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{{Infobox ClassicTV|
{{title dab away}}
story name= The Gunfighters |
{{real world}}
image=[[Image:Gunfighters_title.jpg|250px]] |
{{ImageLinkTV}}
series=[[Doctor Who]] - [[List of Doctor Who television stories|TV Stories]] |
{{Infobox Story SMW
number= [[Season 3]]|
|image                 = Gunfighters title.jpg
story number= 25|
|novelisation          = The Gunfighters (novelisation)
doctor=[[First Doctor]] |
|series                 = [[Doctor Who television stories|''Doctor Who'' television stories]]
companions= [[Steven Taylor]]<br/>[[Dodo Chaplet]] |
|season number         = Season 3 (Doctor Who 1963)|
enemy= [[Johnny Ringo]] |
|season serial number  = 8
year= [[Tombstone]], [[Arizona]], [[1881]] |
|story number           = 25
writer= [[Donald Cotton]]|
|doctor                 = First Doctor
director= [[Rex Tucker]]|
|companions             = [[Steven Taylor|Steven]], [[Dodo Chaplet|Dodo]]
producer= [[Innes Lloyd]] |
|featuring              = Doc Holliday
broadcast date= [[30th April]] - [[21st May]] [[1966]] |
|featuring2            = Kate Fisher
format= 4 25-minute episodes|
|featuring3            = Wyatt Earp
production code= [[List of production codes|Z]] |
|featuring4            = Bat Masterson
previous story= [[The Celestial Toymaker]] |
|enemy                 = [[Pa Clanton]], [[Johnny Ringo]]
next story= [[The Savages]]
|setting                = [[Tombstone, Arizona|Tombstone]], [[October]] [[1881]]
}}{{TV stub}}
|writer                 = Donald Cotton
|director               = [[Rex Tucker]]
|producer               = [[Innes Lloyd]]
|epcount                = 4
|broadcast date         = 30 April - 21 May 1966
|network                = BBC1
|format                 = 4x25-minute episodes
|serial production code = [[List of production codes|Z]]
|prev                  = The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)
|next                   = The Savages (TV story)
|clip                  = The Clanton Brothers - Doctor Who Gunfighters - BBC
|clip2                  = Lynch Mob - Doctor Who Gunfighters - BBC
|clip3                  = Big Gunfight! - Doctor Who The Gunfighters - BBC
|thwr=73|genre=Western}}
'''''The Gunfighters''''' was the eighth serial of [[Season 3 (Doctor Who 1963)|season 3]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. It was ''Doctor Who''{{'}}s first attempt at a {{w|western (genre)|western}}, and, indeed, the first story in any medium principally set in the [[United States]] — though the First Doctor had briefly visited [[New York City]] in ''[[The Chase (TV story)|The Chase]]'' and [[Hollywood]] in ''[[The Daleks' Master Plan (TV story)|The Daleks' Master Plan]].


The story gave [[Director (crew)|director]] [[Rex Tucker]] his first, and only, on-screen credit, despite his heavy involvement in the formative weeks of ''Doctor Who''{{'}}s pre-production in [[1963 (production)|1963]], before [[Verity Lambert]] was hired. It was also the first televised story to have a song written especially for it. The next story to have an original song didn't come until ''[[The King's Demons (TV story)|The King's Demons]]'' almost twenty years later. Conversely, its final episode, "The O. K. Corral", was the last individually-titled episode, discounting charity events, until ''[[Rose (TV story)|Rose]]''. Both conditions — titled episodes and original songs — became more commonplace in the [[BBC Wales]] era.


''The Gunfighters'' was notable for its casting, both proposed and actual. The role of [[Johnny Ringo]] was offered to veteran actor [[Patrick Troughton]], soon to be cast as the [[Second Doctor]], but he was too busy. Other notable actors such as {{w|Donald Sutherland}}, [[John Carson]] and {{w|Carol Cleveland}} were also considered for guest roles. ([[TCH 7]])


'''''The Gunfighters''''' was the eighth story of [[season 3]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. Its final episode, "The O. K. Corral", was the last individually-titled episode until ''[[The Five Doctors]]'', a ninety-minute 20th Anniversary special.
[[Anthony Jacobs]], who played [[Doc Holliday]], was the father of [[Matthew Jacobs]] and brought his son onto the set. The younger Jacobs later wrote the [[Doctor Who (TV story)|1996 telemovie]], somewhat muddying the common fan argument that the [[Paul McGann]] movie was the "[[American]]" version of ''Doctor Who''.


==Synopsis==
Despite its many notable factors, and its reputation having warmed slightly over time, the serial was one of the worst-received in the series' history. Its poor ratings and low audience appreciation figures strengthened [[Innes Lloyd]]'s argument that historical stories should be axed, though two more were produced before the format was dropped.
The TARDIS arrives in the town of Tombstone in the Wild West and the Doctor, having hurt a tooth on one of Cyril's sweets, decides he must visit a dentist. The local dentist is Doc Holliday, currently engaged in a feud with the Clanton family. Lawmen Wyatt Earp and Bat Masterson are meanwhile doing their best to keep the peace.


The Doctor, Steven and Dodo narrowly survive a lynch mob, the attentions of Holliday and Earp and various other dangers; they finally return to the TARDIS after witnessing the famous gunfight at the OK Corral, in which the young Clanton brothers and their gunman ally Johnny Ringo are all killed by Holliday, Earp and Earp's brother Virgil.
== Synopsis ==
When the [[First Doctor]], [[Steven Taylor|Steven]] and [[Dodo Chaplet|Dodo]] arrive in the town of [[Tombstone, Arizona|Tombstone]] in [[1881]], the Doctor's only aim is to find a [[dentist]]. Adamant that they should only stay a night in Tombstone, the Doctor finds their stay prolonged when he inadvertently becomes involved with a group of gunmen out to kill [[Doc Holliday]].


==Plot==
== Plot ==
Three cowboys ride into the centre of a dusty Old West town. It is Tombstone, Arizona, site of the infamous OK Corral. One of the men, Billy Clanton, fires several shots at the corral's faded sign in his youthful exuberance. His brother, Phineas, takes him to task for wasting his bullets. He should save them for Holliday, then man they've come to find. Even though Billy expresses no fear of Holliday, his oldest brother, Ike, reminds him of a cold hard fact: their brother Reuben wasn't scared of Holliday either. That didn't stop him being filled full of lead! They are here to meet up with a man called Seth Harper on the instructions of their pa. They head for the Last Chance Saloon.
=== A Holiday for the Doctor (1) ===
At a nearby stable, the sounds of the TARDIS materializing drift out. The Doctor is quickly out of the ship, staggering in obvious pain. Steven and Dodo follow him out, concerned. He has a terrible toothache, beyond the powers of the TARDIS' medical supplies to cure. He must have the tooth out, and for that they must find a dentist.
Three strangers, [[Ike Clanton|Ike]], [[Phineas Clanton|Phineas,]] and [[Billy Clanton]], arrive in Tombstone with one thing on their mind: revenge for their [[Reuben Clanton|brother]]'s murder at the hands of [[Doc Holliday]]. Little do they know they are not the only strangers in town.
Steven and Dodo try to work out where they are. It doesn't take them long to recognize the trappings of the Old West. Whilst the Doctor despairs of his chances to find a qualified dentist, Steven and Dodo are both delighted to find themselves here. They both rush back into the ship to change, leaving the Doctor with his pain.
The Last Chance Saloon is nearly deserted when the Clanton brothers stroll in. Only Charlie, the barman, and Seth Harper are inside. Harper chastises the boys for taking so long to arrive. Doc Holliday has already been in town since noon. But the Clantons are cocky and in no hurry. They settle in for a few drinks before business. One of the boys make the mistake of addressing Harper by his infamous nickname - Snake Eyes. Harper bristles and reminds them that the last guy who called him that ended up with an extra hole in his head. Phin settles them down and they discuss strategy. Harper is the leader in the plan to kill Holliday. The others will back him up and together they will avenge the death of Reuben Clanton. Charlie overhears all of this, but knows better than to intervene. He hastens back to work.
Back at the stable, Steven and Dodo exit the TARDIS in their cowboy (and cowgirl) finery. The Doctor dismisses them as Tom Mix lookalikes and wonders why they can't wear inconspicuous clothes like his. He especially dislikes Dodo's hat, which she promptly removes and places on his head. If nothing else, it'll keep the rain off. Steven comes forward to show off his outfit, calling himself "Dead-Eye Steve", the fastest gun in town. He clumsily brandishes guns from the Doctor's "favorite collection". The entire group is startled when a shot rings out and Steven's gun is knocked from his hand.
A serious-looking man dressed all in black stands in the entryway of the stable, holding his gun on them. He herds all three together and tells them he is Wyatt Earp, Marshall of Tombstone. Dodo is overjoyed to meet the famous lawman. The religious Earp simply chalks it up to God's Providence. He orders them to accompany him to the sheriff's office. When Steven protests that he's not really a gunman, Earp assures him that was quite obvious. But anyone claiming to be the fastest gun in town could be in trouble today as the Clantons are in town. Steven retrieves his gun and heads off with Earp and the others.
At the saloon, Harper and the Clantons continue their strategy session while playing cards. A young woman, an entertainer at the bar, sits nearby and listens casually as they talk. Harper is especially concerned because the boys don't know what Doc Holliday looks like. He, too, has never seen the man. He offers a vague description: dapper, white hair, wears a long black coat and fancy vest. But the Clanton's are sure they'll know him when they see him. They won't even have to look for him. With his infamous drinking and gambling habits, Doc Holliday will come to the saloon sooner or later. And they'll be waiting for him. The singer tells Charlie that she's just remembered an errand and hurries out.
Down the street, Doc Holliday oversees the installation of medical equipment in his new surgery. He is a dentist, of course. Going outside, he finds the singer, Kate Fisher, waiting for him with an angry scowl on her face. She accuses him of being back to his old days of gunslinging, but Doc assures her he's gone straight as he promised he would. Clearly, there is some history between these two. In that case, she warns him to leave town right away as there are 4 men gunning for him back at the saloon. She says she is tired of worrying about him and wants simply to settle down nice and peaceful. Doc is not worried, that is until she mentions the name Clanton. He becomes furious, wondering why you can't kill a man out of pure professional ethics without his brothers pursuing you through the West!
Kate urges him to leave town, but Holliday refuses to be intimidated. He'll be danged if the Clanton's will run him out of Tombstone. This attitude endears him to Kate and he playfully proposes marriage to her. But they are interrupted by a gruff shout from down the street. Tombstone Sheriff Bat Masterson arrives to "welcome" Doc and to warns him sternly to stay out of trouble. Holliday tries to exude wounded innocence, but the sheriff sees right through this. Holliday bids him a terse goodbye, hoping that the sheriff will shortly find himself in need of a dentist!
As he turns to go, Masterson is stopped by Wyatt Earp. The sheriff is still miffed by Holliday's presence and takes it out on Earp, as Holliday is a friend of his. Masterson then inquires about Earp's odd-looking prisoners. The Doctor jumps in to introduce them: Dodo Dupont, wizard of the ivory keys; Steven Regret, tenor; and he himself Doctor Caligari. They are a humble troupe of travelling players in between engagements. Masterson grumpily tells them they should keep on travelling as Tombstone has no theatre. But the Doctor tells him their main purpose here is to find a dentist. Masterson directs him to Doc Holliday's surgery. The Marshall lets them go, the Doctor bidding farewell "Mr. Werp" as he goes.
Masterson and Earp watch them go, then consider the trouble ahead. With Holliday and the Clantons in town, there will be little peace. They head off to the sheriff's office.
The Doctor and friends reach the surgery, Steven complaining all the way about the ridiculous cover the Doctor has concocted. He only hopes they don't have to prove their ascribed talents. The Doctor assures them they will be leaving Tombstone by the morning.
The Doctor sees the large wooden tooth hanging outside the dentist office and marvels at the lack of subtlety. He's also a bit worried about the surgery to come and tries to talk himself out of his pain...to no avail. Steven and Dodo pack him off to the dentist's office and then head off to the local hotel to book rooms for the night. Dodo cheekily hopes the Doctor isn't expecting anaesthetic!
Inside, the Doctor finds the place deserted. From a backroom, though, he hears voices and goes through, interrupting a tryst between Kate and Doc Holliday. The Doctor is none too impressed by Holliday or his demeanour, even less so when he learns he will be Doc's first patient! He tries to leave, but Kate and Holliday stop him and force him into the chair. Doc gets set to examine him, first shooing the curious Kate out of the room. Holliday takes a quick look at the Doctor's teeth and decides the offending tooth needs to come out. The Doctor is horrified when he starts to simply reach in with his pliers! Confused by the request for "something to dull the pain", Holliday offers "a rap on the cranium" with his gun or a "shot of rattlesnake oil". Preferring neither, the Doctor submits, anticipating the pain to come.
Back at the saloon, the Clantons wait. Charlie nervously apologizes for the lack of a singer. High-strung Billy decides to liven the place up with some fancy shooting until Ike orders him to stop. The only other customers in the place run for safety just as Steven and Dodo enter. The Clantons are heartily amused by the wildly-dressed newcomers. Steven and Dodo book three rooms, signing the guest book with their fake names and occupations. Charlie is excited when he finds out they are entertainers and offers them jobs at the saloon, as Kate is always out someplace and the pianist was killed last week. Dodo seems interested, but Steven refuses, telling her it's too dangerous and the Doctor would never forgive them. They start upstairs to their rooms.
The Clanton's are startled to hear the name "Doctor" and believe it to refer to Doc Holliday.
Dodo returns downstairs briefly to drop off the Doctor's room key with Charlie, then heads upstairs.
Billy retrieves the guest book and reads off the names and occupations listed. It seems unlikely to them that a singer would carry six guns. Ike fears an ambush is waiting for them and sends Phin upstairs to fetch down Steven and Dodo. He also sends Harper to find Doc Holliday.
In the dentist's surgery, the operation is over and the tooth extracted. Doc admires it, planning to give it to Kate as a present. He tells the Doctor the work is on the house as he is the first customer and heads to the back as the Doctor rises, still in pain. The Doctor does not notice as Harper approaches the office and enters behind him. Only the Doctor is in the room.
Harper calls him Doc, and the Doctor grumpily responds. When Harper says "Holliday", the pain-addled Doctor thinks he is speaking of a Holliday and agrees that one could call it that, yes. Harper is sure that he's found Doc Holliday - the description fits perfectly. He introduces himself and tells the Doctor that he and his friends are waiting in the saloon to buy him a drink. The Doctor, still in pain, thanks him and says he'll be there eventually. Harper gives him 5 minutes only, then he'll be back looking for him, but the venom in his words is lost on the Doctor. Then Harper is gone.
But the venom is not lost on Kate and Holliday, who have overheard from the back room. Holliday hits on an idea. He tells the Doctor the he isn't "dressed right" for a party - he doesn't have any guns. At first the Doctor refuses the guns, but Kate manages to put Holliday's gun belt on him and fasten it. Holliday points out the guns with his own name on them and tells the Doctor to return them before he leaves town. Kate fetches his hat and Holliday ushers him out the door with a heartfelt goodbye.
Harper returns to the saloon and warns the Clantons that Doc Holliday is on his way. Just then Phin returns from upstairs with Steven and Dodo. They are ordered to sing, here and now. When Steven protests, all 4 men pull their guns and insist. Now they have control of "Doc's" partner and can gun him down easily when he arrives.
Unaware of the danger that awaits him, the Doctor strolls slowly down the street, toward the saloon...


Billy Clanton disarms Steven as a precaution, then Ike forces him at gunpoint to sing the song he and Dodo have chosen: "The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon". While Steven mutters curses on the Doctor's head for getting them into this, the Clantons watch the door for "Doc's" arrival.
[[First Doctor|The Doctor]] and his companions materialise in a nearby lot. The Doctor emerges from the TARDIS with a [[toothache]]. [[Steven Taylor|Steven]] and [[Dodo Chaplet|Dodo]] are overjoyed to discover they are in the "wild west", but the Doctor is unsure if this is the place to fix his teeth. Steven and Dodo go back into the TARDIS to change.
Steven begins singing. The Doctor continues sauntering slowly down the street.
In his surgery, the real Doc Holliday contemplates life finally in the clear. Once the Doctor is dead in his place, he can continue business under a new name and never look back. He asks Kate to help him choose a new name, but she does not respond. He goes to the back room to look for her but finds only a note that tells him she has gone back to the saloon. Exasperated at her meddling, he checks the small Derringer pistol he carries and heads for the saloon himself.
At the Last Chance, Steven is still singing. He finishes his fourth rendition of the ballad and tries to stop, or at least change songs. But the Clantons insist he continues. The doors swing open, but it is Kate who bursts in, telling the boys to put their guns away. She feigns fury at Charlie over the new singer he's apparently hired in her absence and orders both Steven and Dodo away from the piano. Steven is only too glad to stop, but Dodo seems indignant. She starts to stomp upstairs. Steven tries to follow, but is prevented when Kate draws a gun on him and orders him to play the piano. Further miffed, Dodo goes back to her room.
Steven plays "The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon" while Kate sings with much more gusto. Harper and the Clantons join in with stomping and clapping as she climbs onto the bar for her big finish. The commotion gives the Doctor the chance to enter the saloon with no notice. When the song is over and the Doctor applauds both singer and player does he draw attention.
Harper is first to greet "Doc", and the Doctor - fully restored to health - seems delighted to see him again. He has decided to join them for the promised drink, but asks for milk as he doesn't touch alcohol. Harper takes the opportunity to introduce his friends, the Clanton brothers. The Doctor is quick to recognize the infamous name, and to recognize the trouble he's in when they all draw their guns on him. The Doctor attempts to leave, but Ike and the others bar his way. They want to talk to him about their late brother Reuben. The Doctor talks some nonsense about bereavement after a death, but they tell him they want action, not words. He suggests the law, but they know that Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday are best friends. They'll get no help from the Marshall.
The real Doc Holliday has reached the saloon and entered from a back way. He stands on the stairway above and listens as the Doctor attempts to convince the group that he is not Doc Holliday. The boys do not buy his story, especially when Harper notices the name "Doc Holliday" inscribed on the guns the Doctor wears. They promise him he won't be leaving this town alive.
The Doctor appeals to Steven and Kate to prove his identity. Steven is silenced by a threat from Phin, and Kate, to his horror, confirms that he is Doc Holliday. The Doctor realizes that she is lying to protect Holliday and dismisses her words. He begins again to explain himself and casually pulls out one of his guns when a shot rings out. Harper's own gun flies out of his hand and he grabs his wrist in pain. Kate immediately draws her gun and covers the others, congratulating "Doc" on his fine shooting. At first the Doctor protests, but he realizes that this is his chance to escape. He and Kate hold the others at bay while Steven disarms them.
Drawn by the sound of the shot, Dodo comes out of her room and runs straight into Holliday as he regards his recently-fired Derringer. He points the gun at her and orders her back to her room.
With Kate's prompting, the Doctor orders them all lined up against the piano. Harper, humiliated, vows revenge on "Holliday" for this and the Doctor must repeat that he is not Doc Holliday. When Harper continues, the Doctor intimates a threat with his gun, leading all of the Clantons to revile him for wanting to kill an unarmed man. Fortunately, the situation is defused when Wyatt Earp and Bat Masterson stride into the saloon. They quickly disarm everyone and attempt to sort out what happened. Earp realizes immediately the mistaken identity and decides to arrest the Doctor. However, he continues the pretense that the Doctor is Doc Holliday. Masterson only hopes he knows what he is doing. He hauls the Doctor off with a hearty "Good-night, sinners" to the Clantons.
Kate has taken the opportunity to disappear upstairs, leaving Steven at the mercy of the boys. They quickly turn on him.
Dodo remains Doc's prisoner in her room. They are joined shortly by Kate, who suspected Doc was behind the fancy shooting earlier and tracked him down. She is dismayed to see Dodo and wonders why Doc didn't just kill her. He says he was afraid that Kate would get hurt if shooting broke out and so retreated, leaving the Doctor at the mercy of the Clantons. Dodo is worried about the Doctor, but Kate tells her that he is safe in the jail under Wyatt Earp's care. That settled, Doc simply sits back to wait and see what happens next.
In the jailhouse, Earp tells the Doctor that he is safer here than on the streets. Masterson now understands the ploy - Tombstone is safe from the Clantons as long as they think "Doc" is in jail. Earp heads out to find the real Doc Holliday, while the Doctor sits down in his cell to wait.
In the saloon, Steven repeats his assertion that the Doctor is not Doc Holliday and that he has been wrongly arrested. He must try to get the Doctor out. Harper and the Clantons laugh at this, telling him he's no match for Earp and Masterson. However, Ike hits upon an idea, offering to help Steven break the Doctor out.
Later that evening, Doc is becoming antsy in the tiny, and he is desperate for a drink, sending Kate to see if the coast is clear downstairs. Of course it is not, so Doc decides to head back to his surgery to grab a bottle of whisky, against Kate's wishes. He leaves her to look after Dodo.
At the dentist's office, Holliday lights a lamp and starts to search for the bottle. He is startled by the stealthy arrival of Wyatt Earp, gun drawn. He disarms Holliday and orders him to leave town. Casual at first, Holliday protests his innocence and refuses to leave. Earp reminds him that the Clantons will see their mistake soon enough and will come gunning for him. He plans to release the Doctor in the morning. Doc can ride out safely tonight. He assures Doc that he can return when it all blows over. But Doc realizes there's more to this and presses Earp. The Marshall admits that the Clanton family are running the largest rustling operation in the West. It won't be long before they try to take over the whole of Tombstone. He wants to stop them, but dare not take them on until his own brothers arrive to help. He cannot allow the shooting to start before they get here and Doc's presence only makes that more likely. He urges Doc again to leave town, confiscating his whisky bottle to try and keep him sensible. The Marshall leaves.
Back in the saloon, the Clantons lay out their plan to Steven. He will slip a gun in to the Doctor through the jailhouse window. The Doctor will use it to force his way out, then the Clantons will wait for him outside to spirit him away to safety. They say that they believe the Doctor isn't Doc Holliday and simply want to free an innocent man. Steven agrees, taking the gun and heading out. He will meet them in 20 minutes. Harper, Phin and Billy laugh over Steven's gullibility, but Ike isn't convinced. He sends Phin to shadow Steven, to make sure he follows through. He then sends Billy for "the rope" in order to put a second plan into motion.
Dodo and Kate have struck up an odd friendship. Dodo helps Kate do up her hair while they talk.
Kate assures Dodo that she and Doc will marry. She brags about all of the outlaws she's known in her life: Jesse James, Billy the Kid, Johnny Ringo. Doc's the best of the bunch, even managing to keep to the right side of the law since he became friends with Wyatt Earp. Holliday returns, telling Kate that she must pack up and be ready to leave before sunup. He believes that Wyatt Earp will come gunning for him if he doesn't leave, merely to keep the Clantons at bay, and he can't take on both his friends and his enemies. Kate, pleased at the thought of running off with Doc, goes off to pack.
The Doctor passes his time in the jail by studying wanted posters and taking in the Old West ambiance. His rest, however, is interrupted by Steven, who shoves the gun in to him and instructs him to bluff his way out. Steven was not taken in by the Clantons' story at all and tells him he must get out in less than 10 minutes so they can escape. Then he is gone. The Doctor, who has no intention of using the gun, calls "Mr. Werp" over and passes the gun to him. He explains the plan with a great deal of aggravation. He is perfectly happy where he is and has no intention of leaving. Earp goes out to find Steven.
Meanwhile, Ike has put his second plan in motion. Using his family's influence in town, he has gathered a large crowd in the saloon. He whips them up into a frenzy against Doc Holliday, "the meanest sidewinder that ever polluted the name of the West." The law won't do anything about him, so they must. He urges them to find Holliday and string him up from the nearest tree! In the midst of the chaos, Phin returns, holding Steven at gunpoint. Like Ike figured, he was trying to get away. Ike orders him tied up as insurance. If "Doc" doesn't bust out of jail himself, they'll hang Steven in his place. That'll force "Doc" to come out. Everyone surges out of the saloon and heads for the jail. Harper, however, stays behind for a final drink.
Kate returns to the hotel room and they prepare to leave. Dodo will be returned to her friends before they go. They stop when they hear the noise of the posse in the street. Dodo is horrified to see from the window that Steven is tied up as their prisoner. Doc heads outside, the girls following after.
Harper hears the girls calling for Doc and stops him on the stairs. Doc introduces himself and Harper draws. Doc is faster and Seth Harper is killed. Doc is once again on the wrong side of the law. Charlie warns him not to go out as the whole town is out to lynch "Doc Holliday". Doc considers and decides they must leave town now, Dodo included. There's no other way he can guarantee her safety. They all head off to procure some horses, Dodo protesting all the way. In the jailhouse, Earp and Masterson see the mob coming toward them. They release the Doctor and he too watches, horrified to see Steven as their prisoner.
Ike Clanton, leading the mob, calls for Earp to release "Doc". When he refuses, Ike isn't worried. He calmly announces that either "Doc" comes out or Steven will swing in his place...


The Doctor begs Earp to let him go outside and try to calm down the mob, but Earp won't let him go. Instead, he tells Masterson to keep them talking while he tries to circle round behind. He also orders the agitated Doctor to stay put and tells Masterson to knock him out if he doesn't obey.
Meanwhile, the Clantons meet [[Seth Harper]] in the [[Last Chance Saloon]]. They talk about their vendetta against [[Doc Holliday]] and are overheard by the barman, [[Charlie (The Gunfighters)|Charlie]], and the singer of the saloon, [[Kate Fisher]].
Masterson does well, engaging Billy Clanton in an exchange of words. But Ike steps in and gets back to business. He gives "Doc" one last chance to come out. The Doctor tries again to go, but Masterson forces him back and trusts to his partner. When "Doc" doesn't respond, Ike gives the order and Phin places the noose around Steven's neck. However, Earp comes through the crowd behind Phin and knocks him out with the butt of his gun. He unties Steven while keeping Billy and Ike at bay. Masterson reminds them that he, too, has them in his sights.
Earp frees Steven and disperses the crowd. He orders Ike and Billy off the street, telling them he will detain their unconscious brother for attempted hanging. But before he can force them off, Charlie races up and blurts out the "news" that Doc Holliday is not the man in the jail. Earp cannot stop him from telling how the real Doc Holliday just killed Seth Harper back at the saloon. He says only wanted to keep the Clantons from getting in trouble over nothing.
The boys turn angrily on Earp and demand some answers. He refuses, saying he only answers to the Citizens Committee for his actions. Then he urges them to leave now while they still can. They do so, vowing to return and see that he loses his badge for good. Earp praises God for their narrow - and momentary - victory. Then he, Masterson, Steven, and Charlie haul Phineas Clanton to jail.
The Doctor decries the heavy-handed violence used against Phin, but Steven is very grateful. The Doctor bids brief farewells to Masterson and "Werp", planning to be gone from town by morning. The Marshall is not sorry to see them go.
Pa Clanton bursts into the Last Chance Saloon in a foul mood, trailed by Ike and Billy. He orders whisky shots and all 3 drink. He tells them to find and recruit Johnny Ringo, notorious gun for hire. Ike thinks this too dangerous, preferring to go to the Citizens Committee with Earp's deception. But Pa is tired of his boys' failures and is willing to pay Ringo $500 to take care of Holliday. Pa cuts short all their arguments. He wants Ringo and he wants him now. He storms out of the saloon, the boys close behind.
The Doctor and Steven arrive a moment later, looking for Dodo. They believe she is still safely in her room. Charlie breaks the news that she left with Kate and Doc Holliday, and that she was with them when Holliday killed Harper. They are running from the law and there's no telling where they've gone.
However, Holliday and the girls are only in the next town over, where Doc has decided to stop for the night. Kate thinks they are not far enough out of town yet, but Doc is adamant. He fears they may have to go back to Tombstone soon and shouldn't get too far away. Dodo listens impatiently as they argue. Doc is sure that Earp will need his help should the entire Clanton family unite against the town. He must be able to get back to help his friend. Dodo reminds them that she, too, needs to get back quickly. This settles it for Doc and he will listen to no more arguments. He goes off to rustle up some food for them. Kate still fumes, but Dodo is pleased. Suddenly, four shots ring out. Doc returns with food, saying he ran into "an old friend" who "kind of lost his appetite". They retire to their rooms for the night.
Back in Tombstone, a shadowy figure all in black approaches the saloon with caution. He checks his gun before entering. Inside, Charlie tells the newcomer the bar is closed, his back turned. When the stranger casually orders him to open it up again, Charlie turns in anger. But it all melts away to fear when he recognizes the infamous Johnny Ringo. He is quick to fetch the man's drink.
Charlie babbles nervously about Ringo's reputation as a gunslinger, and realizes too late that he may have said too much. He tries to backpedal, but Ringo is clearly annoyed at having been recognized so easily. Charlie tries to gain Ringo's favour by telling him about Pa Clanton's offer of $500 to join with them. Ringo seems pleased, revealing that he has come here to settle a score against Doc Holliday himself, but turns sour again when he learns the Clanton's also want Holliday dead. Ringo has a long-standing grudge against Holliday and has tracked him all over the West. He will not share Holliday's demise with anyone else.
With shaking hands, Charlie pours Ringo another drink, beginning again to babble and get on Ringo's nerves. Charlie wishes he could see Wyatt Earp's face when he finds out Ringo is in town, but does not realize that this sounds like he's going to rat on Ringo. Charlie tries again to take it all back. Ringo calmly shoots and kills the barman to ensure his silence.
The next morning, Doc awakes in a fine mood, which quickly turns sour when Dodo bursts in, demanding to be taken back to Tombstone. Doc is sure it's not safe to return yet, but Dodo grabs his gun and orders him to take her back. He is amused at her trembling hands, but takes her seriously when she proves able to cock the gun and aim it between his eyes. She wobblingly re-aims to wound him in the arm and says she'll shoot him if she has to. With seemingly no other alternative, he agrees. Dodo nearly collapses with the fear she felt holding the gun. Doc takes the weapon away from her quickly.
Kate enters and Doc tells her that he and Dodo are returning to Tombstone. Kate is to stay here and wait for his return. She is understandably upset, but Doc says he had no choice as Dodo "beat him to the draw", despite the fact that he always had his Derringer at the ready!
Back in Tombstone, Steven and the Doctor come down from their rooms ready to start their search for Holliday and Dodo. They find Charlie's body slumped over the bar, and Johnny Ringo sitting casually by. The Doctor tries to get Ringo to stay until the Marshall can arrive, but he is unconcerned. As far as Ringo's concerned, this is the work of Doc Holliday, the only person low enough to shoot an unarmed barman!
The Doctor recognizes Ringo from his wanted poster, but goes ahead and tells him anyway about their need to find Holliday and their young friend. Thinking he might be able to use some help in his quest for Holliday, Ringo agrees to let Steven ride with him to find Doc. He thinks he knows where he might be. But he warns Steven to stay out of his way, or else!
In the jailhouse, Wyatt's youngest brother Warren has at last arrived. Brother Morgan is tied up in a range war and can't make it, and there's been no word at all from Virgil. Warren is eager, but far too young to be involved in fighting the Clantons. Phineas, now awake, asks how long he'll be kept locked up. Bat assures him the judge will hit town...sometime. He'll be a prisoner until then.
The Doctor arrives to let them know that Steven has gone after Doc Holliday. The lawmen are pleased, until he mentions Johnny Ringo. Immediately, Earp knows that Pa Clanton will find and recruit the gunslinger, then all hell will break loose. Smugly, Phin asks to be released, while they're still able to do so. Earp shuts him up. The Doctor also reports Charlie's murder, obviously Ringo's work, and goes out with Earp and Masterson to remove the body. Warren is left on guard over an amused Phin Clanton.
Steven and Ringo arrive in Tombstone's neighbouring town. Knowing Doc won't venture far from a drink, Ringo is sure he's here. They split up to search, Ringo taking the area around the town saloon. He doesn't get far before he spots his old lover, Kate. She is startled to see him, but manages to keep her wits about her as Ringo questions her about Doc. She tells him that he ran off with Dodo, abandoning her here. Last she heard, they were headed for New Mexico. Ringo doesn't buy the story and tells her that she will come with him back to Tombstone. Seems he hasn't quite forgiven her for throwing him over for Doc and plans to get his revenge on her, after he's finished with a "job" in Tombstone. Then they'll go to "New Mexico" after Holliday. He draws his gun and orders her to get ready to go while he finds Steven.
Back in Tombstone's jail, the nervous Warren Earp tries to ignore Phin's taunts. Phin continues to make him nervous, so much so that Warren is unprepared when Billy and Ike burst in the door behind him. Warren is outgunned and must obey when they order him to go and get the cell keys from the desk. But Warren, in a desperate move, grabs for a gun instead. He is shot down in an instant.
Ike and Billy release their brother, escaping from the jail as Warren lays dying...


Back at the saloon, Masterson, Earp, and the Doctor discuss Ringo's handiwork. If he joins up with the Clantons, things are going to get difficult. Earp points out that the Doctor's "fancy shooting" was seen by all the Clantons earlier. That is a strong insurance policy to have. Despite the Doctor's protests, Earp deputizes him. Earp is sure that his presence will help shorten the odds, even though the Doctor refuses to raise a gun in anger.
When Steven and Dodo emerge they are dressed as fancy dress [[cowboy]]s. Steven tries his best impression of a cowboy, boasting about being "the fastest gun in the west". This is overheard by the local marshal, [[Wyatt Earp]], who takes his shtick as serious and takes him into custody to protect him against Doc Holliday, who will not take kindly to such boasting.
Shortly, more help arrives in the form of Wyatt Earp's brother Virgil. He has finally made it to Tombstone. Virgil goes to get a drink, but Wyatt assures him the bar is closed. Masterson and the Earps head back to the sheriff's office, leaving the Doctor uncomfortably alone with Charlie's corpse.
Ringo has taken Steven and Kate to Pa Clanton's house on the outskirts of Tombstone. They are waiting for the boys to return. The boys do so triumphantly, announcing that they killed one of the Earp brothers. Even though it was only Warren Earp, Pa is angry. They have as good as declared war on Wyatt Earp!
However, Warren still clings to the last vestiges of life. His brothers tend to him as he regretfully finishes the story of what happened. Wyatt and Virgil try to reassure him it wasn't his fault, but his dying wish is that they not tell Morgan that the Clantons got his gun. Then he is dead.
Wyatt's anger bursts forth as Masterson and Virgil move the body to a more comfortable place. Masterson vows to arrest and try the Clantons for this, but Wyatt's mind is made up. He and Virgil will face them at sunup and gain their revenge in a shoot-out. Masterson tries to stop his old friend, but Wyatt's grief and anger know no bounds. He will step outside the law, and no one can stop him! He sends Virgil to the Clanton house to tell them they'll meet at sunup at the OK Corral. As he goes, Wyatt prepares his weapon for the fight.
Steven is desperate to do something. He tries to enlist Kate's aid in an escape plan, but she refuses to go along. He wouldn't make it ten feet before they shot him dead. Their plans - and the Clanton boys' dinner - are interrupted by the sound of horse's hooves outside. The boys don't recognize the newcomer, but Ringo does - his old enemy the Marshall of Dodge City, Virgil Earp. Pa invites him in, but sends Ringo upstairs to preserve the element of surprise.
Virgil enters with his ultimatum. The boys fear an ambush awaits them at the OK Corral, but Virgil assures them this is private business between their two families. The law will not be involved, and if they don't show up, he and Wyatt will come gunning for them. Virgil notices Steven and asks which side he's on. Steven sides with the Earps, but he is prevented from leaving with Virgil. Virgil leaves with the assurance that the Clantons will be there in the morning.
Ringo returns, having heard the whole exchange. He takes control immediately, seeing the opportunity to earn his money. He doesn't trust the high-spirited but untrained boys. He doesn't believe they can prevail against the Earps. He plans to use them as bait to lure the Earps into a trap, and he'll be waiting to shoot them from behind. The boys decide to go along with it, but is there more to this plan than meets the eye?
The Doctor enters the sheriff's office, angry when he hears of the showdown between the Earps and the Clantons. Masterson assures the Doctor that he will not be asked to play a part in it and shuffles him off. Wyatt doesn't even seem to hear him, reacting only when Virgil returns. He brings word that the Clantons will face them come sunup. He also brings word of Steven and Kate. All are sure that Ringo is behind this even though Virgil didn't see him. It will make for a very difficult morning!
However, the odds are shortened when Doc Holliday returns, seemingly glad to be in the midst of the trouble once again. He brings Dodo in with a flourish and she and the Doctor are reunited. Holliday offers his services for the impending shootout, but Virgil refuses to stand alongside a notorious outlaw like him. Doc is on the verge of leaving until he learns that Kate is in the hands of Johnny Ringo, and that he has thrown in with the Clantons. He vows to be there for the shootout whether Virgil likes it or not.
The Doctor tries to talk them out of the showdown, but only succeeds in getting his deputy commission revoked. The others go back to strategy. Doc is appalled at the plan to simply face down the Clantons in the street. He knows that Ringo won't play it straight, and neither will he...
In the small hours of the morning, the Doctor and Dodo discuss what might happen to the town should Wyatt lose the shootout. He only wishes that this could be settled within the law. Masterson overhears this and offers a solution. If the Doctor were to ride out to the Clanton house, he might be able to talk them out of the showdown. Masterson can't go himself as he is obviously a friend of Wyatt's, but the Doctor might just convince them, and he may also have a chance to free Steven and Kate. The Doctor agrees, and is deputized again. It is only two hours to sunup, so he must go now.
However, the Doctor is not quick enough. The boys head out early for Tombstone. Pa Clanton is not at all certain they will win, but he has his hopes pinned on them. Steven tells him that it won't end here if they win. The law will pursue and punish them for the deaths they've caused. But Pa believes that if they succeed in killing Wyatt Earp, the town will be theirs and they will be safely in control of the law.
The Doctor arrives and offers Pa Clanton a fair trial for his boys if he will stop them from going to the OK Corral, but he will not accept. He has planned to take over Tombstone all along. The timing may be wrong, but if the boys win, it will come to pass. Steven warns the Doctor about Ringo, but the Doctor assures him the Earps already know about Ringo. But what the Clantons don't know is that Doc Holliday is there and the odds are much more even now. Pa turns on Kate and she admits her lie. Pa is much less confident now.
Ringo and the Clantons ride into town, early for the showdown. Ringo instructs them that they are to begin firing long before the Earps get in range in order to keep them busy. He'll be behind them and take care of his part of the plan. Everyone heads for their places.
Masterson tries one last time to stop his old friend from going through with this, but Wyatt is determined. Doc goes through the plan one more time - he will trail behind the two Earps, hiding in the shadows of the covered sidewalks. The Clantons won't see him until it is too late. Satisfied, they leave.
True to the plan, the Clantons start shooting as soon as they see the Earps. They scatter to separate cover and keep up the barrage. Confused, Wyatt and Virgil head for cover as well, returning fire.
Doc strolls along the sidewalk, working his way behind the Clantons. Unbeknownst to him, Ringo has come up behind him, gun drawn. It is as if he knew Doc would be there. But Dodo cries out a warning and launches herself at Ringo. The gunslinger catches her and uses her as a shield as Doc turns around. They exchange acid-laced greetings, then Ringo orders Doc to throw down his gun. Doc reluctantly does so and Ringo goes after it, trying to keep hold of Dodo. But just as he reaches the gun, Dodo breaks free. Ringo falls and Doc uses the opportunity to shoot him point blank with his Derringer. Ringo is dead.
Doc orders Dodo to return to safety and he joins Wyatt under cover to report Ringo's death. The Clantons are becoming nervous. Billy spots Holliday and leaves his cover to go after him. He gets off a couple of shots, but he is no match for Doc. Billy, too, is killed. Phin sees this and runs recklessly from cover toward him. Virgil shoots him down easily. Only Ike is left. He tries to retreat up an outside staircase, but he quickly realizes he cannot get away. He doesn't even get off a shot before he is killed by Holliday and the Earps, tumbling from the stairway.
The shootout at the OK Corral is finished.
Later that day, Kate and Holliday escort the Doctor, Steven, and Dodo to the stables. The Doctor cannot understand why Doc has announced they are leaving town. Surely the danger from the Clantons is over now. Doc explains that both he and Wyatt have gone against the law in killing the Clanton boys. Bat Masterson will not rest until Doc is in jail. He has already produced a wanted poster with Doc's face on it and a $2000 reward. Doc gives them the poster as a souvenir as he and Kate bid them farewell.
As the travellers turn to enter the stables, Dodo hears the strains of "The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon" wafting down the street and she gets wistful. She will miss it. But the Doctor has had enough. Dodo has fallen prey to "every cliché-ridden convention in the American West" and it is high time they were off.
They enter the TARDIS and dematerialize.


==Cast==
{{video|The Doctor's Appointment With The Dentist - The Gunfighters - Doctor Who - BBC|left|thumb|The [[First Doctor]] has a tooth removed by [[Doc Holliday]].}}
*[[First Doctor|Doctor]] - [[William Hartnell]]
Kate Fisher, who is Holliday's lover, goes to warn Doc, who has just set up as a dentist. Doc refuses to leave, despite Kate's insistence. They are visited by the town's sheriff, [[Bat Masterson]], who warns Doc against causing any trouble. As Masterson leaves Doc's surgery, he encounters Earp with the Doctor and his companions. By this time the Doctor has worked up a story: he is Doctor Caligari, a travelling player, with his piano player, Dodo DuPont, and singer, Steven Regret. The Doctor enquires if there is a nearby dentist for his toothache. He is directed to Holliday. When the Doctor sees the primitive conditions he tries to back out, but Dodo convinces him. They agree to meet at the saloon. The Doctor enters and interrupts Holliday and Kate mid-clinch. He tries to use this as an excuse to leave but is sat down by Holliday, pleased to have his first customer. The Doctor asks for some sort of anaesthetic. He is offered alcohol or "a rap on the cranium" with Holliday's gun. He rejects both.
*[[Steven Taylor]] - [[Peter Purves]]
*[[Dodo Chaplet]] - [[Jackie Lane]]
*[[Ike Clanton]] - [[William Hurndell]]
*[[Phineas Clanton]] - [[Maurice Good]]
*[[Billy Clanton]] - [[David Cole]]
*[[Kate Fisher]] - [[Sheena Marshe]]
*[[Seth Harper]] - [[Shane Rimmer]]
*[[Charlie (The Gunfighters)|Charlie]] - [[David Graham]]
*[[Wyatt Earp]] - [[John Alderson]]
*[[Doc Holliday]] - [[Anthony Jacobs]]
*[[Bat Masterson]] - [[Richard Beale]]
*[[Pa Clanton]] - [[Reed De Rouen]]
*[[Johnny Ringo]] - [[Laurence Payne]]
*[[Warren Earp]] - [[Martyn Huntley]]
*[[Virgil Earp]] - [[Victor Carin]]


==Crew==
In the Last Chance Saloon, the cowboys are getting restless and begin to shoot bottles from behind the bar. This is interrupted by Steven and Dodo, who come in to reserve some rooms. They sign themselves in as a singer and a piano player — something that interests Charlie on account of his last piano player being shot. As Stephen and Dodo go up to their rooms, the Clantons and Seth overhear them mentioning "the Doctor", whom they take to be Holliday, and assume Steven is working in cahoots with Holliday. Seth is charged to go and seek out Holliday whilst Billy is told to convince Steven and Dodo to come and join them in the saloon.
*[[Assistant Floor Manager]] - [[Tom O'Sullivan]]
*Ballad Music - [[Tristram Cary]]
*[[Costumes]] - [[Daphne Dare]]
*[[Designer]] - [[Barry Newbury]]
*[[Film Cameraman]] - [[Ken Westbury]]
*[[Film Editor]] - [[Les Newman]]
*Lyrics - [[Donald Cotton]], [[Rex Tucker]]
*[[Make-Up]] - [[Sonia Markham]]
*[[Producer]] - [[Innes Lloyd]]
*[[Production Assistant]] - [[Tristan de Vere Cole]], [[Angela Gordon]]
*[[Script Editor]] - [[Gerry Davis]]
*[[Special Sounds]] - [[Brian Hodgson]]
*[[Studio Lighting]] - [[George Summers]]
*[[Studio Sound]] - [[Colin Dixon]]
*[[Theme Arrangement]] - [[Delia Derbyshire]]
*[[Title Music]] - [[Ron Grainer]]


==References==
Back at the dentist, the Doctor has had his tooth pulled, and whilst Holliday is in the back room, encounters Seth. Seth greets him with "Doc?" to which the Doctor responds, "I am, yes." Seth then asks "Holliday?" The Doctor, imagining himself to be on a sort of a holiday, misunderstands and responds with the affirmative. Thinking he has found his man, Seth orders the Doctor to be in the saloon in five minutes. This has all been overheard by Holliday, who seizes the opportunity to get out of his situation. He equips the Doctor with his own gun and sends the Doctor on his way.
''to be added''


==Story notes==
Seth returns to the bar, and the Clantons force Steven and Dodo to perform a song. Dodo plays the [[piano]] while Steven sings "[[The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon]]". The Clantons and Seth ready themselves to shoot Holliday as he comes through the door. Outside, the Doctor approaches the Last Chance Saloon.
*This story had the working titles; '''The Gun-Fighters''' and '''The Gunslingers'''.
*Thunderbirds voice artistes David 'Brains' Graham and Shane 'Scott Tracy' Rimmer appear as Charlie the barman and Seth Harper respectively. Graham had also provided Dalek voices for a number of earlier Doctor Who stories.
*The caption at the end of the final episode reads '''Next Episode: Dr. Who and the Savages'''. The Gunfighters was the last story to have individual episode titles.
*[[Patrick Troughton]] was one of the actors considered for the role of [[Johnny Ringo]].
*The serial features an original song, "[[The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon]]", the last time an original song would be commissioned for the series until "[[Song for Ten]]" in ''[[The Christmas Invasion]]''. "Ballad" is performed off-screen by [[Lynda Baron]], who years later would appear in the serial ''[[Enlightenment (TV story)|Enlightenment]]''.
*Episode 1 carries the title "A Holiday for the Doctor", the first and only episode of the original series to incorporate the "correct" name of The Doctor (as opposed to an episode of ''[[The Chase]]'' called "The Death of Doctor Who" and the 1970 serial ''[[Doctor Who and the Silurians]]'', both of which used the technically incorrect "Doctor Who"). The only other televised episodes (to date) to include the name "The Doctor" in an episode title were the 2005 episode ''[[The Doctor Dances]]'', the 2008 episode ''[[The Doctor's Daughter]]'', and the 2010 episode ''[[Vincent and the Doctor]].''
*This was the first full and only serial to take place completely within the [[United States]]. It would be 30 years until another US-set story was filmed as the [[Doctor Who (1996)|1996 TV movie]], and the next regular episode to be set within the US wouldn't air until ''[[Dalek (TV story)|Dalek]]'' in 2005.
*Contains an example of [[The "Doctor Who?" running joke]] - When introducing himself and his companions to [[Bat Masterson]], the Doctor creates aliases for the group, and says of himself, "And lastly, sir, your humble servant, Doctor, er, Caligari." Masterson, confused, asks, "Doctor who?" to which the Doctor responds, "Yes, quite right."


===Ratings===
=== Don't Shoot the Pianist (2) ===
* A Holiday For The Doctor ''(30/04/1966 17:50)'' - 6.5 million viewers
Back at the dentist surgery, Doc Holliday gloats that he is setting the Doctor up for a fall. He wonders why Kate isn't answering him and discovers that she has left heading towards the Last Chance Saloon.
*Don't Shoot The Pianist ''(07/05/1966 17:50)'' - 6.6 million viewers
*Johnny Ringo ''(14/05/1966 17:55)'' - 6.2 million viewers
*The O.K. Corral ''(21/05/1966 17:50)'' - 5.7 million viewers


===Myths===
Steven and Dodo are still singing and playing the piano when Kate returns and orders Dodo off her piano. She distracts the cowboys by singing to them while Steven plays. Dodo leaves to her room in a mood because of the attention Kate is giving Steven. The Doctor enters and, through a number of misunderstandings, is believed to be Holliday. The Doctor realises their mistake, seemingly remembering the name of the Clantons, and tries to explain. Holliday enters the saloon through a back door and stands on the stair case, listening to the proceedings. The Doctor fails to convince them. Whilst the Doctor brandishes his gun, Holliday fires in such a way to knock Harper's gun from his hand. Kate takes control and orders the four men up against the piano whilst the Doctor holds his gun still. Hearing the shot, Dodo comes down to investigate but meets Holliday, who escorts her back to her room. Wyatt Earp and Masterson enter and try to find out what has happened. Deciding to keep up the pretence that the Doctor is Holliday, Earp arrests the Doctor and leads him from the saloon, allowing the cowboys to continue thinking the Doctor is Holliday. With the Doctor gone, the cowboys turn on Steven.
*The Gunfighters was the lowest-rated Doctor Who story ever. ''(There were a number of stories with lower ratings, including The Savages, The War Machines and The Smugglers.)''
*A similar rumor holds that The Gunfighters is consistently the lowest-ranked story among fans. (''While it may have at one point held this dishonor, the last few polls conducted by [[Doctor Who Magazine]] place the story 20 points or more below the bottom'')
*Sheena Marshe, who played Kate Fisher, was director Rex Tucker's daughter. ''(She was unrelated to him; his daughter Jane Tucker, later to find fame as one third of the Rod, Jane and Freddy group of children's entertainers, did however appear as a walk-on in the story.)''


===Filming locations===
[[File:The Doctor and Kate.jpg|right|thumb|The Doctor and [[Kate Fisher]] take charge.]]
*[[Ealing Television Film Studios]], Ealing Green, Ealing
Kate joins Dodo and Holliday in her room where they plan on waiting until the trouble has died down, despite Dodo's distress at the arrest of the Doctor.
*[[BBC Television Centre]] ([[List of stories recorded at BBC Television Centre|TC4]]), Shepherd's Bush, [[London]]


===Production errors===
The Doctor has been locked in a gaol, with Earp suggesting that it is safer with his status as a wanted man. Masterson agrees with the ploy; having the Doctor in prison means that the Clantons and Harper will think Holliday is locked up. Earp goes out to find the real Holliday.
 
In the saloon, Steven tries to convince the others of the Doctor's innocence, saying that if he had the Doctor here he could prove it. The cowboys take this to mean that he is proposing a prison break and agree to back him up.
 
Upstairs, Doc is thirsty, and Kate reminds him he left a bottle in his dentistry. He says that he'll sneak back.
 
On arriving at the dentistry, Earp is there and orders him to leave town before the morning. Earp will tell the Clantons the truth tomorrow morning. He explains that [[Pa Clanton]] and his sons are rustlers and that he is biding his time before he and his boys run them out of his town.
 
In the saloon, the Clantons and Harper tell Steven to pass a gun through the gaol-house window to the Doctor with which he can force his way out. They'll wait outside to "welcome him back to society". Steven agrees. Phineas follows him, just in case he makes a run for it with "Holliday".
 
Dodo asks Kate if she really intends to marry Holliday, an outlaw. Kate replies that she has met many outlaws and that Holliday is the best of the lot, "a real gentleman". Holliday arrives and tells Kate that they have to leave. Earp is gunning for him and he doesn't want to kill a friend.
 
Steven gives the Doctor the gun through a window, telling him that the Clantons still think he's Holliday. Once he has gone, the Doctor hands the gun to Earp, asking him to meet Steven outside in his stead and to tell him he wants to remain in gaol as it's the safest place for him.
 
In the saloon, the Clantons incite the locals to violence, telling them to break "Holliday" out of gaol and hang him from the nearest tree. Phineas brings Steven in, whom he found running away from the saloon, and they tie him up, saying that if the Doctor refuses to leave gaol they will hang Steven instead.
 
Kate has got her stuff together ready for departure when they see the mob pass with Steven from an upstairs window. Doc makes his way downstairs, and Kate calls after him. Hearing the name "Doc", Harper, who has been left behind, enquires if he is Holliday. He says yes and draws his gun faster than Harper, shooting his opponent. Doc tells Kate to ready three horses, planning to take Dodo with them when they leave. Dodo is unsure, but finally complies and they leave the saloon.
 
Earp and Masterson let the Doctor out of gaol to see the mob gather outside. The Clantons announce that they want "Holliday" within two minutes, or Steven will be hanged.
 
=== Johnny Ringo (3) ===
The Doctor tries to leave, but Earp and Masterson hold him back. Earp says he has a plan and disappears around the back. Billy Clanton fronts up to Masterson as the sheriff pulls a shotgun. Just as they're attaching the [[noose]], Earp attacks, knocking Phineas out. He frees Steven. Realising they're caught in the crossfire of Earp and Masterson, the mob disperses. The bartender, Charlie, arrives and tells the Clantons that Harper is dead, shot by Holliday in the saloon. The Clantons confront Earp, who admits he knew the Doctor wasn't Holliday. Earp threatens them until they leave. Charlie, Earp, Masterson and Steven carry the unconscious Phineas into the gaol. The Doctor says goodbye to Earp and Masterson and says he and Steven intend to leave in the morning.
 
[[File:Fixing the noose.jpg|right|thumb|The noose is placed round [[Steven Taylor|Steven]]'s neck.]]
In the saloon, Pa Clanton tells his sons that he wants to hire [[Johnny Ringo]] to help them fight Earp. His sons protest, but he does not think they are capable. They leave. Steven and the Doctor return to the saloon, and Charlie tells them that Dodo left with Holliday. The Doctor claims that Holliday is his friend, recalling how he removed his tooth. They then retire to their rooms, intent on seeking Holliday out in the morning.
 
Doc, Kate and Dodo find a place to sleep, but Kate wants to continue as they are still near Tombstone. Doc says he doesn't want to be too far away as when the Clantons and the Earps meet he wants to be nearby to help his friend. Dodo is pleased with this as she states that she needs to return to the Doctor as soon as she can too. As Doc leaves to get food, they hear gunfire and he returns. He ran into an old friend who has now "lost his appetite".
 
Meanwhile, Ringo enters the saloon and talks to Charlie. The barman tells him that the Clantons want help dealing with Earp but Ringo already has a target, Doc Holliday. Charlie tells him that they're also after Doc but Ringo wants to kill him on his own. Charlie promises that he won't tell anyone. Ringo agrees and shoots him dead.
 
In the morning, Dodo asks Doc if he is going to return her to the Doctor today. He says no. Angered, Dodo takes his gun and threatens him. Doc agrees to take her home and asks Kate to stay. Realising Doc had a gun and was about to shoot her, Dodo faints.
 
Steven and the Doctor come down into the bar in the morning and find the dead Charlie with Johnny Ringo sitting calmly at the table. The Doctor asks Ringo to wait in the bar for Earp to investigate, but Ringo claims that only Holliday would shoot an unarmed barman. Steven tells Ringo they also seek Holliday. Ringo suspects they want him dead too, and the Doctor denies any intention to kill him. Ringo invites Steven to ride with him after Doc and he agrees.
 
At the gaol, Wyatt's youngest brother Warren has come with bad news: his other two brothers are too busy to come and help Wyatt. Wyatt says that this is no good and says that Warren is too young to fight. The Doctor visits the gaol and tells Earp that Steven has gone after Holliday with Ringo. He points out that photos of Ringo are all over the gaol on wanted posters. Wyatt is concerned that Ringo may side with the Clantons and goes out to search for him with Masterston. He leaves Warren in charge.
 
Ringo and Steven split up and search for Holliday at the saloon where he stayed. Ringo finds Kate, a former girlfriend of his. She lies, telling him Holliday was headed for [[New Mexico]] with Dodo, with whom he has run off. Ringo tells Kate that he's taking her back to Tombstone as revenge for him spurning her. She refuses, but he threatens her at gunpoint.
 
In the gaol, Phineas taunts the young [[Warren Earp]]. Ike and Billy Clanton enter and threaten him into opening the cell. Warren tries to grab his gun. Billy shoots him. They free Phineas and leave.
 
=== The O. K. Corral (4) ===
In the saloon, Masterson, Earp and the Doctor cover Charlie's body. Masterson and Earp correctly assume Ringo killed Charlie, on the logic that the only other suspect would be the Doctor, who Earp does not believe would have. Recalling that the Clantons still believe the Doctor to have easily intimidated them all in their confrontation in the saloon, Earp deputises the Doctor, giving him a badge and a gun. Again the Doctor shows distaste at being given a firearm, but Earp maintains the Doctor's presence may help enforce a show of power. [[Virgil Earp]] enters unexpectedly and offers his support in the fight against the Clantons. Masterson and the Earps leave. The Doctor remains in the saloon.
 
The Clantons return to Pa and find Ringo there with Kate and Steven. They boastfully tell Pa about killing Warren, and he tells them that it really is war now.
 
However, Warren is alive...barely. His brothers tend to him in the gaol. He tells them it was a Clanton who shot him, then he dies. Wyatt is furious and tells Virgil to inform the Clantons that they'll meet at dawn, at the [[O.K. Corral]]. Masterson tries to convince him that this isn't the way of the lawman. Earp renounces the law.
 
[[File:Deputised.jpg|right|thumb|The Doctor is deputised.]]
Steven plans to escape to warn the inhabitants of Tombstone about the Clantons, but Kate warns him against the futility of this. The Clantons hear Virgil approach, and Ringo recognises him as the marshal of [[Dodge City]]. Virgil gives them his message and asks Steven whose side he is on. Steven tells him he supports the Earps but cannot leave as Pa threatens him. Ringo, who hid upstairs during the talk, returns and lays out a plan to use the Clantons as bait and ambush the Earps from behind while the Clantons go in from the front.
 
Back at the gaol, both the Doctor and Masterson try to reason with Earp, but their protestations fall on deaf ears. Virgil returns and tells Earp that Kate and Ringo's horse were there. He also informs the Doctor that Steven is there. The Earps figure Ringo is siding with the Clantons. The Doctor tells them they cannot take on both the Clantons and Ringo, but as he does so, Doc enters and announces that they won't have to. When asked by Wyatt why he has returned, he says a girl forced him to at gunpoint. A celebratory Dodo walks into the gaol and embraces the Doctor. Virgil refuses to fight alongside Holliday due to the fact he is an outlaw, but when Doc is told that Kate is with them, he insists. With Doc back, the Doctor hands over his gun and badge, happy to be rid of them. Doc suggests that if Ringo is involved there will be a tactic. He plans to hang back to observe anything Ringo may be trying to pull.
 
Later that night, Dodo and the Doctor are in the saloon when Masterson enters and asks the Doctor to talk the Clantons out of the fight. He is persuaded that it is the only way of avoiding bloodshed and to allow justice to take its course. The Doctor is given his badge back by Masterson and sets off.
 
Despite the Doctor's best effort, he arrives at the Clanton ranch after the departure of Ringo and the Clantons. Steven tells the Doctor of Ringo's plan to circle around, and the Doctor tells Pa that they predicted Ringo would side with the Clantons and that Holliday has joined the Earps. Pa is furious to discover that he has been lied to by Kate.
 
The Clantons and Ringo arrive at the OK Corral whilst the Earps leave to face them. Masterson tries to persuade Earp one last time.
 
The Earps and Clantons meet and the latter open fire, hoping that they can stop the Earps. Once in range, the Earps also fire. Away from the main fight, Ringo comes across Holliday approaching the fight and is about to shoot Doc when Dodo runs over and alerts him. Ringo takes Dodo hostage while Doc takes cover. He forces Holliday to drop his weapon. Doc throws his weapon down. As Ringo goes to retrieve it, Dodo pushes him down. Doc pulls another gun and shoots him. Holliday tells the dying Ringo he thought he would do better. "I will, next time," Ringo says, then dies. Holliday regroups with Wyatt, telling him Ringo's dead. Billy makes a move to kill Doc, but he misses and Doc kills him instead. Virgil hits Phineas, who dies shortly after. Ike, the only man left to oppose the Earps and Doc, tries to run. Doc corners him and Ike fires his gun, only to find that it's empty. Doc and the Earps kill Ike.
 
Sometime later, the Doctor and Doc are walking together with Dodo, Steven and Kate. He questions Holliday's reason for leaving. Kate and Doc unveil a wanted poster Masterson has released with Holliday's face upon it. Holliday claims that Wyatt is no longer a lawman, having been involved in the fighting. He gives the poster to the Doctor and then leaves with Kate. The Doctor insists they leave in [[The Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]] — much to the disappointment of Dodo.
 
The TARDIS is now in a different setting, and its crew are dressed differently, discussing where they have arrived. The Doctor tells his companions that he knows exactly where they are: the far future, in a time of peace and prosperity. As they leave the TARDIS, the scanner shows a savage figure appearing on the crest of a hill.
 
== Cast ==
* [[First Doctor|Dr. Who]] - [[William Hartnell]]
* [[Steven Taylor]] - [[Peter Purves]]
* [[Dodo Chaplet]] - [[Jackie Lane]]
* [[Ike Clanton]] - [[William Hurndell]]
* [[Phineas Clanton]] - [[Maurice Good]]
* [[Billy Clanton]] - [[David Cole]]
* [[Kate Fisher]] - [[Sheena Marshe]]
* [[Seth Harper]] - [[Shane Rimmer]]
* [[Charlie (The Gunfighters)|Charlie]] - [[David Graham]]
* [[Wyatt Earp]] - [[John Alderson]]
* [[Doc Holliday]] - [[Anthony Jacobs]]
* [[Bat Masterson]] - [[Richard Beale]]
* [[Pa Clanton]] - [[Reed De Rouen]]
* [[Johnny Ringo]] - [[Laurence Payne]]
* [[Warren Earp]] - [[Martyn Huntley]]
* [[Virgil Earp]] - [[Victor Carin]]
* Singer - [[Lynda Baron]]
 
=== Uncredited cast ===
* Cowboys - [[John Doye]], [[Roy Curtis]], [[John Caesar]], [[Bill Smith (extra)|Bill Smith]]
* Pianists - [[Tom McCall]], [[Winifred Taylor]]
* Bar Girls - [[Vilma Stuttle]], [[Maureen Lane]], [[Maureen Nelson]]
* Townsfolk in Lynch Mob - [[Reg Cranfield (actor)|Reg Cranfield]], [[Leslie Shannon]], [[Mark Allington]], [[Jonas Kurchi]], [[Kevin Leslie]], [[John de Marco|John De Marco]], [[Derek Chafer]]
* [[Mexico|Mexican]] Cowboy - [[Antony Billing]]
* Chinese Storekeepers - [[Jackie Ho]], [[Edward Cheekan]]
* Settler's Wife - [[Marguerite Young]]
* Settler's Daughters - [[Jane Tucker]], [[Edwina Salmon]]
* Savage - [[John Raven]] (all [[DWM 220]])
 
== Crew ==
* Ballad Music - [[Tristram Cary]]
* [[Costumes]] - [[Daphne Dare]]
* [[Designer (crew)|Designer]] - [[Barry Newbury]]
* [[Film Cameraman]] - [[Ken Westbury]]
* [[Film Editor]] - [[Les Newman]]
* Lyrics - [[Donald Cotton]], [[Rex Tucker]]
* [[Make-Up]] - [[Sonia Markham]]
* [[Producer]] - [[Innes Lloyd]]
* [[Script Editor]] - [[Gerry Davis]]
* [[Studio Lighting]] - [[George Summers]]
* [[Studio Sound]] - [[Colin Dixon]]
* [[Doctor Who theme|Title Music]] - [[Ron Grainer]]
 
=== Uncredited crew ===
* [[Assistant Floor Manager]] - [[Tom O'Sullivan]]<ref name="BBC Official Site">[http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/gunfighters/detail.shtml BBC Official Site]</ref>
* [[Production Assistant]] - [[Tristan de Vere Cole]]<ref name="BBC Official Site"/>
* Production Assistant - [[Angela Gordon]]<ref name="BBC Official Site"/>
* [[Special Sounds]] - [[Brian Hodgson]]<ref name="BBC Official Site"/>
* [[Theme Arrangement]] - [[Delia Derbyshire]]<ref name="BBC Official Site"/>
* [[Floor assistant|Floor Assistant]] - [[Julian Aston]] ([[INFO]]: ''The Gunfighters'')
* [[Producer's assistant|Producer's Assistant]] - [[Rosemary Parsons]] ([[INFO]]: ''The Gunfighters'')
* [[Armourer]] - [[Jack Lennox]] ([[INFO]]: ''The Gunfighters'')
* [[Technical manager|Technical Manager]] - [[John Farr|Johnny Farr]] ([[INFO]]: ''The Gunfighters'')
* [[Vision Mixer]]s - [[Clive Halls]], [[Joan Duncan]] ([[INFO]]: ''The Gunfighters'')
* [[Camera crew|Camera Crew]] - [[Crew 14]] ([[INFO]]: ''The Gunfighters'')
 
== Worldbuilding ==
* Both Dodo and Steven can play the [[piano]].
* The Doctor wonders why Steven has chosen to dress up like [[Tom Mix]].
* Johnny Ringo tells Charlie that he's trailed Doc Holliday from [[Fort Griffin]] to Tombstone.
* Kate knows many other famous outlaws, including [[Jesse James]] and [[Billy the Kid]].
 
=== Influences ===
 
* ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/My_Darling_Clementine My Darling Clementine]''
* ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunfight_at_the_O.K._Corral_(film) Gunfight at the OK Corral]''
* ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat_Ballou Cat Ballou]''
 
== Story notes ==
* This story had the working titles ''The Wild West'', ''The Gun-Fighters'' and ''The Gunslingers''. Working titles for the first episode were "Ticket to Tombstone" and "Holliday for Doctor", while those for the second, third and fourth episodes were "Lynching Parties Catered For", "All Roads Lead to Tombstone" and "Guns in the Morning" respectively.<ref>''How the West Was Done'' by Lucas Testro, ''[[Doctor Who Magazine|DWM]]'' Issue 581 ([[September]] [[2022]]).</ref>
* This story directly follows ''[[The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)|The Celestial Toymaker]]'', as the Doctor is suffering from toothache after eating one of [[Cyril (The Celestial Toymaker)|Cyril]]'s sweets at the end of "[[The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)#The Final Test (4)|The Final Test]]".
* ''[[Thunderbirds]]'' voice artistes [[David Graham]] and [[Shane Rimmer]] appear as Charlie the barman and Seth Harper respectively. Graham had also provided Dalek voices for a number of earlier ''Doctor Who'' stories and would be later cast as [[Fyodor Nikolai Kerensky|Professor Kerensky]] in [[Season 17 (Doctor Who 1963)|Season 17]]'s ''[[City of Death (TV story)|City of Death]].
* The closing caption caption of "The O.K. Corral" reads "Next Episode: DR. WHO AND THE SAVAGES". This was the last story to have individual episode titles until [[Season 11 (Doctor Who 1963)|Season 11]]'s six-part story ''[[Invasion of the Dinosaurs (TV story)|Invasion of the Dinosaurs]]'' in 1974, when part one was given the on-screen title "Invasion" — also sometimes referred to as "Invasion" part one.
* The serial features an original song, "[[The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon]]", the last time that an original song would be commissioned for the series until the rap song featured in ''[[The Greatest Show in the Galaxy (TV story)|The Greatest Show in the Galaxy]]'' (discounting "[[The King's Song]]" in ''[[The King's Demons (TV story)|The King's Demons]]''). The "Ballad" is performed off-screen by [[Lynda Baron]].
* Along with Lynda Baron, the "Ballad" was also performed by [[Peter Purves]] in "A Holiday for the Doctor" while [[Jackie Lane]] mimed playing the piano.
* The first episode is titled "A Holiday for the Doctor", the first and only episode of the original series to incorporate the "correct" name of the Doctor (as opposed to an episode of ''[[The Chase (TV story)|The Chase]]'' called "The Death of Doctor Who" and 1970 serial ''[[Doctor Who and the Silurians (TV story)|Doctor Who and the Silurians]]'', both of which used the technically incorrect "Doctor Who"). The next televised episode to include the name "the Doctor" in its title was the 2005 episode ''[[The Doctor Dances (TV story)|The Doctor Dances]]'', a practice later followed by several others.
* This was the first full and only serial of the original series to take place completely within the [[United States]]. It was thirty years until another US-set story was filmed, namely the [[Doctor Who (TV story)|1996 TV movie]]. The next regular episode to be set within the US did not air until ''[[Dalek (TV story)|Dalek]]'' in 2005.
* This story contains an example of the play on the series' title — when introducing himself and his companions to [[Bat Masterson]], the Doctor creates aliases for the group, and says of himself, "And lastly, sir, your humble servant, Doctor, er, Caligari." Masterson, confused, asks, "Doctor who?" to which the Doctor responds, "Yes, quite right."
* The storyline of the serial makes several notable departures from the historical fact. In reality, Wyatt Earp was not the ranking Marshal of Tombstone. Virgil was, and he deputised Wyatt as an emergency, less than an hour before the battle. Kate Holliday probably spoke with a Hungarian accent, not the exaggerated American accent depicted in the show. [[Bat Masterson]], [[Johnny Ringo]], [[Warren Earp]] and [[Phineas Clanton]] were not present in Tombstone in October [[1881]]. Consequently, neither Ringo nor Phineas Clanton participated in the Gunfight at the O. K. Corral and were therefore not casualties of it as portrayed here. Warren Earp did not die until July [[1900]], almost 19 years after the events of this story take place. Phineas' brother [[Ike Clanton]] survived the gunfight whereas their father [[Pa Clanton]] had died in August 1881, about 10 weeks before the battle. Conversely, no reference is made to four of the gunfight's actual participants: Morgan Earp (brother of Warren, Wyatt, and Virgil) and the Clanton brothers' fellow outlaw cowboys Billy Claiborne and Tom and Frank McLaury. Furthermore, [[Doc Holliday]] was only 30 years old in 1881 in real life whereas [[Anthony Jacobs]] was 48 in [[1966]]. Wyatt was the only member of the Earp combat team who was not wounded.
* The real Big Nose Kate died at the age of 90, in [[1940]]. [[William Hartnell]] was 32 years old then. This is one of the rare instances in which a historical character was within the lifetime of a ''Doctor Who'' performer.
* This story, which includes multiple deaths by shooting and an attempted hanging shown on screen, is one of the most violent ''Doctor Who'' TV stories.
* The Savage, who appears on the TARDIS scanner screen at the end of "The O.K. Corral", was played by [[John Raven]] ([[DWM 221]]), who remained uncredited both on-screen and in ''Radio Times''.
* [[Rex Tucker]] requested that his director's credit be removed from the closing roller caption of "The O.K. Corral", following a disagreement with [[Innes Lloyd]] over the editing of the episode. However, Tucker was still billed as director in the ''Radio Times'' programme listing.
* [[Jane Tucker]], of {{w|Rod, Jane, and Freddy}}/{{wi|Rainbow (TV series)|Rainbow}} fame, appears briefly in the Lynch Mob scene. Tucker was the daughter of director [[Rex Tucker]]. (DWM 221)
* Various actors were considered for guest roles:
** [[Donald Sutherland]] was the original choice to play [[Wyatt Earp]]. ([[TCH 7]])
** It was hoped that [[Patrick Troughton]] would play [[Johnny Ringo]], but he had other commitments; [[John Carson]], William Dexter, [[Philip Madoc]] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Slater_(actor) John Slater] were also considered for Ringo. (TCH 7)
** [[John Bryans]] was considered to play both [[Pa Clanton]] and [[Bat Masterson]]. (TCH 7)
** [[Alan Tilvern]] was a possible choice for [[Seth Harper]] or [[Ike Clanton]]. (TCH 7)
** {{w|David Burke (British actor)|David Burke}}, {{w|Marne Maitland}}, [[Derek Newark]] and [[Ewen Solon]] were all considered to play Ike Clanton or Virgil Earp. (TCH 7)
** Jeanne Moody, {{w|Patricia English}}, {{w|Carol Cleveland}}, {{w|Jill Melford}}, {{w|Delena Kidd}}, {{w|Anita West}} and {{w|Delphi Lawrence}} were all considered for Kate. (TCH 7)
* When the Clantons force Steven and Dodo to perform "[[The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon]]", originally, Dodo was to sing while Steven played the piano. Jackie Lane proved to be a mediocre vocalist and so [[Peter Purves]] reluctantly agreed to swap roles so that he sang the Ballad while Lane pretended to play the piano.
* [[Peter Purves]] hated working on this serial, calling it a "crummy script". He and [[William Hartnell]] didn't get on with director [[Rex Tucker]], who felt that the series was beneath him — Tucker had in fact originally been pencilled in to produce and direct the pilot episode before those roles were taken by [[Verity Lambert]] and [[Waris Hussein]] respectively, but felt that it had become a juvenile sci-fi series in the years since.
* Despite the fact the character of Johnny Ringo only turns up in the third and fourth episodes, "Johnny Ringo" and "The O.K. Corral", the role was regarded as the main guest star role for this serial.
* [[Rex Tucker]] wanted to cast American and/or Canadian actors as much as possible to lend some authenticity to the proceedings, but this proved difficult.
* [[Rex Tucker]] hoped that [[Jane Tucker]] would sing "The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon", but her voice lacked the necessary gravitas. [[Sheena Marshe]] was also deemed unsuitable.
* For historical research, [[Donald Cotton]] contacted a friend, cabaret performer Tony Snell, who was working in the United States at the time and was able to visit Tombstone. In composing his scripts, however, Cotton hewed closer to the legendary version of the Gunfight.
* [[John Alderson]] previously played Virgil Earp in the ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_Are_There_(series) You Are There]'' episode "The Gunfight at the O.K. Corral".
* While Kate Fisher was a fictional character, she was loosley based on Doc Holliday's wife, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Nose_Kate “Big Nose” Kate Horony], also known as Kate Elder.
* Reuben Clanton and Seth Harper were fictional characters.
* [[Donald Cotton]] devised "The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon" as a mood piece. [[Rex Tucker]] turned it into a narrative piece to be played throughout the story.
* [[Innes Lloyd]] and [[Gerry Davis]] weren't happy with being saddled with such a comedic story. They hoped to drop the serial entirely and replace it with ''[[The Savages (TV story)|The Savages]].''
 
=== Ratings ===
* "A Holiday For The Doctor" - 6.5 million viewers
* "Don't Shoot The Pianist" - 6.6 million viewers
* "Johnny Ringo" - 6.2 million viewers
* "The O.K. Corral" - 5.7 million viewers
 
=== Myths ===
* ''The Gunfighters'' was the least-watched ''Doctor Who'' story ever, and/or got the lowest-ever Audience Appreciation score. ''(There were a number of stories with lower viewing figures, including ''[[The Savages (TV story)|The Savages]]'', ''[[The War Machines (TV story)|The War Machines]]'' and ''[[The Smugglers (TV story)|The Smugglers]]'', plus every story after the 1986 hiatus. Its Audience Appreciation score technically is the lowest in the show's history, but the scoring system changed several times throughout the show's run, and thus the score cannot really be compared to a story from the 1970s or 1980s.)''
* A similar rumour holds that ''The Gunfighters'' is consistently the lowest-ranked story among fans. ''(While it may have at one point held this dishonour, the last few polls conducted by ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' place the story twenty points or more above the bottom.)''
* [[Sheena Marshe]], who played [[Kate Fisher]], was director Rex Tucker's daughter. ''(She was unrelated to him; his daughter [[Jane Tucker]], later to find fame as one-third of the Rod, Jane and Freddy group of children's entertainers, did, however, appear as a walk-on in the story.)''
 
=== Filming locations ===
* [[Ealing Television Film Studios]], Ealing Green, Ealing
* [[BBC Television Centre]] ([[List of stories recorded at BBC Television Centre|TC4]]), Shepherd's Bush, [[London]]
 
=== Production errors ===
{{discontinuity}}
{{discontinuity}}
*The Clanton gang have unconvincing American accents.
* In the first shot of the O.K. Corral sign, the K already has bullet holes in it. The holes shouldn't have appeared until Billy shoots the sign in the next scene.
* As Kate moves towards Ringo after she recognises him, something falls off-screen with a clatter. [[Sheena Marshe]] (Kate) glances quickly in that direction before continuing with the scene.
* [[Anthony Jacobs]] (Doc Holliday) fluffs a line after Dodo holds a gun on him, Jacobs saying, "For the first time in my life, I have just been taken - beaten...to the draw."
* [[Shane Rimmer]] (Seth Harper) fluffs a line in "A Holiday for the Doctor", saying, " You don't know where Holliday....y-you never met Holliday either?"
* [[Peter Purves]] slips on the step upon entering the saloon for the first time and stumbles forward while looking behind him.
* When Doc Holliday hears Harper talking to the Doctor in his surgery, he moves behind a door to eavesdrop. However, he hits the door, producing a loud thud, and has to grab it to stop it from closing.
* The bar at the saloon wobbles badly as Harper crashes into it after having been shot by Holliday.
* Steven and Dodo's accents change frequently without anybody seeming to notice.
* When explaining to Wyatt that Steven has gone with Johnny Ringo to find Dodo, he{{who}} refers to Steven as "she".
* As he's leaving with the Doctor following that exchange, Wyatt fumbles his line to Warren saying, "Well, Warren, my lad, guess you're gonna left- have to leave you in charge, after all, huh?"


==Continuity==
== Continuity ==
*Directly follows [[DW]]: ''[[The Celestial Toymaker]]''.
* The Doctor returned to the Wild West several times. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[A Town Called Fortune (audio story)|A Town Called Fortune]]'', [[PROSE]]: ''[[Peacemaker (novel)|Peacemaker]]'', [[TV]]: ''[[A Town Called Mercy (TV story)|A Town Called Mercy]]'')
*The Doctor returns to the 'Wild West' 1880s in [[NSA]]: ''[[Peacemaker]]''.
* After being [[hypnosis|conditioned]] by the [[computer|artificial intelligence]] [[WOTAN]] on [[20 July]] [[1966]], Dodo suffered a nervous breakdown. She left the TARDIS soon after. Her claims to have met Wild West gunfighters and other similarly outlandish stories resulted in her being sent to a [[Glasshouse|psychiatric institution]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Who Killed Kennedy (novel)|Who Killed Kennedy]]'')
* The [[Torchwood Institute]] tracked the Doctor to Tombstone after the gunfight. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Time Machination (comic story)|The Time Machination]]'')
* Despite claiming to never touch alcohol, the Doctor previously accepted an offer of mead in Northumbria in 1066, describing it as "delightful". ([[TV]]: ''[[The Time Meddler (TV story)|The Time Meddler]]'')


==Timeline==
== Home video and audio releases ==
*This story occurs after [[DW]]: ''[[The Celestial Toymaker]]''
=== DVD release ===
*This story occurs before [[ST]]: ''[[64 Carlysle Street]]''
This story was released on DVD in 2011 as part of a boxset called ''[[Earth Story]]'' which also included ''[[The Awakening (TV story)|The Awakening]]''.


==Home video and audio releases==
==== Special features ====
* Commentary by [[Peter Purves]] ([[Steven Taylor|Steven]]), [[Shane Rimmer]] ([[Seth Harper]]), [[David Graham]] ([[Charlie (The Gunfighters)|Charlie]]), [[Richard Beale]] ([[Bat Masterson]]), production assistant [[Tristan de Vere Cole]], and moderator [[Toby Hadoke]]
* ''[[The End of the Line? (documentary)|The End of the Line?]]'' - A new documentary about the turbulent third year of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' featuring [[Maureen O'Brien]] ([[Vicki Pallister|Vicki]]), [[Anneke Wills]] ([[Polly Wright|Polly]]) and Peter Purves (Steven), script editor [[Donald Tosh]], new series writer [[Gareth Roberts]], and long-term viewer [[Ian Levine]]
* ''[[Tomorrow's Times: The First Doctor (documentary)|Tomorrow's Times - The First Doctor]]'' - What the papers said about [[William Hartnell]]'s time in [[The Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]]
* ''[[Radio Times]]'' listings (DVD-ROM)
* Production information subtitles
* Photo gallery
* Coming Soon trailer - ''[[Paradise Towers (TV story)|Paradise Towers]]''


* '''Video Release''' - Released as "Doctor Who: The Gunfighters"
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true">
::[[UK]] Release: [[November]] [[2002]] / [[US]] Release: [[October]] [[2003]]
Gunfighters region2.jpg|Region 2 cover
Earth_Story_UK_Box_Set.jpg|Earth Story Box Set Region 2
The_Gunfighters_AUS_DVD.jpg|Region 4 cover
Earth Story.jpg|Earth Story Box Set Region 4
The gunfighters.jpg|Region 1 cover
</gallery>
 
=== Digital releases ===
This story is available:
* for streaming through [[BritBox]] ([[US]]) as part of Season 3 of ''Classic Doctor Who''.
 
=== Video release ===
This story was released as ''Doctor Who: The Gunfighters''.
::[[UK]] Release: [[November (releases)|November]] [[2002 (releases)|2002]] / [[US]] Release: [[October (releases)|October]] [[2003 (releases)|2003]]
::PAL - [[BBC Video]] BBCV7277
::PAL - [[BBC Video]] BBCV7277
::NTSC - [[Warner Video]]
::NTSC - [[Warner Video]]
:Released as part of [[The First Doctor Collection]] in the UK (BBCV 7268)
:Released as part of [[The First Doctor Collection]] in the UK (BBCV 7268)
:Released as part of [[The End of the Universe Collection]] in the US
:Released as part of [[The End of the Universe Collection]] in the US as well as being released separately.
* Editing for VHS release was completed by the [[Doctor Who Restoration Team]].
::There is a small error in the restoration, as the OK Corral gunfight was VidFIREd despite it being shot on film.
 
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true">
The_Gunfighters_UK_VHS.jpg|The Gunfighters VHS UK Cover
The_First_Doctor_UK_VHS_Box_Set.jpg|The First Doctor VHS UK Box Set Cover
The First Doctor Collection.jpg|The First Doctor VHS AUS Box Set Cover
The_Gunfighters_US_VHS.jpg|The Gunfighters VHS US Cover
The_The_End_of_the_Universe_US_VHS_Box_Set.jpg|The End of the Universe VHS US Box Set Cover
</gallery>


*Editing for VHS release completed by [[Doctor Who Restoration Team]].
=== Audio releases ===
* This story was released on CD by BBC Audio in [[February (releases)|February]] [[2007 (releases)|2007]] with linking narration and a bonus interview with [[Peter Purves]]. The release also included several extra chapters with all the different lyrics to [[The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon]].
* This story was re-released in September 2013 as part of the box set ''[[The TV Episodes - Collection Six]]''.


==Novelisation and its audiobook==
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true">
[[Image:Gunfighters novel.jpg|right|75px]]
The_Gunfighters_CD_Soundtrack.jpg|CD release
: ''Main article: [[The Gunfighters (novelisation)]]''
Lost TV Eps coll6 cover.jpg|The TV Episodes - Collection Six
</gallery>


Novelised as ''[[The Gunfighters (novelisation)|The Gunfighters]]'' in [[1986]] by [[Donald Cotton]]. Cotton's book contains many differences from the televised story, including a startling moment where the Doctor initially takes Doc Holliday's place in the gunfight, and actually triggers it by accidentially discharging his firearm and apparently killing two men.
== Footnotes ==
{{reflist}}


==See also==
== External links ==
''to be added''
* {{bbcepguideclassic|gunfighters/|The Gunfighters}}
* {{radiotimes|2009-03-20/the-gunfighters|The Gunfighters}}
{{dwcast}}
{{dwrefguide|who_z.htm|The Gunfighters}}
* {{briefhistory|serials/z.html|The Gunfighters}}
{{DWTV}}
{{TitleSort}}
[[he:האקדוחנים]]
[[ru:Меткие стрелки]]


==External links==
[[Category:Doctor Who (1963) television stories]]
*{{bbcepguideclassic|gunfighters/|The Gunfighters}}
[[Category:First Doctor television stories]]
*{{dwrefguide|who_z.htm|The Gunfighters}}
[[Category:Stories set in Arizona]]
*{{briefhistory|serials/z.html|The Gunfighters}}
[[Category:Stories set in 1881]]
{{season 3}}
[[Category:1966 television stories]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gunfighters}}
[[Category:First Doctor episodes|Gunfighters, The]]
[[Category:Stories set in Arizona|Gunfighters, The]]
[[Category:Stories set in 1881|Gunfighters, The]]
[[Category:1966 television stories|Gunfighters, The]]
[[Category:Historical stories|Gunfighters, The]]
[[Category:Season 3 stories]]
[[Category:Season 3 stories]]
[[Category:Four part serials]]
[[Category:Musical stories]]

Latest revision as of 20:01, 3 November 2024

RealWorld.png

The Gunfighters was the eighth serial of season 3 of Doctor Who. It was Doctor Who's first attempt at a western, and, indeed, the first story in any medium principally set in the United States — though the First Doctor had briefly visited New York City in The Chase and Hollywood in The Daleks' Master Plan.

The story gave director Rex Tucker his first, and only, on-screen credit, despite his heavy involvement in the formative weeks of Doctor Who's pre-production in 1963, before Verity Lambert was hired. It was also the first televised story to have a song written especially for it. The next story to have an original song didn't come until The King's Demons almost twenty years later. Conversely, its final episode, "The O. K. Corral", was the last individually-titled episode, discounting charity events, until Rose. Both conditions — titled episodes and original songs — became more commonplace in the BBC Wales era.

The Gunfighters was notable for its casting, both proposed and actual. The role of Johnny Ringo was offered to veteran actor Patrick Troughton, soon to be cast as the Second Doctor, but he was too busy. Other notable actors such as Donald Sutherland, John Carson and Carol Cleveland were also considered for guest roles. (TCH 7)

Anthony Jacobs, who played Doc Holliday, was the father of Matthew Jacobs and brought his son onto the set. The younger Jacobs later wrote the 1996 telemovie, somewhat muddying the common fan argument that the Paul McGann movie was the "American" version of Doctor Who.

Despite its many notable factors, and its reputation having warmed slightly over time, the serial was one of the worst-received in the series' history. Its poor ratings and low audience appreciation figures strengthened Innes Lloyd's argument that historical stories should be axed, though two more were produced before the format was dropped.

Synopsis[[edit] | [edit source]]

When the First Doctor, Steven and Dodo arrive in the town of Tombstone in 1881, the Doctor's only aim is to find a dentist. Adamant that they should only stay a night in Tombstone, the Doctor finds their stay prolonged when he inadvertently becomes involved with a group of gunmen out to kill Doc Holliday.

Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]

A Holiday for the Doctor (1)[[edit] | [edit source]]

Three strangers, Ike, Phineas, and Billy Clanton, arrive in Tombstone with one thing on their mind: revenge for their brother's murder at the hands of Doc Holliday. Little do they know they are not the only strangers in town.

The Doctor and his companions materialise in a nearby lot. The Doctor emerges from the TARDIS with a toothache. Steven and Dodo are overjoyed to discover they are in the "wild west", but the Doctor is unsure if this is the place to fix his teeth. Steven and Dodo go back into the TARDIS to change.

Meanwhile, the Clantons meet Seth Harper in the Last Chance Saloon. They talk about their vendetta against Doc Holliday and are overheard by the barman, Charlie, and the singer of the saloon, Kate Fisher.

When Steven and Dodo emerge they are dressed as fancy dress cowboys. Steven tries his best impression of a cowboy, boasting about being "the fastest gun in the west". This is overheard by the local marshal, Wyatt Earp, who takes his shtick as serious and takes him into custody to protect him against Doc Holliday, who will not take kindly to such boasting.

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Kate Fisher, who is Holliday's lover, goes to warn Doc, who has just set up as a dentist. Doc refuses to leave, despite Kate's insistence. They are visited by the town's sheriff, Bat Masterson, who warns Doc against causing any trouble. As Masterson leaves Doc's surgery, he encounters Earp with the Doctor and his companions. By this time the Doctor has worked up a story: he is Doctor Caligari, a travelling player, with his piano player, Dodo DuPont, and singer, Steven Regret. The Doctor enquires if there is a nearby dentist for his toothache. He is directed to Holliday. When the Doctor sees the primitive conditions he tries to back out, but Dodo convinces him. They agree to meet at the saloon. The Doctor enters and interrupts Holliday and Kate mid-clinch. He tries to use this as an excuse to leave but is sat down by Holliday, pleased to have his first customer. The Doctor asks for some sort of anaesthetic. He is offered alcohol or "a rap on the cranium" with Holliday's gun. He rejects both.

In the Last Chance Saloon, the cowboys are getting restless and begin to shoot bottles from behind the bar. This is interrupted by Steven and Dodo, who come in to reserve some rooms. They sign themselves in as a singer and a piano player — something that interests Charlie on account of his last piano player being shot. As Stephen and Dodo go up to their rooms, the Clantons and Seth overhear them mentioning "the Doctor", whom they take to be Holliday, and assume Steven is working in cahoots with Holliday. Seth is charged to go and seek out Holliday whilst Billy is told to convince Steven and Dodo to come and join them in the saloon.

Back at the dentist, the Doctor has had his tooth pulled, and whilst Holliday is in the back room, encounters Seth. Seth greets him with "Doc?" to which the Doctor responds, "I am, yes." Seth then asks "Holliday?" The Doctor, imagining himself to be on a sort of a holiday, misunderstands and responds with the affirmative. Thinking he has found his man, Seth orders the Doctor to be in the saloon in five minutes. This has all been overheard by Holliday, who seizes the opportunity to get out of his situation. He equips the Doctor with his own gun and sends the Doctor on his way.

Seth returns to the bar, and the Clantons force Steven and Dodo to perform a song. Dodo plays the piano while Steven sings "The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon". The Clantons and Seth ready themselves to shoot Holliday as he comes through the door. Outside, the Doctor approaches the Last Chance Saloon.

Don't Shoot the Pianist (2)[[edit] | [edit source]]

Back at the dentist surgery, Doc Holliday gloats that he is setting the Doctor up for a fall. He wonders why Kate isn't answering him and discovers that she has left heading towards the Last Chance Saloon.

Steven and Dodo are still singing and playing the piano when Kate returns and orders Dodo off her piano. She distracts the cowboys by singing to them while Steven plays. Dodo leaves to her room in a mood because of the attention Kate is giving Steven. The Doctor enters and, through a number of misunderstandings, is believed to be Holliday. The Doctor realises their mistake, seemingly remembering the name of the Clantons, and tries to explain. Holliday enters the saloon through a back door and stands on the stair case, listening to the proceedings. The Doctor fails to convince them. Whilst the Doctor brandishes his gun, Holliday fires in such a way to knock Harper's gun from his hand. Kate takes control and orders the four men up against the piano whilst the Doctor holds his gun still. Hearing the shot, Dodo comes down to investigate but meets Holliday, who escorts her back to her room. Wyatt Earp and Masterson enter and try to find out what has happened. Deciding to keep up the pretence that the Doctor is Holliday, Earp arrests the Doctor and leads him from the saloon, allowing the cowboys to continue thinking the Doctor is Holliday. With the Doctor gone, the cowboys turn on Steven.

The Doctor and Kate Fisher take charge.

Kate joins Dodo and Holliday in her room where they plan on waiting until the trouble has died down, despite Dodo's distress at the arrest of the Doctor.

The Doctor has been locked in a gaol, with Earp suggesting that it is safer with his status as a wanted man. Masterson agrees with the ploy; having the Doctor in prison means that the Clantons and Harper will think Holliday is locked up. Earp goes out to find the real Holliday.

In the saloon, Steven tries to convince the others of the Doctor's innocence, saying that if he had the Doctor here he could prove it. The cowboys take this to mean that he is proposing a prison break and agree to back him up.

Upstairs, Doc is thirsty, and Kate reminds him he left a bottle in his dentistry. He says that he'll sneak back.

On arriving at the dentistry, Earp is there and orders him to leave town before the morning. Earp will tell the Clantons the truth tomorrow morning. He explains that Pa Clanton and his sons are rustlers and that he is biding his time before he and his boys run them out of his town.

In the saloon, the Clantons and Harper tell Steven to pass a gun through the gaol-house window to the Doctor with which he can force his way out. They'll wait outside to "welcome him back to society". Steven agrees. Phineas follows him, just in case he makes a run for it with "Holliday".

Dodo asks Kate if she really intends to marry Holliday, an outlaw. Kate replies that she has met many outlaws and that Holliday is the best of the lot, "a real gentleman". Holliday arrives and tells Kate that they have to leave. Earp is gunning for him and he doesn't want to kill a friend.

Steven gives the Doctor the gun through a window, telling him that the Clantons still think he's Holliday. Once he has gone, the Doctor hands the gun to Earp, asking him to meet Steven outside in his stead and to tell him he wants to remain in gaol as it's the safest place for him.

In the saloon, the Clantons incite the locals to violence, telling them to break "Holliday" out of gaol and hang him from the nearest tree. Phineas brings Steven in, whom he found running away from the saloon, and they tie him up, saying that if the Doctor refuses to leave gaol they will hang Steven instead.

Kate has got her stuff together ready for departure when they see the mob pass with Steven from an upstairs window. Doc makes his way downstairs, and Kate calls after him. Hearing the name "Doc", Harper, who has been left behind, enquires if he is Holliday. He says yes and draws his gun faster than Harper, shooting his opponent. Doc tells Kate to ready three horses, planning to take Dodo with them when they leave. Dodo is unsure, but finally complies and they leave the saloon.

Earp and Masterson let the Doctor out of gaol to see the mob gather outside. The Clantons announce that they want "Holliday" within two minutes, or Steven will be hanged.

Johnny Ringo (3)[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Doctor tries to leave, but Earp and Masterson hold him back. Earp says he has a plan and disappears around the back. Billy Clanton fronts up to Masterson as the sheriff pulls a shotgun. Just as they're attaching the noose, Earp attacks, knocking Phineas out. He frees Steven. Realising they're caught in the crossfire of Earp and Masterson, the mob disperses. The bartender, Charlie, arrives and tells the Clantons that Harper is dead, shot by Holliday in the saloon. The Clantons confront Earp, who admits he knew the Doctor wasn't Holliday. Earp threatens them until they leave. Charlie, Earp, Masterson and Steven carry the unconscious Phineas into the gaol. The Doctor says goodbye to Earp and Masterson and says he and Steven intend to leave in the morning.

The noose is placed round Steven's neck.

In the saloon, Pa Clanton tells his sons that he wants to hire Johnny Ringo to help them fight Earp. His sons protest, but he does not think they are capable. They leave. Steven and the Doctor return to the saloon, and Charlie tells them that Dodo left with Holliday. The Doctor claims that Holliday is his friend, recalling how he removed his tooth. They then retire to their rooms, intent on seeking Holliday out in the morning.

Doc, Kate and Dodo find a place to sleep, but Kate wants to continue as they are still near Tombstone. Doc says he doesn't want to be too far away as when the Clantons and the Earps meet he wants to be nearby to help his friend. Dodo is pleased with this as she states that she needs to return to the Doctor as soon as she can too. As Doc leaves to get food, they hear gunfire and he returns. He ran into an old friend who has now "lost his appetite".

Meanwhile, Ringo enters the saloon and talks to Charlie. The barman tells him that the Clantons want help dealing with Earp but Ringo already has a target, Doc Holliday. Charlie tells him that they're also after Doc but Ringo wants to kill him on his own. Charlie promises that he won't tell anyone. Ringo agrees and shoots him dead.

In the morning, Dodo asks Doc if he is going to return her to the Doctor today. He says no. Angered, Dodo takes his gun and threatens him. Doc agrees to take her home and asks Kate to stay. Realising Doc had a gun and was about to shoot her, Dodo faints.

Steven and the Doctor come down into the bar in the morning and find the dead Charlie with Johnny Ringo sitting calmly at the table. The Doctor asks Ringo to wait in the bar for Earp to investigate, but Ringo claims that only Holliday would shoot an unarmed barman. Steven tells Ringo they also seek Holliday. Ringo suspects they want him dead too, and the Doctor denies any intention to kill him. Ringo invites Steven to ride with him after Doc and he agrees.

At the gaol, Wyatt's youngest brother Warren has come with bad news: his other two brothers are too busy to come and help Wyatt. Wyatt says that this is no good and says that Warren is too young to fight. The Doctor visits the gaol and tells Earp that Steven has gone after Holliday with Ringo. He points out that photos of Ringo are all over the gaol on wanted posters. Wyatt is concerned that Ringo may side with the Clantons and goes out to search for him with Masterston. He leaves Warren in charge.

Ringo and Steven split up and search for Holliday at the saloon where he stayed. Ringo finds Kate, a former girlfriend of his. She lies, telling him Holliday was headed for New Mexico with Dodo, with whom he has run off. Ringo tells Kate that he's taking her back to Tombstone as revenge for him spurning her. She refuses, but he threatens her at gunpoint.

In the gaol, Phineas taunts the young Warren Earp. Ike and Billy Clanton enter and threaten him into opening the cell. Warren tries to grab his gun. Billy shoots him. They free Phineas and leave.

The O. K. Corral (4)[[edit] | [edit source]]

In the saloon, Masterson, Earp and the Doctor cover Charlie's body. Masterson and Earp correctly assume Ringo killed Charlie, on the logic that the only other suspect would be the Doctor, who Earp does not believe would have. Recalling that the Clantons still believe the Doctor to have easily intimidated them all in their confrontation in the saloon, Earp deputises the Doctor, giving him a badge and a gun. Again the Doctor shows distaste at being given a firearm, but Earp maintains the Doctor's presence may help enforce a show of power. Virgil Earp enters unexpectedly and offers his support in the fight against the Clantons. Masterson and the Earps leave. The Doctor remains in the saloon.

The Clantons return to Pa and find Ringo there with Kate and Steven. They boastfully tell Pa about killing Warren, and he tells them that it really is war now.

However, Warren is alive...barely. His brothers tend to him in the gaol. He tells them it was a Clanton who shot him, then he dies. Wyatt is furious and tells Virgil to inform the Clantons that they'll meet at dawn, at the O.K. Corral. Masterson tries to convince him that this isn't the way of the lawman. Earp renounces the law.

The Doctor is deputised.

Steven plans to escape to warn the inhabitants of Tombstone about the Clantons, but Kate warns him against the futility of this. The Clantons hear Virgil approach, and Ringo recognises him as the marshal of Dodge City. Virgil gives them his message and asks Steven whose side he is on. Steven tells him he supports the Earps but cannot leave as Pa threatens him. Ringo, who hid upstairs during the talk, returns and lays out a plan to use the Clantons as bait and ambush the Earps from behind while the Clantons go in from the front.

Back at the gaol, both the Doctor and Masterson try to reason with Earp, but their protestations fall on deaf ears. Virgil returns and tells Earp that Kate and Ringo's horse were there. He also informs the Doctor that Steven is there. The Earps figure Ringo is siding with the Clantons. The Doctor tells them they cannot take on both the Clantons and Ringo, but as he does so, Doc enters and announces that they won't have to. When asked by Wyatt why he has returned, he says a girl forced him to at gunpoint. A celebratory Dodo walks into the gaol and embraces the Doctor. Virgil refuses to fight alongside Holliday due to the fact he is an outlaw, but when Doc is told that Kate is with them, he insists. With Doc back, the Doctor hands over his gun and badge, happy to be rid of them. Doc suggests that if Ringo is involved there will be a tactic. He plans to hang back to observe anything Ringo may be trying to pull.

Later that night, Dodo and the Doctor are in the saloon when Masterson enters and asks the Doctor to talk the Clantons out of the fight. He is persuaded that it is the only way of avoiding bloodshed and to allow justice to take its course. The Doctor is given his badge back by Masterson and sets off.

Despite the Doctor's best effort, he arrives at the Clanton ranch after the departure of Ringo and the Clantons. Steven tells the Doctor of Ringo's plan to circle around, and the Doctor tells Pa that they predicted Ringo would side with the Clantons and that Holliday has joined the Earps. Pa is furious to discover that he has been lied to by Kate.

The Clantons and Ringo arrive at the OK Corral whilst the Earps leave to face them. Masterson tries to persuade Earp one last time.

The Earps and Clantons meet and the latter open fire, hoping that they can stop the Earps. Once in range, the Earps also fire. Away from the main fight, Ringo comes across Holliday approaching the fight and is about to shoot Doc when Dodo runs over and alerts him. Ringo takes Dodo hostage while Doc takes cover. He forces Holliday to drop his weapon. Doc throws his weapon down. As Ringo goes to retrieve it, Dodo pushes him down. Doc pulls another gun and shoots him. Holliday tells the dying Ringo he thought he would do better. "I will, next time," Ringo says, then dies. Holliday regroups with Wyatt, telling him Ringo's dead. Billy makes a move to kill Doc, but he misses and Doc kills him instead. Virgil hits Phineas, who dies shortly after. Ike, the only man left to oppose the Earps and Doc, tries to run. Doc corners him and Ike fires his gun, only to find that it's empty. Doc and the Earps kill Ike.

Sometime later, the Doctor and Doc are walking together with Dodo, Steven and Kate. He questions Holliday's reason for leaving. Kate and Doc unveil a wanted poster Masterson has released with Holliday's face upon it. Holliday claims that Wyatt is no longer a lawman, having been involved in the fighting. He gives the poster to the Doctor and then leaves with Kate. The Doctor insists they leave in the TARDIS — much to the disappointment of Dodo.

The TARDIS is now in a different setting, and its crew are dressed differently, discussing where they have arrived. The Doctor tells his companions that he knows exactly where they are: the far future, in a time of peace and prosperity. As they leave the TARDIS, the scanner shows a savage figure appearing on the crest of a hill.

Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]

Uncredited cast[[edit] | [edit source]]

Crew[[edit] | [edit source]]

Uncredited crew[[edit] | [edit source]]

Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Both Dodo and Steven can play the piano.
  • The Doctor wonders why Steven has chosen to dress up like Tom Mix.
  • Johnny Ringo tells Charlie that he's trailed Doc Holliday from Fort Griffin to Tombstone.
  • Kate knows many other famous outlaws, including Jesse James and Billy the Kid.

Influences[[edit] | [edit source]]

Story notes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • This story had the working titles The Wild West, The Gun-Fighters and The Gunslingers. Working titles for the first episode were "Ticket to Tombstone" and "Holliday for Doctor", while those for the second, third and fourth episodes were "Lynching Parties Catered For", "All Roads Lead to Tombstone" and "Guns in the Morning" respectively.[2]
  • This story directly follows The Celestial Toymaker, as the Doctor is suffering from toothache after eating one of Cyril's sweets at the end of "The Final Test".
  • Thunderbirds voice artistes David Graham and Shane Rimmer appear as Charlie the barman and Seth Harper respectively. Graham had also provided Dalek voices for a number of earlier Doctor Who stories and would be later cast as Professor Kerensky in Season 17's City of Death.
  • The closing caption caption of "The O.K. Corral" reads "Next Episode: DR. WHO AND THE SAVAGES". This was the last story to have individual episode titles until Season 11's six-part story Invasion of the Dinosaurs in 1974, when part one was given the on-screen title "Invasion" — also sometimes referred to as "Invasion" part one.
  • The serial features an original song, "The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon", the last time that an original song would be commissioned for the series until the rap song featured in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy (discounting "The King's Song" in The King's Demons). The "Ballad" is performed off-screen by Lynda Baron.
  • Along with Lynda Baron, the "Ballad" was also performed by Peter Purves in "A Holiday for the Doctor" while Jackie Lane mimed playing the piano.
  • The first episode is titled "A Holiday for the Doctor", the first and only episode of the original series to incorporate the "correct" name of the Doctor (as opposed to an episode of The Chase called "The Death of Doctor Who" and 1970 serial Doctor Who and the Silurians, both of which used the technically incorrect "Doctor Who"). The next televised episode to include the name "the Doctor" in its title was the 2005 episode The Doctor Dances, a practice later followed by several others.
  • This was the first full and only serial of the original series to take place completely within the United States. It was thirty years until another US-set story was filmed, namely the 1996 TV movie. The next regular episode to be set within the US did not air until Dalek in 2005.
  • This story contains an example of the play on the series' title — when introducing himself and his companions to Bat Masterson, the Doctor creates aliases for the group, and says of himself, "And lastly, sir, your humble servant, Doctor, er, Caligari." Masterson, confused, asks, "Doctor who?" to which the Doctor responds, "Yes, quite right."
  • The storyline of the serial makes several notable departures from the historical fact. In reality, Wyatt Earp was not the ranking Marshal of Tombstone. Virgil was, and he deputised Wyatt as an emergency, less than an hour before the battle. Kate Holliday probably spoke with a Hungarian accent, not the exaggerated American accent depicted in the show. Bat Masterson, Johnny Ringo, Warren Earp and Phineas Clanton were not present in Tombstone in October 1881. Consequently, neither Ringo nor Phineas Clanton participated in the Gunfight at the O. K. Corral and were therefore not casualties of it as portrayed here. Warren Earp did not die until July 1900, almost 19 years after the events of this story take place. Phineas' brother Ike Clanton survived the gunfight whereas their father Pa Clanton had died in August 1881, about 10 weeks before the battle. Conversely, no reference is made to four of the gunfight's actual participants: Morgan Earp (brother of Warren, Wyatt, and Virgil) and the Clanton brothers' fellow outlaw cowboys Billy Claiborne and Tom and Frank McLaury. Furthermore, Doc Holliday was only 30 years old in 1881 in real life whereas Anthony Jacobs was 48 in 1966. Wyatt was the only member of the Earp combat team who was not wounded.
  • The real Big Nose Kate died at the age of 90, in 1940. William Hartnell was 32 years old then. This is one of the rare instances in which a historical character was within the lifetime of a Doctor Who performer.
  • This story, which includes multiple deaths by shooting and an attempted hanging shown on screen, is one of the most violent Doctor Who TV stories.
  • The Savage, who appears on the TARDIS scanner screen at the end of "The O.K. Corral", was played by John Raven (DWM 221), who remained uncredited both on-screen and in Radio Times.
  • Rex Tucker requested that his director's credit be removed from the closing roller caption of "The O.K. Corral", following a disagreement with Innes Lloyd over the editing of the episode. However, Tucker was still billed as director in the Radio Times programme listing.
  • Jane Tucker, of Rod, Jane, and Freddy/Rainbow fame, appears briefly in the Lynch Mob scene. Tucker was the daughter of director Rex Tucker. (DWM 221)
  • Various actors were considered for guest roles:
  • When the Clantons force Steven and Dodo to perform "The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon", originally, Dodo was to sing while Steven played the piano. Jackie Lane proved to be a mediocre vocalist and so Peter Purves reluctantly agreed to swap roles so that he sang the Ballad while Lane pretended to play the piano.
  • Peter Purves hated working on this serial, calling it a "crummy script". He and William Hartnell didn't get on with director Rex Tucker, who felt that the series was beneath him — Tucker had in fact originally been pencilled in to produce and direct the pilot episode before those roles were taken by Verity Lambert and Waris Hussein respectively, but felt that it had become a juvenile sci-fi series in the years since.
  • Despite the fact the character of Johnny Ringo only turns up in the third and fourth episodes, "Johnny Ringo" and "The O.K. Corral", the role was regarded as the main guest star role for this serial.
  • Rex Tucker wanted to cast American and/or Canadian actors as much as possible to lend some authenticity to the proceedings, but this proved difficult.
  • Rex Tucker hoped that Jane Tucker would sing "The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon", but her voice lacked the necessary gravitas. Sheena Marshe was also deemed unsuitable.
  • For historical research, Donald Cotton contacted a friend, cabaret performer Tony Snell, who was working in the United States at the time and was able to visit Tombstone. In composing his scripts, however, Cotton hewed closer to the legendary version of the Gunfight.
  • John Alderson previously played Virgil Earp in the You Are There episode "The Gunfight at the O.K. Corral".
  • While Kate Fisher was a fictional character, she was loosley based on Doc Holliday's wife, “Big Nose” Kate Horony, also known as Kate Elder.
  • Reuben Clanton and Seth Harper were fictional characters.
  • Donald Cotton devised "The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon" as a mood piece. Rex Tucker turned it into a narrative piece to be played throughout the story.
  • Innes Lloyd and Gerry Davis weren't happy with being saddled with such a comedic story. They hoped to drop the serial entirely and replace it with The Savages.

Ratings[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • "A Holiday For The Doctor" - 6.5 million viewers
  • "Don't Shoot The Pianist" - 6.6 million viewers
  • "Johnny Ringo" - 6.2 million viewers
  • "The O.K. Corral" - 5.7 million viewers

Myths[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The Gunfighters was the least-watched Doctor Who story ever, and/or got the lowest-ever Audience Appreciation score. (There were a number of stories with lower viewing figures, including The Savages, The War Machines and The Smugglers, plus every story after the 1986 hiatus. Its Audience Appreciation score technically is the lowest in the show's history, but the scoring system changed several times throughout the show's run, and thus the score cannot really be compared to a story from the 1970s or 1980s.)
  • A similar rumour holds that The Gunfighters is consistently the lowest-ranked story among fans. (While it may have at one point held this dishonour, the last few polls conducted by Doctor Who Magazine place the story twenty points or more above the bottom.)
  • Sheena Marshe, who played Kate Fisher, was director Rex Tucker's daughter. (She was unrelated to him; his daughter Jane Tucker, later to find fame as one-third of the Rod, Jane and Freddy group of children's entertainers, did, however, appear as a walk-on in the story.)

Filming locations[[edit] | [edit source]]

Production errors[[edit] | [edit source]]

If you'd like to talk about narrative problems with this story — like plot holes and things that seem to contradict other stories — please go to this episode's discontinuity discussion.
  • In the first shot of the O.K. Corral sign, the K already has bullet holes in it. The holes shouldn't have appeared until Billy shoots the sign in the next scene.
  • As Kate moves towards Ringo after she recognises him, something falls off-screen with a clatter. Sheena Marshe (Kate) glances quickly in that direction before continuing with the scene.
  • Anthony Jacobs (Doc Holliday) fluffs a line after Dodo holds a gun on him, Jacobs saying, "For the first time in my life, I have just been taken - beaten...to the draw."
  • Shane Rimmer (Seth Harper) fluffs a line in "A Holiday for the Doctor", saying, " You don't know where Holliday....y-you never met Holliday either?"
  • Peter Purves slips on the step upon entering the saloon for the first time and stumbles forward while looking behind him.
  • When Doc Holliday hears Harper talking to the Doctor in his surgery, he moves behind a door to eavesdrop. However, he hits the door, producing a loud thud, and has to grab it to stop it from closing.
  • The bar at the saloon wobbles badly as Harper crashes into it after having been shot by Holliday.
  • Steven and Dodo's accents change frequently without anybody seeming to notice.
  • When explaining to Wyatt that Steven has gone with Johnny Ringo to find Dodo, he[who?] refers to Steven as "she".
  • As he's leaving with the Doctor following that exchange, Wyatt fumbles his line to Warren saying, "Well, Warren, my lad, guess you're gonna left- have to leave you in charge, after all, huh?"

Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]

Home video and audio releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

DVD release[[edit] | [edit source]]

This story was released on DVD in 2011 as part of a boxset called Earth Story which also included The Awakening.

Special features[[edit] | [edit source]]

Digital releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

This story is available:

  • for streaming through BritBox (US) as part of Season 3 of Classic Doctor Who.

Video release[[edit] | [edit source]]

This story was released as Doctor Who: The Gunfighters.

UK Release: November 2002 / US Release: October 2003
PAL - BBC Video BBCV7277
NTSC - Warner Video
Released as part of The First Doctor Collection in the UK (BBCV 7268)
Released as part of The End of the Universe Collection in the US as well as being released separately.
There is a small error in the restoration, as the OK Corral gunfight was VidFIREd despite it being shot on film.

Audio releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 BBC Official Site
  2. How the West Was Done by Lucas Testro, DWM Issue 581 (September 2022).

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