Christopher Marlowe: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Line 15: Line 15:


==Profile==
==Profile==
[[Ninth Doctor|The Doctor]] made passing reference to [[Rose Tyler]] that Marlowe was gay or bisexual, and that the Doctor would be willing to make a pass at him if the situation called for it. ([[DWM]]: ''[[A Groatsworth of Wit]]'') Marlowe, in fact, flirted extensively with [[First Doctor|the Doctor]]'s [[companion]] [[Steven Taylor]]. ([[MA]]: ''[[The Empire of Glass]]'')  
[[Ninth Doctor|The Doctor]] made passing reference to [[Rose Tyler]] that Marlowe was gay or bisexual, and that the Doctor would be willing to make a pass at him if the situation called for it. ([[DWM]]: ''[[A Groatsworth of Wit]]'') Marlowe, in fact, flirted extensively with the [[First Doctor|First Doctor]]'s [[companion]] [[Steven Taylor]]. ([[MA]]: ''[[The Empire of Glass]]'')  


Marlowe, Edward Kelly, and [[William Shakespeare]] were supposedly involved in some trouble with [[Psionovore]]s invading through a scrying stone.  The date and details of the event haven't been recorded.  ([[ST]]: ''[[Apocrypha Bipedium]]'')
Marlowe, Edward Kelly, and [[William Shakespeare]] were supposedly involved in some trouble with [[Psionovore]]s invading through a scrying stone.  The date and details of the event haven't been recorded.  ([[ST]]: ''[[Apocrypha Bipedium]]'')

Revision as of 10:45, 21 February 2011

For other individuals named Christopher and Marlowe, see separate entry.

Christopher "Kit" Marlowe was the greatest Elizabethan tragedian writer before William Shakespeare.

Profile

The Doctor made passing reference to Rose Tyler that Marlowe was gay or bisexual, and that the Doctor would be willing to make a pass at him if the situation called for it. (DWM: A Groatsworth of Wit) Marlowe, in fact, flirted extensively with the First Doctor's companion Steven Taylor. (MA: The Empire of Glass)

Marlowe, Edward Kelly, and William Shakespeare were supposedly involved in some trouble with Psionovores invading through a scrying stone. The date and details of the event haven't been recorded. (ST: Apocrypha Bipedium)

Though history would recorded that Marlowe died in 1593, this was a fallacy. In fact, Marlowe had traveled to the colony of Roanoke in the future United States to spy on Sir Walter Raleigh. While there, he and the rest of the colony were abducted by the Greld, who would use them in their plan to sabotage the Armageddon Convention. He actually died in 1609 as a result of a duel. (MA: The Empire of Glass)

Christopher Marlowe