Series 1 (Doctor Who 2005): Difference between revisions

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:''For the 1963-1964 season of the original series, see [[Season 1]].''
{{real world}}
[[Image:9thlogo.jpg|center|250px]]
{{Infobox Series
'''Series 1''' of ''[[Doctor Who]]'', also known as '''Season 27''' to differentiate it from [[Season 1]] of the original series, starred [[Christopher Eccleston]] as the [[Ninth Doctor]] and [[Billie Piper]] as [[Rose Tyler]]. Later in the season it introduced [[Bruno Langley]] as the Ninth Doctor's short-lived second companion [[Adam Mitchell]], [[John Barrowman]] as companion [[Jack Harkness]] and, finally, [[David Tennant]] as the [[Tenth Doctor]]. It marked the return of ''Doctor Who'' to weekly television after a sixteen year hiatus. Unlike the original Doctor Who series, in which stories consisted of as few as two and as many as twelve episodes, stories in the revived series consist mainly of individual episodes and occasional two-or-three-parters.
|image      = Doctor-who-logo-nine.jpg
|image2      = 2005 dw promocard.jpg
|broadcast year = 2005
|nth season = 27
|ep count    = 13
|story count = 10
|doctor      = Ninth Doctor
|companion  = Rose Tyler
|companion2  = Jack Harkness
|companion3  = Adam Mitchell
|companion4  = Mickey Smith
|producer    = Phil Collinson
|exec prod  = Russell T Davies
|exec prod2  = Julie Gardner
|exec prod3  = Mal Young
|first ep    = Rose (TV story)
|start date  = [[26 March (releases)|26 March]] [[2005 (releases)|2005]]
|end date    = [[18 June (releases)|18 June]] [[2005 (releases)|2005]]
|network    = BBC One
|runtime    = 45'
|DWM        = DWM 336
|DWM2        = DWM 338
|DWM3        = DWM 342
|DWM4        = DWM 343
|DWM5        = DWM 345
|DWM6        = DWM 352
|DWM7        = DWM 353
|DWM8        = DWM 354
|DWM9        = DWM 355
|DWM10      = DWM 356
|DWM11      = DWM 357
|DWM12      = DWM 358
|DWM13      = DWM 359
|DWM14      = DWM 363
|DWM15      = DWM 364
|DWM16      = DWM 463
|DWM17      = DWM 464
|DWMSE      = DWMSE 11
|DWMSE2      = DWMSE 24
|confidential = Series 1 (CON)
|action figures = Character Options series 1 action figures
|ref book    = About Time 7
|ref book2  = TCH 48{{!}}The Complete History 48
|ref book3  = TCH 49
|ref book4  = TCH 50
|ref book5  =
|doc        =
|doc2        =
|doc3        =
|doc4        =
|doc5        =
|prev        = Season 26 (Doctor Who 1963)|
|next        = Series 2 (Doctor Who 2005)
|trailer    = The Trip of a Lifetime with the Ninth Doctor - Series 1 TV Trail - Doctor Who - BBC
|trailer2    = Series 1 "Trip of a Lifetime" Steelbook - Doctor Who
|clip        = Rose Tyler Boards the TARDIS! (HD) Rose Doctor Who
|clip2      = Pete Tyler Saves The Day - Father's Day - Doctor Who - BBC
|clip3      = No weapons, no defences, no plan - Doctor Who - Bad Wolf - Series 1 -BBC
|bts        = Challenges of Bringing Back Doctor Who - Phil Collinson Teaser - 50th Anniversary Celebration
|bts2        = Doctor Who Bad Wolf and The Parting of the Ways Q&A
|bts3        = The Story of Rose Tyler The Women Who Lived Doctor Who
}}{{dab page|Series 1}}
'''Series 1''' of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' ran from [[26 March (releases)|26 March]] [[2005 (releases)|2005]] to [[18 June (releases)|18 June]] 2005. It was the first series produced by [[BBC Wales]]. It starred [[Christopher Eccleston]] as the [[Ninth Doctor]] and [[Billie Piper]] as [[Rose Tyler]]. The series opened with {{cs|Rose (TV story)}} and concluded with {{cs|The Parting of the Ways (TV story)}}.


==Overview==
== Overview ==
Series 1 aired between [[26th March]] [[2005]] and [[18th June]] [[2005]]. There is debate as to whether ''[[The Christmas Invasion]]'' and the ''[[Children in Need Special]]'' should be considered part of Series 1, though they are more regularly packaged as part of Series 2. The episode guide on the BBC website regards these stories as belonging to neither series, but standing alone as specials.
Series 1 introduced the [[Ninth Doctor]], along with new companion [[Rose Tyler]]. It dealt with the words "[[Bad Wolf meme|Bad Wolf]]" being spread across time and space, which was the [[Story arc|main arc]] of the series. This meme was seen in the majority of the episodes.


Although it was a continuation of the earlier series, the BBC chose to restart its series numbering rather than possibly alienate new viewers by branding this the 27th season. This season saw the show return to 45-minute episodes for the first time since 1985. Many episodes serve to reintroduce concepts of ''Doctor Who'' to a new generation, with key episodes being ''[[Aliens of London]]'', which reintroduced [[UNIT]] (albeit in a minor way), ''[[Dalek (TV story)|Dalek]]'', which reintroduced the [[Dalek]]s
Series 1 also provided the first major information about the [[Last Great Time War]]. {{cs|The Parting of the Ways (TV story)}} featured the revived series' first regeneration. The season also introduced [[Jack Harkness]], planting the seed for the spin-off ''[[Torchwood (TV series)|Torchwood]]''.


Series 1 also provided the first major [[File:2005_dw_promocard.jpg|thumb|Promotional postcard for the series]]information about the [[Last Great Time War]], and ''[[The Parting of the Ways]]'', which featured the revived series' first regeneration. The season also introduced [[Jack Harkness]] and laid the initial seed for the later spin-off ''[[Torchwood]]''. All 13 episodes are linked by the story arc, [[Bad Wolf meme|Bad Wolf]].
== Production ==
Series 1 consisted of ten stories and thirteen episodes. Its [[head writer]] was [[Russell T Davies]], and thus the series was the start of his first era as head writer, which lasted until the story {{cs|The End of Time (TV story)}}, the final "specials" of the [[Series 4 (Doctor Who 2005)|fourth series]]. This era came nearly sixteen years after [[Season 26 (Doctor Who 1963)|the previous ''season'']], though only nine years after [[Doctor Who (TV story)|the last ''television story'']]. But credit for the series hardly belonged to RTD alone. The struggles to bring ''Doctor Who'' back to [[BBC One]] after such a long absence are the subject of several documentaries and behind-the-scenes explorations, all of which confirm that series 1 was the result of the struggles of several individuals apart from RTD himself — notably [[BBC]] execs [[Jane Tranter]] and [[Lorraine Heggessey]], as well as RTD's fellow [[executive producer]]s, [[Julie Gardner]] and [[Mal Young]].


Series 1 was later shown (after some initial hesitation) by the American network, Sci-Fi Channel - the first time a nationally broadcast commercial network had shown the series in the US.
Their pitch was successful, with RTD's desires to have the series be a continuation, rather than a reboot, of the original being successful. As such, series 1 saw many of the classic era's elements remain, notably the Doctor's history as a [[Time Lord]], his use of the [[The Doctor's sonic screwdriver|sonic screwdriver]], [[The Doctor's TARDIS|his TARDIS]], and the return of his original nemesis the [[Dalek]]s. The series also brought the return of individual episode titles for the first time since ''[[The Gunfighters (TV story)|The Gunfighters]]'' in [[Season 3 (Doctor Who 1963)|season 3]].


Behind the scenes, the program saw the involvement of many writers and actors who had been involved in keeping the ''Doctor Who'' brand alive during the 1989-2005 hiatus through original novels, audio dramas and independent video productions. Executive producer and head writer [[Russell T Davies]] is counted among them for having written the [[Virgin New Adventures]] novel ''[[Damaged Goods]]''. Other "interregnum" veterans involved in this inaugural season included [[Mark Gatiss]], [[Robert Shearman]], [[Steven Moffat]] and, in particular, actor/writer [[Nicholas Briggs]] who provided voices for the [[Dalek]]s starting this season and whose involvement in Who fandom dates back 20 years.
Though RTD wrote the bulk of the series, he also brought in Mark Gatiss, Robert Shearman, Paul Cornell and Steven Moffat on the basis of their previous ''Doctor Who ''writing work for the Virgin New Adventures and Short Trips ranges. With Gatiss and Cornell, he actively told them that he wanted their scripts to be similar in tone to what they had written for the VNAs.<ref>Aldridge, Mark; Murray, Andy, ''T is for Television: The Small Screen Adventures of Russell T Davies.'' Reynolds & Hearn Ltd.</ref>


This first season, and those immediately following, would credit the [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation]] for assistance in providing production support. The season aired on the CBC only a few days after the UK broadcast, with [[Christopher Eccleston]] appearing in specially shot bumpers. (This practice did not continue beyond this first season.)
Ultimately, the decision to make the series in [[Cardiff]] rather than [[London]] not only changed the face of ''[[Doctor Who]]'', but also reshaped the British television industry. A then-sleepy satellite of the BBC was transformed by this series' success into a major hub of British television production. Series 1 was characterised not just by its unexpected success with the British public, but also by the teething problems inherent in filming a major, special-effects-heavy series in a country that, until then, had little experience with that kind of production.


Beginning with this season, ''Doctor Who'' not only reestablished itself as a popular drama series, it also entered a new era of critical acclaim, being nominated for a number of awards including the BAFTA and writer Steven Moffat began a three-year association with the Hugo Awards by winning one of his ''The Empty Child''/''The Doctor Dances'' two-parter.
Series 1 was unusually well-received. It won the {{w|National Television Award}} and [[BAFTA]] for "Best Drama Series", confirming its popular and critical success. Its BAFTA nomination was the first for the series since [[Season 15 (Doctor Who 1963)|season 15]] and the first ever for the programme in an "adult" category. Perhaps more importantly, it was the first time that a series of ''Doctor Who'' had actually ''won'' a BAFTA. Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper both won National Television Awards for "Favourite Actor" and "Favourite Actress". [[Writer]] Steven Moffat also began a three-year domination of the [[Hugo Award]] "Short Form Presentation" category by winning one for his {{cs|The Empty Child (TV story)}}/{{cs|The Doctor Dances (TV story)}} two-parter. [[John Barrowman]]'s [[Jack Harkness]], who was introduced in this story, would go on to have a profound impact on the shape and scope of the [[DWU|''Doctor Who'' universe]].


==Television stories==
Unlike the more recent series, series 1 was produced under a partnership deal with the [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4328329.stm|title=BBC investigates Doctor Who leak|date of source=Tuesday, 8 March, 2005|website name=BBC NEWS - Entertainment|accessdate=2nd August 2011}}</ref> It was also the first whole series of ''Doctor Who'' to be broadcast on a national, commercial network in the [[United States]], thanks to a late deal with the [[Sci-Fi Channel]].


== Cast ==
* [[Ninth Doctor|Doctor Who]]<ref>Despite being credited as "Doctor Who" onscreen for the entirety of this series, the [[Ninth Doctor]] is credited on all episode pages on the official [[Doctor Who website|''Doctor Who'' website]] (barring ''Rose'') as 'The Doctor'. </ref> - [[Christopher Eccleston]]
* [[Rose Tyler]] - [[Billie Piper]], [[Julia Joyce]]
: and introducing [[David Tennant]] as [[Tenth Doctor|Doctor Who]]
=== Recurring ===
* [[Jackie Tyler]] - [[Camille Coduri]]
* [[Mickey Smith]] - [[Noel Clarke]], [[Casey Dyer]]
* Voice of the [[Nestene Consciousness]] - [[Nicholas Briggs]]
* [[Auton]]s - [[Alan Ruscoe]], [[Paul Kasey]], [[David Sant]], [[Elizabeth Fost]], [[Helen Otway]]
* [[Cassandra O'Brien.Δ17]] - [[Zoë Wanamaker]]
* [[Trinity Wells]] - [[Lachele Carl]]
* [[Harriet Jones]] - [[Penelope Wilton]]
* [[Blon Fel-Fotch Passameer-Day Slitheen]] - [[Annette Badland]], [[Alan Ruscoe]]
* [[Adam Mitchell]] - [[Bruno Langley]]
* [[Jack Harkness|Captain Jack Harkness]] - [[John Barrowman]]
* [[Dalek]]s - [[Dalek operator|operated]] by [[Barnaby Edwards]], [[Nicholas Pegg]], [[David Hankinson]] and voiced by [[Nicholas Briggs]]
<!-- Peter Tyler is not recurring because the other appearances are of the alternative-universe version-->
=== Guest ===
* [[Clive Finch]] - [[Mark Benton]]
* [[Steward (The End of the World)|Steward]] - [[Simon Day]]
* [[Jabe]] - [[Yasmin Bannerman]]
* [[Moxx of Balhoon]] - [[Jimmy Vee]]
* [[Gabriel Sneed]] – [[Alan David]]
* [[Gwyneth (The Unquiet Dead)|Gwyneth]] - [[Eve Myles]]
* [[Charles Dickens]] - [[Simon Callow]]
* Voice of the [[Gelth]] – [[Zoe Thorne]]
* [[Jocrassa Fel-Fotch Passameer-Day Slitheen]] - [[David Verrey]]
* [[Toshiko Sato]] - [[Naoko Mori]]
* [[Henry van Statten]] - [[Corey Johnson]]
* [[Diana Goddard|Goddard]] - [[Anna-Louise Plowman]]
* [[Cathica Santini Khadeni]] - [[Christine Adams]]
* [[Eva Saint Julienne|Suki]] - [[Anna Maxwell Martin|Anna Maxwell-Martin]]
* [[The Editor]] - [[Simon Pegg]]
* [[Nurse (The Long Game)|Nurse]] - [[Tamsin Greig]]
* [[Peter Tyler]] - [[Shaun Dingwall]]
* [[Jamie (The Empty Child)|Jamie]] - [[Albert Valentine]]
* [[Nancy (The Empty Child)|Nancy]] - [[Florence Hoath]]
* [[Constantine (The Empty Child)|Doctor Constantine]] - [[Richard Wilson (actor)|Richard Wilson]]
* [[Lynda Moss]] - [[Jo Joyner]]
* [[Rodrick]] - [[Paterson Joseph]]
* [[Controller (Bad Wolf)|Controller]] - [[Martha Cope]]
== Television stories ==
=== Story formats and arc ===
Series 1 saw a recreation of the show's format for its episodes. Rather than spending multiple 30 minute episodes on a single story, as the classic series had grown accustomed to, Davies and the new team changed the format to loosely follow one 45 minute episode per story. They also included two-parter stories spaced over the whole series, concluding with a two-parter finale. Given the series success, the format set by series 1 has been followed nearly identically by all subsequent series to date.
Series 1 also began the use of a loose story arc to tie the series together, notably hinting towards a "big bad" the Doctor and his companions would have to learn about and overcome by the series conclusion. For series 1, it was the [[Bad Wolf meme]], hidden throughout each episode in some way, whether mentioned in dialogue or messaged on the surface of an object, even the TARDIS.
=== Episodes ===
{| {{prettytable}}
{| {{prettytable}}
|'''#''' || '''Title''' || '''Writer''' || '''Notes'''
!'''Episode Number''' || '''Title''' || '''Writer''' || '''Director''' || '''Notes'''
|-
|-
|1 ||''[[Rose (TV story)|Rose]]''||[[Russell T Davies]]||Reintroduction of the Autons. First appearances of the Ninth Doctor, Rose Tyler, Jackie Tyler, Mickey Smith.  
|1
|{{cs|Rose (TV story)}}
|rowspan=2|[[Russell T Davies]]
|[[Keith Boak]]
|First episode of the revived series. First appearances of the [[Ninth Doctor]], [[Rose Tyler]], [[Jackie Tyler]] and [[Mickey Smith]]. Reintroduction of the [[Auton]]s and the [[Nestene Consciousness]]. First appearance of the [[Ninth Doctor's sonic screwdriver|blue diode sonic screwdriver]] model. First appearance of [[www.whoisdoctorwho.co.uk|whoisdoctorwho.co.uk]].
|-
|-
|2 ||''[[The End of the World]]''||Russell T Davies||First appearance of the Face of Boe and Cassandra
|2
|{{cs|The End of the World (TV story)}}
|rowspan=2|[[Euros Lyn]]
|First appearance of the [[Face of Boe]] and [[Cassandra O'Brien.Δ17|Cassandra]]. Debut of the [[psychic paper]]. Introduction of the [[Bad Wolf meme]], and first mention of the [[Last Great Time War]] by name. First time a confirmed LGBTIQ character appears in a televised story in Cassandra.
|-
|-
|3 ||''[[The Unquiet Dead]]''||[[Mark Gatiss]]||
|3
|{{cs|The Unquiet Dead (TV story)}}
|[[Mark Gatiss]]
|Introduction of the [[Cardiff Space-Time Rift|Cardiff Rift]].
|-
|-
|4 ||Pt. 1: ''[[Aliens of London]]''<br>Pt. 2:[[World War Three]]||Russell T Davies||First appearance of the Slitheen
|4 & 5
|{{cs|Aliens of London (TV story)}} / {{cs|World War Three (TV story)}}
|Russell T Davies
|Keith Boak
|First appearance of [[Toshiko Sato]], [[Harriet Jones]] and the [[Slitheen family]].
|-
|-
|5 ||''[[Dalek (TV story)|Dalek]]''||[[Robert Shearman]]||Reintroduction of the Daleks, first appearance of Adam Mitchell
|6
|{{cs|Dalek (TV story)}}
|[[Robert Shearman]]
|[[Joe Ahearne]]
|Reintroduction of the [[Dalek]]s, and first appearance of [[Adam Mitchell]]. [[Cyberman (Dalek)|The helmet]] of a [[Cyberman]] briefly appears as a cameo.
|-
|-
|6 ||''[[The Long Game]]''||Russell T Davies||Final appearance of Adam Mitchell - becoming the first companion to be expelled for bad behaviour
|7
|{{cs|The Long Game (TV story)}}
|Russell T Davies
|[[Brian Grant]]
|Final televised appearance of [[Adam Mitchell]]. First appearance of [[Satellite 5]].
|-
|-
|7 ||''[[Father's Day]]''||[[Paul Cornell]]||First appearance of Pete Tyler  
|8
|{{cs|Father's Day (TV story)}}
|[[Paul Cornell]]
|Joe Ahearne
|First appearance of [[Pete Tyler]].
|-
|-
|8 ||Pt. 1: ''[[The Empty Child]]''<br>Pt. 2: ''[[The Doctor Dances]]''||[[Steven Moffat]]||First appearance of Jack Harkness
|9 & 10
|{{cs|The Empty Child (TV story)}} / {{cs|The Doctor Dances (TV story)}}
|[[Steven Moffat]]
|[[James Hawes]]
|First appearance of [[Jack Harkness]].
|-
|-
|9 ||''[[Boom Town]]''||Russell T Davies||Reintroduction of the Slitheen
|11
|{{cs|Boom Town (TV story)}}
|rowspan=2|Russell T Davies
|rowspan=2|Joe Ahearne
|
|-
|-
|10 ||Pt. 1: ''[[Bad Wolf (TV story)|Bad Wolf]]''<br>Pt. 2: ''[[The Parting of the Ways]]''||Russell T Davies||Final appearance of the Ninth Doctor and introduction of the Tenth Doctor; last regular appearance of Jack Harkness until 2007
|12 & 13
|{{cs|Bad Wolf (TV story)}} / {{cs|The Parting of the Ways (TV story)}}
|Final regular appearance of the [[Ninth Doctor]], and last time Jack Harkness serves as a travelling companion. First mention of the [[Torchwood Institute]]. Resolution of the [[Bad Wolf]] arc. First appearance of the [[Tenth Doctor]].
|}
|}


==Cast==
== Adaptations and merchandising ==
===Primary cast===
=== Home media ===
*[[Ninth Doctor|The Doctor]] - [[Christopher Eccleston]]
==== DVD ====
*[[Rose Tyler]] - [[Billie Piper]]
All episodes of Series 1 were released in [[2005 (releases)|2005]] in both individual volumes and in boxset form by [[BBC Worldwide|2|Entertain]] and for [[Doctor Who/Covers/Home video/DVDs/Region 2#Ninth Doctor|Regions 2]] and [[Doctor Who/Covers/Home video/DVDs/Region 4#Ninth Doctor|4]], and in [[2006 (releases)|2006]] by [http://www.warnerbros.com/studio/divisions/home-entertainment/warner-home-video Warner Home Video] for [[Doctor Who/Covers/Home video/DVDs/Region 1#Ninth Doctor|Region 1]].
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%;"
|-
! style="width:30%;" | '''Name'''
! style="width:10%;" | '''Number and duration<br />of episodes'''
! style="width:10%;" | '''R2 release date'''
! style="width:10%;" | '''R4 release date'''
! style="width:10%;" | '''R1 release date'''
|-
| Doctor Who: Volume 1<br />{{cs|Rose (TV story)}}<br />{{cs|The End of the World (TV story)}}<br />{{cs|The Unquiet Dead (TV story)}} || 3 × 45 min. || [[16 May (releases)|16 May]] [[2005 (releases)|2005]] || [[17 June (releases)|17 June]] 2005 || [[7 November (releases)|7 November]] [[2006 (releases)|2006]]
|-
| Doctor Who: Volume 2<br />{{cs|Aliens of London (TV story)}} /<br />{{cs|World War Three (TV story)}}<br />{{cs|Dalek (TV story)}} || 3 × 45 min. || [[13 June (releases)|13 June]] 2005 || [[3 August (releases)|3 August]] 2005 || 7 November 2006
|-
| Doctor Who: Volume 3<br />{{cs|The Long Game (TV story)}}<br />{{cs|Father's Day (TV story)}}<br />{{cs|The Empty Child (TV story)}}/<br />{{cs|The Doctor Dances (TV story)}} || 4 × 45 min. || [[1 August (releases)|1 August]] 2005 || [[31 August (releases)|31 August]] 2005 || 7 November 2006
|-
| Doctor Who: Volume 4<br />{{cs|Boom Town (TV story)}}<br />{{cs|Bad Wolf (TV story)}}/<br />{{cs|The Parting of the Ways (TV story)}} || 3 × 45 min. || [[5 September (releases)|5 September]] 2005 || [[6 October (releases)|6 October]] 2005 || 7 November 2006
|-
| Doctor Who: The Complete First Series
Disc 1: Episodes 1-3
Disc 2: Episodes 4-6
Disc 3: Episodes 7-10
Disc 4: Episodes 11-13
Disc 5: Confidentials
|| 13 × 45 min. || [[21 November (releases)|21 November]] 2005 || [[8 December (releases)|8 December]] 2005 || [[14 February (releases)|14 February]] 2006 (Canada)<br />[[4 July (releases)|4 July]] 2006 (US)
|}


===Secondary cast===
==== Blu-ray ====
*[[Jack Harkness]] - [[John Barrowman]]
{{Section stub|This section needs to have images of the covers and possibly a table added.}}
*[[Jackie Tyler]] - [[Camille Coduri]]
Series 1 was included in the ''Doctor Who: Complete Series 1-7'' [[Blu-ray]] boxset, released on [[5 November (releases)|5 November]], [[2013 (releases)|2013]] in the US and [[4 November (releases)|4 November]], 2013 in the UK. In [[2015 (releases)|2015]], Series 1-[[Series 4 (Doctor Who 2005)|4]] were reissued on Blu-ray individually.
*[[Mickey Smith]] - [[Noel Clarke]]
*[[Adam Mitchell]] - [[Bruno Langley]]


===Guest cast===
In [[March (releases)|March]] [[2017 (releases)|2017]], an Amazon exclusive [[Steelbook]] containing all thirteen episodes was announced.
*[[Clive Finch]] - [[Mark Benton]]
*[[Lady Cassandra]] - [[Zoë Wanamaker]]
*[[Jabe]] - [[Yasmin Bannerman]]
*[[Gwyneth]] - [[Eve Myles]]
*[[Charles Dickens]] - [[Simon Callow]]
*[[Harriet Jones]] - [[Penelope Wilton]]
*[[Joseph Green]] - [[David Verrey]]
*[[Margaret Blaine]] - [[Annette Badland]]
*[[Henry van Statten]] - [[Corey Johnson]]
*[[The Editor]] - [[Simon Pegg]]
*[[Pete Tyler]] - [[Shaun Dingwall]]
*[[Nancy]] - [[Florence Hoath]]
*[[Constantine|Doctor Constantine]] - [[Richard Wilson]]
*[[Lynda Moss]] - [[Jo Joyner]]
*[[Rodrick]] - [[Paterson Joseph]]


====Introducing====
Series 1 was upscaled to HD along with [[Series 2 (Doctor Who 2005)|Series 2]], [[Series 3 (Doctor Who 2005)|3]] and 4 and released on [[21 November (releases)|21 November]] [[2023 (releases)|2023]] in a limited edition Blu-ray box set containing every "New Who" series up to [[Series 13 (Doctor Who 2005)|Series 13]]<ref>https://www.ign.com/articles/doctor-who-limited-edition-complete-new-who-blu-ray-set-is-up-for-preorder</ref> or in a separate box set containing only the first four upscaled series on [[27 November (releases)|27 November]] 2023.<ref>https://hmv.com/Store/Film-TV/Blu-ray/Doctor-Who-Series-1-4?clickref=1101lxWJx3d4&utm_source=Visualsoft&utm_medium=affiliate&utm_campaign=skimlinks_phg</ref><ref>https://cultbox.co.uk/news/remastered-doctor-who-series-1-4-blu-ray-coming-in-november</ref>
*[[Tenth Doctor]] - [[David Tennant]]


==Novels==
The Complete Series 1-4 was released on [[24 October (releases)|24 October]] [[2024 (releases)|2024]] by the BBC Shop newly upscaled to high definition and with all existing bonus features plus one new extra.<ref>https://shop.bbc.com/products/doctor-who-complete-seasons-1-4-blu-ray-24218</ref>
*[[The Clockwise Man]]
*[[The Monsters Inside]]
*[[Winner Takes All]]  
*[[The Deviant Strain]]
*[[Only Human]]
*[[The Stealers of Dreams]]


==Aliens and enemies==
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" widths="150">
*[[Auton]]s
Limited Edition New Who Blu-Ray Collection Box Set front.jpg|New Who Limited Edition (front)
*[[Nestene Consciousness]]
Limited Edition New Who Blu-Ray Collection Box Set back.jpg|New Who Limited Edition (back)
*[[Cassandra O'Brien.Δ17]]
Limited Edition New Who Blu-Ray Collection Box Set promo front.jpg|New Who Limited Edition (front)
*[[Forest of Cheem]]
Limited Edition New Who Blu-Ray Collection Box Set promo back.jpg|New Who Limited Edition (back)
*[[Adherents of the Repeated Meme]]
Limited Edition New Who Collector's promo 1.jpg|New Who Limited Edition promo
*[[Metal spider]]s
Limited Edition New Who Collector’s promo 2.jpg|New Who Limited Edition promo
*[[Crespallion]]
Series 1-4 & Specials Blu-Ray Box Set.jpg|Series 1-4 & Specials Box Set
*[[Face of Boe]]
Series 1-4 & Specials Blu-Ray Collection.jpg|Series 1-4 & Specials Collection
*[[Moxx of Balhoon]]
Series 1-4 & Specials Blu-Ray Collection backside.jpg|Series 1-4 & Specials (back)
*[[Ambassadors from the City State of Binding Light]]
Series 1-4 & Specials upscale promo.jpg|Series 1-4 & Specials promo
*[[Mr and Mrs Pacoo]]
Complete Series 1-4 - Blu-Ray promo.jpg|The Complete Series 1-4 promo
*[[Hop Pyleen]]
</gallery>
*[[Cal MacNannovich]]
*[[Scholars of the University of Rago Rago 56 Rago]]
*[[Gelth]]
*[[Slitheen family]]
*[[Space Pig]]
*[[Dalek]]s
*[[Henry van Statten]]
*[[Mighty Jagrafess of the Holy Hadrojassic Maxarodenfoe]]
*[[The Editor]]
*[[Automated Corpse]]s
*[[Reaper]]s
*[[Empty Child plague]]
*[[Nanogene]]s
*[[Anne Droid]]
*[[Trine-E]]
*[[Zu-Zana]]
*[[Davinadroid]]


==Promotional trailers==
== Stories set before this season ==
For the series, several promotional trailers were created, utilizing specially shot footage of the cast, breaking the fourth wall and addressing viewers.
=== Seventh Doctor's post-''Survival'' stories ===
* The show's main trailer begins with an explosion rushing through a tunnel and the Doctor running. He enters the TARDIS and asks the viewer: "Do you want to come with me?" He then walks around the console room warning of the dangers that lie ahead, but promising "the trip of a lifetime." This promo uses an early arrangement of the [[Doctor Who theme]] that was replaced by a more upbeat arrangement for the series itself.
{{main|Seventh Doctor}}
* Rose, in the console room, telling the viewer about the choice she had to make - working in a dull shop, or chasing monsters. As the camera pulls back to show the Doctor standing behind her, she says "What do you think?"
* Several short, wordless five-second "stings" were also produced showing closeups of the Doctor, Rose, the two together, and the TARDIS. No series logo or title is shown, with only a snippet of the Doctor Who theme or the TARDIS sound effect to identify the programme.


==External links==
=== Eighth Doctor ===
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/episodes/2005/index.shtml BBC website index for Series 1]
{{main|Eighth Doctor}}


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{{main|Reborn Master}}
 
=== ''Once and Future'' ===
{{main|Once and Future}}
 
=== War Master ===
{{main|War Master}}
 
=== Ninth Doctor's pre-''Rose'' stories ===
{{main|Ninth Doctor}}
 
== Stories set during this season ==
=== Novels ===
* ''[[The Clockwise Man (novel)|The Clockwise Man]]''
* ''[[The Monsters Inside (novel)|The Monster Inside]]''
* ''[[Winner Takes All (novel)|Winner Takes All]]''
* ''[[The Deviant Strain (novel)|The Deviant Strain]]''
* ''[[Only Human (novel)|Only Human]]''
* ''[[The Stealers of Dreams (novel)|The Stealer of Dreams]]''
 
=== Audio stories ===
* ''[[The Window on the Moor (audio story)|The Window on the Moor]]''
* ''[[The Other Side (9DC audio story)|The Other Side]]''
* ''[[Retail Therapy (audio story)|Retail Therapy]]''
 
=== Comics ===
* ''[[Weapons of Past Destruction (comic story)|Weapons of Past Destruction]]''
* ''[[Hacked (comic story)|Hacked]]''
* ''[[Doctormania (comic story)|Doctormania]]''
* ''[[The Transformed (comic story)|The Transformed]]''
* ''[[Official Secrets (comic story)|Official Secrets]]''
* ''[[Slaver's Song (comic story)|Slaver's Song]]''
* ''[[Sin-Eaters (comic story)|Sin-Eaters]]''
* ''[[Secret Agent Man (comic story)|Secret Agent Man]]''
* ''[[The Bidding War (comic story)|The Bidding War]]''
 
=== Short stories ===
* ''[[Who is Doctor Who? (tie-in website)|Who is Doctor Who?]]''
** ''[[Have You Seen This Man? (short story)|Have You Seen This Man?]]''
** ''[[Dummy Massacre (short story)|Dummy Massacre]]''
** ''[[The Doctor Was Involved in the Dummy Massacre (short story)|The Doctor Was Involved in the Dummy Massacre]]''
** ''[[Rose sighting confirmed (short story)|Rose sighting confirmed]]''
** ''[[Alien landing confirmed (short story)|Alien landing confirmed]]''
** ''[[Hoax This! (short story)|Hoax This!]]''
** ''[[Henry Van Statten (short story)|Henry Van Statten]]''
** ''[[Essay Competition (short story)|Essay Competition]]''
** ''[[Rose's Dad? (short story)|Rose's Dad?]]''
** ''[[Amarillo Hoax (short story)|Amarillo Hoax]]''
** ''[[Hitler's Last Secret? (short story)|Hitler's Last Secret?]]''
** ''[[Meltdown (short story)|Meltdown]]''
** ''[[World Saved. Who Cares? (short story)|World Saved. Who Cares?]]''
** ''[[Mars (WiDW short story)|Mars]]''
* ''[[U.N.I.T. (tie-in website)|U.N.I.T.]]''
** ''[[Computer Virus File Sharing Alert (short story)|Computer Virus File Sharing Alert]]''
** ''[[UNIT's Position on The London Incident (short story)|UNIT's Position on The London Incident]]''
** ''[[Operation Mannequin (short story)|Operation Mannequin]]''
** ''[[Operation London (short story)|Operation London]]''
** ''[[Number Ten Pays Tribute to UNIT (short story)|Number Ten Pays Tribute to UNIT]]''
** ''[[Number Ten (short story)|Number Ten]]''
** ''[[Object Auction (short story)|Object Auction]]''
** [[Untitled (U.N.I.T. video game)|Untitled]]
** ''[[Rose Tyler (short story)|Rose Tyler]]''
** ''[[Unexploded WWII Bomb Warnings (short story)|Unexploded WWII Bomb Warnings]]''
** ''[[Cardiff Earthquake (short story)|Cardiff Earthquake]]''
** ''[[Guinevere One (short story)|Guinevere One]]''
** ''[[Alien Life (short story)|Alien Life]]''
** ''[[Project Rooftop (short story)|Project Rooftop]]''
* ''[[Doctor Who Files 5: Mickey]]''
** ''[[Taking Mickey (short story)|Taking Mickey]]''
* ''[[The Doctor: His Lives and Times]]''
** ''[[Mickey's Blog (short story)|Mickey's Blog]]''
* ''[[The Beast of Babylon (short story)|The Beast of Babylon]]''
 
== Promotional trailers ==
For the series, several promotional trailers were created, utilising specially shot footage of Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper breaking the fourth wall and addressing viewers.
* The show's main trailer begins with an explosion rushing through a tunnel and the Doctor running. He enters the TARDIS and asks the viewer: "Do you want to come with me?" He walks around the console room, warning of the dangers that lie ahead, but promising "the trip of a lifetime." This promo uses an early arrangement of the [[Doctor Who theme|''Doctor Who'' theme]] that was replaced by a more upbeat arrangement for the series itself.
* Rose, in the console room, tells the viewer about the choice she had to make - working in a dull shop or chasing monsters. As the camera pulls back to show the Doctor standing behind her, she says, "What do you think?"
* Several short, wordless five-second "stings" were also produced. These showed close-ups of the Doctor, Rose, the two together, and the TARDIS. No series logo or title is shown, with only a snippet of the ''Doctor Who'' theme or the TARDIS sound effect to identify the programme.
 
== Canadian broadcast bumpers and documentaries ==
The first season is credited as a co-production with Canada's [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation]], which broadcast Series 1 shortly after the UK; as had been the case with the original series in 1965, the CBC became the first North American broadcaster of the revival. To promote this, Christopher Eccleston recorded a series of introductions that aired before most episodes and leading into some commercial breaks. These introductions, aside from explaining some concepts in the series, also served to promote a contest with the Canadian edition of ''TV Guide'' magazine, the first prize being a trip to visit the set of ''Doctor Who'' during production of Series 2. For ''The Christmas Invasion'', a similar set of introductions was taped, only featuring Billie Piper instead. No further introductions were produced for Series 2.
 
The initial CBC broadcasts of most episodes concluded with brief documentaries focusing on Canadian Doctor Who fans.
 
== Footnotes ==
{{reflist}}


{{seasons}}
== External links ==
{{Series 1}}
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/episodes/2005/index.shtml BBC website index for Series 1]
{{DWTV}}
{{Series 1 aliens}}
{{Series 1 aliens}}
[[Category:Doctor Who seasons]]
{{TitleSort}}
[[Category:Ninth Doctor]]
 
 
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[[it:Prima Stagione (Doctor Who)]]
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[[pt:1ª Temporada (SN)]]
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[[Category:Seasons|Series 01 (Doctor Who)]]
[[Category:Doctor Who seasons|Season 27]]

Latest revision as of 20:15, 3 November 2024

RealWorld.png

You may wish to consult Series 1 for other, similarly-named pages.

Series 1 of Doctor Who ran from 26 March 2005 to 18 June 2005. It was the first series produced by BBC Wales. It starred Christopher Eccleston as the Ninth Doctor and Billie Piper as Rose Tyler. The series opened with Rose [+]Loading...["Rose (TV story)"] and concluded with The Parting of the Ways [+]Loading...["The Parting of the Ways (TV story)"].

Overview[[edit] | [edit source]]

Series 1 introduced the Ninth Doctor, along with new companion Rose Tyler. It dealt with the words "Bad Wolf" being spread across time and space, which was the main arc of the series. This meme was seen in the majority of the episodes.

Series 1 also provided the first major information about the Last Great Time War. The Parting of the Ways [+]Loading...["The Parting of the Ways (TV story)"] featured the revived series' first regeneration. The season also introduced Jack Harkness, planting the seed for the spin-off Torchwood.

Production[[edit] | [edit source]]

Series 1 consisted of ten stories and thirteen episodes. Its head writer was Russell T Davies, and thus the series was the start of his first era as head writer, which lasted until the story The End of Time [+]Loading...["The End of Time (TV story)"], the final "specials" of the fourth series. This era came nearly sixteen years after the previous season, though only nine years after the last television story. But credit for the series hardly belonged to RTD alone. The struggles to bring Doctor Who back to BBC One after such a long absence are the subject of several documentaries and behind-the-scenes explorations, all of which confirm that series 1 was the result of the struggles of several individuals apart from RTD himself — notably BBC execs Jane Tranter and Lorraine Heggessey, as well as RTD's fellow executive producers, Julie Gardner and Mal Young.

Their pitch was successful, with RTD's desires to have the series be a continuation, rather than a reboot, of the original being successful. As such, series 1 saw many of the classic era's elements remain, notably the Doctor's history as a Time Lord, his use of the sonic screwdriver, his TARDIS, and the return of his original nemesis the Daleks. The series also brought the return of individual episode titles for the first time since The Gunfighters in season 3.

Though RTD wrote the bulk of the series, he also brought in Mark Gatiss, Robert Shearman, Paul Cornell and Steven Moffat on the basis of their previous Doctor Who writing work for the Virgin New Adventures and Short Trips ranges. With Gatiss and Cornell, he actively told them that he wanted their scripts to be similar in tone to what they had written for the VNAs.[1]

Ultimately, the decision to make the series in Cardiff rather than London not only changed the face of Doctor Who, but also reshaped the British television industry. A then-sleepy satellite of the BBC was transformed by this series' success into a major hub of British television production. Series 1 was characterised not just by its unexpected success with the British public, but also by the teething problems inherent in filming a major, special-effects-heavy series in a country that, until then, had little experience with that kind of production.

Series 1 was unusually well-received. It won the National Television Award and BAFTA for "Best Drama Series", confirming its popular and critical success. Its BAFTA nomination was the first for the series since season 15 and the first ever for the programme in an "adult" category. Perhaps more importantly, it was the first time that a series of Doctor Who had actually won a BAFTA. Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper both won National Television Awards for "Favourite Actor" and "Favourite Actress". Writer Steven Moffat also began a three-year domination of the Hugo Award "Short Form Presentation" category by winning one for his The Empty Child [+]Loading...["The Empty Child (TV story)"]/The Doctor Dances [+]Loading...["The Doctor Dances (TV story)"] two-parter. John Barrowman's Jack Harkness, who was introduced in this story, would go on to have a profound impact on the shape and scope of the Doctor Who universe.

Unlike the more recent series, series 1 was produced under a partnership deal with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.[2] It was also the first whole series of Doctor Who to be broadcast on a national, commercial network in the United States, thanks to a late deal with the Sci-Fi Channel.

Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]

and introducing David Tennant as Doctor Who

Recurring[[edit] | [edit source]]

Guest[[edit] | [edit source]]

Television stories[[edit] | [edit source]]

Story formats and arc[[edit] | [edit source]]

Series 1 saw a recreation of the show's format for its episodes. Rather than spending multiple 30 minute episodes on a single story, as the classic series had grown accustomed to, Davies and the new team changed the format to loosely follow one 45 minute episode per story. They also included two-parter stories spaced over the whole series, concluding with a two-parter finale. Given the series success, the format set by series 1 has been followed nearly identically by all subsequent series to date.

Series 1 also began the use of a loose story arc to tie the series together, notably hinting towards a "big bad" the Doctor and his companions would have to learn about and overcome by the series conclusion. For series 1, it was the Bad Wolf meme, hidden throughout each episode in some way, whether mentioned in dialogue or messaged on the surface of an object, even the TARDIS.

Episodes[[edit] | [edit source]]

Episode Number Title Writer Director Notes
1 Rose [+]Loading...["Rose (TV story)"] Russell T Davies Keith Boak First episode of the revived series. First appearances of the Ninth Doctor, Rose Tyler, Jackie Tyler and Mickey Smith. Reintroduction of the Autons and the Nestene Consciousness. First appearance of the blue diode sonic screwdriver model. First appearance of whoisdoctorwho.co.uk.
2 The End of the World [+]Loading...["The End of the World (TV story)"] Euros Lyn First appearance of the Face of Boe and Cassandra. Debut of the psychic paper. Introduction of the Bad Wolf meme, and first mention of the Last Great Time War by name. First time a confirmed LGBTIQ character appears in a televised story in Cassandra.
3 The Unquiet Dead [+]Loading...["The Unquiet Dead (TV story)"] Mark Gatiss Introduction of the Cardiff Rift.
4 & 5 Aliens of London [+]Loading...["Aliens of London (TV story)"] / World War Three [+]Loading...["World War Three (TV story)"] Russell T Davies Keith Boak First appearance of Toshiko Sato, Harriet Jones and the Slitheen family.
6 Dalek [+]Loading...["Dalek (TV story)"] Robert Shearman Joe Ahearne Reintroduction of the Daleks, and first appearance of Adam Mitchell. The helmet of a Cyberman briefly appears as a cameo.
7 The Long Game [+]Loading...["The Long Game (TV story)"] Russell T Davies Brian Grant Final televised appearance of Adam Mitchell. First appearance of Satellite 5.
8 Father's Day [+]Loading...["Father's Day (TV story)"] Paul Cornell Joe Ahearne First appearance of Pete Tyler.
9 & 10 The Empty Child [+]Loading...["The Empty Child (TV story)"] / The Doctor Dances [+]Loading...["The Doctor Dances (TV story)"] Steven Moffat James Hawes First appearance of Jack Harkness.
11 Boom Town [+]Loading...["Boom Town (TV story)"] Russell T Davies Joe Ahearne
12 & 13 Bad Wolf [+]Loading...["Bad Wolf (TV story)"] / The Parting of the Ways [+]Loading...["The Parting of the Ways (TV story)"] Final regular appearance of the Ninth Doctor, and last time Jack Harkness serves as a travelling companion. First mention of the Torchwood Institute. Resolution of the Bad Wolf arc. First appearance of the Tenth Doctor.

Adaptations and merchandising[[edit] | [edit source]]

Home media[[edit] | [edit source]]

DVD[[edit] | [edit source]]

All episodes of Series 1 were released in 2005 in both individual volumes and in boxset form by 2|Entertain and for Regions 2 and 4, and in 2006 by Warner Home Video for Region 1.

Name Number and duration
of episodes
R2 release date R4 release date R1 release date
Doctor Who: Volume 1
Rose [+]Loading...["Rose (TV story)"]
The End of the World [+]Loading...["The End of the World (TV story)"]
The Unquiet Dead [+]Loading...["The Unquiet Dead (TV story)"]
3 × 45 min. 16 May 2005 17 June 2005 7 November 2006
Doctor Who: Volume 2
Aliens of London [+]Loading...["Aliens of London (TV story)"] /
World War Three [+]Loading...["World War Three (TV story)"]
Dalek [+]Loading...["Dalek (TV story)"]
3 × 45 min. 13 June 2005 3 August 2005 7 November 2006
Doctor Who: Volume 3
The Long Game [+]Loading...["The Long Game (TV story)"]
Father's Day [+]Loading...["Father's Day (TV story)"]
The Empty Child [+]Loading...["The Empty Child (TV story)"]/
The Doctor Dances [+]Loading...["The Doctor Dances (TV story)"]
4 × 45 min. 1 August 2005 31 August 2005 7 November 2006
Doctor Who: Volume 4
Boom Town [+]Loading...["Boom Town (TV story)"]
Bad Wolf [+]Loading...["Bad Wolf (TV story)"]/
The Parting of the Ways [+]Loading...["The Parting of the Ways (TV story)"]
3 × 45 min. 5 September 2005 6 October 2005 7 November 2006
Doctor Who: The Complete First Series

Disc 1: Episodes 1-3 Disc 2: Episodes 4-6 Disc 3: Episodes 7-10 Disc 4: Episodes 11-13 Disc 5: Confidentials

13 × 45 min. 21 November 2005 8 December 2005 14 February 2006 (Canada)
4 July 2006 (US)

Blu-ray[[edit] | [edit source]]

This section's awfully stubby.

This section needs to have images of the covers and possibly a table added.

Series 1 was included in the Doctor Who: Complete Series 1-7 Blu-ray boxset, released on 5 November, 2013 in the US and 4 November, 2013 in the UK. In 2015, Series 1-4 were reissued on Blu-ray individually.

In March 2017, an Amazon exclusive Steelbook containing all thirteen episodes was announced.

Series 1 was upscaled to HD along with Series 2, 3 and 4 and released on 21 November 2023 in a limited edition Blu-ray box set containing every "New Who" series up to Series 13[4] or in a separate box set containing only the first four upscaled series on 27 November 2023.[5][6]

The Complete Series 1-4 was released on 24 October 2024 by the BBC Shop newly upscaled to high definition and with all existing bonus features plus one new extra.[7]

Stories set before this season[[edit] | [edit source]]

Seventh Doctor's post-Survival stories[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Seventh Doctor

Eighth Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Eighth Doctor

Gallifrey[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Gallifrey (audio series)

Bruce Master[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Bruce Master

Reborn Master[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Reborn Master

Once and Future[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Once and Future

War Master[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: War Master

Ninth Doctor's pre-Rose stories[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Ninth Doctor

Stories set during this season[[edit] | [edit source]]

Novels[[edit] | [edit source]]

Audio stories[[edit] | [edit source]]

Comics[[edit] | [edit source]]

Short stories[[edit] | [edit source]]

Promotional trailers[[edit] | [edit source]]

For the series, several promotional trailers were created, utilising specially shot footage of Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper breaking the fourth wall and addressing viewers.

  • The show's main trailer begins with an explosion rushing through a tunnel and the Doctor running. He enters the TARDIS and asks the viewer: "Do you want to come with me?" He walks around the console room, warning of the dangers that lie ahead, but promising "the trip of a lifetime." This promo uses an early arrangement of the Doctor Who theme that was replaced by a more upbeat arrangement for the series itself.
  • Rose, in the console room, tells the viewer about the choice she had to make - working in a dull shop or chasing monsters. As the camera pulls back to show the Doctor standing behind her, she says, "What do you think?"
  • Several short, wordless five-second "stings" were also produced. These showed close-ups of the Doctor, Rose, the two together, and the TARDIS. No series logo or title is shown, with only a snippet of the Doctor Who theme or the TARDIS sound effect to identify the programme.

Canadian broadcast bumpers and documentaries[[edit] | [edit source]]

The first season is credited as a co-production with Canada's Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, which broadcast Series 1 shortly after the UK; as had been the case with the original series in 1965, the CBC became the first North American broadcaster of the revival. To promote this, Christopher Eccleston recorded a series of introductions that aired before most episodes and leading into some commercial breaks. These introductions, aside from explaining some concepts in the series, also served to promote a contest with the Canadian edition of TV Guide magazine, the first prize being a trip to visit the set of Doctor Who during production of Series 2. For The Christmas Invasion, a similar set of introductions was taped, only featuring Billie Piper instead. No further introductions were produced for Series 2.

The initial CBC broadcasts of most episodes concluded with brief documentaries focusing on Canadian Doctor Who fans.

Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  1. Aldridge, Mark; Murray, Andy, T is for Television: The Small Screen Adventures of Russell T Davies. Reynolds & Hearn Ltd.
  2. BBC investigates Doctor Who leak. BBC NEWS - Entertainment (Tuesday, 8 March, 2005). Retrieved on 2nd August 2011.
  3. Despite being credited as "Doctor Who" onscreen for the entirety of this series, the Ninth Doctor is credited on all episode pages on the official Doctor Who website (barring Rose) as 'The Doctor'.
  4. https://www.ign.com/articles/doctor-who-limited-edition-complete-new-who-blu-ray-set-is-up-for-preorder
  5. https://hmv.com/Store/Film-TV/Blu-ray/Doctor-Who-Series-1-4?clickref=1101lxWJx3d4&utm_source=Visualsoft&utm_medium=affiliate&utm_campaign=skimlinks_phg
  6. https://cultbox.co.uk/news/remastered-doctor-who-series-1-4-blu-ray-coming-in-november
  7. https://shop.bbc.com/products/doctor-who-complete-seasons-1-4-blu-ray-24218

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