Season 14 (Doctor Who 1963): Difference between revisions

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The season also introduced new companion [[Leela]]. The overall gothic ambience of the season was helped by the introduction of the TARDIS' secondary [[console room]], which would be used in lieu of the traditional console room into the next season.
The season also introduced new companion [[Leela]]. The overall gothic ambience of the season was helped by the introduction of the TARDIS' secondary [[console room]], which would be used in lieu of the traditional console room into the next season.


== Television Stories ==
== Television stories ==


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== Main Cast ==
== Main cast ==
* The [[Fourth Doctor]] - [[Tom Baker]]
* The [[Fourth Doctor]] - [[Tom Baker]]
* [[Sarah Jane Smith]] - [[Elisabeth Sladen]] (''[[The Masque of Mandragora]]''-''[[The Hand of Fear]]'')
* [[Sarah Jane Smith]] - [[Elisabeth Sladen]] (''[[The Masque of Mandragora]]''-''[[The Hand of Fear]]'')
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* [[PDA]]: ''[[Match of the Day (novel)|Match of the Day]] (after ''Psi-ence Fiction'')
* [[PDA]]: ''[[Match of the Day (novel)|Match of the Day]] (after ''Psi-ence Fiction'')


== Adaptations and Merchandising ==
== Adaptations and merchandising ==
=== Home Media ===
=== Home media ===
==== VHS ====
==== VHS ====
* The Masque of Mandragora
* The Masque of Mandragora

Revision as of 15:02, 14 March 2012

The fourteenth season of Doctor Who ran between 4 September 1976 and 2 April 1977. It starred Tom Baker as the Fourth Doctor. Famously, it wrote out Sarah Jane Smith, introduced the wood-panelled secondary TARDIS console room, featured the first companion-less televised story, and debuted Leela.

Like the 2011 series, it was comprised of two distinct "halves", separated by a chunk of time when the programme wasn't transmitting new episodes. Though not quite as long as the 2011 gap, the show stopped broadcasting in mid-November and didn't return until New Year's Day. Contemporaneous marketing suggested that The Face of Evil — the serial which began on 1 January 1977 — was actually the start of a new series of Doctor Who. (INFO: The Face of Evil) This fact, however, is ill-remembered, and no reference work published since the event has ever seriously suggested that Face was the season 15 opener.

Overview

Season 14 consisted of six serials and twenty-six episodes. The season is notable for the departure of Sarah Jane Smith in The Hand of Fear and for The Deadly Assassin, a story set entirely on Gallifrey which featured a "revisionist" portrayal of the Time Lords, as well as revealing much more about them. The Deadly Assassin also featured the return of the Master in a degenerated form, and had the Doctor without a companion for an entire story for the first time in the entire history of Doctor Who.

The season also introduced new companion Leela. The overall gothic ambience of the season was helped by the introduction of the TARDIS' secondary console room, which would be used in lieu of the traditional console room into the next season.

Television stories

# Title Writer Episodes Notes
1 The Masque of Mandragora Louis Marks 4
2 The Hand of Fear Bob Baker
Dave Martin
4 Final regular appearance of Sarah Jane Smith
3 The Deadly Assassin Robert Holmes 4 Reintroduction of the Master; only story of the 1963-89 series in which the Doctor does not have a companion
4 The Face of Evil Chris Boucher 4 First appearance of Leela
5 The Robots of Death Chris Boucher 4
6 The Talons of Weng-Chiang Robert Holmes 6

Main cast

Stories set during this season

Adaptations and merchandising

Home media

VHS

  • The Masque of Mandragora
  • The Hand of Fear
  • The Deadly Assassin
  • The Face of Evil
  • The Robots of Death
  • The Talons of Weng-Chiang
  • The Tom Baker Years (extracts from all of the stories)

DVD

  • The Masque of Mandragora (2010)
  • The Hand of Fear (2006)
  • The Deadly Assassin (2009)
  • The Face of Evil (2012)
  • The Robots of Death (2000)
  • The Robots of Death - Special Edition (2012)
  • The Talons of Weng-Chiang (2003)
  • The Talons of Weng-Chiang - Special Edition (2010)

Novels

See also

External links