The Doctor's scarf: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 14:56, 20 July 2014

This article needs a big cleanup.

Article replete total opinion on the part of previous editors and inappropriate use of present tense.

These problems might be so great that the article's factual accuracy has been compromised. Talk about it here or check the revision history or Manual of Style for more information.

This topic might have a better name.

If this article wants to remain focused on the Fourth Doctor's scarf, then it should be called The Fourth Doctor's scarf. Personally, though, I think it should just be called scarf, in the same way that we have articles for others of the Doctors' various "signature items": hat, glasses,umbrella, celery, cat badge, fez, bow tie, question mark and signet ring.

Talk about it here.

Although the Doctor owned many scarves throughout his lives, [source needed]the Doctor's scarf from his fourth incarnation was the one he used most. At least two such scarves existed. (TV: Robot, TV: The Leisure Hive) The second was later unravelled by the Fifth Doctor to leave a trail for himself to find his way back to the console room. (TV: Castrovalva)

Profile

Shortly after his third regeneration, the Doctor had to accompany Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart on an investigation. He tried on several inappropriately conspicuous costumes before settling on a vaguely Bohemian outfit. This included a wide-brimmed fedora and a long scarf. (TV: Robot) The scarf had originally been knitted for him by Madame Nostradamus. (TV: The Ark in Space)

Near the end of this incarnation, the Doctor switched to a scarf of longer length, but coloured in shades of burgundy. (TV: The Leisure Hive) However, his original scarf was kept on a hatstand in the console room. (TV: Warriors' Gate)

After his fourth regeneration, the Fifth Doctor unravelled his burgundy scarf in the TARDIS' corridors, allowing his companions to follow him. After this, he began using pieces of his former self's clothing to continue the trail before finding a cricketeer outfit. (TV: Castrovalva)

The Fifth Doctor admitted that the scarf was warm and sometimes useful, though he did trip on it occasionally. (AUDIO: No Place Like Home)

The Seventh Doctor used his scarf from his newly-found outfit to stall the Rani as he tried to escape her laboratory. (TV: Time and the Rani)

While selecting an outfit following his seventh regeneration, the Doctor discovered a similar multi-coloured scarf in a hospital locker. He did not include it in his outfit, though he did think about using it for a moment. (TV: Doctor Who)

On her first trip back to Earth after being transferred to the Destrii's body, Izzy Sinclair wrapped herself up in the original scarf to hide her non-human body. (COMIC: The Way of All Flesh)

The TARDIS wardrobe contained a multi-colour scarf during the Doctor's tenth incarnation. (TV: The Christmas Invasion)

The Eleventh Doctor and Kazran Sardick wore scarves similar to the Fourth Doctor's when visiting Abigail Pettigrew. (TV: A Christmas Carol)

The scarf eventually ended up in the Doctor's study onboard the TARDIS, among other knick-knacks collected through his years of travel. (GAME: TARDIS, The Gunpowder Plot)

Uses

The scarf proved to be useful on many occasions as something other than a piece of attire.

Behind the scenes

Real world prop

  • According to Tom Baker, when a woman named Begonia Pope was asked to knit a scarf for the new Doctor, she was unsure how long a scarf was required. She consequently used all of the wool she had been given, resulting in a ridiculously long scarf. The producers loved it and, after it had been shortened slightly, used it for the Fourth Doctor's first story Robot.
  • There were many scarves used during Tom Baker's era. This included a considerably shorter "stunt scarf" for action sequences. The pattern and colouration varied from season to season, as did the overall length of the scarf, which, at one point reached a maximum length of 24 feet.
  • When June Hudson was asked to design a new outfit for the Doctor at the start of season 18, she was given the option to omit the scarf by producer John Nathan-Turner. Eventually, she decided the scarf had become too much a part of the Doctor's image to omit. She designed a new scarf to go with the burgundy colour scheme of the Doctor's new outfit.

Prime Computer ads

  • In 1980, Tom Baker played the Fourth Doctor in a series of TV commercials for Prime Computer. In one of the commercials, when asked by the Doctor of his scarf's length, Prime Computer responds, "It is 7.013 metres exclusive of the loose threads!".

whoisdoctorwho.co.uk

The website whoisdoctorwho.co.uk had a list of sightings of the Doctor from which people had ostensibly been submitting to Clive, a conspiracy theorist character from TV: Rose, who had pictures of the Doctor's ninth incarnation on the website, asking if anyone had seen him.

A submission from Dinah May claimed to have seen "this man several years ago, dumping some old clothes at the local tip", including a long scarf. When Dinah asked him about them, he claimed to have been "having a clear out". One of the items he was throwing away was a long scarf. [1]

External links

Footnotes

  1. Contact Us. whoisdoctorwho.co.uk. Retrieved on 26 October 2013.