Gulliver's Travels: Difference between revisions

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* The ''Cold Fusion'' joke is a reference to the following passage from the novel: "He has been eight years upon a project for extracting sunbeams out of cucumbers."
* The ''Cold Fusion'' joke is a reference to the following passage from the novel: "He has been eight years upon a project for extracting sunbeams out of cucumbers."
* [[Julian Glover]], [[Catherine Schell]], [[Robert Rietti]], [[Murray Melvin]], [[Denise Bryer]] and [[David Prowse]] appeared in the [[1977]] {{w|Gulliver's Travels (1977 film)|film adaptation}}.
* [[Julian Glover]], [[Catherine Schell]], [[Robert Rietti]], [[Murray Melvin]], [[Denise Bryer]] and [[David Prowse]] appeared in the [[1977]] {{w|Gulliver's Travels (1977 film)|film adaptation}}.
* [[Andrew Burt]] played the title character in the 1982 television serial ''Gulliver in Lilliput'', which was written and directed by [[Barry Letts]]. [[Elisabeth Sladen]], [[Leon Eagles]], [[Leon Eagles]], [[Andrew McCulloch]], [[Linda Polan]], [[Barry Andrews]], [[Jenny McCracken]], [[George Little]], [[John Baker (actor)|John Baker]], [[Bartlett Mullins]] and [[Glen Murphy]] all also appeared in the serial.
* [[Andrew Burt]] played the title character in the 1982 television serial ''Gulliver in Lilliput'', which was written and directed by [[Barry Letts]]. [[Elisabeth Sladen]], [[Leon Eagles]], [[Andrew McCulloch]], [[Linda Polan]], [[Barry Andrews]], [[Jenny McCracken]], [[George Little]], [[John Baker (actor)|John Baker]], [[Bartlett Mullins]] and [[Glen Murphy]] all also appeared in the serial.
* [[James Fox]], [[Warwick Davis]], [[John Standing]], [[Richard Wilson]], [[Graham Crowden]], [[Navin Chowdhry]], [[Annette Badland]], [[Ricco Ross]], [[Cyril Shaps]], [[Malcolm Stoddard]], [[Sylvester Morand]], [[Philip McGough]] and [[Gordon Sterne]] appeared in the {{w|Gulliver's Travels (miniseries)|miniseries adaptation}}.
* [[James Fox]], [[Warwick Davis]], [[John Standing]], [[Richard Wilson]], [[Graham Crowden]], [[Navin Chowdhry]], [[Annette Badland]], [[Ricco Ross]], [[Cyril Shaps]], [[Malcolm Stoddard]], [[Sylvester Morand]], [[Philip McGough]] and [[Gordon Sterne]] appeared in the {{w|Gulliver's Travels (miniseries)|miniseries adaptation}}.
* [[Catherine Tate]] and [[James Corden]] appeared in the [[2010]] {{w|Gulliver's Travels (2010 film)|film adaptation}}.
* [[Catherine Tate]] and [[James Corden]] appeared in the [[2010]] {{w|Gulliver's Travels (2010 film)|film adaptation}}.
[[Category:Books from the real world]]
[[Category:Books from the real world]]
[[Category:The Doctor's books]]
[[Category:The Doctor's books]]

Revision as of 20:56, 2 April 2018

Gulliver's Travels

Gulliver's Travels was a book by Jonathan Swift published around a hundred years after 1616. (PROSE: The Empire of Glass) Its protagonist, Lemuel Gulliver, was brought to life in the Land of Fiction, and there encountered the Second Doctor. He could only speak passages from the novel. (TV: The Mind Robber) As the First Doctor noted, Laputa was a fictional island within the book's narrative. (PROSE: The Empire of Glass)

The First Doctor read Gulliver's Travels while living on the Isle of Hoy, Orkney for several years in the 1950s. (AUDIO: The Revenants)

The Second Doctor had a copy, and gave it to Eleanor Woods to read. According to her, the book began with Gulliver setting sail from Bristol. (PROSE: Visiting Hours)

In 1190, Barbara Wright, while a prisoner of Saladin, planned to tell him stories such as that of Gulliver's Travels. (TV: The Crusade)

The Fifth Doctor made a "literary reference" to the book, joking that the Scientifica had no more cucumbers to offer as they'd used them all up trying to extract sunbeams. (PROSE: Cold Fusion)

In the far future, Professor George Litefoot compared the Venusian floating city Amtor to the flying island Laputa from the novel. (AUDIO: Voyage to Venus)

Behind the scenes