Mr Tickle: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{wikipediainfo|Mr. Tickle}}
{{wikipediainfo|Mr. Tickle}}
{{Navfobox
|header = Alternate counterparts of <br/>[[Mr Tickle]]
|t1    =
|1      = [[Mr Tickle|The Doctor's universe]] • [[Mr Tickle (The Daft Dimension)|Daft Dimension]]
}}
'''Mr Tickle''' was a fictional character with his own series of books.
'''Mr Tickle''' was a fictional character with his own series of books.



Revision as of 18:01, 31 May 2023

Mr Tickle

Mr Tickle was a fictional character with his own series of books.

Bernice Summerfield made a mental note to herself once: "Dear diary, I'm not writing this down – if I could I'd be Mr Tickle – so I'm going to have to memorize this, or paint it on the walls." (PROSE: Falls the Shadow)

The Tenth Doctor asked Rose Tyler if she wanted to meet Mr Tickle, but then decided that he might be annoying since he lived in a universe of nominative determinism. (AUDIO: Infamy of the Zaross)

When Anya Kingdom protested that the Tenth Doctor had called her into an dangerous environment just to hold a switch, the Doctor defended that the process had to be simultaneous and he was not "made of arms" like Mr. Tickle only for her to not get the reference. (AUDIO: The Wrong Woman)

Long, wiggly, orange arms about to tickle the Twelfth Doctor. (COMIC: The Daft Dimension)

A version of Mr Tickle existed as a real individual in the Daft Dimension. The Twelfth Doctor explained to Clara Oswald that they couldn't go to meet him as he "did not exist", unaware that Mr Tickle was reaching out for him with his long arms. (COMIC: The Daft Dimension)

Behind the scenes

Mr. Tickle was the titular protagonist in the very first Mr. Men book by Roger Hargreaves, published in 1971.

The inspiration for this character came from a question by Hargreave's 8-year-old son, Adam Hargreaves[1], who himself would go on to write all fourteen books for Dr. Men, a Doctor Who spin on the iconic children's series, beginning in 2017.

External links

Footnotes

  1. Cavendish, Lucy (6 August 2011). Adam Hargreaves: 'The Mr Men will always be part of me'. The Telegraph. Retrieved on 10 August 2019.