Transmat:Doctor Who: Difference between revisions
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<div class="tr-box two">'''[[Donald Baverstock]]''' was the [[British Broadcasting Corporation|BBC]] executive who set the the wheels in motion that eventually led to the creation of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. Essentially the original commissioner of the programme, he hired [[Sydney Newman]] and later imposed a sense of financial responsibility upon [[producer]] [[Verity Lambert]]. </div> | <div class="tr-box two">'''[[Donald Baverstock]]''' was the [[British Broadcasting Corporation|BBC]] executive who set the the wheels in motion that eventually led to the creation of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. Essentially the original commissioner of the programme, he hired [[Sydney Newman]] and later imposed a sense of financial responsibility upon [[producer]] [[Verity Lambert]]. </div> | ||
<div class="tr-box one">The '''[[Quantel Paintbox]]''' was a graphics workstation that allowed ''[[Doctor Who]]'' to have a primitive form of [[colourist|colour grading]] in the [[1980s]].</div> | <div class="tr-box one">The '''[[Quantel Paintbox]]''' was a graphics workstation that allowed ''[[Doctor Who]]'' to have a primitive form of [[colourist|colour grading]] in the [[1980s]].</div> | ||
<div class="tr-box two">'''[[John Cleese]]''' appeared in ''Doctor Who''{{'}}s highest rated televised story, ''[[City of Death]]'', around the time of series 2 of ''Fawlty Towers''.</div> | <div class="tr-box two"> | ||
<div class="tr-box one">The careers of the [[Fifth Doctor|Fifth]], [[Sixth Doctor|Sixth]], [[Seventh Doctor|Seventh]] and [[Eighth Doctor]]s are '''significantly''' longer [[Big Finish Doctor Who audio stories|in audio]] than on television.</div> | {{thead|Surprising guest star}} | ||
'''[[John Cleese]]''' appeared in ''Doctor Who''{{'}}s highest rated televised story, ''[[City of Death]]'', around the time of series 2 of ''Fawlty Towers''. Find out more about the thousands of actors who have been on ''Doctor Who'' by exploring '''[[:category:Doctor Who guest actors|Doctor Who guest actors]]'''. </div> | |||
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{{thead|Ex-Doctors never die, they just make audios}} | |||
The careers of the [[Fifth Doctor|Fifth]], [[Sixth Doctor|Sixth]], [[Seventh Doctor|Seventh]] and [[Eighth Doctor]]s are '''significantly''' longer [[Big Finish Doctor Who audio stories|in audio]] than on television. Check out their latest works at '''[[:category:{{CURRENTYEAR}} audio releases]]''' | |||
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<div class="tr-box two">Officially, only ''[[The Lodger (TV story)|The Lodger]]'' has been explicitly adapted from a comic strip — also called ''[[The Lodger (comic story)|The Lodger]]''. | <div class="tr-box two">Officially, only ''[[The Lodger (TV story)|The Lodger]]'' has been explicitly adapted from a comic strip — also called ''[[The Lodger (comic story)|The Lodger]]''. | ||
[[File:10MickeyFootball.png|center|250px|link=The Lodger (comic story)]] | [[File:10MickeyFootball.png|center|250px|link=The Lodger (comic story)]] |
Revision as of 18:17, 10 October 2013
The Name of the Doctor was the beginning of Doctor Who's fiftieth anniversary storyline, and the conclusion of the seventh series produced by BBC Wales. It resolved the central mystery of the series by conclusively explaining how Clara Oswald had appeared and died at several points in the Doctor's life.
The episode contained the most Doctors ever seen in a single episode — though this was mostly achieved through the integration of old footage into new background plates. Nevertheless, the appearances were incidental; former Doctors were merely seen, not heard. A notable exception was the First Doctor, whose initial departure from Gallifrey was shown for the very first time on-screen — albeit in a way that essentially validated the depiction of the event seen in the 30th anniversary comic story, Time & Time Again.
While the main focus of the story was to explain Clara's splintered existence, it also had other reveals: the apparent conclusion of the Doctor's relationship with River Song, the definitive end of the Great Intelligence story arc and the shocking reveal of a previously unseen incarnation.
That reveal covemprised the episode's cliffhanger, which was not continued until the 50th anniversary episode itself.
Think Doctor Who is just for boys? Don't you believe it. Not only was the show's very first producer a woman, but it would never have come back without the fierce advocacy of Jane Tranter and Julie Gardner. Considering her importance to Doctor Who it's somewhat ironic that Tranter's only on-screen credits are for Torchwood: Miracle Day. But Gardner, her "partner in crime", is tied only with Russell T Davies as the most prolific producer in Doctor Who history.
The careers of the Fifth, Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Doctors are significantly longer in audio than on television. Check out their latest works at category:2024 audio releases
However, several stories have clearly taken material from comic strips — often those in Doctor Who Magazine. The Shakespeare Code contains a good amount of material from A Groatsworth of Wit, and the notion of the Doctor absorbing the time vortex in order to spare a companion was explored in both The Parting of the Ways and The Flood.
- 1970 - Studio filming for Terror of the Autons took place at BBC Television Centre 8. (REF: Doctor Who The Handbook: The Third Doctor)
- 1975 - Studio filming for The Brain of Morbius took place. (REF: Doctor Who The Handbook: The Fourth Doctor)
- 1984 - Location filming for The Mark of the Rani took place. (REF: Doctor Who The Handbook: The Sixth Doctor)
- 2005 - Untitled shooting scripts for Doctor Who series 2, episodes 12 and 13, later titled Army of Ghosts and Doomsday, were issued. (DWMSE 14)
- 2012 - The Big Finish/AudioGO audio story Vengeance of the Stones was recorded at the Moat Studios.
- 2017 - Big Finish's Torchwood audio story Believe was recorded.
- 2018 - The Big Finish audio story The Monsters of Gokroth was recorded at the Moat Studios.
- 2022 - Big Finish's Torchwood audio story Oodunnit was recorded at the Soundhouse.
- 1970 - Part eight of the TV Comic story Doctor Who and the Robot was published.
- 1996
- Damaged Goods and Speed of Flight were published by Virgin Books.
- DWM 245 was published by Marvel Comics.
- 2002 - The audio stories The Sandman[1] and Professor Bernice Summerfield and the Dance of the Dead[2] were released by Big Finish Productions.
- 2012 - Love and War was released by Big Finish.
- 2013 - DWFC 5 was published by Eaglemoss Publications Ltd.
- 2014 - The interactive story featuring the Twelfth Doctor premiered at the Doctor Who Experience.
- 2015 - The Woman Who Lived premiered on BBC One.
- 2016 - The Robot Reveal premiered on CBBC.
- 2019 - The Target Storybook was published by BBC Books.
- 1921 - Actor Walter Henry was born.[3]
- 1929 - Actor Clifford Rose was born.[4]
- 1930 - Actor Brian Peck was born.[5]
- 1939 - Actor Callen Angelo was born.[6]
- 1958 - Actor Sarah Greene was born.[7]
- 1971 - Actor Dervla Kirwan was born.[8]
- 1975 - Actor Martin Boddey died.[9]
- 1981 - Actor Jemima Rooper was born.[10]
- 1988 - Actor Valerie Taylor died.[11]
- 1994 - Actor Kit Young was born.[12]
- 2005 - Writer Robert Sloman died.[13]
- 2018 - Actor Laurence Kennedy died.[14]
- 2021 - Actor Thapelo Maropefela died.[15]
- ↑ The Sandman. Big Finish, via Internet Archive. Retrieved on 9 December 2002.
- ↑ The Dance of the Dead. Big Finish, via Internet Archive. Retrieved on 8 December 2002.
- ↑ Aveleyman
- ↑ The Guardian
- ↑ Aveleyman
- ↑ Aveleyman
- ↑ Doctor Who Guide
- ↑ Doctor Who Guide
- ↑ Aveleyman
- ↑ Famous Birthdays
- ↑ Aveleyman
- ↑ People Pill
- ↑ Doctor Who Guide
- ↑ DWMSE 51
- ↑ The South African