Adventures in a Pocket Universe (series): Difference between revisions
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'''Adventures in a Pocket Universe''' were two audio dramas released by [[BBV Productions]] under their [[Audio Adventures in Time and Space]] banner. | '''Adventures in a Pocket Universe''' were two audio dramas released by [[BBV Productions]] under their [[Audio Adventures in Time and Space]] banner. | ||
These two audio dramas, ''[[The Choice]]'' and ''[[The Search]]'', featured [[John Leeson]] as [[K9 (The Choice)|yet another version of K9]] and [[Lalla Ward]] as "[[the Mistress (The Choice)|the Mistress]]" (heavily implied to be [[Romana II]]) | These two audio dramas, ''[[The Choice]]'' and ''[[The Search]]'', featured [[John Leeson]] as [[K9 (The Choice)|yet another version of K9]] and [[Lalla Ward]] as "[[the Mistress (The Choice)|the Mistress]]" (heavily implied to be [[Romana II]]) travelling through [[Ecto-Space]] (heavily implied to be [[E-Space]]). The series had to tread a very fine legal line, since their only license was derived from [[Bob Baker]] and [[Dave Martin]], co-owners of the character of [[K9]]. Thus, almost every narrative element is either original to the series, or, like "the Mistress" and "Ecto-Space", a close but legally-distinct approximation of a televised concept. | ||
[[Category:Doctor Who spin-offs]] | [[Category:Doctor Who spin-offs]] |
Revision as of 19:05, 7 May 2017
Adventures in a Pocket Universe were two audio dramas released by BBV Productions under their Audio Adventures in Time and Space banner.
These two audio dramas, The Choice and The Search, featured John Leeson as yet another version of K9 and Lalla Ward as "the Mistress" (heavily implied to be Romana II) travelling through Ecto-Space (heavily implied to be E-Space). The series had to tread a very fine legal line, since their only license was derived from Bob Baker and Dave Martin, co-owners of the character of K9. Thus, almost every narrative element is either original to the series, or, like "the Mistress" and "Ecto-Space", a close but legally-distinct approximation of a televised concept.