his life. --[[User:Stardizzy2|Stardizzy2]] 15:41, 10 July 2008 (UTC)
::He may have also been taking about his overall age - remember he must have been born in a body so could have been over 100 before the first doctor was seen on screen. --[[User:LuisFernandoLopez|LuisFernandoLopez]] 16:24, 10 July 2009 (UTC)


==Redirect problem==
How is ''[[An Unearthly Child (TV story)|An Unearthly Child]]'' being used as a source for the First Doctor having "piercing blue eyes"?{{User:SOTO/sig}} 21:38, March 11, 2020 (UTC)
The Doctor and the Enterprise for some reason redirects to this page. Yet there is no "redirected" notice when this happens. What the smeg is going on? [[User:ZeldaTheSwordsman|ZeldaTheSwordsman]] 03:32, 2 April 2009 (UTC)


== His first body or first regeneration? ==
== Infobox Image ==


Ok, is this his first body ie the one he was born in, or is this after his first regeneration. If it is just his first body then it would mean we could have 13 Doctors and not only 12. Does anyone know if he had regenerated before this. --[[User:LuisFernandoLopez|LuisFernandoLopez]] 16:21, 10 July 2009 (UTC)
I think that I'm not alone in believing that the current infobox image representing William Hartnell is inadequate. It obscures half of his face! I've pulled a few options (all of them are uncropped at present but can easily be cropped should the need arise). I think any of these would be strong options.


: He refers to himself as "the original" in T5D and there are a few other references, such as some quite explicit language in Mawdryn Undead, that back this up. Thus it is generally accepted that William Hartnell played the very first Doctor. On the other hand, ''The Brain of Morbius'' implies that there were not just one, but several previous Doctors. Most fans simply ignore this, though there are also various fan explanations for the discrepancy. [[Special:Contributions/69.154.188.179|69.154.188.179]] 05:21, January 15, 2010 (UTC)
<gallery widths=150>
OneThinks.jpg|The Current Infobox Image
First Doctor in the Chase Quizzical.jpeg|Option 1
First Doctor in the Aztecs Quizzical.jpeg|Option 2
First Doctor The Sensorites Confusion.jpeg|Option 3
First Doctor in the Rescue Neutral Face.jpeg|Option 4
First Doctor in DIOE.jpeg|Option 5
First Doctor in the Sensorites.jpeg|Option 6
First Doctor in the Sensorites Fear.jpeg|Option 7
First Doctor look left Unearthly Child.jpeg|Option 8
</gallery>


::There are multiple references on-screen that this is his first, "original" body. Time Lords do have twelve regenerations, so yes that would mean they have thirteen bodies/incarnations. The other faces seen in the mind-bending sequence in "The Brain of Morbius" are most easily explained as having been previous incarnations of Morbius (the other Time Lord in the contest). [[User:Spreee|Spreee]] 20:00, March 1, 2010 (UTC)Spreee
[[User:NoNotTheMemes|NoNotTheMemes]] [[User talk:NoNotTheMemes|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 06:24, 16 March 2023 (UTC)


== Built, Grown, Stolen ==
:I quite like option 1. [[User:LauraBatham|LauraBatham]] [[User talk:LauraBatham|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 06:30, 16 March 2023 (UTC)


I'm not sure why this is so hard to reconcile. One could build a computer for a friend and then steal it from him. So too could the Doctor have built/grown the TARDIS for some other person/institution only to have wound up stealing it for his own use.([[Special:Contributions/86.1.172.195|86.1.172.195]] 05:14, 29 July 2009 (UTC))
:: I think it's quite obvious image 1 blows the rest out of the water. I think I'd generally love to have an image with a dark background, but nothing captures Hartnell's personality like that image. [[User:OttselSpy25|OS25]][[User Talk:OttselSpy25|🤙☎️]] 06:31, 16 March 2023 (UTC)


In a deleted scene in Journey's End, The Doctor gave the clone a piece of the TARDIS. He said it took millions of years to grow. [[Special:Contributions/86.15.106.0|86.15.106.0]] 13:31, August 10, 2010 (UTC) Unregistered Contributor
::: My personal opinion is that Option 6 is the best, followed closely by Option 1. While Hartnell is often impish, the face he is pulling in that moment does not capture his likeness as effectively as Option 6. it shows ''less'' personality, but it still shows his personality. My order of preference is 6>8>3>1>2>5>4>7. I would also be open to other screen grabs, if people have other options they can think of. [[User:NoNotTheMemes|NoNotTheMemes]] [[User talk:NoNotTheMemes|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 06:39, 16 March 2023 (UTC)
:::: I've also added another option from ''An Unearthly Child'' which may actually befit OS25's desire for capturing Hartnell's personality AND having a dark background. 06:49, 16 March 2023 (UTC)


==The singular heartbeat==
:: I like #7 and #8. [[User:BananaClownMan|BananaClownMan]] [[User talk:BananaClownMan|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 08:14, 16 March 2023 (UTC)
In the episode "The Edge of Destruction", Ian claims that the Doctor's "heartbeat" is steady - this links in with the theory that Time Lords that have been born rather than Loomed have one heart until they regenerate. Doesn't this prove that the Doctor was born rather than Loomed? [[User:BlueBox|BlueBox]] 21:28, January 21, 2010 (UTC)


:It doesn't necessarily mean anything, except that Ian didn't know to check for a second heartbeat. In later stories, there's indication that you only really hear the one heart which is on the side of the chest you're listening to. Ian, not being a doctor, may not have noticed any "echo" from a second heart, if there was one. The "Looming concept" of course has never been brought up or referenced anywhere in the TV series, and is arguably contradicted by a few references. [[User:Spreee|Spreee]] 20:07, March 1, 2010 (UTC)Spreee
Revisiting this just to throw a spanner in the works - now we have "The Daleks in Colour", does anyone think we should update the infobox image to showcase the First Doctor colourised? I mean, honestly, I'm against the idea (his era was first broadcast in black and white, and 99% of it still is in black and white - except this current one off release and animations) but thought it was worth asking anyway. [[User:FractalDoctor|Fractal Doctor]] [[User talk:FractalDoctor|<span title="Talk"></span>]] 21:21, 26 February 2024 (UTC)
::Problem with that theory is that ''The End of Time'' establishes that the heartbeat of a Time Lord is definitely four beats, rather than two beats with echoes. And ''The Christmas Invasion'' proves that a 19-year-old shopgirl can tell when a Time Lord's second heart isn't beating. These two things taken together suggest that Ian wouldn't need to have a medical background to have noticed a non-human heartbeat. Still, as to BlueBox's original point, looming is a concept that frankly has little traction outside ''Lungbarrow'' — a low-selling book that effectively ended a range of ''Doctor Who'' fiction. And you've got the chicken side when the egg side is the one you want. It's not that ''The Edge of Destruction'' proves something said in ''Lungbarrow'', but rather that ''Lungbarrow'' gave an explanation for why the First Doctor appeared to have only one heart. '''[[User:CzechOut|<span style="background:blue;color:white">Czech</span><span style="background:red;color:white">Out</span>]]''' [[User talk:CzechOut|☎]] | [[Special:Contributions/CzechOut|<font size="+1"></font>]] 02:04, March 2, 2010 (UTC)


==Gap down the side==
:: Yeah, I'm against that for the same reason. That's not to say I wouldn't be open to the idea at all, but it would be a bit jarring to have the First Doctor in colour and the Second Doctor in B&W. [[User:BlueSupergiant|BlueSupergiant]] [[User talk:BlueSupergiant|<span title="Talk to me"></span>]] 23:13, 26 February 2024 (UTC)
What's with the gap down the left side of this article? At a glance I can't see anything abnormal in the code. [[User:Tardis1963|Tardis1963]] 04:39, April 4, 2010 (UTC)
==Departure from Gallifrey==
Article currently says (but perhaps not for much longer):
:For reasons that have yet to be fully revealed, at some point the Doctor broke the Time Lords law on non-interference in the time line and/or culture of an alien race. Rather than face his punishment, he stole an outdated and possibly run-down Type 40 TARDIS and fled Gallifrey . . .
What the heck? Where are we getting that from? I've never heard anything remotely like that. He wasn't a criminal ''before'' he left Gallifrey, surely. He was a criminal ''because'' he left Gallifrey. Anyone got a source for ''anything'' that says something ''close'' to what we're asserting? '''[[User:CzechOut|<span style="background:blue;color:white">Czech</span><span style="background:red;color:white">Out</span>]]''' [[User talk:CzechOut|☎]] | [[Special:Contributions/CzechOut|<font size="+1"></font>]] 20:29, May 27, 2010 (UTC)


== Leaving gallifrey. ==
== Other actors ==
To avoid [[Tardis:Edit wars are good for absolutely nothing|an edit war]], I'm bringing this matter to this talk page: simply put, "doubles", whether they by ''stunt'' or ''body'' doubles, should not be allowed in infoboxes. Currently, stunt doubles are sensibly excluded, as they don't perform as the character in a capacity other than to fill in for the main actor during difficult scenes... but apparently body doubles are a-okay? Doubles which perform stunts are excluded but doubles who stand in for actors if they're ill or for long shots and stuff are included? Where's the sense in that?


I have nothing to back this up with, but I'm under the impression that he leaves Gallifrey because his sense of justice cannot allow him to let oppression exist in the universe, a standpoint which is in complete contrast to the Gallifreyans strict adherence to a policy of non- interference. His activities after leaving Gallifrey are what makes him a criminal to his own people.
Not only is this a double standard, it completely clogs infoboxes as you expect an actor listed in "other actors" to actually have performed a character in a significant capacity other than [[Albert Ward|being a hand double while William Hartnell was off sick]]. Someone like [[Michael Jones]] who played the young First Doctor in ''[[Listen (TV story)|Listen]]'' should be included while [[Brian Proudfoot]] who stood in for Hartnell in long-distance shots in ''[[The Reign of Terror (TV story)|The Reign of Terror]]'' should be excluded.


The difference between double types is minimal; [[Wikipedia]], for instance, has both types on {{w|Double (occupation)}}.


TL;DR: there is not any substantial difference between stunt and body doubles, much less that warrants inclusion in the <nowiki>|other actor =</nowiki> field of an infobox which you'd expect to find actors who have actually played a given character in some capacity, like playing a younger version of an established character.


==Who messed?==
One last thing I want to suggest, instead, is to have [[List of doubles for the Doctor]] where we list off every stunt and body double, explain how they stood in for the main actors, which can be linked to in a new <nowiki>|doubles =</nowiki> field which can be linked to with a template similar to {{tlx|appears}}. {{User:Epsilon the Eternal/signature}} 23:18, 29 October 2023 (UTC)


The entire page has been deleted and replaced with an advert. Please rollback ASAP
: I agree with everything here. Including doubles in the infobox at all is just confusing. It bloats the field somewhat and the format gives little room for explanation. I like the alternative of creating a separate variable and page to list doubles, it's an elegant solution to the problem. [[User:Danochy|Danochy]] [[User talk:Danochy|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 00:05, 31 October 2023 (UTC)


[[Special:Contributions/81.99.155.6|81.99.155.6]] 14:56, June 7, 2010 (UTC)
:: And what about the implications to the wider wiki, such as other stand-in performers that are listed as other actors, like [[Leslie Bates]] as [[Kal]], [[Sylvester McCoy]] and [[Chris Laurens]] as the [[Sixth Doctor]], or [[Paul McGann]] as the [[War Doctor]]? [[User:BananaClownMan|BananaClownMan]] [[User talk:BananaClownMan|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 20:41, 6 November 2023 (UTC)


:Fixed. It was [http://tardis.wikia.com/wiki/Special:Contributions/62.253.192.145
::: All of those people you either only see their shadows or they're just body doubles. They never played those characters even in a small role, as they doubled for the main actors. I maintain a separate page linked to from the infobox for doubles makes much more sense. {{User:Epsilon the Eternal/signature}} 21:09, 6 November 2023 (UTC)
this user]. [[User:Looq|Looq]] 09:07, July 6, 2010 (UTC)
==Key Life Events==
where did they go? [[User:Revanvolatrelundar|Revanvolatrelundar]] 09:36, August 7, 2010 (UTC)


ive re-added the events from previous edits, they are on all other doctor pages so theres no reason they should be removed again. [[User:Revanvolatrelundar|Revanvolatrelundar]] 10:43, August 7, 2010 (UTC)
:: Agree with Eps hefe. [[User:Cousin Ettolrhc|Cousin Ettolrahc]] [[User talk:Cousin Ettolrhc|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 17:56, 1 December 2023 (UTC)


==Clearing up POV in the article concerning Lungbarrow==
::: I agree Epsilon here. Having a separate page for stunt doubles is a good idea and actually gets the point across far better than having all these random names cluttering up the infobox and misleading people into thinking that there’s additional performances under a variety of actors. [[User:SarahJaneFan|SarahJaneFan]] [[User talk:SarahJaneFan|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 13:59, 3 December 2023 (UTC)


The member who keeps reverting the edits concerning Lungbarrow may not be aware of this as they have only be here for about a year, but this wiki works differently from wikipedia. ''The canonicity of this story in relation to the TV series is questionable'' line of thought does not hold sway on this wiki, which considers novels, comics and audios to be canon.
== Peter Cushing ==
In regards to [[Peter Cushing]] playing the First Doctor, it's simple:
# Firstly, Peter Cushing did indeed play the First Doctor. Back sixty-odd years ago, Cushing stepped into a recording booth and performed his role as the Doctor. Regardless of if the story was released, he undeniably played the Doctor on that date.
# Secondly, back in the First Doctor's era, there weren't multiple Doctors. There was one, singular Doctor. He was the definitive article; there are many interpretations of the character, but the Doctor in the annuals is no more a different Doctor than Cushing's portrayal(s). The page for ''[[Journey into Time (unreleased audio story)|Journey into Time]]'' is misleading by saying its unclear which Doctor he played, as that displays a lack of understanding of the era from a revisionist perspective. Like, David Bradley's portrayal of the First Doctor in ''[[Twice Upon a Time (TV story)|Twice Upon a Time]]'' is, if anything, much less faithful than any so-called aberrant take on the character from the 1960s.


Also, the fact that the Doctor uses birth rather than ''looming'' is not a contradiction as ''birth'' or ''born'' merely mean to come into the world and do not need a natural birth at all. Even so, the Other was most likely born, himself, and Mark Platt (who considers his work canon) uses ''birth'' for the Doctor often.
If we can say David Bradley played the First Doctor, who has a different characterisation, biology, appearance, and life to the version played by William Hartnell, we can say Peter Cushing played the First Doctor in ''JiT''.


Also, like all the NAs, Lungbarrow is quite clearly canon in the 80s Doctor novels (though they expand on the Doctor's origin, and thus the Doctor is the son of Ulysses, who put his biodata into a loom, and the Other. Also the use of the looms is referenced in the 80s Doctor stories, and the looms, and biodata in general, play a part in the Faction Paradox arch.
I dunno where this may leave [[Dr. Who (Dr. Who and the Daleks)]], but I don't feel we should compromise the coverage of one unambiguous subject because of a potentially more controversial, linked subject. {{User:Epsilon the Eternal/signature}} 21:40, 9 February 2024 (UTC)


But the main thing is that one person, or a clique, is forcing his own opinion onto others. Many count Lungbarrow to be canon, and it is never fully contradicted at all, and the NAs in general. They were officially licensed by the BBC as canonical continue ons of the series, and were made by people who either worked on the show (Mark Platt and Co.) and those who actually cared for it. Infact Virgin only bought the writers because Peter Darvill-Evans and Branson loved the show and wished to continue it, something the BBC have never done, as they canceled it in the first place, and bought the writes back after it was proven to be a good marketing strategy. If it wasn't for the NAs we probably wouldn't have had the BBC novels and probably not a TV series as early as we got one. The NAs play an important part in saving the show, along with other spin-off media.
: Interesting points. It's undeniable that Cushing plays the so-called "First Doctor" (a rather anachronistic term in this discussion). But he's still playing a different ''version'' of that Doctor, analogous to how [[Tobey Maguire]] and {{w|Tom Holland}} play different versions of [[Spiderman|Peter Parker]]. You could say the same of the annuals and TV comics, but they're much more ambiguous than Cushing in that regard. The Bradley argument holds no weight though: he's clearly written to be the same Doctor with the same continuity, albeit with the modern conception of lore in mind. But anyway, there ''were'' multiple Doctors, they just happened to be versions of the same Doctor.


But all that is irrelevant, in a way. What is important is that certain cliques shouldn't tell people what is canon and what is not, especially in an article which opens with ''What accounts of this period exist are both incomplete and contradictory; no attempt to resolve the conflicts is made here.'' [[User:The Valeyard|The Valeyard]] 11:46, August 10, 2010 (UTC)
: As for your first point, do we have any precedent or policy for using unreleased stories in this manner? If not, I would argue against it, mostly for the reason that [[T:IBOX|infoboxes are not meant to include controversial information]]. [[User:Danochy|Danochy]] [[User talk:Danochy|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 05:11, 10 February 2024 (UTC)


:I've added it back in just now, and made some minor tweaks to it. The reason it is called into question is that Lungbarrow says that Time Lords were fully formed from the looms. ''[[The Sound of Drums]]'' completely contradicts this, showing the Master as a child, which is why it is generally considered un-canon. Now, I don't know much about it, but from what I can tell, that's a pretty solid contradiction. Before removing it again, give some other people time to give their input. [[User:The Thirteenth Doctor|The Thirteenth Doctor]] 14:47, August 10, 2010 (UTC)
:: Not sold on the Spider-Man analogy as they're explicitly in alternative universes, which isn't the case here.
:: It's more like Ebenezer Scrooge being played by different actors in theatre, but it's hard to argue that each performance of the character constitutes a new, separate character. IMO.


::I agree with The Valeyard.  
:: But I don't think this would be controversial information?
::Both the novels and the TV stories are equal in canon, just because something contradicts it doesn't make it any ''less'' canon. Please also note the [[Tardis:Manual of Style#Contradictory evidence]]. --[[User:Tangerineduel|Tangerineduel]] 14:59, August 10, 2010 (UTC)
:: Peter Cushing performed his role. He was paid for his performance. He ticked off every criterion for playing the Doctor in a licensed capacity, its just then they never released it.
:: For example, it'd be absurd to say that {{w|Michael Keaton}} didn't play [[Batman]] in {{wi|Batgirl (film)}}, even though Warner Bros executives cancelled the film despite being completely. In the hypothetical situation where this Wiki would cover ''Batgirl'', it'd be strange not to put Keaton in Batman's infobox.
:: The short of it is, whether or not the project is released has no bearing on whether or not an actor played a character. {{User:Epsilon the Eternal/signature}} 14:22, 10 February 2024 (UTC)
 
To say there was one "Dr. Who" in the 1960s is somewhat inaccurate, as there were actually two versions; the small screen William Hartnell Dr. Who, and the big screen Peter Cushing Dr. Who. Going off the Spider-Man analogue, it's the same scenario as the Flash, as we concurrently had a TV Flash played by Grant Gustin, and the Movie Flash played by Ezra Miller, not too different from each other as Hartnell and Cushing in their roles of Dr. Who; the TV characters and their Movie counterparts are meant to represent the spirit of each other, but they differ in enough ways with backstory and supporting characters that they can't co-exist with each other. Hence, if a tie-in comic or video game features the Flash, whether it's Gustin or Miller can be determinate by the minor details, like costume, other characters or lore.
 
And, looking into ''Journey into Time'', which already links Susan to the [[Roberta Tovey]] counterpart, it reads more as an amalgamation of the two Doctors in the early 60s than a representation of either version. What we have on our shoulders here is essentially a movie tie-in meant to take place in a reality similiar enough to pass off as the movie without being strictly set within the universe of the movie. The best example that comes to mind is how the events of ''Green Lantern: The Animated Series'' are meant to also take place in the universe of ''Young Justice: Phantoms'', but the two shows don't share a universe due to minor but significant contradictions. In essence, ''Journey into Time'' is just a slight revamping of the Cushing Doctor, a sort of "this account, that account" sort of deal.  
 
With this in mind, I believe it is appropriate to say Cushing didn't portray the [[First Doctor]], but simply acting out a diffrent interpretation of his Dr. Who, no different than Kevin Conroy reprising his Batman role for different iterations of his character. [[User:BananaClownMan|BananaClownMan]] [[User talk:BananaClownMan|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 10:58, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
:: I'm fairly neutral as to how to cover this, but I ''will'' say that it is no more accurate to say there were "two versions" than "one". The whole issue is that in truth, if we stop viewing screen media as "primary", it becomes apparent that ''[[Doctor Who in an Exciting Adventure with the Daleks (novelisation)|Doctor Who in an Exciting Adventure with the Daleks]]'' and ''[[Dr. Who and the Daleks (theatrical film)|Dr. Who and the Daleks]]'' are playing the same game, which gives you at least three… and that's before going into things like the Sweet Cigarettes or ''TV Comics''. (The two S.C. short stories have their own redesigns and status-quos for the Doctor, and ''[[The Klepton Parasites (comic story)|The Klepton Parasites]]'' is as much an alternative retelling of ''An Unearthly Child'' Ep.1  as the opening scenes of the first Cushing movie: "Doctor in junkyard, mystery, kids, wandering into the police box, accidental take-off, oops".) It doesn't seem at ''all'' true that the "if a tie-in comic or video game features the Flash, whether it's Gustin or Miller can be determined by minor details" thing holds. People in the 1960s didn't give a damn about "lore" in this sense, that wasn't how people perceived stories to ''work''. There were simply varyingly-different retellings, on a sliding scale of resemblance to one another, and a random piece of merchandise would feature "the character in general", not any specific rendition.
 
:: ''Journey Into Time'', then, is not quite about the First Doctor of television, but ''nor'' is it about specifically the movie version… or the Target version, or a specific amalgamation of Harntell and Cushing. It's a whole new portrayal of the basic "Doctor" character, like a new staging of a play which has no "right" version. It is worth remembering that at one point Boris Karloff was meant to play this audio-Doctor, which I think would make it clear that he ought to be considered his own version. Contrariwise at one point they wanted William Hartnell to play the Doctor in the movies, which doesn't mean they would have been "in continuity" with the TV verison in the modern sense; they would probably have given him a colourful costume, and perhaps even the Cushing hairstyle. Looking at actors simply isn't the way to think about this, it's a largely anachronistic way of looking at sci-fi media. [[User:Scrooge MacDuck|'''Scrooge MacDuck''']] [[User_talk:Scrooge MacDuck|⊕]] 11:09, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
 
::: I'd like to echo Scrooge's points here. The difference 1960s ''Who'' has with late 20th century/early 21st century DC television series is the latter has universe hopping baked in, whilst people watching the former when it first aired would never have thought each performance of the character was "actually another version of the Doctor from a parallel universe".
::: So to assert that this Doctor is the Peter Cushing one based solely on the actor is misguided, and, furthermore, the Cushing Doctor's page deals with a mostly consistent version of the character spare a few details, whilst the Hartnell Doctor page deals with much more contradictory takes on the character.
::: For now, I've made [[Journey into Time (unreleased audio story)]] link to just [[The Doctor]], until we figure this out. {{User:Epsilon the Eternal/signature}} 13:03, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
 
: I feel we should drop this misunderstanding concerning the multiverse, as that is not what is being said by anyone. Our examples aren't a case of Universe A and Universe B, but more along the lines of "this guy played the role on the telly" and "that guy played him in the movie". Think Patrick McNee and Ralph Fiennes as [[John Steed]]. The gist of it is that a Doctor connected to Cushing is more than likely set within the exclusive continuity of the movie-verse than the television show. [[User:BananaClownMan|BananaClownMan]] [[User talk:BananaClownMan|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 19:26, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
 
:: But BCM, people in the sixties ''didn't think about "continuity" in that way'', by and large. Dr Who was Dr Who and Spider-Man was Spider-Man. Asking if the Doctor in Target and the Doctor on TV are "the same continuity" or not would have been gibberish to David Whitaker, he wouldn't have understood what you were even ''asking''. Target, the Cushing film, ''TV Comics'', all were him following the brief "let's tell stories about the Dr Who character in this new medium", he didn't think to himself "this is a Reboot set in a New Bespoke Continuity". People simply didn't typically think that Watsonianly, outside of narrow proto-fannish circles. [[User:Scrooge MacDuck|'''Scrooge MacDuck''']] [[User_talk:Scrooge MacDuck|⊕]] 20:08, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
 
::: I'm sort of against including it in the infobox just because the story never got released, but don't dispute this is an alternate First Doctor. Is there an overview page of the contradicting First Doctor somewhere, that's sort of akin to [[The Doctor's ninth incarnation]]? I can see the "Mysteries and discrepancies" section on this page but it's not very detailed at the moment. I think just putting Peter Cushing in the infobox without changing anything else is bad UX though. There's no link to ''JiT'' on this page, nor is there any mention of Peter Cushing. Nor is there any reference to the First Doctor on Cushing's page beyond the mention he was considered as a successor. So if I want to find out where Cushing played the First Doctor, as a casual reader, I've come up empty handed. Bad experience. And even if I did figure out it was refering to ''JiT'', I then discover I can't even listen to the thing because it never got released. Now I'm annoyed. [[user:guyus24|guyus24]] ([[user talk:guyus24|talk]]) 22:36, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
 
:: Yes, I agree with all of this. I don't think Cushing should be listed as a voice actor in this infobox. I just also don't think saying "''Journey Into Time'' features [[Dr. Who (Dr. Who and the Daleks)]] instead of the [[First Doctor]]" is a particularly accurate statement. [[User:Scrooge MacDuck|'''Scrooge MacDuck''']] [[User_talk:Scrooge MacDuck|⊕]] 22:37, 15 February 2024 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 00:50, 13 March 2024

Archive.png
Archives: #1, #2, #3

How detailed should things be[[edit source]]

Hi, it has come to my attention that there is some disagreement regarding the extent to which the latest episode should be covered on this page. First of all, as always, I invite you to explain the thinking behind your edits here on the talk page. It is quite common that different edits are based on different ideologies and learning about the modi operandi of other editors was always very illuminating for me. Amorkuz 23:33, January 4, 2018 (UTC)

Meanwhile, let me leave my two cents. My firm belief is that all relevant information should be on the wiki but it should be curated according to the focus of each particular page to maximise usefulness for the readers. Detailed plots on story page is something that is sorely missing all too often. (Even so, plot does not equate to a transcript and should be shorter, more digested, if only for copyright reasons.) Care should be taken to treat all stories equally. Most recent stories should not be given more prevalence than older ones. Indeed, every most recent story soon ceases to be one. Things that seem important because they are fresh and emotionally raw for us now may well become mere footnotes in one-two years. All articles should be written from the point of view of a historian looking back (from the end of the universe for in-universe pages or from some unspecified future for BTS portions). Less blogging on the spur of the moment; more recording for posterity. A good mental exercise is to imagine reading this article right after the (imaginary potential) regeneration of the Thirteenth Doctor to see whether a particular detail still seems important then.
Apart from this global posture, there is a peculiarity of this particular character. Personally, I settle on different level of details for blink-and-you-miss-them characters, guest characters, companions and Doctor's incarnations. How compact the information should be naturally depends on the total amount of information available. If one struggles to fill the height of the infobox with the available info on the character, there is no problem writing everything in excruciating detail (such as is known). On the contrary, the page of a Doctor incarnation is almost without exception extremely long. There are dozens of stories, from all media. Making sense of his/her life is hard enough when each story is represented by a short paragraph. Putting even a short plot of every story would, IMHO, make the page rather unusable for anyone. Thus, I generally am for brevity on pages such as this. Only the most basic of information. Veni-vedi-vici, followed by a link to a more detailed description on the stories page. Amorkuz 23:56, January 4, 2018 (UTC)
This one's actually pretty easy, since it's stated elsewhere on this wiki (and as usual, I don't remember where, but if I find it I will post it) that character pages should really only have no more than three sentences per story. We want to differentiate our character pages from our story/plot pages. There are several reasons for requiring this brevity (some of which are included in User:Amorkuz' statements above):
  • The longer a page is, the longer it takes to load, the harder it is to find specific information, and the harder it is to find a particular error to fix. A Doctor usually accumulates dozens of stories during his tenure, and he can accumulate far more than that after his actor has quit the job.
  • Tardis:Neutral point of view specifically tells us to treat all stories equally. That means we do not say that the TV stories should get more text per story while the other media are just fine with a couple of sentences per story.
  • This is a wiki, and I think that some people aren't aware of what a wiki's purpose really is. The goal of a wiki is to get readers clicking on as many links as possible (that's why we link so often on pages and why orphaned pages are bad). If someone is reading a Doctor's page, and wants more detail on one of his particular adventures, they can click on the story link. If someone wants just an overview of that Doctor, they don't have to wade through detailed descriptions of adventures they might not be interested in.
Unfortunately, this guideline is not found at Tardis:Guide to writing Individuals articles, but it probably should be. The closest I can find to a definitive statement is located at User talk:Shambala108/Archive 1#Zaroff, but I will keep looking. Shambala108 01:17, January 5, 2018 (UTC)
Well, I've always gone by the three paragraph mindset when recapping episode entries, with exception to "wham episodes" that go on longer. Still, 4 pages on word is a bit much for a single episode, especially when its only one hour long, and the First Doctor had serials that went on longer than that that are barely covered by one paragraph as it is.BananaClownMan 09:43, January 5, 2018 (UTC)
Just for personal clarification, if we are really only meant to have three sentences per story for character articles, that means a lot of pages (particularly NewWho ones) need a major overhaul. The Eleventh Doctor alone has paragraphs on paragraphs for just single stories - The Eleventh Hour (TV story) alone has seven paragraphs dedicated to it. So is it necessary we shorten those pages to fit this three sentence rule? Snivystorm 15:13, January 5, 2018 (UTC)
Well, going by what Shambala108 is saying, it seems more like a guidline than a rule; something to encourage recaps from getting out of hand and dwarfing the rest of the page. Like how looking when crossing the road is not strictly legal, but people are taught to treat it as such.BananaClownMan 17:02, January 5, 2018 (UTC)
We kinda have to draw a line though, otherwise debates like this will keep cropping up: "is it only three sentences for episode stories, but three paragraphs for finales then four pages worth for special episodes?". We have to settle what length is acceptable and what isn't otherwise there will always be a clash between editors, like now and at some point down the road, disputing what is long enough and what is not. I personally have no problem dedicating a few paragraphs for each story, but this will (given not every editor will value each story as equal) create unbalance between stories. Also, as Amorkuz mentioned, even a single paragraph given to every single story would make the length practically unbearable, particularly on the ever growing mobile users. Snivystorm 17:13, January 5, 2018 (UTC)
"Three sentences per story" might be a good guideline but would be a horrible policy. Novels might well require more space than short stories. An audio short trip Rise and Fall may not merit more than one sentence as opposed to The Daleks' Master Plan that saw introduction of one companions and death of two companions. It was never my intention to put anyone into a straitjacket. It would just be good to try and mention every story, but only mention the highlights. Amorkuz 21:09, January 5, 2018 (UTC)
So it all just depends? Snivystorm 21:58, January 5, 2018 (UTC)
I think what BananaClownMan described as a "three-sentence mindset" is a good approach, as long as one is not overzealous about it. I myself would try to fit the story description into three sentences. That is the benchmark given on the wiki. If I succeed, great. If not, then I ask myself why. What is this information that does not fit? Why is it important? Is it really significant when viewed as part of the whole life of the First Doctor? If yes, then I allow myself to add it.
One of the reasons I don't want to treat it as an absolute maximum is that, having worked as an editor, I can see very well how to cheat it if need be. If it's only three sentences, I could make very elaborate long sentences. German philosophers, for instance, are famous for writing sentences that can be longer than a page. It is a bit harder to do in English, but still possible. This would satisfy the strict bound but violate its spirit. And vice versa, it would not make sense to artificially combine five rather short sentences into three longer ones at the expense of readability.
Incidentally, I do believe that TUaT can easily be summarised in three sentences as far as the First Doctor is concerned. He didn't really do much. There is not a single action of his (action unique to this story) that would merit to be part of his biography. Perhaps, it would clarify things if I walked my way through mock-writing it. So I would put it something like this (I'm not checking details, so this cannot be used on the page):
  1. When and where the story is set and what was the problem: e.g., after meeting the Twelfth Doctor on the way to his TARDIS mid-regeneration, the two of them experienced time freezing and encountered a Captain from WWI.
  2. Statement that the problem was resolved, e.g., he helped the Twelfth Doctor figure out that the Captain was taken from time by glass people for archiving purposes and save his life.
  3. Explanation what happened next, e.g., he then overcame his reluctance to change his persona, and returned to the South Pole to regenerate.
(This is obviously rubbish and used just as a benchmark.)
Is there something missing?
  • Rusty? Definitely not. First Doctor has no idea who that is.
  • Lethbridge-Stewart? Dunno, see above. Maybe. But I wouldn't. When Second Doctor meets Archibald's grandson, there is no indication that Archibald is in any way remembered.
  • Bill? Well, it's not really her. So again dubious. Did it really affect his life in any profound way?
  • Bonding with Twelve on the topic of non-regenerating? That could be argued and could even merit a fourth sentence. (Though I'm sure there are different opinions on the topic.)
  • His sexism? Should be on the page but not in the biography section. That's personality.
Hope this little analysis helps. Amorkuz 23:47, January 5, 2018 (UTC)
One thing I forgot to mention. It was ruled in Forum:Extended plots that editors are encouraged to write detailed plot summaries on story pages. This is where we want "extended" description of the plot, not on character pages. Shambala108 00:28, January 6, 2018 (UTC)
Yeah, I can get behind this, particularly the last point regarding placing extensive information on story pages than on character pages. When editing today (or yesterday depending on where one is in the world) I found recent story pages were comparatively bare than they were years ago, when it comes to plot at least. It would seem the root of the problem comes from editors piling all their effort into discussing the entirety of the story on character pages instead, as this incident shows. But yes, it is tough to place a precise policy on this when one can bend the rules to their limits. Maybe this matter warrants a full, wiki wide, discussion than simply us four discussing it on a talk page? Snivystorm 01:08, January 6, 2018 (UTC)

Listen[[edit source]]

Surely the appearance of the small Doctor from Listen should be retained on this page, as The Timeless Children explicitly reveals that the First Doctor, while not being the first incarnation of the Being later known as the Doctor, was forced to regenerate and grow up as a child, forced to go back to the Academy, and become a Time Lord again — with Listen having two adult Time Lords comment on the fact that they don't think he'll ever make it to the Academy, with one commenting that he doesn't want to be a Time Lord. Even with the Timeless Child twist, I think the implication is clear that this is still intended to be the William Hartnell incarnation of the Doctor! Sabovia (Message Wall) | (Contributions) 15:00, March 8, 2020 (UTC)

I completely agree. This is by all rates the First Doctor as a child. If this has been removed, it should be re-added. This IS definitely the First Doctor by all intents and purposes. The dialogue spoken to the kid by Clara about "fear makes companions of us all" is even later re-instated (from the Doctor's point of view) in An Unearthly Child to Barbara, Ian and Susan. This is not assumption, this is not speculation. That is a pure fact. Sorry admins and anyone else who potentially want to bicker and argue this, but that is how it is whether you want to admit it or not. --DCLM 15:24, March 8, 2020 (UTC)
The Timeless Child is irrelevant to this discussion. True, the child in Listen cannot be one of the Timeless Child's incarnations — but it could still be Patience's husband or any other pre-Hartnell incarnations from accounts not involving the Timeless Child, as detailed at The Doctor's early life. The Timeless Child story which would preclude the child in Listen being pre-hartnell is only one of several potential ways Hartnell could be something else than the first incarnation. For example, The Power of the Daleks refers to pre-Hartnell lives that the Second Doctor remembers quite well and keep mementos from. --Scrooge MacDuck 15:37, March 8, 2020 (UTC)

Eye colour[[edit source]]

How is An Unearthly Child being used as a source for the First Doctor having "piercing blue eyes"?
×   SOTO contribs ×°//]   💬| {/-//:   21:38, March 11, 2020 (UTC)

Infobox Image[[edit source]]

I think that I'm not alone in believing that the current infobox image representing William Hartnell is inadequate. It obscures half of his face! I've pulled a few options (all of them are uncropped at present but can easily be cropped should the need arise). I think any of these would be strong options.

NoNotTheMemes 06:24, 16 March 2023 (UTC)

I quite like option 1. LauraBatham 06:30, 16 March 2023 (UTC)
I think it's quite obvious image 1 blows the rest out of the water. I think I'd generally love to have an image with a dark background, but nothing captures Hartnell's personality like that image. OS25🤙☎️ 06:31, 16 March 2023 (UTC)
My personal opinion is that Option 6 is the best, followed closely by Option 1. While Hartnell is often impish, the face he is pulling in that moment does not capture his likeness as effectively as Option 6. it shows less personality, but it still shows his personality. My order of preference is 6>8>3>1>2>5>4>7. I would also be open to other screen grabs, if people have other options they can think of. NoNotTheMemes 06:39, 16 March 2023 (UTC)
I've also added another option from An Unearthly Child which may actually befit OS25's desire for capturing Hartnell's personality AND having a dark background. 06:49, 16 March 2023 (UTC)
I like #7 and #8. BananaClownMan 08:14, 16 March 2023 (UTC)

Revisiting this just to throw a spanner in the works - now we have "The Daleks in Colour", does anyone think we should update the infobox image to showcase the First Doctor colourised? I mean, honestly, I'm against the idea (his era was first broadcast in black and white, and 99% of it still is in black and white - except this current one off release and animations) but thought it was worth asking anyway. — Fractal Doctor 21:21, 26 February 2024 (UTC)

Yeah, I'm against that for the same reason. That's not to say I wouldn't be open to the idea at all, but it would be a bit jarring to have the First Doctor in colour and the Second Doctor in B&W. BlueSupergiant 23:13, 26 February 2024 (UTC)

Other actors[[edit source]]

To avoid an edit war, I'm bringing this matter to this talk page: simply put, "doubles", whether they by stunt or body doubles, should not be allowed in infoboxes. Currently, stunt doubles are sensibly excluded, as they don't perform as the character in a capacity other than to fill in for the main actor during difficult scenes... but apparently body doubles are a-okay? Doubles which perform stunts are excluded but doubles who stand in for actors if they're ill or for long shots and stuff are included? Where's the sense in that?

Not only is this a double standard, it completely clogs infoboxes as you expect an actor listed in "other actors" to actually have performed a character in a significant capacity other than being a hand double while William Hartnell was off sick. Someone like Michael Jones who played the young First Doctor in Listen should be included while Brian Proudfoot who stood in for Hartnell in long-distance shots in The Reign of Terror should be excluded.

The difference between double types is minimal; Wikipedia, for instance, has both types on Double (occupation).

TL;DR: there is not any substantial difference between stunt and body doubles, much less that warrants inclusion in the |other actor = field of an infobox which you'd expect to find actors who have actually played a given character in some capacity, like playing a younger version of an established character.

One last thing I want to suggest, instead, is to have List of doubles for the Doctor where we list off every stunt and body double, explain how they stood in for the main actors, which can be linked to in a new |doubles = field which can be linked to with a template similar to {{appears}}.

23:18, 29 October 2023 (UTC)

I agree with everything here. Including doubles in the infobox at all is just confusing. It bloats the field somewhat and the format gives little room for explanation. I like the alternative of creating a separate variable and page to list doubles, it's an elegant solution to the problem. Danochy 00:05, 31 October 2023 (UTC)
And what about the implications to the wider wiki, such as other stand-in performers that are listed as other actors, like Leslie Bates as Kal, Sylvester McCoy and Chris Laurens as the Sixth Doctor, or Paul McGann as the War Doctor? BananaClownMan 20:41, 6 November 2023 (UTC)
All of those people you either only see their shadows or they're just body doubles. They never played those characters even in a small role, as they doubled for the main actors. I maintain a separate page linked to from the infobox for doubles makes much more sense. 21:09, 6 November 2023 (UTC)
Agree with Eps hefe. Cousin Ettolrahc 17:56, 1 December 2023 (UTC)
I agree Epsilon here. Having a separate page for stunt doubles is a good idea and actually gets the point across far better than having all these random names cluttering up the infobox and misleading people into thinking that there’s additional performances under a variety of actors. SarahJaneFan 13:59, 3 December 2023 (UTC)

Peter Cushing[[edit source]]

In regards to Peter Cushing playing the First Doctor, it's simple:

  1. Firstly, Peter Cushing did indeed play the First Doctor. Back sixty-odd years ago, Cushing stepped into a recording booth and performed his role as the Doctor. Regardless of if the story was released, he undeniably played the Doctor on that date.
  2. Secondly, back in the First Doctor's era, there weren't multiple Doctors. There was one, singular Doctor. He was the definitive article; there are many interpretations of the character, but the Doctor in the annuals is no more a different Doctor than Cushing's portrayal(s). The page for Journey into Time is misleading by saying its unclear which Doctor he played, as that displays a lack of understanding of the era from a revisionist perspective. Like, David Bradley's portrayal of the First Doctor in Twice Upon a Time is, if anything, much less faithful than any so-called aberrant take on the character from the 1960s.

If we can say David Bradley played the First Doctor, who has a different characterisation, biology, appearance, and life to the version played by William Hartnell, we can say Peter Cushing played the First Doctor in JiT.

I dunno where this may leave Dr. Who (Dr. Who and the Daleks), but I don't feel we should compromise the coverage of one unambiguous subject because of a potentially more controversial, linked subject.

21:40, 9 February 2024 (UTC)

Interesting points. It's undeniable that Cushing plays the so-called "First Doctor" (a rather anachronistic term in this discussion). But he's still playing a different version of that Doctor, analogous to how Tobey Maguire and Tom Holland play different versions of Peter Parker. You could say the same of the annuals and TV comics, but they're much more ambiguous than Cushing in that regard. The Bradley argument holds no weight though: he's clearly written to be the same Doctor with the same continuity, albeit with the modern conception of lore in mind. But anyway, there were multiple Doctors, they just happened to be versions of the same Doctor.
As for your first point, do we have any precedent or policy for using unreleased stories in this manner? If not, I would argue against it, mostly for the reason that infoboxes are not meant to include controversial information. Danochy 05:11, 10 February 2024 (UTC)
Not sold on the Spider-Man analogy as they're explicitly in alternative universes, which isn't the case here.
It's more like Ebenezer Scrooge being played by different actors in theatre, but it's hard to argue that each performance of the character constitutes a new, separate character. IMO.
But I don't think this would be controversial information?
Peter Cushing performed his role. He was paid for his performance. He ticked off every criterion for playing the Doctor in a licensed capacity, its just then they never released it.
For example, it'd be absurd to say that Michael Keaton didn't play Batman in Batgirl (film), even though Warner Bros executives cancelled the film despite being completely. In the hypothetical situation where this Wiki would cover Batgirl, it'd be strange not to put Keaton in Batman's infobox.
The short of it is, whether or not the project is released has no bearing on whether or not an actor played a character. 14:22, 10 February 2024 (UTC)

To say there was one "Dr. Who" in the 1960s is somewhat inaccurate, as there were actually two versions; the small screen William Hartnell Dr. Who, and the big screen Peter Cushing Dr. Who. Going off the Spider-Man analogue, it's the same scenario as the Flash, as we concurrently had a TV Flash played by Grant Gustin, and the Movie Flash played by Ezra Miller, not too different from each other as Hartnell and Cushing in their roles of Dr. Who; the TV characters and their Movie counterparts are meant to represent the spirit of each other, but they differ in enough ways with backstory and supporting characters that they can't co-exist with each other. Hence, if a tie-in comic or video game features the Flash, whether it's Gustin or Miller can be determinate by the minor details, like costume, other characters or lore.

And, looking into Journey into Time, which already links Susan to the Roberta Tovey counterpart, it reads more as an amalgamation of the two Doctors in the early 60s than a representation of either version. What we have on our shoulders here is essentially a movie tie-in meant to take place in a reality similiar enough to pass off as the movie without being strictly set within the universe of the movie. The best example that comes to mind is how the events of Green Lantern: The Animated Series are meant to also take place in the universe of Young Justice: Phantoms, but the two shows don't share a universe due to minor but significant contradictions. In essence, Journey into Time is just a slight revamping of the Cushing Doctor, a sort of "this account, that account" sort of deal.

With this in mind, I believe it is appropriate to say Cushing didn't portray the First Doctor, but simply acting out a diffrent interpretation of his Dr. Who, no different than Kevin Conroy reprising his Batman role for different iterations of his character. BananaClownMan 10:58, 15 February 2024 (UTC)

I'm fairly neutral as to how to cover this, but I will say that it is no more accurate to say there were "two versions" than "one". The whole issue is that in truth, if we stop viewing screen media as "primary", it becomes apparent that Doctor Who in an Exciting Adventure with the Daleks and Dr. Who and the Daleks are playing the same game, which gives you at least three… and that's before going into things like the Sweet Cigarettes or TV Comics. (The two S.C. short stories have their own redesigns and status-quos for the Doctor, and The Klepton Parasites is as much an alternative retelling of An Unearthly Child Ep.1 as the opening scenes of the first Cushing movie: "Doctor in junkyard, mystery, kids, wandering into the police box, accidental take-off, oops".) It doesn't seem at all true that the "if a tie-in comic or video game features the Flash, whether it's Gustin or Miller can be determined by minor details" thing holds. People in the 1960s didn't give a damn about "lore" in this sense, that wasn't how people perceived stories to work. There were simply varyingly-different retellings, on a sliding scale of resemblance to one another, and a random piece of merchandise would feature "the character in general", not any specific rendition.
Journey Into Time, then, is not quite about the First Doctor of television, but nor is it about specifically the movie version… or the Target version, or a specific amalgamation of Harntell and Cushing. It's a whole new portrayal of the basic "Doctor" character, like a new staging of a play which has no "right" version. It is worth remembering that at one point Boris Karloff was meant to play this audio-Doctor, which I think would make it clear that he ought to be considered his own version. Contrariwise at one point they wanted William Hartnell to play the Doctor in the movies, which doesn't mean they would have been "in continuity" with the TV verison in the modern sense; they would probably have given him a colourful costume, and perhaps even the Cushing hairstyle. Looking at actors simply isn't the way to think about this, it's a largely anachronistic way of looking at sci-fi media. Scrooge MacDuck 11:09, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
I'd like to echo Scrooge's points here. The difference 1960s Who has with late 20th century/early 21st century DC television series is the latter has universe hopping baked in, whilst people watching the former when it first aired would never have thought each performance of the character was "actually another version of the Doctor from a parallel universe".
So to assert that this Doctor is the Peter Cushing one based solely on the actor is misguided, and, furthermore, the Cushing Doctor's page deals with a mostly consistent version of the character spare a few details, whilst the Hartnell Doctor page deals with much more contradictory takes on the character.
For now, I've made Journey into Time (unreleased audio story) link to just The Doctor, until we figure this out. 13:03, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
I feel we should drop this misunderstanding concerning the multiverse, as that is not what is being said by anyone. Our examples aren't a case of Universe A and Universe B, but more along the lines of "this guy played the role on the telly" and "that guy played him in the movie". Think Patrick McNee and Ralph Fiennes as John Steed. The gist of it is that a Doctor connected to Cushing is more than likely set within the exclusive continuity of the movie-verse than the television show. BananaClownMan 19:26, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
But BCM, people in the sixties didn't think about "continuity" in that way, by and large. Dr Who was Dr Who and Spider-Man was Spider-Man. Asking if the Doctor in Target and the Doctor on TV are "the same continuity" or not would have been gibberish to David Whitaker, he wouldn't have understood what you were even asking. Target, the Cushing film, TV Comics, all were him following the brief "let's tell stories about the Dr Who character in this new medium", he didn't think to himself "this is a Reboot set in a New Bespoke Continuity". People simply didn't typically think that Watsonianly, outside of narrow proto-fannish circles. Scrooge MacDuck 20:08, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
I'm sort of against including it in the infobox just because the story never got released, but don't dispute this is an alternate First Doctor. Is there an overview page of the contradicting First Doctor somewhere, that's sort of akin to The Doctor's ninth incarnation? I can see the "Mysteries and discrepancies" section on this page but it's not very detailed at the moment. I think just putting Peter Cushing in the infobox without changing anything else is bad UX though. There's no link to JiT on this page, nor is there any mention of Peter Cushing. Nor is there any reference to the First Doctor on Cushing's page beyond the mention he was considered as a successor. So if I want to find out where Cushing played the First Doctor, as a casual reader, I've come up empty handed. Bad experience. And even if I did figure out it was refering to JiT, I then discover I can't even listen to the thing because it never got released. Now I'm annoyed. guyus24 (talk) 22:36, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
Yes, I agree with all of this. I don't think Cushing should be listed as a voice actor in this infobox. I just also don't think saying "Journey Into Time features Dr. Who (Dr. Who and the Daleks) instead of the First Doctor" is a particularly accurate statement. Scrooge MacDuck 22:37, 15 February 2024 (UTC)