1988: Difference between revisions
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* [[25 December|25]] - [[Terence Dudley]], writer and director, died. | * [[25 December|25]] - [[Terence Dudley]], writer and director, died. | ||
* [[28 December|28]] - [[TV]]: ''[[The Greatest Show in the Galaxy]]'' Part Three was first broadcast. | * [[28 December|28]] - [[TV]]: ''[[The Greatest Show in the Galaxy]]'' Part Three was first broadcast. | ||
[[Category:Years]] | [[Category:Years]] |
Revision as of 22:50, 4 January 2013
Timeline for 1988 |
1982 • 1983 • 1984 • 1985 • 1986 • 1987 • 1989 • 1990 • 1991 • 1992 • 1993 • 1994 |
Events
July
- 31 - Lucie Miller, a future travelling companion of the Eighth Doctor, was born in Blackpool. (AUDIO: Brave New Town)
November
- 23 - The Nemesis statue returned to Earth after three hundred fifty years. Lady Peinforte arrived to regain it. The Seventh Doctor used it to destroy the Cyber-Fleet. (TV: Silver Nemesis)
Unknown date
- The Eighth Doctor and Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart discovered the secret of the Embodiment of Gris in Hong Kong. (PROSE: The Dying Days)
Behind the scenes
January
- Titan Books launched a new line of books entitled Doctor Who: The Scripts, with the publication of the script for TV: An Unearthly Child, which was published under the working title The Tribe of Gum. This series of books continued until 1994, although the second volume was not published for some eighteen months.
- 16 - Robert Keegan (Sholakh in TV: The Ribos Operation) died.
- 21 - PROSE: Doctor Who - The Rescue was first published. This was the second and last novelisation by the late Ian Marter to be published posthumously. The book included a tribute to the actor/writer, who died soon after writing the book.
February
- 15 - BBC Broadcasting Research issued its Television Audience Reaction Report for Season 24 of Doctor Who, which had introduced a new Doctor, Sylvester McCoy. The show's Appreciation Index was 60, down from 69 for Season 23. Troubling numbers in the report indicated that the new Doctor and his companion, Mel, were not popular with viewers. Fewer than half were interested in seeing further seasons of the series. Despite this, viewer count actually rose over the previous year.[1]
- 15 - Red Dwarf debuted on the BBC. This science fiction comedy series became the BBC's longest-running SF program after Doctor Who, producing nine seasons over the next twenty-one years.
- 18 - PROSE: Doctor Who - Terror of the Vervoids was first published. It was the first of four novelisations based upon TV: The Trial of a Time Lord, even though it was the third chapter of the arc.
- 18 - REF Doctor Who: The Early Years was published in paperback.
March
- PROSE: Doctor Who - The Time Meddler was first published.
- REF: Encyclopedia of The Worlds of Doctor Who: E-K was first published.
- 23 - Reg Lye (Griffin in TV: The Enemy of the World) died.
April
- 04 - Production of TV: Remembrance of the Daleks caused a brief panic when a large explosion set off on a London side street during filming of a Dalek battle scene was mistaken as a possible IRA bombing. (Remembrance of the Daleks DVD production notes)
- 21 - PROSE: Doctor Who - The Mysterious Planet was first published.
May
- 03 - David Garth, who played Grey in TV: The Highlanders and the Time Lord in TV: Terror of the Autons, died.
- 05 - PROSE: Doctor Who - Time and the Rani was first published. It was the first Seventh Doctor novelisation and the first to use the new Sylvester McCoy-era series logo (though it did not immediately replace the neon-tube logo on all Target Books releases). It was the first photographic cover since PROSE: Doctor Who - Enlightenment four years earlier. Canadian fans noticed a substantial (but ultimately temporary) jump in the cover price of Doctor Who books (on the order of $2-$3) beginning with this release.
- 23 - The musical group called The Timelords released "Doctorin' the Tardis". It was a dance single built around the Doctor Who theme and recordings by Gary Glitter and with a Dalek voice featured, and was released in the UK. It became a substantial hit. (The group later rebranded itself The KLF and enjoyed further hits in the 1990s.)
June
- 05 - Michael Barrington (Sir Colin Thackeray in TV: The Seeds of Doom) died.
- 06 - The Timelords musical group released "Gary in the TARDIS", a follow-up to their earlier single, "Doctorin' the TARDIS", featuring Gary Glitter.
- 16 - PROSE: Doctor Who - Vengeance on Varos was first published.
July
- 21 - PROSE: Doctor Who - The Underwater Menace was first published.
- 22 - Patrick Newell (Colonel Faraday in TV: The Android Invasion) died.
August
- 08 - David Tennant made his TV acting debut in "The Secret of Croftmore", an episode of Dramarama.
- 18 - PROSE: Doctor Who - The Wheel in Space was first published. It was the final Target Books release to use the neon-tube series logo established in 1980. All further releases used the McCoy era logo introduced in 1987. This book had an extremely low print run which resulted in it becoming a collector's item.
- 18 - In an effort to boost sales of older novelisations, Target Books launched the Doctor Who Classics line of releases. These were omnibus reissues of novelisations, two per volume. Two books were released this date (with the original book titles shortened to their original TV titles in the case of those with Doctor Who and... in the original release): PROSE: Dalek Invasion of Earth/The Crusaders and PROSE: The Myth Makers/The Gunfighters.
September
- 01 - YTV, a Canadian youth-oriented cable network, was launched. During its first few years, Doctor Who was a regular part of the schedule, with YTV being one of the first North American broadcasters to show episodes from the Sylvester McCoy era.
- 15 - PROSE: Doctor Who - The Ultimate Foe was first published.
- 15 - Doctor Who Classics - PROSE: The Dominators/The Krotons was published.
- 20 - REF: Doctor Who: 25 Glorious Years was published in paperback.
October
- REF: Encyclopedia of The Worlds of Doctor Who: A-D was published in paperback.
- 05 - TV: Remembrance of the Daleks Part One was first broadcast, launching Doctor Who's history-making 25th season.
- 08 - Sylvester McCoy appeared as himself in the "Clown Court" segment of The Noel Edmunds Saturday Roadshow, which presented outtakes from TV: Delta and the Bannermen, TV: Silver Nemesis and a bonus blooper from TV: The Visitation with Peter Davison.
- 11 - Roy Herrick, who performed in three Doctor Who serials, died.
- 12 - TV: Remembrance of the Daleks Part Two was first broadcast.
- 14 - Mary Morris, who played Panna in TV: Kinda, died.
- 19 - TV: Remembrance of the Daleks Part Three was first broadcast.
- 20 - PROSE: Doctor Who - The Edge of Destruction was first published.
- 26 - TV: Remembrance of the Daleks Part Four was first broadcast. It was the final appearance of Davros until TV: The Stolen Earth and the final on-screen appearance of the Daleks until TV: Dalek.
November
- REF: Doctor Who: Cybermen was first published.
- It's Bigger on the Inside!, a collection of Doctor Who-related humour, was first published by Marvel Comics.
- 02 - TV: The Happiness Patrol Part One was first broadcast.
- 07 - BBC Audio issued the 1986 radio play AUDIO: Slipback and the 1979 audio version of TV: Genesis of the Daleks on cassette.
- 09 - TV: The Happiness Patrol Part Two was first broadcast.
- 16 - TV: The Happiness Patrol Part Three was first broadcast.
- 16 - REF: Encyclopedia of The Worlds of Doctor Who: E-K was published in paperback.
- 17 - PROSE: Doctor Who - The Smugglers was first published.
- 17 - REF: Doctor Who: 25 Glorious Years was first published.
- 23 - TV: Silver Nemesis Part One was first broadcast on the twenty-fifth anniversary of the first broadcast of Doctor Who.
- 30 - TV: Silver Nemesis Part Two was first broadcast.
December
- REF: The Official Doctor Who & the Daleks Book, a retrospective by John Peel and Terry Nation, was first published.
- REF: Doctor Who Magazine Master Index was published.
- 01 - PROSE: Doctor Who - Paradise Towers was first published. The cover art featuring an image of Sylvester McCoy marked the first time in four and a half years that an image of the current Doctor was included on a Target Books release.
- 07 - TV: Silver Nemesis Part Three was first broadcast. It was the final on-screen appearance of the original Cybermen (save for brief references) to date.
- 14 - TV: The Greatest Show in the Galaxy Part One was first broadcast.
- 21 - TV: The Greatest Show in the Galaxy Part Two was first broadcast.
- 25 - Terence Dudley, writer and director, died.
- 28 - TV: The Greatest Show in the Galaxy Part Three was first broadcast.