Pseudonym: Difference between revisions

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==== Comics ====
==== Comics ====
* ''[[Maxwell Stockbridge]]'': This pseudonym (Which later lent its name to the fictional town of [[Stockbridge]] from early ''[[Doctor Who Monthly]]'' stories and to prominent Stockbridge resident [[Maxwell Edison]]) concealed the identity of ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' editor [[Alan McKenzie]], among others, and was also used as the name of the author of several stories featuring Marvel's vigilante character 'Night Raven' from 1981 onwards.
* ''[[Maxwell Stockbridge]]'': This pseudonym (Which later lent its name to the fictional town of [[Stockbridge]] from early ''[[Doctor Who Monthly]]'' stories and to prominent Stockbridge resident [[Maxwell Edison]]) concealed the identity of ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' editor [[Alan McKenzie]], among others. It was also used as the name of the author of several stories featuring Marvel's vigilante character 'Night Raven' from 1981 onwards.
* ''[[Richard Alan]]'': A pseudonym used by [[Richard Starkings]] for co-writer credit on his ''Doctor Who Magazine'' comics stories.
* ''[[Richard Alan]]'': A pseudonym used by [[Richard Starkings]] for co-writer credit on his ''Doctor Who Magazine'' comics stories.



Revision as of 20:24, 21 June 2012

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A pseudonym is a false name under which a writer publishes his or her work. Few Doctor Who writers have regularly written under an assumed name. Most have been used under very specific circumstances. Most often writers have used a pseudonym when they wrote a story but weren't legally entitled to receive credit for it. On other occasions, a pseudonym was used as a way to share credit amongst several writers or to express dissatisfaction in the way their story had been handled by the producers or publishers.

List

Writers

Television

Comics

Prose

Actors

Other pseudonyms

  • The Elusive David Agnew, a featurette on the 2008 DVD release of The Invasion of Time, was a tongue-in-cheek profile of the pseudononymous David Agnew. In keeping with the joke, the director of the featurette is uncredited; instead, the credit Alan Smithee is used, a reference to the infamous pseudonym used by Hollywood film and TV directors.