1962: Difference between revisions

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== Events ==
== Events ==
=== [[October]] ===
=== [[October]] ===
* [[10 October|10]] - [[Edward Grainger]] travelled to Checkpoint Charlie in [[Berlin|West Berlin]] to meet an agent who was preparing to cross the [[Berlin Wall]] from [[Germany|East Germany]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Checkpoint (short story)|Checkpoint]]'')
* [[10 October|10]] - The British Intelligence operative [[Edward Grainger]] travelled to Checkpoint Charlie in [[Berlin|West Berlin]] to meet an agent who was preparing to cross the [[Berlin Wall]] from [[Germany|East Germany]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Checkpoint (short story)|Checkpoint]]'')
* [[Section Eight]] used the dark arts to end the [[Cuban Missile Crisis]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Heart of TARDIS]]'')
* [[Section Eight]] used the dark arts to end the [[Cuban Missile Crisis]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Heart of TARDIS]]'')



Revision as of 10:22, 16 September 2012

Timeline for 1962
20th century | 1960s

1956 • 1957 • 1958 • 1959 • 1960 • 1961 • 1963 • 1964 • 1965 • 1966 • 1967 • 1968
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Events

October

November

Unknown dates

Alternative timeline

Behind the scenes

April

  • 25 - Donald Wilson, head of Serial Drama for BBC TV, received a four-page report from the BBC Survey Group discussing whether the production of an in-house science-fiction TV series was feasible and warranted. According to the BBC Archives, this was the spark of what eventually led to the commissioning of Doctor Who.[1]

June

  • 20 - Stuart Clarke, a stunt performer for Doctor Who, was born.
  • 30 - Out of This World debuted on ITV. This science fiction series, created by Irene Shubik and overseen by Sydney Newman, was considered a precursor to Doctor Who. It featured episodes written by Terry Nation and other future Doctor Who writers.

July

  • 25 - Donald Wilson received a follow-up report from the BBC Survey Group discussing potential story ideas for a BBC-produced science fiction series. The report included synopses of several science fiction novels, including the time-travel-based The Guardians of Time by Poul Anderson.[2]

August

October

November

  • 10 - "The Mauritius Penny", an episode of The Avengers (created by Sydney Newman), aired in the UK. It is the earliest writing credit in the Internet Movie Database attributed to future Doctor Who stalwart Terrance Dicks.

December

Unknown Date

Footnotes