Nikola Tesla's Night of Terror (TV story): Difference between revisions

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* Tesla had the idea for [[Wi-Fi]].
* Tesla had the idea for [[Wi-Fi]].
* The Doctor extends the [[TARDIS force field]] to the boundaries of Wardenclyffe.
* The Doctor extends the [[TARDIS force field]] to the boundaries of Wardenclyffe.
* Tesla invented a "mechanism for photographing thoughts", an "apparatus for producing ozone" and a "prototype Death Ray".<!-- Please link these if you know what this could be called or is called.-->
* Tesla invented a "[[mechanism for photographing thoughts]]", an "[[apparatus for producing ozone]]" and a "[[prototype Death Ray]]".
* The Doctor uses the [[TARDIS speaker]]s.
* The Doctor uses the [[TARDIS speaker]]s.



Revision as of 15:41, 24 March 2020

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Nikola Tesla's Night of Terror was the fourth episode of series 12 of Doctor Who.

Synopsis

New York City, the turn of the 20th century. For Nikola Tesla, his grand ideas for revolutionising electricity and communication are proving to be a hard sell to the public. His business rival, Thomas Edison, may not want him to succeed, but surely even he cannot be behind the sudden appearance of hostile alien scavengers? The Thirteenth Doctor and her friends are about to find out.

Plot

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Cast

Crew

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References

Locations

Events

Currency

Individuals

Science

Species

Language

Companies

Technology

Story notes

  • The official synopsis dates this story to 1903, however, this date is not given in the episode. In fact, the Thirteenth Doctor describes Nikola Tesla as "an inventor from 1900" when questioning why the Skithra sought him out. As, historically, the tower at Wardenclyffe was completed in 1902, it is likely that the story is set in 1903 and the reference to 1900 was intended as an approximation. Indeed, a newspaper image is briefly seen in the episode that dates Tesla's discovery of the transmission from "Mars", some months earlier, to 1903.
    • The letter from J.P. Morgan refusing to fund Tesla was historically received on July 14, 1903. According to reports, that night Wardenclyffe tower "came alive shooting off bright flashes lighting up the night sky", which does seem to confirm the story as happening at that time.
  • Robert Glenister, who plays Thomas Edison, previously appeared as Salateen in the 1984 serial The Caves of Androzani, making him one of the select few actors to have appeared in both incarnations of the programme.
  • Anjli Mohindra, who plays Queen Skithra, was a member of the main cast in the spin-off series The Sarah Jane Adventures. She played Rani Chandra from 2008 to 2011. This is Mohindra's first appearance in televised Doctor Who.
  • Bradley Walsh and Anjli Mohindra have worked together before on the Sarah Jane Adventures serial The Day of the Clown. In that story, Walsh played the story's antagonist, Elijah Spellman. This story sees their roles reversed with Walsh now playing a companion and Mohindra playing the villain. Mohindra said that, despite the fact that she and Walsh had worked together before, he did not recognise her due to her excessive make-up. She initially believed he was only joking with her but it was only when he asked to see a picture of her so he could say hello to her if he passed her in the street that she realised he was being serious.[1]
  • Although newspapers in the real world did cast reports on both Tesla's and Edison's views, the newspaper used in the episode, New York Bugle, was never a real world paper, nor were the headlines Tesla: I Heard Message From Mars and Edison: Shut Down Tesla. The closest possible real world connections would be newspapers New York Herald and New York Times, both active at the time.
  • A sign in the story says Night of Tesla Terror, a play on the title Nikola Tesla's Night of Terror.

Ratings

  • 4.04 million (BBC overnight)[2]
  • 5.20 million (BBC final)[3]

Filming locations

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Production errors

If you'd like to talk about narrative problems with this story — like plot holes and things that seem to contradict other stories — please go to this episode's discontinuity discussion.

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Continuity

Home video releases

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External links

Footnotes