1996: Difference between revisions

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=== [[January]] ===
=== [[January]] ===
* [[James Stevens]] began writing ''[[Who Killed Kennedy]]''. ([[MA]]: ''[[Who Killed Kennedy]]'')
* [[22 January|22]] - [[James Stevens]] began writing ''[[Who Killed Kennedy]]''. ([[MA]]: ''[[Who Killed Kennedy]]'')
 
=== [[April]] ===
=== [[April]] ===
* [[James Stevens]] went missing, having travelled back in time to [[Kennedy assassination|assassinate Kennedy]]. ([[MA]]: ''[[Who Killed Kennedy]]'')
* [[James Stevens]] went missing, having travelled back in time to [[Kennedy assassination|assassinate Kennedy]]. ([[MA]]: ''[[Who Killed Kennedy]]'')

Revision as of 23:14, 14 September 2012

Timeline for 1996
20th century | 1990s

1990 • 1991 • 1992 • 1993 • 1994 • 1995 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 2002
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Events

January

April

Unknown Dates

Behind the scenes

January

February

March

April

May

  • 12 - CITV in Edmonton, Canada, was the first broadcaster to air the DW: Doctor Who TV movie, two days before its "official" premiere in the US.
  • 14DW: Doctor Who was first broadcast on the Fox Broadcasting Company in America, marking the return of Doctor Who to the screen. Sylvester McCoy regenerated into Paul McGann for McGann's (to date) only on-screen appearance as the Eighth Doctor. The film introduced a new theme music arrangement by John Debney (the late Ron Grainer was not credited, however), and reinstated the Jon Pertwee era logo from 1970-1973. This logo replaced the 1987 series logo as the franchise branding, and continued to be used into 2009 to denote "past Doctor"-related products following the 2005 series revival. The ratings proved to be a disappointment, and Fox declined to commission a TV series or further movies. Subsequently, issues over rights and licensing prevented the telefilm from being released to home video in North America until 2011, although UK home video release occurred not long after its broadcast there.
  • 16 - NA: Happy Endings was first published. Promoted as the fiftieth book in the Virgin New Adventures line, it featured cameo appearances by many characters from both the TV series and the NA books, and was notable for "outing" Mike Yates. Benny Summerfield ceased to be a regular companion with this novel, though she returned in later volumes and ultimately took over the New Adventures line after Virgin lost the Doctor Who licence.
  • 16 - MA: The Sands of Time was first published.
  • 16 - REF: Doctor Who: A History of the Universe was first published.
  • 17 - Doctor Who - The Script of the Film was first published.
  • 20 - Jon Pertwee (the Third Doctor) died from a heart attack in his sleep whilst in Connecticut.
  • 25 - The TV movie was promoted on the cover of the Radio Times.
  • 27 - DW: Doctor Who was first broadcast on BBC1. The UK broadcast included some minor edits related to violence, and also included an on-screen dedication to the memory of Jon Pertwee. Unlike the US showing, the UK broadcast was considered a ratings winner, but without US support, the telefilm did not result in a series revival.
  • Doctor Who - The Novel of the Film was first published. This was the first novelisation of a televised story to not be published by Target Books or an affiliate. It was the first Doctor Who novel to be published by BBC Books, and led to the imprint taking over the Doctor Who fiction licence from Virgin Books (it was not, however, considered part of the later Eighth Doctor Adventures line). It was the last novelisation of a televised Doctor Who story to date, and the last novelisation of any kind until WC: Scream of the Shalka was adapted in 2004.

Spring 1996

  • Around the time the novelisation of the telefilm was published, a major shake-up occurred in the Doctor Who publishing world when it was announced that BBC Books had taken on the licence to publish fiction featuring the Doctor and other BBC-owned characters and concepts from the franchise. Virgin Books, which had been publishing original novels since 1991 and also owned the Target Books line which dated back to 1973, announced its Virgin New Adventures and Virgin Missing Adventures lines would conclude in 1997, after several remaining commissioned novels were published. Virgin, however, also announced it would continue the New Adventures line after that point, focusing on the character of Benny Summerfield.

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

  • 5 - NA: Bad Therapy was first published. Roz Forrester was no longer a companion, but readers had to wait until NA: So Vile a Sin was finally published to find out why. Peri Brown made a return appearance.
  • 5 - MA: Cold Fusion was first published. It was the first and only Missing Adventures novel to feature more than one incarnation of the Doctor, and the first to feature the Seventh Doctor. At one point Virgin planned for Seventh Doctor adventures to continue in the Missing Adventures line after novels began to appear featuring the Eighth Doctor, but this did not happen. This was also the final Missing Adventures novel to feature the Fifth Doctor.
  • 5 - REF: The Completely Useless Encyclopedia was first published.

Unknown

Footnotes

  1. Time Rift. Doctor Who Reference Guide. Retrieved on 11th December 2011.
  2. M KNIGHT For the Registrar the Comptroller-General (14th day of August 2002). IN THE MATTER OF Application No. 2104259 by The British Broadcasting Corporation to register a series of three marks in Classes 9, 16, 25 and 41 AND IN THE MATTER OF Opposition thereto under No. 48452 by The Metropolitan Police Authority (PDF). Intellectual Property Office (UK). Retrieved on 11th December 2011.