The Daleks (series): Difference between revisions

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'''''The Daleks''''', later reprinted as '''''The Dalek Tapes''''', was a series of 104 single-page comic stories published in the ''[[TV Century 21]]'' magazine between [[1965 (releases)|1965]] and [[1967 (releases)|1967]]. The stories detailed the history of the Daleks from their [[Creation of the Daleks|creation]] to their discovery of [[Earth]].
'''''The Daleks''''', later reprinted as '''''The Dalek Tapes''''', was a series of 104 single-page comic stories published in the ''[[TV Century 21]]'' magazine between [[1965 (releases)|1965]] and [[1967 (releases)|1967]]. The stories detailed the history of the Daleks from their [[Creation of the Daleks|creation]] to their discovery of [[Earth]].


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Revision as of 22:58, 9 November 2020

RealWorld.png
Series logo, as printed in the first panel of each installment.
You may wish to consult The Daleks for other, similarly-named pages.

The Daleks, later reprinted as The Dalek Tapes, was a series of 104 single-page comic stories published in the TV Century 21 magazine between 1965 and 1967. The stories detailed the history of the Daleks from their creation to their discovery of Earth.

Storyline

The strip portrayed a unique narrative of the creation of the Daleks. The original humanoid Daleks were diminutive blue men with large heads. For their war against the Thals, these humanoid Daleks had created not just war machines but also neutron bombs that were accidentally detonated by a meteorite fall. The subsequent explosion created mutant Daleks who used the war machines as their shells. This account conflicted with the story recounted in The Daleks and was later contradicted by Genesis of the Daleks.

Later stories told of the expansion of the Dalek Empire and a lengthy war against the Mechanoids and other enemies (tying into The Chase). In most of these, the Emperor Dalek served as the protagonist.

The final story, The Road to Conflict, concerned the Daleks' first encounters with humans and their discovery of the planet Earth. This was intended to lead into The Dalek Invasion of Earth, but this was retconned in the followup story Return of the Elders released in Doctor Who Magazine issues 249-254. Another followup, Deadline to Doomsday, was planned but ultimately unproduced.

Although much of the material in these strips directly contradicted what was shown on television later, some concepts — such as flying Daleks, Daleks acquiring human characteristics and turning against their masters, and the design of the Dalek Emperor — did show up later on in the programme.

Stories by TV Century 21 issue

Originally, no individual titles were given to the stories. However, some titles were given in the preceding issue's "coming next time" closing caption. After doing research and interviewing those involved in the original strips, John Ainsworth proposed the following titles, which were later used by Doctor Who Magazine:

Title Writer Printed in Released
Genesis of Evil David Whitaker, Alan Fennell TV Century 21 1-3 23 January - 6 February 1965
Power Play David Whitaker TV Century 21 4-10 13 February - 27 March 1965
Duel of the Daleks TV Century 21 11-17 3 April - 15 March 1965
The Amaryll Challenge TV Century 21 18-24 22 May - 23 July 1965
The Penta Ray Factor TV Century 21 25-32 10 July - 28 August 1965
Plague of Death TV Century 21 33-39 4 September - 16 October 1965
The Menace of the Monstrons TV Century 21 40-46 23 October - 4 December 1965
Eve of War TV Century 21 47-51 11 December 1965 - 8 January 1966
The Archives of Phryne TV Century 21 52-58 15 January - 26 February 1966
The Rogue Planet TV Century 21 59-62 5 - 26 March 1966
Impasse TV Century 21 63-69 2 April - 14 May 1966
The Terrorkon Harvest TV Century 21 70-75 21 May - 25 June 1966
Legacy of Yesteryear TV Century 21 76-85 2 July - 3 September 1966
Shadow of Humanity TV Century 21 86-89 10 September - 1 October 1966
The Emissaries of Jevo TV Century 21 90-95 8 October - 12 November 1966
The Road to Conflict TV Century 21 96-104 19 November 1966 - 14 January 1967
Return of the Elders John Lawrence DWM 249-254 13 February - 3 July 1997

Crew

Though the strips featured the credit "by Terry Nation", the scripts were written mainly by Nation and David Whitaker. The editor of TV Century 21 said that he had a heavy hand in the writing of the Genesis of Evil story.

At different times, Richard Jennings, Eric Eden, and Ron Turner did the art duties.

Reprints

World Distributors first reprinted the comics in 1976 and 1977.

They were again reprinted in Doctor Who Magazine, issues 33 to 42, under the new title The Dalek Tapes.

In 1994 the original, unedited stories were collected and published by Marvel Comics as a graphic novel called The Dalek Chronicles.

Title graphics

The title image occupied the first panel on the page for the first 75 issues. From issue 76 onward the title ran along the length of the page above the comic.

TV Century 21 Issues 76-104 Art by Ron Turner
Doctor Who Magazine Issues 249-254 Art by Ron Turner

The first set of reprints from World Distributors in the years 1976 and 1977 only used a series title graphic on the first page. On subsequent pages, as with most reprints of the series, both the title and the news box were replaced with narration. Where divided into parts, only the first part's title box carried the series title The Daleks. The Amazing World of Doctor Who's title box (not shown) read The Daleks in A New Start.

From 1980 to 1994, Marvel UK reprinted the series. The first block of reprints went uninterrupted from Doctor Who Magazine Issues 30-42 and used the title The Dalek Tapes. Those included the standard elements of the tape graphic and the series title, however sizing, placement, and the presence of the other elements varied. Tape number didn't alway receive a special font and the episode title was originally placed in the news box. When the series was revisited, it carried the second TV21 title graphic on every page of Eve of War. The image was resized to fill the news box as well, avoiding the need to supply any new narration. The Archives of Phryne only carried the graphic on the first page in the issue because it had been originally reprinted in a Dalek Annual. The third set reproduced the 1978 Dalek Annual's reprints of the Skardal arc in original colour and featured the same whimsical lettering in the title box.

Later reprints focused on better quality reproduction of the material. The graphic novel features the comics with original TV21 title and news panels intact.