Joan Redfern: Difference between revisions

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Joan Redfern's husband died in war, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Human Nature (novel)|Human Nature]]'') specifically in the [[Boer Wars|Boer War]] at the [[Battle of Spion Kop]] in [[January]] [[1900]].
Joan Redfern's husband died in war, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Human Nature (novel)|Human Nature]]'') specifically in the [[Boer Wars|Boer War]] at the [[Battle of Spion Kop]] in [[January]] [[1900]].


While working at Farringham, from [[September]] to [[November]] [[1913]], [[John Smith (Tenth Doctor)|John Smith]] fell in love with Matron Redfern. He showed her a [[A Journal of Impossible Things (Human Nature)|journal]] in which he had written down his dreams, which were really echoes of [[the Doctor]]'s adventures with [[Rose Tyler]] and [[Martha Jones]], and later took her to a dance. However, their affair was interrupted by the arrival of the [[Family of Blood]], who were looking for the Doctor. ([[TV]]: ''[[Human Nature (TV story)|Human Nature]]''-
While working at Farringham, from [[September]] to [[November]] [[1913]], [[John Smith (Tenth Doctor)|John Smith]] fell in love with Matron Redfern. He showed her a [[A Journal of Impossible Things (Human Nature)|journal]] in which he had written down his dreams, which were really echoes of [[the Doctor]]'s adventures with [[Rose Tyler]] and [[Martha Jones]], and later took her to a dance. However, their affair was interrupted by the arrival of the [[Family of Blood]], who were looking for the Doctor. ([[TV]]: ''[[Human Nature (TV story)|Human Nature]]'')


When John Smith was forced to open the [[biodata module|fob watch]] and let the Doctor's mind take over his body again, Joan was devastated, considering that Smith had "died", robbing them of the future they could have had, a normal life which the Doctor would never know for all his adventures. After the Family were defeated, she had a tense interview with the Tenth Doctor, during which she made her position clear that John Smith was not him and was dead because of him, making any further association between her and the Doctor uncountenanceable. She also berated the Doctor for havng chosen Farringham "on a whim" as the place to lure the Family of Blood, and consequently caused the needless deaths of all the [[human]]s the Family had killed before the Doctor's return.  
When John Smith was forced to open the [[biodata module|fob watch]] and let the Doctor's mind take over his body again, Joan was devastated, considering that Smith had "died", robbing them of the future they could have had, a normal life which the Doctor would never know for all his adventures. After the Family were defeated, she had a tense interview with the Tenth Doctor, during which she made her position clear that John Smith was not him and was dead because of him, making any further association between her and the Doctor uncountenanceable. She also berated the Doctor for havng chosen Farringham "on a whim" as the place to lure the Family of Blood, and consequently caused the needless deaths of all the [[human]]s the Family had killed before the Doctor's return.  

Revision as of 12:33, 28 April 2021

Joan Redfern was a widow working at a school in Norfolk when the Doctor transformed himself into a human called "John Smith". Redfern developed a close bond with John, to which John's transformation back into the Doctor put an end.

This story happened "many times" in "different ways" throughout the life of the Doctor, (WC: The Shadow in the Mirror) including to the Seventh Doctor (PROSE: Human Nature) and the Tenth Doctor. (TV: Human Nature, The Family of Blood) The Joan Redfern encountered by the former's human identity was a science teacher at Hulton College, near Farringham, and the widow of Arthur Redfern; (PROSE: Human Nature) meanwhile, when the Tenth Doctor's human avatar became romantically involved with her, she was the Matron of Farringham School for Boys and the widow of an Oliver Redfern.

Biography

Joan Redfern's husband died in war, (PROSE: Human Nature) specifically in the Boer War at the Battle of Spion Kop in January 1900.

While working at Farringham, from September to November 1913, John Smith fell in love with Matron Redfern. He showed her a journal in which he had written down his dreams, which were really echoes of the Doctor's adventures with Rose Tyler and Martha Jones, and later took her to a dance. However, their affair was interrupted by the arrival of the Family of Blood, who were looking for the Doctor. (TV: Human Nature)

When John Smith was forced to open the fob watch and let the Doctor's mind take over his body again, Joan was devastated, considering that Smith had "died", robbing them of the future they could have had, a normal life which the Doctor would never know for all his adventures. After the Family were defeated, she had a tense interview with the Tenth Doctor, during which she made her position clear that John Smith was not him and was dead because of him, making any further association between her and the Doctor uncountenanceable. She also berated the Doctor for havng chosen Farringham "on a whim" as the place to lure the Family of Blood, and consequently caused the needless deaths of all the humans the Family had killed before the Doctor's return.

After she coldly dismissed him, she broke down sobbing, clutching John's journal. (TV: The Family of Blood)

Joan Redfern as the Seventh Doctor knew her. (PROSE: Human Nature)

In another "instantiation" of the story of John Smith and Joan Redfern and the alien family, (WC: The Shadow in the Mirror) Joan Redfern was working as a science teacher at Hulton College in early 1914. She became involved with John Smith, the Seventh Doctor's human identity. In April, after meeting the Seventh Doctor himself, she gave her cat Wolsey to his companion Bernice Summerfield, to remember her by. (PROSE: Human Nature)

Many years later, Joan's diary was found by her great-granddaughter Verity Newman. Verity published A Journal of Impossible Things, the story of Joan's romance with the Doctor which Verity told people who bought the book. As his regeneration into the Eleventh Doctor approached, the Doctor bought Joan's book and asked Verity, who realised who he was, if Joan was happy in the end. Verity confirmed that Joan did live a happy life after the Doctor left, but the Doctor left without answering when Verity asked if he too had been happy. (TV: The End of Time)

Alternate timeline

In a possible future viewed by her and John Smith, she became his wife. They had two children and a number of grandchildren as they lived long, happy lives together. (TV: The Family of Blood)