2010: Difference between revisions
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* [[AUDIO]]: ''[[Bernice Summerfield and the Criminal Code]]'' was first released. While earlier instalments of [[The Companion Chronicles]] had featured former TV companions, this story featured [[Benny Summerfield]], a companion created for the [[Virgin New Adventures]] novels. | * [[AUDIO]]: ''[[Bernice Summerfield and the Criminal Code]]'' was first released. While earlier instalments of [[The Companion Chronicles]] had featured former TV companions, this story featured [[Benny Summerfield]], a companion created for the [[Virgin New Adventures]] novels. | ||
* The ''[[Radio Times]]'' published a special retrospective magazine available by mail order, entitled ''[[Doctor Who: David Tennant and the Regeneration Years 2005-2010]]''. | * The ''[[Radio Times]]'' published a special retrospective magazine available by mail order, entitled ''[[Doctor Who: David Tennant and the Regeneration Years 2005-2010]]''. | ||
* The Australian-produced spin-off series ''[[K9 (TV series)|K9]]'' began airing in Scandinavia. | * The Australian-produced spin-off series ''[[K9 (TV series)|K9]]'' began airing in Scandinavia. | ||
* [[1 January|1]] - [[TV]]: ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time, Part Two]]'' was first broadcast, concluding the [[David Tennant]] era and marking the debut of [[Matt Smith]] as the [[Eleventh Doctor]]. This was expected to be the final on-screen use of the [[Doctor Who logo|logo]] introduced in 2005 and later modified slightly, as well as the arrangement of the [[Doctor Who theme|''Doctor Who'' theme]] introduced at the end of 2007. The final David Tennant edition of ''[[Doctor Who Confidential]]'' followed. | * [[1 January|1]] - [[TV]]: ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time, Part Two]]'' was first broadcast, concluding the [[David Tennant]] era and marking the debut of [[Matt Smith]] as the [[Eleventh Doctor]]. This was expected to be the final on-screen use of the [[Doctor Who logo|logo]] introduced in 2005 and later modified slightly, as well as the arrangement of the [[Doctor Who theme|''Doctor Who'' theme]] introduced at the end of 2007. The final David Tennant edition of ''[[Doctor Who Confidential]]'' followed. |
Revision as of 14:55, 27 October 2012
Timeline for 2010 |
2004 • 2005 • 2006 • 2007 • 2008 • 2009 • 2011 • 2012 • 2013 • 2014 • 2015 • 2016 |
Events
March
- Jack Harkness investigated the House of the Dead and encountered the ghost of Ianto Jones before it was destroyed. At the same time, the Rift was sealed forever. (AUDIO: The House of the Dead)
- Gwen Cooper and Rhys Williams met with Jack Harkness outside Cardiff. Jack, still mourning the deaths of his grandson, Ianto Jones, Owen Harper, Toshiko Sato and Suzie Costello, used his recovered vortex manipulator to send a signal to a cold fusion freighter just outside the Sol system. He was beamed into space. (TV: Children of Earth: Day Five)
April
- 24: The wedding of Bernice Summerfield and Jason Kane occurred on this date in Cheldon Bonniface, England, Earth. Many guests from throughout time and space attended. (PROSE: Happy Endings)
- Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart was restored to youth and health by the Fortean Flicker. (PROSE: Happy Endings)
Spring
- Some time before Donna's wedding, Joshua Naismith and his daughter, Abigail, were put on trial. (TV: The End of Time)
- The wedding of Donna Noble and Shaun Temple occurred at this time. Among her guests were her mother Sylvia Noble, granddad Wilfred Mott, friend Nerys, and, unbeknownst to her, the Tenth Doctor, who was in the midst of a prolonged regeneration. The Doctor (by way of Sylvia and Wilf) gifted Donna a winning triple rollover lottery ticket. (TV: The End of Time)
June
- 25: The Eleventh Doctor returned to Amy Pond's house two years after the incident with the Atraxi and Prisoner Zero from 2008 and invited her to travel with him. (TV: The Eleventh Hour). They left together, and returned at 11:55 PM after the crash of the Byzantium. (TV: Flesh and Stone)
- 26: The Eleventh Doctor and Amy left for 1580 Venice after picking up Amy's fiancé Rory from his stag party. (TV: Flesh and Stone, The Vampires of Venice). Amy Pond and Rory Williams got married after the Eleventh Doctor, with Amy's help, had restored the universe to its original condition. (TV: The Big Bang)
- Anwen Williams, daughter of Gwen Cooper and Rhys Williams, was born. (TV: Children of Earth: Day One, The New World based on Gwen being two weeks pregnant in Children of Earth)
August
- 19: Luke Smith received his A Level results all (four) A Stars. (TV: The Nightmare Man)
September
- 10: Luke Smith, Clyde Langer and Rani Chandra defeated the Nightmare Man by trapping him inside a dream. Luke left with K9 for Oxford University. (TV: The Nightmare Man)
- Soon after Luke arrived at Oxford, a critically ill Androvax returned to Earth to free the remains of the Veil species from an interdimensional vault there. With Sarah Jane Smith and Mister Dread's help, he took the spaceship with the Veil safely off Earth into space to search for a new home. Mister Dread gave his life saving the day. (TV: The Vault of Secrets)
- Jilly Kitzinger started working for PhiCorp. (TV: Escape to LA)
October
- Sarah Jane Smith was told by UNIT they had found the Eleventh Doctor's body. She, her gang, Jo Jones and her grandson were invited to the Doctor's funeral on Mount Snowdon. The Doctor arrived; his death had been faked by the Claw Shansheeth. Using a machine he built, he swapped places with Clyde Langer from where he had been trapped in the Crimson Heart. With his teleporter fixed by Jo and Sarah Jane, he returned to Earth properly. The Claw Shansheeth and Tia Karim used memory weave technology to attempt to create a TARDIS key from the Doctor's companions' memories. Sarah Jane and Jo overloaded the machine, killing the Shansheeth and Tia. (TV: Death of the Doctor)
November
- Before 23rd November - Clyde and Rani, having been grounded by the Judoon, were the only two humans left on Earth. They found an alien prince, Gavin, and delivered him to royal robots so he could take his rightful place as king of his home planet. Gavin happily teleported to his home planet after he knighted Clyde and Rani and ordered the return of the warp shunted human race. (TV: The Empty Planet)
- 23 - The Shopkeeper requested the Bannerman Road gang's help to acquire Chronosteel at key points in time to save the Earth. While two of the pieces were supplied, one was left behind with Emily Morris in 1889. Her descendant, Angela, having been handed the newspaper article of the red herring the Shopkeeper had used to draw the Bannerman Road gang to him, gave the Shopkeeper the piece, saving the timestream. The Shopkeeper departed with his parrot Captain. (TV: Lost in Time)
Winter
- Sarah Jane encountered an unwilling ally using the alias of Ruby White, who faked Sarah Jane's retirement, taking over 13 Bannerman Road and Mr Smith, trying to kill Sarah Jane by draining her life force. Ruby was defeated by being overwhelmed by humanity's fears of meteors (in simulations created by Mr White, reprogrammed by Luke). She was sent off into space on her prison ship. (TV: Goodbye, Sarah Jane Smith)
- The Eleventh Doctor took Amy Pond to see a Vincent van Gogh exhibit in the Musée d'Orsay. They discovered a monster peeping through a church window in one of van Gogh's paintings. They travelled back to 1890 to discover the meaning of the painting and later took Vincent to 2010 to show modern evaluation of his work. (TV: Vincent and the Doctor) Although the date in the year was not confirmed, the setting indicates that it was winter or nearing it.
Unknown dates
- The Eleventh Doctor and Amy went to New York City and found that the city had been invaded by Vykoids. (PROSE: The Forgotten Army)
- The Tenth Doctor and Majenta Pryce landed in Sydney Australia and foiled an invasion of the Skith. (COMIC: The Age of Ice)
The following events are conjectured as taking place in 2010. None of them, however, include any on-screen indication as to whether they actually occurred this year, but the likeliness was that they do, with Martha and Mickey appearing recently married and having gotten married near September 2009 and Captain Jack appearing to have not been away from Earth long since he left in March this year.
- Martha Jones and her husband Mickey Smith were saved from a Sontaran attack by the Tenth Doctor. (TV: The End of Time)
- At some point after March, the Tenth Doctor visited Jack Harkness, who was recovering from the 456 incident, and hinted that he should start dating Alonso Frame before parting. (TV: Children of Earth: Day Five, TV: The End of Time)
- Verity Newman, great-granddaughter of Joan Redfern, published a semi-autobiography of her great-grandmother, incorporating elements of John Smith's A Journal of Impossible Things. During a book-signing, the Tenth Doctor, who had used a Chameleon arch to temporarily become John, got a copy of the book signed and asked if Joan lived a happy life. (TV: Human Nature/The Family of Blood, The End of Time)
Other timelines
Time Field timeline
- 26 June - River Song arrived some time in the early morning before sunrise after the TARDIS landed there. She investigated Amy's house and found a book on the Pandora's Box and a Roman Britain book beside Amy's bed. She took them for analysis in the TARDIS shortly before it exploded on this date, cracking all of time and space. (TV: The Pandorica Opens)
Pete's World
- Mickey Smith, Jake Simmonds and Pete travelled from a parallel world back to the Doctor's universe. They and Rose and Jackie Tyler were stuck in Pete's World after the tear through the Void closed. (TV: Doomsday)
- Due to time differences between the two worlds, they appeared in 2007 in the other world. See also Pete's World.
Behind the scenes
Early 2010
- Big Finish Productions announced it was reviving its Short Trips line as a series of short audio dramas, with the first release expected in late 2010.[1]
January
- AUDIO: Bernice Summerfield and the Criminal Code was first released. While earlier instalments of The Companion Chronicles had featured former TV companions, this story featured Benny Summerfield, a companion created for the Virgin New Adventures novels.
- The Radio Times published a special retrospective magazine available by mail order, entitled Doctor Who: David Tennant and the Regeneration Years 2005-2010.
- The Australian-produced spin-off series K9 began airing in Scandinavia.
- 1 - TV: The End of Time, Part Two was first broadcast, concluding the David Tennant era and marking the debut of Matt Smith as the Eleventh Doctor. This was expected to be the final on-screen use of the logo introduced in 2005 and later modified slightly, as well as the arrangement of the Doctor Who theme introduced at the end of 2007. The final David Tennant edition of Doctor Who Confidential followed.
- 1 - BBC One also rebroadcasted TV: The End of Time, Part One earlier in the day.
- 1 - Doctor Who's Greatest Moments: The Doctor was rebroadcast on BBC3.
- 1 - Beginning at midnight New Year's Eve/Day, BBC America aired a forty-six-hour marathon of the entire David Tennant era, starting with TV: The Christmas Invasion.
- 1 - TV: Children of Earth was rebroadcast in its entirety on the Canadian network Space.
- 1 - A Dalek made a cameo appearance in an episode of the American sitcom Better Off Ted.
- 1 - Almost immediately after the broadcast of the finale, BBC Online's Doctor Who website began phasing in a new look featuring the new logo and material related to the Eleventh Doctor. Little of this was made available to Internet users outside the UK.
- 2 - TV: The End of Time, Part Two was broadcast in the U.S. on BBC America, ending its forty-six-hour David Tennant marathon.
- 2 - Space Channel in Canada aired both parts of TV: The End of Time for the first time as part of a daylong Doctor Who/Torchwood marathon that included rebroadcasts of all the specials from TV: The Next Doctor to The Waters of Mars and additional rebroadcasts of the complete TV: Children of Earth mini-series.
- 2 - The final David Tennant edition of Doctor Who Confidential was rebroadcast on BBC3.
- 2 - Following its broadcast of TV: The End of Time, Part Two, the BBC received more than a hundred forty complaints from viewers alleging that the Eleventh Doctor's reference to not being ginger was a slight against redheaded people. See 6th January.
- 3 - TV: The End of Time was rebroadcast on Space in Canada.
- Week of 4 January - Production of Series 5 resumed in Cardiff after a Christmas break.
- 5 - The North American DVD release of TV: The Keys of Marinus and TV: The Twin Dilemma took place on this date.
- 5 - The arrival of Matt Smith as the new Doctor Who was the topic of a question on the internationally syndicated American game show Jeopardy.
- 6 - In response to complaints regarding widespread misinterpretation of the Eleventh Doctor's comment from the end of TV: The End of Time, Part Two about not being ginger, the BBC issued an official statement clarifying that the line referenced the Doctor's previously-stated desire to be ginger in TV: The Christmas Invasion, and also noting that both Donna Noble and Amy Pond were redheads.[1](dead link)[additional sources needed]
- 6 - Filming for Series 5 took place in Cardiff at Roald Dahl Plass, attracting media attention.[2]
- 7 - AUDIO: The Last Voyage, an exclusive-to-audio adventure of the Tenth Doctor, was first released.
- 7 - The audio adaptation of PROSE: Doctor Who - The Three Doctors was first released.
- 7 - Doctor Who Magazine debuted a new look incorporating the new Doctor Who logo.
- 7 - TV: The Keys of Marinus was released to DVD in Region 4.
- Early January - Production of David Tennant's American pilot, Rex was Not Your Lawyer, concluded in Hollywood. Soon after, US media reported that production of a full series by the NBC network might be fast-tracked due to the necessity of filling multiple timeslots left vacant as of March 2010 by the cancellation of the five-nights-a-week Jay Leno Show. It was later reported that NBC chose not to follow through with a full series immediately, though a fall 2010 broadcast was still a possibility. [3]
- Early January - It was also announced that Gugu Mbatha-Raw (Tish Jones in Series 3) had been cast in a lead role in another American series, Undercovers, from J.J. Abrams.
- 8 - TV: Children of Earth debuted in Australia on ABC2. The five chapters of the mini-series were broadcast one per week.
- 8 - The British Academy of Film and Television Arts posted The Regeneration of Doctor Who, a twenty-five-minute discussion with Russell T Davies and Julie Gardner, to its YouTube channel.[2] (YouTube video private)[additional sources needed]
- 11 - The UK DVD/Blu-Ray release of the 2009 Specials box set occurred , including TV: The Next Doctor, Planet of the Dead, The Waters of Mars and The End of Time. TV: The Next Doctor became the first Doctor Who episode to be "upconverted" from standard definition to high definition.[4] A three-disc Winter Specials set containing just Waters of Mars and End of Time was also released.
- 11 - TV: Regeneration was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 12 - A box set compiling the 5-part BBC Audio story AUDIO: Hornets' Nest was first released.
- 14 - The second edition of The Writer's Tale by Russell T Davies and Benjamin Cook, titled The Writer's Tale: The Final Chapter, was first published in the UK. The new edition added more than 300 pages of new material to the previous book.
- 14 - Mark Jones, who played Keeler in TV: The Seeds of Doom, died in Shrewsbury, Shropshire at the age of 70.
- Mid January - Canadian broadcasts of Series 2 of The Sarah Jane Adventures began in some parts of Canada on BBC Kids (a major national cable provider dropped the network in 2009).
- Mid January - The BBC began scouting for a new producer to take on Series 4 of The Sarah Jane Adventures.[5]
- 18 - The UK release of The Peladon Tales DVD box set, consisting of TV: The Curse of Peladon and TV: The Monster of Peladon, occurred.
- 18 - TV: Liberation was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 19 - Reports surfaced in US media that BBC Worldwide, Russell T Davies, Julie Gardner and Jane Tranter were planning to mount a US version of Torchwood for the American Fox network. John Barrowman was a potential star, reprising Jack Harkness, but at this point it was not known if the show would be a standalone remake or part of the established Whoniverse. According to The Hollywood Reporter a US-based "reboot" of Doctor Who was a possibility as well.[6]
- 20 - For the fourth consecutive ceremony, Doctor Who won the Drama category at the National Television Awards. David Tennant also received the NTA award for Best Drama Performance.
- 20 - Special effects technician Ian Scoones died in Bulgaria.
- 21 - AUDIO: Doctor Who at the BBC: A Legend Reborn was first released (delayed from original release date of November 2009). However it was immediately recalled due to issues regarding clearance of some material on the disc and a new February release date was announced. A few copies of the unedited version, however, entered circulation.[7]
- 21 - REF: The Writer's Tale: The Final Chapter was scheduled to be published in North America, although availability through retailers such as Amazon was apparently delayed until March. Some smaller retailers might still have received the book.
- 21 - Doctor Who Adventures published its hundred-fiftieth issue. To celebrate, the magazine came with a package of "Mars Slime".
- 22 - The audio adaptation of PROSE: Doctor Who and the Ice Warriors was first released.
- 25 - TV: The Korven was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- Late January - Vworp Vworp!, a fanzine dedicated to the history of Doctor Who Magazine and the Doctor Who comic strip, was launched.[8]
- 29 - Doctor Who and the Silver Spiral, a piece of fan fiction written by an astronomer Dr. Megan Argo to commemorate a major discovery involving a supernova, received notable press coverage in Scientific American. Argo also recorded and uploaded an audio version of the story, read by her.[9][10]
- 29 - Adam Dawson, who was a film editor for TV: Spearhead from Space, died.
- 30 - David Tennant and Catherine Tate again guest-hosted the Jonathan Ross show on BBC Radio. Guests included Anthony Head and Ricky Gervais.
- 31 - AUDIO: Leviathan, part of Big Finish Productions' The Lost Stories series, was first released.
- 30 - AUDIO: A Thousand Tiny Wings was first released. This audio reintroduced Elizabeth Klein, a character who last appeared in the 2001 release AUDIO: Colditz, as a new companion for the Seventh Doctor.
- Look Who's Talking, a collection of columns written by Colin Baker for Bucks Free Press between 1995 and 2009, was first published.
- Shooty Dog Thing, a collection of fanzine articles, was first published.
February
- AUDIO: The Suffering was first released.
- The online service SeeSaw began offering classic-series Doctor Who episodes for online viewing.
- 1 - The animated story TV: Dreamland was first released on DVD in the UK. The documentary series Doctor Who's Greatest Moments was included in the release.
- 1 - TV: The Bounty Hunter was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 2 - The North American DVD/Blu-Ray release of TV: The Waters of Mars and The End of Time occurred, and the five-disc 2009 Specials box set including TV: The Next Doctor was up-converted to high definition for the Blu-Ray edition.
- 3 - Doctor Who DVD Files moved beyond the 2005-present revival and began featuring classic-series stories on DVD, beginning with TV: Remembrance of the Daleks.
- 4 - The region 4 DVD/Blu-Ray release of TV: The Waters of Mars and the Dalek War DVD box set featuring TV: Frontier in Space and Planet of the Daleks occurred.
- 4 - The audio adaptation of PROSE: Doctor Who - Logopolis was first released.
- 6 - Noted fantasy writer Neil Gaiman announced via his blog that he would write an episode of Doctor Who for the 2011 season.[11] This was also the first indication that the series was expected to continue beyond 2010.
- 7 - The New Zealand broadcast of TV: The End of Time, Part One occurred.
- 8 - UK DVD release of TV: The Masque of Mandragora occurred.
- 8 - TV: Sirens of Ceres was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 11 - This was the reissue date for AUDIO: Doctor Who at the BBC: A Legend Reborn, following two previous delays. [7]
- 13 - Max Faulkner, a frequent stunt performer on Doctor Who, died.
- 14 - Australian broadcast of TV: The End of Time, Part One on ABC1 occurred.
- 14 - New Zealand broadcast of TV: The End of Time, Part Two occurred.
- 14 - The Sunday Times ran an article, "Doctor in War with Planet Maggie", that alleged that episodes of the fading original series in the late 1980s were crafted with an anti-Margaret Thatcher political agenda, a view apparently supported by Sylvester McCoy and his era's script editor, Andrew Cartmel. TV: The Happiness Patrol and Paradise Towers and even the obscure novel PROSE: Turlough and the Earthlink Dilemma were cited as specific examples.
- 15 - The twenty-years-warmed-over controversy as to whether late-period Doctor Who had an anti-Thatcher agenda was picked up by other media, and was the topic of a discussion with Andrew Cartmel, Terrance Dicks and others on BBC Two's Newsnight.
- 15 - George Waring (Arden, TV: The Ice Warriors) died.
- 15 - TV: Fear Itself was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 17 - The BBC, in advance of issuing a new trailer, released a new Eleventh Doctor promotional image featuring the the Doctor, Amy Pond, a Dalek, a Weeping Angel, and the first glimpse of a new character, the Smiler.
- 17 - Matt Smith chose the winner in a "design a TARDIS console" contest conducted on Blue Peter. The console design was scheduled to be incorporated into an upcoming Series 5 episode in some way.[12]
- 17 - Around this same time, Broadcast magazine reported that a forty-second 3-D trailer had been produced for cinemas.
- 19 - Doctor Who and Torchwood received several nominations for the 2010 Saturn Awards (scheduled to be awarded 24th June). TV: The End of Time and TV: Children of Earth were nominated for Best Television Presentation. Competition included the new versions of The Prisoner and V along with, strangely, The Tudors; David Tennant was nominated for Best Actor in Television; Bernard Cribbins for Best Guest Starring Role in Television (his competition included John Lithgow and Leonard Nimoy); and in the Best DVD Television Release category, the DVDs of TV: Planet of the Dead and TV: Children of Earth were nominated against full-season sets of Lost, Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, the US version of Life on Mars and another BBC series, Primeval.
- 20 - A 3-D trailer for the new series, featuring specially-shot footage, debuted on UK cinemas.
- 21 - The Australian broadcast of TV: The End of Time, Part Two on ABC1 occurred.
- 22 - TV: The Fall of the House of Gryffen was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 23 - Multiple Doctor Who-related audios were released in North America, including AUDIO: The Last Voyage, and the audio adaptations of PROSE: Doctor Who and the Dalek Invasion of Earth, PROSE: Doctor Who and the Ice Warriors, PROSE: Doctor Who and the Planet of the Spiders and PROSE: Beautiful Chaos.
- 23 - Australian broadcasts of Series 3 of The Sarah Jane Adventures began on Nickelodeon.
- 24 - A major auction of props from Doctor Who took place at Bonhams auction house.[13]
- 28 - AUDIO: The Hollows of Time (The Lost Stories) was first released.
- 28 - AUDIO: Survival of the Fittest was first released. This release included the twelfth and final chapter of the serialised story AUDIO: The Three Companions.
March
- AUDIO: The Emperor of Eternity was first released.
- The Canadian cable network Space took over the Canadian broadcast licence for Doctor Who seasons 1-4 and related Christmas Specials (save TV: Voyage of the Damned which did not become available until April) from the CBC.
- 1 - TV: The Space Museum and The Chase were released as a single set in the UK.
- 1 - TV: Jaws of Orthrus was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 2 - The North American DVD release of the Dalek War box set, featuring TV: Frontier in Space and Planet of the Daleks, occurred.
- 2 - The North American DVD release of TV: Remembrance of the Daleks Special Edition occurred, more than two years after it was first announced.
- 4 - PROSE: Code of the Krillitanes, the fifth Quick Reads novella, was first published. This book featured the Tenth Doctor, despite it being published several months after TV: The End of Time. It was the final Tenth Doctor original novel under the BBC New Series Adventures line. (Although announced for 4th March, online retailers were shipping the book as early as mid-February.)
- 4 - The audio adaptation of PROSE: Doctor Who - Castrovalva was first released.
- 4 - The The Peladon Tales DVD box set consisting of TV: The Curse of Peladon and TV: The Monster of Peladon was released in Region 4, along with the DVD/Blu-Ray release of TV: The End of Time.
- 4 - The BBC announced that it had not only commissioned a 4th series of The Sarah Jane Adventures for airing later in 2010, but also a 5th series to air in 2011. Brian Minchin was announced as the new producer for the series, although Russell T Davies stayed on as executive producer. [14]
- 4 - Paul Magrs published the young adult novel The Diary of a Dr. Who Addict, about a youth growing up in 1980s Britain.
- 4 - The BBC announced it had purchased 2 entertain, the company that had co-produced many of its DVD releases, including Doctor Who, in recent years.[15]
- 7 - AUDIO: Dead Air, the final exclusive-to-audio story featuring the Tenth Doctor, was first released.
- 8 - TV: Dream-Eaters was first broadcast in Scandinavia
- 9 - The BBC Four documentary Sidekick Stories, narrated by Catherine Tate, included a segment devoted to Doctor Who and interviews with David Tennant, Elisabeth Sladen and John Leeson.
- 9 - Doctor Who won Best TV Drama at the 2010 Television and Radio Industries Club (TRIC) Awards. The award was accepted by Bernard Cribbins.
- 10 - Fugitive, a graphic novel reprinting the first story arcs from COMIC: Doctor Who Ongoing, was published both in North America and in the UK, making it one of the first occasions of original IDW comic stories released in Britain.
- 11 - It was reported that the upcoming Region 1 and 4 DVD release of TV: The Chase would be edited to remove a sequence featuring a film clip of The Beatles. No release date for the DVD was announced. It was also reported that the North American release of TV: Dreamland, originally scheduled for 4 May, had been delayed to October.[16]
- 12 - The Sun tabloid reported that BBC Worldwide had signed a £10-million deal with Nintendo for the development of a Doctor Who game for the Wii and DS gaming systems.[3]
- 15 - REF: Chicks Dig Time Lords: A Celebration of Doctor Who by the Women Who Love It was first published. This was an essay collection by Mad Norwegian Press. Contributors included Lisa Bowerman, Kate Orman, India Fisher, Sophie Aldred and Carole E. Barrowman (sister of John Barrowman and co-author of his autobiography).
- 15 - TV: Curse of Anubis was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 16 - The 20-26 March issue of Radio Times, available this day, included an interview with Steven Moffat.
- 17 - On his official website, Tom Baker indicated that he was in discussions with Big Finish Productions about possibly recording an audio drama.[4]
- 18 - A BBC press screening was held for TV: The Eleventh Hour, during which producer Piers Wenger officially announced that a 2010 Christmas special was planned, and production of Series 6 was set to begin in July.[17]
- 18 - Big Finish Productions issued a statement titled "Fourth Doctor Rumour Control" indicating that nothing official had been arranged regarding Tom Baker doing any recordings for the company, though Elisabeth Sladen, Louise Jameson and Nicholas Courtney were cited as being enthusiastic about possibly participating should such a project come together.[18]
- 19 - UK media gave extensive coverage to the previous night's press launch, with Steven Moffat, fresh from a dubbing edit of TV: Victory of the Daleks, appearing on BBC Breakfast to promote the show.
- 19 - The American publication Entertainment Weekly's website reported on rumours that Jack Harkness might be made heterosexual for the proposed US version of Torchwood.[19]
- 20 - Filming of Series 5 concluded (according to comments made at the 18 March press launch).
- 22 - TV: Oroborus was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 24 - This was the rescheduled release date for REF: The Writer's Tale: The Final Chapter for North American retailers such as Amazon (originally announced for 21 January).
- 25 - Doctor Who Adventures published its final issue using the Doctor Who branding introduced in 2005. It was likely the last piece of merchandise to make the change to the new Eleventh Doctor-era branding.
- 26 - This was the fifth anniversary of the return of Doctor Who to television.
- 26 - Matt Smith appeared on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross, during which a new trailer and a clip from TV: The Vampires of Venice were unveiled.
- 27 - The first minute of TV: The Eleventh Hour became available as a special preview on the BBC's Red Button service in the UK.[20]
- 27 - The BBC Radio 4 series Archive on Four aired the documentary Sculptress of Sound: The Lost Works of Delia Derbyshire.
- 28 - At approximately the same time, two BBC Radio programmes were interrupted by specially-recorded mini-skits featuring Matt Smith in character as Eleventh Doctor: on The Official Chart on BBC Radio 1 the Doctor interrupted ""Opposite Adults" by Chiddy Bang and joked about knowing the No. 1 song before the listeners. Approximately two minutes later, BBC Radio 2's The Paul O'Grady Show was airing ABBA's "Super Trooper" when the Doctor again interrupted long enough to spot a mouse in the BBC studio.
- 28 - The BBC7 radio series 7th Dimension began broadcasting Barry Letts' audio book reading of his memoirs Who and Me, running over the course of the next seven weeks.
- 29 - For the first time since the original series ended, the stars of Doctor Who embarked on a promotional tour for an upcoming season, with Matt Smith and Karen Gillan scheduled to make personal appearances in several cities accompanied by special screenings of TV: The Eleventh Hour. An appearance in Belfast occurred this day.
- 29 - TV: Alien Avatar was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 29 - UK release of the DVD box set Myths and Legends, including TV: The Time Monster, Underworld and The Horns of Nimon, occurred.
- 29 - Doctor Who Classics Vol. 5, a graphic novel collecting more issues of the COMIC series Doctor Who Classics, was released in North America.
- 29 - Production of Series 4 of The Sarah Jane Adventures began under new series producer Brian Minchin; Russell T Davies and new Doctor Who producer Nikki Wilson were executive producers.[21]
- 29 - This was the submission deadline for the first of Big Finish Productions' new Short Trips audio series.[1]
- 30 - The Series 5 promotional tour visited Inverness and Sunderland.
- 30 - Steven Moffat was interviewed on BBC Radio 4's Front Row.
- 31 - The Series 5 promotional tour concluded in Salford and Northampton.
- 31 - Matt Smith appeared on Blue Peter.
- 31 - TV: The Waters of Mars was rebroadcast on BBC Three.
- 31 - AUDIO: Paradise 5 (The Lost Stories) was first released.
- 31 - AUDIO: The Architects of History was first released.
April
- The Canadian cable network Space was scheduled to take over the Canadian broadcast licence for the 2007 Christmas special TV: Voyage of the Damned from the CBC, officially ending the CBC's association with the Doctor Who franchise. According to a January 2010 posting by the Doctor Who Information Network, Space was expected to broadcast the episode soon after.[source needed]
- AUDIO: Shadow of the Past was released.
- The BBC7 radio series 7th Dimension was scheduled to broadcast several of BBC Audio's audio-book versions of Target Books novelislations, read by Tom Baker. Scheduled to air in April were PROSE: Doctor Who and the Giant Robot, PROSE: Doctor Who and the Brain of Morbius, and PROSE: Doctor Who and the Creature from the Pit.
- 1 - Doctor Who Adventures magazine underwent a relaunch to introduce the new Eleventh Doctor-era branding and new editorial features.
- 1 - Guinness World Records recognised Doctor Who Magazine, which had celebrated its thirtieth anniversary in 2009, as the Longest Running Magazine Based on a Television Series.[22]
- 1 - Matt Smith appeared on One Show on BBC One.
- 1 - TV: The Masque of Mandragora was released to DVD in Region 4.
- 1 - 3 - Big screen showings of TV: The Eleventh Hour were held in London, Manchester, Edinburgh, Plymouth, and Swansea.
- 2 - BBC Radio 4 aired Douglas and the Doctor, a documentary on Douglas Adams’s influence on Doctor Who, hosted by Jon Culshaw.
- 2 - Both parts of TV: The End of Time, along with the final David Tennant edition of Doctor Who Confidential, were rebroadcast on BBC Three.
- 2 - The cast promoted the new season: Karen Gillan appeared on GMTV and CBBC, while Matt Smith was on BBC Radio 1's Chris Moyles show.
- 2 - 5 - The UK Sci Fi Channel broadcast a marathon of classic Doctor Who, beginning with TV: The Ark in Space and ending with TV: Warriors of the Deep.
- 3 - TV: The Eleventh Hour was first broadcast, beginning Series 5, launching the Eleventh Doctor era and introducing Karen Gillan as Amy Pond. A new Doctor Who theme arrangement was introduced - an unprecedented third arrangement for Murray Gold - along with the first on-screen use of the new Doctor Who logo and a new title sequence.
- 3 - Doctor Who Confidential also returned for another season.[23]
- 3 - TV: Regeneration was broadcast on Network 10 in Australia, launching the first season of the spin-off series K9. The episode was also supposed to be broadcast on the same day on Disney XD in the UK. However, The Korven aired in its place. [24]
- 3 - TV: The Eleventh Hour received its North American premiere when it was shown during the 2010 WonderCon in San Francisco, two weeks ahead of broadcast.
- 3 - 4 - Space in Canada rebroadcast TV: The Next Doctor, Planet of the Dead and The Waters of Mars as a mini-marathon.
- 4 - TV: The Bounty Hunter was first broadcast in the UK, despite Liberation being reported to air. [24]
- 4 - TV: The Eleventh Hour was rebroadcast on BBC Three.
- 5 - For the fifth consecutive year, Doctor Who was nominated in the Best Dramatic Presentation - Short Form category at the Hugo Awards. Nominated this year were TV: The Next Doctor, Planet of the Dead and The Waters of Mars; the competing nominees were the TV series Dollhouse and FlashForward.
- 5 - TV: Aeolian was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 8 - The audio adaptation of PROSE: Doctor Who - The Three Doctors was released.
- 8 - The Canadian press screening for TV: The Eleventh Hour was held in Toronto. Steven Moffat participated in a Q&A conducted via Skype.
- 10 - TV: The Beast Below was first broadcast..
- 10 - TV: Sirens of Ceres was first broadcast in the UK.
- 10 - TV: Liberation was first broadcast in Australia.
- 11 - TV - Fear Itself was first broadcast in the UK.
- 11 - In Canada, Space rebroadcasted both parts of TV: The End of Time as a single three-hour programme.
- 12 - Matt Smith, Karen Gillan and Steven Moffat promoted the launch of Series 5 in America by attending a presentation entitled Who's Next? The New Era of Doctor Who in New York City.
- 12 - TV: The Last Oak Tree was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 14 - In New York City, Matt Smith and Karen Gillan attended a BBC America screening of TV: The Eleventh Hour at the Village East Cinema.
- 14 - In Canada, the cable network CBC Bold rebroadcast TV: Journey's End. With the broadcast rights to the revival now resting with Space, this was expected to be the final CBC-related broadcast of Doctor Who, ending an association that had begun in 2005.
- 14 - A volcanic eruption in Iceland disrupted air travel to, from, and within Europe. Among those later reported as "stranded" in the US were Karen Gillan[25], Matt Smith[26], and Steven Moffat[27], all of whom took the opportunity to attend events in the Los Angeles area after the conclusion of their East Coast press junket.
- 16 - TV: The Eleventh Hour received a third pre-broadcast US screening at the C2E2 convention in Chicago.
- 17 - TV: Victory of the Daleks was first broadcast. It was followed by a trailer for Doctor Who: The Adventure Games.
- 17 - TV: Jaws of Orthrus was first broadcast in the UK.
- 17 - TV: The Korven was first broadcast in Australia.
- 17 - Series 5 began airing on BBC America [28] and Space in Canada [29]. The BBC America broadcast set a ratings record for the network.[5]
- 17 - The BBC America and Space premieres were preceded by a documentary, Doctor Who: The Ultimate Guide.
- 17 - TV: The Eleventh Hour became available for viewing in Australia on the online iView service, ahead of the next day’s ABC1 broadcast.
- 18 - Series 5 began in Australia with the broadcast of TV: The Eleventh Hour on ABC1.[30]
- 18 - TV: Dream-Eaters was first broadcast in the UK.
- 19 - The BBC Press Office announced that Katy Manning would return to the role of Jo Grant for a fourth season storyline of The Sarah Jane Adventures, an episode also to feature Matt Smith as the Eleventh Doctor.[31]
- 19 - The read-through for the reunion episode of The Sarah Jane Adventures was held in Cardiff. Matt Smith could not attend due to being stranded in the US by the Iceland volcano.[26]
- 19 - TV: Black Hunger was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 21 - A press event attended by a number of new-design Daleks announced details of the upcoming Doctor Who: The Adventure Games video game releases.[32]
- 21 - The American FOX network announced it was dropping plans to produce a thirteen-episode, serialised series of Torchwood.[33]
- 22 - PROSE: Apollo 23, PROSE: Night of the Humans and PROSE: The Forgotten Army, the first original novels featuring the Eleventh Doctor were published.
- 23 - Eiji Kusuhara, Toshio Shimura in AUDIO: Enemy of the Daleks, died.
- 24 - TV: The Time of Angels was first broadcast.
- 24 - TV: Curse of Anubis was first broadcast in the UK.
- 24 - TV: The Bounty Hunter was first broadcast in Australia.
- 24 - AUDIO: The Runaway Train was scheduled for release as a promotional giveaway with copies of The Daily Telegraph (retail release, originally announced for June 2010, was pushed back to 2011). This launched a weeklong promotion in the Telegraph which saw several previously released BBC Audio issues (AUDIO: Pest Control, AUDIO: Slipback, the audio version of AUDIO: Genesis of the Daleks, AUDIO Exploration Earth and the audio soundtrack to TV: Mission to the Unknown) made available again.
- 25 - TV: Oroborus was first broadcast in the UK.
- 26 - TV: The Cambridge Spy was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 28 -This was the scheduled broadcast of the David Tennant version of Hamlet on PBS in the US.
- 29 - The Decide Your Destiny line continued with the scheduled release of Claws of the Macra and The Coldest War.
- 29 - This was the scheduled UK publication of the Doctor Who Classics Omnibus from IDW Publishing.
- 29 - This was the scheduled publication of the children's books Eleventh Doctor Regeneration Sticker Guide and Companion Activity Book.
- 30 - AUDIO: City of Spires was scheduled for release. This was the first of three dramas pairing the Sixth Doctor with Jamie McCrimmon.
- 30 - AUDIO: Point of Entry (The Lost Stories) was scheduled for release.
May
- AUDIO: The Time Vampire and AUDIO: Night's Black Agents were first released.
- 1 - TV: Flesh and Stone was first broadcast.
- 1 - TV - Alien Avatar was first broadcast in the UK.
- 1 - TV - Sirens of Ceres was first broadcast in Australia.
- 1 - REF: Doctor Who Funfax (2nd edition) was scheduled for publication.
- 1 - REF: Time, Unincorporated 2 was scheduled for publication.
- 1 - REF: Timeless Adventures: How Doctor Who Conquered TV was scheduled for publication.
- 2 - TV: Aeolian was first broadcast in the UK.
- 3 - TV: Lost Library of Ukko was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 3 - Jimmy Gardner (Chenchu in TV: Marco Polo and Idmon in TV: Underworld) died.
- 4 - The Crimson Hand, the final omnibus of Tenth Doctor Doctor Who Magazine comic strips, was published.
- 4 - This was the North American DVD release of TV: The Curse of Peladon and TV: The Monster of Peladon (released separately instead of as a box set as in the UK), as well as TV: The Masque of Mandragora.
- 6 - This was the release of the audio adaptation of PROSE: Doctor Who - Mission to the Unknown.
- 8 - TV: The Vampires of Venice was first broadcast.
- 8 - TV: The Last Oak Tree was first broadcast in the UK.
- 8 - TV: Fear Itself was first broadcast in Australia.
- 9 - TV: Black Hunger was first broadcast in the UK.
- 10 - TV: Mutant Copper was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 15 - TV: Amy's Choice was first broadcast.
- 15 - TV: The Cambridge Spy was first broadcast in the UK.
- 15 - TV: The Fall of the House of Gryffen was first broadcast in Australia.
- 15-16 - This was the publication of Deborah Watling's autobiography, Daddy's Girl (delayed from the original November 2009 publication date).
- 16 - TV: Lost Library of Ukko was first broadcast in the UK.
- 17 - TV: The Custodians was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 22 - TV: The Hungry Earth was first broadcast.
- 22 - TV:Mutant Copper was first broadcast in the UK.
- 22 - TV: Jaws of Orthrus was first broadcast in Australia.
- 23 - TV: The Custodians was first broadcast in the UK.
- 24 - TV: Taphony and the Time Loop was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 27 - REF: The Tardis Handbook was published.
- 28 - REF: The Science of Doctor Who was published.
- 29 - TV: Cold Blood was first broadcast.
- 29 - This was the scheduled North American publication of the Doctor Who Classics Omnibus from IDW Publishing.
- 29 - TV: Dream-Eaters was first broadcast in Australia.
- 31 - AUDIO: The Wreck of the Titan was released.
- 31 - TV: Robot Gladiators was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 31 - AUDIO: The Song of Megaptera (The Lost Stories) was released.
June
- AUDIO: Solitaire was released, ending the range's forth series.
- Big Finish Productions released Jago and Litefoot Series One, a collection of four audio dramas featuring characters from TV: The Talons of Weng-Chiang. Stories included The Bloodless Soldier by Justin Richards, The Bellova Devil by Alan Barnes, The Spirit Trap by Jonathan Morris and The Similarity Engine by Andy Lane.
- 3 - AUDIO: The Hounds of Artemis, the first original audio story featuring the Eleventh Doctor, was released (delayed from 8 April 2010).
- 3 - The audio adaptation of PROSE: Doctor Who - The Mutation of Time was released.
- 3 - REF: Doctor Who: Intergalactic Survival Guide was published.
- 3 - The children's books Doctor Who: Battle Badges Activity Book, Doctor Who: Top Secret Stories, Activities and Stickers! and Doctor Who: 3-D Mask Activity Book were published.
- 5 - TV: Vincent and the Doctor was first broadcast.
- 5 - The BBC released GAME: City of the Daleks, the first of four computer games for PC and Mac under the umbrella title Doctor Who: The Adventure Games. These games featured the voices of Matt Smith and Karen Gillan.[32]
- 5 - TV: Curse of Anubis was first broadcast in Australia.
- 7 - Doctor Who Series 5 - Volume 1, a "vanilla" DVD/Blu-Ray release featuring the first three Eleventh Doctor stories, TV: The Eleventh Hour, The Beast Below,and Victory of the Daleks and a featurette, The Monster Diaries, was released in the UK.[34]
- 7 - TV: Mind Snap was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 12 - TV: The Lodger was first broadcast.
- 12 - TV: - Oroborus was first broadcast in Australia.
- 14 This was the UK release of the Kamelion DVD box set featuring TV: The King's Demons and Planet of Fire.
- 14 - TV: Angel of the North was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 19 - TV: The Pandorica Opens was first broadcast.
- 21 - TV: The Last Precinct was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 23 - TV: Alien Avatar was first broadcast in Australia.
- 24 - REF: Doctor Who: The Episode Guide from Pocket Essentials was published.
- 26 - TV: The Big Bang was first broadcast.
- 26 - TV: Aeolian was first broadcast in Australia.
- 28 - TV: Hound of the Korven was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 30 - AUDIO: Legend of the Cybermen was released, featuring the return of Wendy Padbury as Zoe Heriot.
- 30 - AUDIO: The Macros (The Lost Stories) was released.
July
- Production of the 6th series of the revived Doctor Who began.[17]
- AUDIO: The Guardian of the Solar System was released, launching the range's fifth series.
- Situation Vacant was first released.
- 3 - TV: The Last Oak Tree was first broadcast in Australia.
- 5 - TV: The Eclipse of the Korven, the Series 1 finale, was first broadcast in Scandinavia.
- 6 - The region 1 DVD of TV: The Space Museum/The Chase was released (three-disc set with The Chase edited to remove footage of the Beatles performing "Ticket to Ride"), along with The Time Monster, Underworld and The Horns of Nimon which were released individually rather than as the Myth & Legends box set as per the UK release.
- 10 - TV: Black Hunger was first broadcast in Australia.
- Region 2 DVD of TV: The Dominators was released.
- 17 - TV: The Cambridge Spy was first broadcast in Australia.
- 22 - PROSE: Adorable Illusion, PROSE: Nuclear Time and PROSE: The King's Dragon were published.
- 24-25 - The second Doctor Who at the Proms concert, hosted by Matt Smith and Karen Gillan, was broadcast live on BBC Radio 3 with later telecast on BBC Three.[35]
- TV: Lost Library of Ukko was first broadcast in Australia.
- 28: "All the Presidents' Heads", a Futurama episode featuring the Fourth Doctor, aired.
- 31 - AUDIO: Cobwebs was released; this was the first of several audio dramas reuniting the 1983 cast of Peter Davison, Sarah Sutton, Janet Fielding and Mark Strickson.
- 31 - TV: Mutant Copper was first broadcast in Australia.
August
- AUDIO: Echoes of Grey was released.
- PROSE: Ring of Steel was released.
- Nevermore was released.
- Doctor Who The Official Annual 2011 was published.
- 5 - AUDIO: Doctor Who: The Lost TV Episodes - Collection One audio box set was released in the UK. This collection compiled audio tracks for the missing stories Marco Polo, The Reign of Terror, The Crusade, Galaxy 4, and The Myth Makers.
- 7 - TV: The Custodians was first broadcast in Australia.
- This was the region 2 DVD release of TV: Revenge of the Cybermen and Silver Nemesis.
- 14 - TV: Taphony and the Time Loop was first broadcast in Australia.
- 18 - AUDIO: Trail of the White Worm and The Oseidon Adventure were recorded.
- 21 - TV: Robot Gladiators was first broadcast in Australia.
- 28 - TV: Mind Snap was first broadcast in Australia.
- 31 - AUDIO: The Whispering Forest was released.
September
- AUDIO: Find and Replace was released. This Third Doctor story featured Jo Grant and Iris Wildthyme - both characters played by Katy Manning.
- The Book of Kells was released.
- 4 - TV: Angel of the North was first broadcast in Australia.
- 11 - TV: The Last Precinct (TV story) was first broadcast in Australia.
- 13 - TV: Time and the Rani was released on DVD in the UK.
- 15 - AUDIO: Beyond the Ultimate Adventure was recorded.
- 15 - Frank Jarvis died.
- 18 - TV: Hound of the Korven was first broadcast in Australia.
- 21 - Geoffrey Burgon, who provided incidental music for Doctor Who, died.
- 25 - TV: The Eclipse of the Korven was first broadcast in Australia.
- 30 - AUDIO: The Cradle of the Snake was released.
- 30 - AUDIO: Project: Destiny was released.
October
- AUDIO: The Invasion of E-Space was released. This was Andrew Smith's first Doctor Who story since TV: Full Circle thirty years earlier.
- Deimos was released.
- 2 - TV: Taphony and the Time Loop was first broadcast in Britain.
- 4 - The first Revisitations DVD set was released in Region 2. This contained new editions of televised stories released on DVD early in the range; they were now remastered or compiled with new extras. This first set contained TV: The Talons of Weng-Chiang, The Caves of Androzani and The Movie.
- 5 - This was the region 1 DVD release of TV: Dreamland, delayed from an original announced release date of 4 May, including the Doctor Who Greatest Moments documentary.[36]
- 7 - The TV audio original Wraith World was released. [37]
- 9 - TV: Liberation was first broadcast in Britain.
- 11- TV: The Nightmare Man Part 1 aired, launching The Sarah Jane Adventures Series 4.
- 12- TV: The Nightmare Man Part 2 was first broadcast.
- 16 - TV: Robot Gladiators was first broadcast in Britain.
- 18 - TV: The Vault of Secrets Part 1 was first broadcast.
- 19- TV: The Vault of Secrets Part 2 aired.
- 19 - Graham Crowden, who played Soldeed in TV: The Horns of Nimon, died.
- 23 - TV: Mind Snap was first broadcast in Britain.
- 25- TV: Death of the Doctor Part 1 was first broadcast.
- 25 - TV: The Seeds of Doom was first released on Region 2 DVD.
- 26- TV: Death of the Doctor Part 2 was first broadcast.
- 29 - Two Doctor Who Nintendo Games, Evacuation Earth and Return to Earth, for the Nintendo Wii and DS respectively, were released.
- 31 - AUDIO: A Death in the Family was released.
- 31 - REF: The Doctor's Monsters: Meanings of the Monstrous in Doctor Who was scheduled for publication.
Fall
- Doctor Who: The Monsters Are Coming (informally Doctor Who Live) started and ended its original run.
November
- The Resurrection of Mars was released.
- AUDIO: A Town Called Fortune was released, featuring the return of audio companion Evelyn Smythe.
- The Lost Stories' second series began with a double release of First Doctor stories: Farewell, Great Macedon and The Fragile Yellow Arc of Fragrance.
- Big Finish Productions relaunched the Short Trips series, with an audio release, Short Trips: Volume 1, featuring stories from the first eight Doctors.
- 1 - TV: The Empty Planet Part 1 was first broadcast.
- 1 - This was the UK DVD release of the Third Series of The Sarah Jane Adventures.
- 2 - TV: The Empty Planet Part 2 was first broadcast.
- 8 - TV: Lost in Time Part 1 was first broadcast.
- 8 - Doctor Who - The Complete Fifth Series was released on Region 2 DVD.
- 9 - TV: Lost in Time Part 2 was first broadcast.
- 9 - Doctor Who - The Complete Fifth Series was released on Region 1 DVD.
- 15 - TV: Goodbye, Sarah Jane Smith Part 1 was first broadcast.
- 16 - TV: Goodbye, Sarah Jane Smith Part 2 was first broadcast.
- 22 - 23 - AUDIO: The Elite was recorded.
- 23 - This was the forty-seventh anniversary of TV: An Unearthly Child.
- 23 - Ingrid Pitt (Galleia in TV: The Time Monster and Solow in TV: Warriors of the Deep) died.
- 30 - AUDIO: Lurkers at Sunlight's Edge was released.
Late 2010
- The Coming of the Terraphiles by Michael Moorcock was scheduled for publication before Christmas.[38]
December
- AUDIO: Quinnis was released.
- AUDIO: The Four Doctors, a multi-Doctor adventure issued as an exclusive for Big Finish subscribers, was scheduled for release.
- AUDIO: The Demons of Red Lodge and Other Stories, an anthology of four stories featuring the Fifth Doctor and Nyssa, was released.
- Relative Dimensions was released.
- According to an announcement made by IDW Publishing in February 2010, the final Tenth Doctor issue of its Doctor Who Ongoing series was scheduled to occur with issue #16 scheduled for publication this month.[39]
- The second box set of The Lost Stories was released, containing audio adaptations of the unmade Second Doctor story Prison in Space and the unmade pilot for a Dalek TV spin-off The Destroyers.
- 1 - K-9: Alien Avatar was released in Australia containing episodes 7-12 of Series 1.
- 2 - Doctor Who - The Complete Fifth Series was released on Region 4 DVD.
- 9 - Coronation Street, long Doctor Who's biggest competitor, marked its fiftieth anniversary of broadcast. Since September it had been the longest-running English language drama series in the world.
- 18 - TV: Regeneration was first broadcast on Five in the UK.
- 19 - TV: Liberation was first broadcast on Five in the UK.
- 20 - TV: The Korven was first broadcast on Five in the UK.
- 21 - TV: The Bounty Hunter was first broadcast on Five in the UK.
- 22 - TV: Sirens of Ceres was first broadcast on Five in the UK.
- 23 - TV: Fear Itself was first broadcast on Five in the UK.
- 24 - TV: The Fall of the House of Gryffen was first broadcast on Five in the UK.
- 25 - TV: A Christmas Carol was first broadcast.
- 25 - TV: Jaws of Orthrus was first broadcast on Five in the UK.
- 26 - TV: Dream-Eaters was first broadcast on Five in the UK.
- 27 - TV: Curse of Anubis was first broadcast on Five in the UK.
- 28 - TV: Oroborus was first broadcast on Five in the UK.
- 29 - TV: Alien Avatar was first broadcast on Five in the UK.
- 30 - TV: Aeolian was first broadcast on Five in the UK.
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Big Finish - News - Short Trips Reminder
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Filming Returns to Cardiff
- ↑ EW.com - Exclusive: 'Rex Is Not Your Lawyer' DOA at NBC?
- ↑ TVShowsonDVD - Doctor Who - Official Answer for The Next Doctor on Blu-ray, Plus the BBC's Press Release ***UPDATE: Online Previews for 'The End of Time, Part 1' ***
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Sarah Jane Adventures - Series 4 confirmed
- ↑ io9.com Torchwood May Be Coming To America
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 The Doctor Who News Page: CD Delayed
- ↑ Vworp Vworp
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Doctor Who and the Silver Spiral
- ↑ Megan's Blog - Doctor Who and the Silver Spiral
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Gaiman confirms he is writing for Doctor Who
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Blue Peter competition winner announced
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Doctor Who auction at Bonhams
- ↑ BBC - Press Office - Sarah jane returns to CBBC for two further series of adventures
- ↑ BBC - Press Office - BBC Worldwide reaches agreement on 2entertain
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: No Beatles outside Europe
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 The Doctor Who News Page: 2011 Series Confirmed
- ↑ Big Finish - News - Fourth Doctor Rumour Control
- ↑ EW.com - 'Torchwood' exclusive: Would U.S. version turn Capt. Jack straight?
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Red Button Preview of The Eleventh Hour
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Sarah Jane Adventures 4 (and 5!) confirmed
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Doctor Who Magazine wins Guinness World Record
- ↑ Official Website Updated
- ↑ 24.0 24.1 K9 UK and Australian premier on 3rd April
- ↑ The Sun - Ash wreaks havoc across Europe
- ↑ 26.0 26.1 SFX - Witnessing Jo Grant's return
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Moffat delighted with series reception
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: BBC America Announces US Start Date
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Space Announces Canadian Start Date
- ↑ whovian.net - Series 5 to air Down Under from April 18th!
- ↑ BBC Press Office - The Doctor and Jo to join CBBC's The Sarah Jane Adventures
- ↑ 32.0 32.1 The Doctor Who News Page: Doctor Who - The Adventure Games
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Fox withdraw from American Torchwood
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Matt Smith First DVD release date
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: Doctor Who Returns to the Proms
- ↑ Amazon.com: Doctor Who: Dreamland
- ↑ Play.com The Sarah Jane Adventures: Wraith World (Audio Original)
- ↑ By TARDIS Through the Multiverse - Moorcock's Miscellany
- ↑ The Doctor Who News Page: IDW annoucne first US Doctor Who Annual