Kenneth Adam: Difference between revisions

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{{real world}}
{{real world}}
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' was the Director of Television at the [[British Broadcasting Corporation]], appointed to that position after the broadcast of [[season 1]] was underway. On [[28 May (production)|28 May]] [[1964 (production)|1964]], he expressed an early concern that it was dramatically "stupid" for the [[First Doctor]] and his [[companion]]s to always "split up the way they do when danger threatens". He claimed that ''Doctor Who''{{'}}s survival depends upon increasing the discipline amongst its writers, because "even [his] 3½-year-old grand-daughter remarked on it" after the broadcast of "[[The Temple of Evil]]" a few days earlier.   
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' was the Director of Television at the [[British Broadcasting Corporation]], appointed to that position after the broadcast of [[season 1]] was underway. On [[28 May (production)|28 May]] [[1964 (production)|1964]], he expressed an early concern to [[Stuart Hood|his Controller of Programmes for Television]] that it was dramatically "stupid" for the [[First Doctor]] and his [[companion]]s to always "split up the way they do when danger threatens". He claimed that ''Doctor Who''{{'}}s survival depends upon increasing the discipline amongst its writers, because "even [his] 3½-year-old grand-daughter remarked on it" after the broadcast of "[[The Temple of Evil]]" a few days earlier.   
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[[Category:BBC executives]]
[[Category:BBC executives]]

Revision as of 15:01, 12 October 2013

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Kenneth Adam was the Director of Television at the British Broadcasting Corporation, appointed to that position after the broadcast of season 1 was underway. On 28 May 1964, he expressed an early concern to his Controller of Programmes for Television that it was dramatically "stupid" for the First Doctor and his companions to always "split up the way they do when danger threatens". He claimed that Doctor Who's survival depends upon increasing the discipline amongst its writers, because "even [his] 3½-year-old grand-daughter remarked on it" after the broadcast of "The Temple of Evil" a few days earlier.