Special Executive: Difference between revisions
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* [[Alan Moore]], their creator, did not write any further ''Doctor Who'' strips, preventing him from using most of the material he had planned for the Executive. [http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/specex.htm] He went on to use them in the Captain Britain strip of [[Marvel UK]]'s ''The Daredevils'' — one of multiple crossovers between Marvel Comics and ''Doctor Who'' by the UK branch. They made two subsequent cameos after Alan Moore finished writing Captain Britain, one in ''Captain Britain Monthly'', and one in Marvel's ''Excalibur'', the former showing that Wardog was the second leader of the Executive. | * [[Alan Moore]], their creator, did not write any further ''Doctor Who'' strips, preventing him from using most of the material he had planned for the Executive. [http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/specex.htm] He went on to use them in the Captain Britain strip of [[Marvel UK]]'s ''The Daredevils'' — one of multiple crossovers between Marvel Comics and ''Doctor Who'' by the UK branch. They made two subsequent cameos after Alan Moore finished writing Captain Britain, one in ''Captain Britain Monthly'', and one in Marvel's ''Excalibur'', the former showing that Wardog was the second leader of the Executive. | ||
* In the charity anthology ''Walking in Eternity'', [[Lance Parkin]] proposed that the members of the Special Executive were the result of [[Rassilon]]'s first experiments with [[Loom]]s, and he formed the group to do the Time Lords' "dirty jobs" before they split away into an independent team. This backstory has been accepted by many Marvel fans. [http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/cobwb1.htm] [http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/wardog.htm] | * In the charity anthology ''Walking in Eternity'', [[Lance Parkin]] proposed that the members of the Special Executive were the result of [[Rassilon]]'s first experiments with [[Loom]]s, and he formed the group to do the Time Lords' "dirty jobs" before they split away into an independent team. This backstory has been accepted by many Marvel fans. [http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/cobwb1.htm] [http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/wardog.htm] | ||
* [[Daniel O'Mahony]]'s ''A Rag and a Bone'', published in the 2003 fanzine ''Myth Makers Presents: Essentials, ''mentions "Dawn Brigades of parahumans" in [[Gallifrey]]'s past. The story features a [[Wardog|dog-faced parahuman]] in "Gallifreyan scarlet" as a veteran of Gallifrey's [[Black Sun War|First Time War]] and an assistant of [[Sabbath Dei|Sabbath]]. | * [[Daniel O'Mahony]]'s ''A Rag and a Bone'', published in the 2003 fanzine ''Myth Makers Presents: Essentials, ''mentions "Dawn Brigades of parahumans" fighting "[[Killer Cat of Gin-Seng|cat people]]" in [[Gallifrey]]'s past. The story features a [[Wardog|dog-faced parahuman]] in "Gallifreyan scarlet" as a veteran of Gallifrey's [[Black Sun War|First Time War]] and an assistant of [[Sabbath Dei|Sabbath]]. | ||
[[Category:Special Executive| ]] | [[Category:Special Executive| ]] |
Revision as of 04:33, 7 September 2018
The Special Executive (conversationally contracted as Special Exec) were a mercenary group of parahuman lifeforms, led by Wardog. They worked across time and the multiverse.
They were hired by Gallifrey in the early days of the Time Lords to retrieve the assassin Fenris. Wardog, alongside Time Lady Rema-Du, did the retrieval, and Viridian the Brainfeeler scanned Fenris' mind to identify his employers as the Order of the Black Sun. At that moment, agents of the Order attacked; Viridian was killed and Wardog had his left arm blown off. (COMIC: 4-D War)
Ten years later, the Executive — Wardog, Zeitgeist, Cobweb and Millenium — escorted Rema-Du to a trade negotiation that involved the Sontarans and a third party. The third party turned out to be the Order from before they declared war on Gallifrey. The Sontaran ambassador Brilox wiped Millenium's mind with a psy-snare and brainwashed her into murder the Black Sun Elder. Wardog killed her in a failed attempt to stop the murder — and because the Executive were employed by the Time Lords, the Order of the Black Sun believed this to be a deliberate assault and declared war. (COMIC: Black Sun Rising)
Behind the scenes
- Alan Moore, their creator, did not write any further Doctor Who strips, preventing him from using most of the material he had planned for the Executive. [1] He went on to use them in the Captain Britain strip of Marvel UK's The Daredevils — one of multiple crossovers between Marvel Comics and Doctor Who by the UK branch. They made two subsequent cameos after Alan Moore finished writing Captain Britain, one in Captain Britain Monthly, and one in Marvel's Excalibur, the former showing that Wardog was the second leader of the Executive.
- In the charity anthology Walking in Eternity, Lance Parkin proposed that the members of the Special Executive were the result of Rassilon's first experiments with Looms, and he formed the group to do the Time Lords' "dirty jobs" before they split away into an independent team. This backstory has been accepted by many Marvel fans. [2] [3]
- Daniel O'Mahony's A Rag and a Bone, published in the 2003 fanzine Myth Makers Presents: Essentials, mentions "Dawn Brigades of parahumans" fighting "cat people" in Gallifrey's past. The story features a dog-faced parahuman in "Gallifreyan scarlet" as a veteran of Gallifrey's First Time War and an assistant of Sabbath.