1984: Difference between revisions

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=== [[March]] ===
=== [[March]] ===
*  [[1 March|01]] - [[DW]]: ''[[Planet of Fire]]'' Part 3 was first broadcast.
*  [[1 March|01]] - [[DW]]: ''[[Planet of Fire]]'' Part 3 was first broadcast.
*  [[2 March|02]] - [[DW]]: ''[[Planet of Fire]]'' Part 4 was first broadcast. [[Kamelion]] was destroyed and [[Mark Strickson]] leaves the series.
*  [[2 March|02]] - [[DW]]: ''[[Planet of Fire]]'' Part 4 was first broadcast. [[Kamelion]] was destroyed and [[Mark Strickson]] left the series.
*  [[8 March|08]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Caves of Androzani]]'' Part 1 was first broadcast.
*  [[8 March|08]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Caves of Androzani]]'' Part 1 was first broadcast.
*  [[9 March|09]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Caves of Androzani]]'' Part 2 was first broadcast.
*  [[9 March|09]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Caves of Androzani]]'' Part 2 was first broadcast.
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:: [[DWN]]: ''[[Kinda (novelisation)|Doctor Who - Kinda]]'' was first published. This was the last fully photographic [[Peter Davison]] cover.
:: [[DWN]]: ''[[Kinda (novelisation)|Doctor Who - Kinda]]'' was first published. This was the last fully photographic [[Peter Davison]] cover.
*  [[16 March|16]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Caves of Androzani]]'' Part 4 was first broadcast, ending in [[Peter Davison]]'s [[regeneration]] into [[Colin Baker]]
*  [[16 March|16]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Caves of Androzani]]'' Part 4 was first broadcast, ending in [[Peter Davison]]'s [[regeneration]] into [[Colin Baker]]
*  [[17 March|17]] - [[John Dearth]], who provided the voice of [[BOSS]] in [[DW]]: ''[[The Green Death]]'' and portrayed [[Lupton]] in [[DW]]: ''[[Planet of the Spiders]]'' died.
*  [[17 March|17]] - [[John Dearth]], who provided the voice of [[BOSS]] in [[DW]]: ''[[The Green Death]]'' and portrayed [[Lupton]] in [[DW]]: ''[[Planet of the Spiders]],'' died.
*  [[22 March|22]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Twin Dilemma]]'' Part 1 was first broadcast, launching the [[Colin Baker]] era. A slight modification was made to the series logo, adding a prism effect (which creates the effect of it being curved); the logo used for merchandising, however, remains as per the version introduced in [[1980]]. This was the first time since the switchover from [[William Hartnell]] to [[Patrick Troughton]] that a regeneration occurred before the end of a season, allowing the new Doctor to finish the year.
*  [[22 March|22]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Twin Dilemma]]'' Part 1 was first broadcast, launching the [[Colin Baker]] era. A slight modification was made to the series logo, adding a prism effect (which creates the effect of it being curved); the logo used for merchandising, however, remained as per the version introduced in [[1980]]. This was the first time since the switchover from [[William Hartnell]] to [[Patrick Troughton]] that a regeneration occurred before the end of a season, allowing the new Doctor to finish the year.
*  [[23 March|23]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Twin Dilemma]]'' Part 2 was first broadcast.
*  [[23 March|23]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Twin Dilemma]]'' Part 2 was first broadcast.
* [[27 March|27]] - [[Derek Francis]], who played [[Nero]] in [[DW]]: ''[[The Romans]]'', died from a heart attack in [[Wimbledon]].
* [[27 March|27]] - [[Derek Francis]], who played [[Nero]] in [[DW]]: ''[[The Romans]]'', died from a heart attack in [[Wimbledon]].
*  [[29 March|29]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Twin Dilemma]]'' Part 3 was first broadcast.
*  [[29 March|29]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Twin Dilemma]]'' Part 3 was first broadcast.
*  [[30 March|30]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Twin Dilemma]]'' Part 4 was first broadcast, concluding Season 21. This was the last half-hour Part until 1986 as [[Season 22]] moves to a new format of 45-minute Parts. The 1984 season also marks the end of the show's 24-Part long seasons. Beginning in 1985 the number of Parts was reduced to 13, later 14. A similar Part count would persist when the series returned in 2005.
*  [[30 March|30]] - [[DW]]: ''[[The Twin Dilemma]]'' Part 4 was first broadcast, concluding Season 21. This was the last half-hour part until 1986 as [[Season 22]] moved to a new format of 45-minute parts. The 1984 season also marked the end of the show's 24-part long seasons. Beginning in 1985 the number of parts was reduced to 13, later 14. A similar part count persisted when the series returned in 2005.


=== [[April]] ===
=== [[April]] ===

Revision as of 04:23, 8 November 2011

Timeline for 1984
20th century | 1980s

1978 • 1979 • 1980 • 1981 • 1982 • 1983 • 1985 • 1986 • 1987 • 1988 • 1989 • 1990
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Events

May

Summer

September

Unknown dates


Behind the scenes

January

February

March

DWN: Doctor Who - Kinda was first published. This was the last fully photographic Peter Davison cover.

April

  • 15 - Magician and comic Tommy Cooper, who at one point was considered a contender to play the Doctor, suffered a heart attack during a live TV performance and died backstage.
  • 22 - Michelle Ryan was born.
  • 26 - Dr. Who films and Gerry Anderson composer Barry Gray died.

May

  • 03 - DWN: Doctor Who - Snakedance was first published. With this release, Target Books returns to using artistic covers, although for this and the next Fifth Doctor novelisation, a modified series logo incorporating a photograph of Peter Davison was utilised.
  • 15 - Tom Baker guest stars in the American TV series, Remington Steele, in the Part "Hounded Steele".
  • 24 - DWN: Doctor Who - Enlightenment was first published. A rare occasion where more than one novelisation has been published at different times within the same calendar month. Second and last use of the modified logo-and-photo branding for a Fifth Doctor novelisation, and the final use of a photographic element on a Doctor Who fiction book until the 1988 novelisation of DWN: Time and the Rani. As Target was not allowed to feature artistic renderings of Peter Davison at the time, this was the last appearance of an image of the Fifth Doctor on a new novelisation, although Target would finally be allowed to feature drawings of Davison when it issued new editions of many of its novelisations in the early 1990s. Target subsequently chose not to include images of the Sixth Doctor on initial releases of any of that era's novelisations; therefore, an image of the current Doctor would not appear again on the cover of a newly issued Target novelisation until DWN: Paradise Towers was published in December 1988.

June

  • 14 - BBC Broadcasting Research issues a Viewing Panel Report gauging response to Season 21 of Doctor Who, which had included the changeover from Fifth Doctor Peter Davison to Sixth Doctor Colin Baker. The season receives an Appreciation Index of 57, while newcomer Baker has received a "rather cool reception" from viewers.[1]

July

August

September

October

November

December

Unknown dates

Footnotes