Winning (poem): Difference between revisions
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* This poem focuses on the Master's personality. | * This poem focuses on the Master's personality. | ||
* This poem is written in first person from the point of view of the Master, but at the end of the poem (an unknown incarnation of) the Doctor has some speech. | * This poem is written in first person from the point of view of the Master, but at the end of the poem (an unknown incarnation of) the Doctor has some speech. | ||
* The illustration of Missy holding a [[Missy's child|baby]] was inspired by a conversation [[Steven Moffat]] and [[Russell T Davies]] | * The illustration of Missy holding a [[Missy's child|baby]] was inspired by a conversation between [[Steven Moffat]] and [[Russell T Davies]]. The plan follows that Moffat would have ended his era of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' on a [[List of televised cliffhangers|cliffhanger]] in which Missy told the Master and the Doctor that she was [[pregnant]]. | ||
{{TitleSort}} | {{TitleSort}} | ||
{{Master stories}} | {{Master stories}} |
Revision as of 14:46, 10 March 2020
Winning was a poem contained within the anthology Now We Are Six Hundred.
Plot
to be added
References
- The Master's hypnotic abilities are referenced.
Notes
- This poem focuses on the Master's personality.
- This poem is written in first person from the point of view of the Master, but at the end of the poem (an unknown incarnation of) the Doctor has some speech.
- The illustration of Missy holding a baby was inspired by a conversation between Steven Moffat and Russell T Davies. The plan follows that Moffat would have ended his era of Doctor Who on a cliffhanger in which Missy told the Master and the Doctor that she was pregnant.
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