Catch-1782 (audio story): Difference between revisions
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=== Part four === | === Part four === | ||
Mel | Mel refuses Henry's [[marriage proposal]] as she does not love him nor know for sure that he has not taken advantage of her, but he insists that she think on it and she wonders if the Doctor has left her to become his second wife. The Doctor is unwilling to leave her behind and, whilst Dr Wallace digs a hole for the prototype canister to be buried in, sneaks into the house with John and finds Mrs McGregor distraught after learning of Henry's proposal. Having hoped to marry him herself, she helps John rescue Mel and they regroup with the Doctor and Dr Wallace, who bury the canister in a [[sewing box]] to be dug up in 2003. | ||
They prepare to, however, Mel points out a problem, since if she leaves Eleanor Hallam will cease to exist and so she won't be recorded in the notes of her uncle John so that on reading the notes she won't be thinking about Eleanor Hallam when the TARDIS ends up interacting with the canister sending her back in the first place, but she doesn't want to stay and live out the remainder of Eleanor Hallam's life until her recorded death in 1811. The Doctor discovers a loop-hole, realising that Eleanor Hallam's "life", as recorded by Henry, is a fiction and her "death" is merely symbolic since no proper record of her death, or a body, was ever recorded. Thus Mel can return to the present. Doctor Wallace says he will go visit Henry as they are friends and Mel reminds him that he has an ally in McGregor. They take off, with Mel still weary about where she belongs but relieved to be leaving. McGregor confesses to Henry and explains that the people who visited earlier were Mel's "family" here to take her home. Henry is distraught and refuses to believe her, going so far as to attack her but is found in time by Dr. Wallace who reels him off her. Henry breaks down as he cries Jane's name over and over as Wallace realises the Doctor was right and he still hasn't recovered from the death of wife. Dr. Wallace and McGregor agree to take care of him as per the Doctor's instructions to help him get better. | |||
The Doctor, Mel and John arrive back in the house in [[2003]] and the Doctor instructs John to dismantle the capsule lest it cause any more harm. They realise that the woman in the painting they saw earlier, the "Eleanor" there was actually McGregor and reckon that they had a happy ending after all, and Henry must have removed the pages of 1782 from his diary lest anyone find out about him suffering his mental instability at that time. Then, reluctantly, but at Mel's behest, the Doctor joins Mel and John back downstairs to attend the remainder of the celebration. | The Doctor, Mel and John arrive back in the house in [[2003]] and the Doctor instructs John to dismantle the capsule lest it cause any more harm. They realise that the woman in the painting they saw earlier, the "Eleanor" there was actually McGregor and reckon that they had a happy ending after all, and Henry must have removed the pages of 1782 from his diary lest anyone find out about him suffering his mental instability at that time. Then, reluctantly, but at Mel's behest, the Doctor joins Mel and John back downstairs to attend the remainder of the celebration. |
Revision as of 19:39, 25 June 2023
Catch-1782 was the sixty-eighth story in Big Finish's monthly range. It was written by Alison Lawson and featured Colin Baker as the Sixth Doctor and Bonnie Langford as Melanie Bush.
It was the third team-up between the the Sixth Doctor and Mel characters since their turn on television. It was notable for providing the first substantial details about Mel's family and general back story in performed Doctor Who. It was also unusual for not having a "villain" per se, and no real alien presence at all. Because of this, and its setting in 2003 and 1782, it was a "pure historical", even at the time of its release. The main "enemy" in the piece is actually the concept of the Grandfather Paradox and the Doctor's efforts to retrieve Mel from her family's past history without causing damage to Mel's personal timeline.
Publisher's summary
When the Doctor and Mel visit the National Foundation for Scientific Research as it celebrates its centenary, Mel expects only to be able to catch up with her uncle. She doesn't expect to meet her own ancestors...
What is buried in the grounds of the Foundation?
What secret has Henry Hallam kept from his descendants for three hundred years?
Can Mel escape her own past?
Visiting your relatives can sometimes be trying, but surely it should never be this difficult?
Plot
Part one
The Doctor acquires a letter sent to Mel from her uncle, Dr John Hallam, in which he invites her to the National Foundation for Scientific Research's centenary celebration in 2003 Berkshire, on the way to which the Doctor hears a voice calling for help through a kink in time. A keen historian, John shows the Doctor and Mel around Hallam House, which his father leased to the Foundation, and tells them how many claim to have seen the ghost of the mysterious Eleanor Hallam. The Doctor initially wonders if the phenomena is related to the kink in time, but rules it out.
Whilst the Doctor talks to Professor David Munro, an old friend and the director of the Foundation, Mel learns from her uncle how the time capsule that the Foundation is burying is made of a new and unique alloy and goes to his study to look at his notes on the family history. David finds an object whilst burying the canister and the Doctor and John take it to the laboratory for analysis, discovering that it is an 18th century box containing the prototype canister which, impossibly, is in John's study. Mel and the canister in the study are relocated by a time disturbance and the Doctor enters the TARDIS, finding that there has been an explosion in the control room.
Part two
The Doctor deduces that the new alloy, created by the Foundation from elements supplied by the Space Agency, was activated by its proximity to the TARDIS and sent Mel back in time, but the TARDIS attempted to warn her with its telepathic circuits. He and John look through the notes on the Hallam family and head off in the TARDIS to find Mel upon learning that the mysterious Eleanor arrived at Hallam Hall exactly 222 years earlier during a period which Henry Hallam tore from his journal.
Mel finds herself in 1781 and is taken by the housekeeper, Mrs McGregor, to the master of Hallam Hall, Henry. She claims to be a member of his late wife's sewing circle and forgets her name and home, vaguely remembering a doctor and collapsing on her way to the study to be saved by him. Dr Michael Wallace suspects that she might be attempting to exploit Henry's charity but diagnoses her with a concussion and suggests that they humour her by taking her to the study as she keeps asking. There, Mel says that she is in the wrong time and that she needs to go home.
Part three
The Doctor and John arrive in June 1782, by which point Mel (referred to by the misheard name of Nell or Eleanor) has been living with Henry for several months and treated with laudanum by Dr Wallace. Whilst John drinks tea with Mrs McGregor, the Doctor apologises to the confused Mel for arriving late because of interference caused to the TARDIS systems by the canister and gives her medicine from Xanthus IV. He suggests that Mel be removed from the house, but Henry comes to suspect that he and Dr Wallace are attempting to have Mel, whom he loves, committed to an asylum.
Henry kicks the Doctor, John and Dr Wallace out of the house. Mel has benefitted from the Doctor's medicine and talks with Mrs McGregor about how a violent fit at Christmas led to her being treated by Dr Wallace and that she is a time traveller, becoming distraught upon learning that the Doctor has been banished as she expected that he would rescue her. Outside of the grounds, the Doctor tells John that Mel has now become part of history and must be left behind to live out her life as Eleanor Hallam.
Part four
Mel refuses Henry's marriage proposal as she does not love him nor know for sure that he has not taken advantage of her, but he insists that she think on it and she wonders if the Doctor has left her to become his second wife. The Doctor is unwilling to leave her behind and, whilst Dr Wallace digs a hole for the prototype canister to be buried in, sneaks into the house with John and finds Mrs McGregor distraught after learning of Henry's proposal. Having hoped to marry him herself, she helps John rescue Mel and they regroup with the Doctor and Dr Wallace, who bury the canister in a sewing box to be dug up in 2003.
They prepare to, however, Mel points out a problem, since if she leaves Eleanor Hallam will cease to exist and so she won't be recorded in the notes of her uncle John so that on reading the notes she won't be thinking about Eleanor Hallam when the TARDIS ends up interacting with the canister sending her back in the first place, but she doesn't want to stay and live out the remainder of Eleanor Hallam's life until her recorded death in 1811. The Doctor discovers a loop-hole, realising that Eleanor Hallam's "life", as recorded by Henry, is a fiction and her "death" is merely symbolic since no proper record of her death, or a body, was ever recorded. Thus Mel can return to the present. Doctor Wallace says he will go visit Henry as they are friends and Mel reminds him that he has an ally in McGregor. They take off, with Mel still weary about where she belongs but relieved to be leaving. McGregor confesses to Henry and explains that the people who visited earlier were Mel's "family" here to take her home. Henry is distraught and refuses to believe her, going so far as to attack her but is found in time by Dr. Wallace who reels him off her. Henry breaks down as he cries Jane's name over and over as Wallace realises the Doctor was right and he still hasn't recovered from the death of wife. Dr. Wallace and McGregor agree to take care of him as per the Doctor's instructions to help him get better.
The Doctor, Mel and John arrive back in the house in 2003 and the Doctor instructs John to dismantle the capsule lest it cause any more harm. They realise that the woman in the painting they saw earlier, the "Eleanor" there was actually McGregor and reckon that they had a happy ending after all, and Henry must have removed the pages of 1782 from his diary lest anyone find out about him suffering his mental instability at that time. Then, reluctantly, but at Mel's behest, the Doctor joins Mel and John back downstairs to attend the remainder of the celebration.
Cast
- The Doctor - Colin Baker
- Melanie Bush - Bonnie Langford
- Dr John Hallam - Derek Benfield
- Dr Wallace - Michael Chance
- Henry Hallam - Keith Drinkel
- Professor David Munro - Ian Fairburn
- Rachel - Rhiannon Meades
- Mrs McGregor - Jillie Meers
References
- The Doctor has a pill he picked up as a hangover cure from Zanthas IV which successfully counteracts the effects of laudanum.
- Royal mail doesn't deliver to "out here" (implied to be outer space or wherever the TARDIS is when the Doctor reveals he has Mel's uncle John's letter and invitation).
- The Doctor mentions being friends with Richard Dawkins and David Munro.
- Doctor Hallam's cat Jupiter is named after the planet Jupiter.
- Doctor Hallam is a historian but has an interest in chemistry and dabbles in it.
- David Munro and the Doctor worked on a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance imaging project together many years ago for the Foundation. It investigated the course of disease evolution. (14:30)
- John mentions electron microscopes.
- John refers to the TARDIS as a police box.
- John mentions the secret project of the Foundation involves particle physics and unstable chrono atoms.
- Mel drinks some brandy.
- Daisy is a servant at Hallam Hall.
- The Doctor claims to be an expert on diseases of the mind, including mania, schizophrenia, hysteria, delusions, neurosis and dementia.
- The Doctor has a cure for hangovers and similar maladies which he picked up on Xanthus IV.
- Mel has an eidetic memory.
Notes
- The name is an obvious pun on Catch-22, a book published in 1961. When explaining the apparent dichotomy of leaving Hallam hall, Mel comments that she's stuck in a "Catch-22". This is a phrase used to describe a paradoxical situation
- The implication of the initial interior TARDIS scene is that Mel insisted that the Doctor change his outfit to attend the centenary celebration at the National Foundation for Scientific Research, and that he testily obeyed. Thus he likely was not wearing his traditional multi-coloured outfit for this adventure. However, the audio never makes clear exactly what he changed into, though the celebration was described as a "black tie affair."
- This audio drama was recorded on 25 and 26 October 2004 at the Moat Studios.
Continuity
- During her childhood, Mel often visited the museum with her uncle John. (AUDIO: The Wrong Doctors)
- Gallifrey is mentioned to be in Ireland. (TV: The Hand of Fear)
- The Doctor claims to be a doctor of "practically everything", including medicine. (TV: The Moonbase, Spearhead from Space, The God Complex et al.)
External links
- Official Catch-1782 page at bigfinish.com
- Catch-1782 at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- DisContinuity for Catch-1782 at Tetrapyriarbus - The DisContinuity Guide