2007: Difference between revisions

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* [[BFA]]: ''[[100 (audio anthology)|100]]'' was first released.
* [[BFA]]: ''[[100 (audio anthology)|100]]'' was first released.
* [[BFBS]]: ''[[The End of the World (audio story)|The End of the World]]'' - a [[Bernice Summerfield]] audio drama not to be confused with the 2005 ''Doctor Who'' episode of the same title - was first released
* [[BFBS]]: ''[[The End of the World (audio story)|The End of the World]]'' - a [[Bernice Summerfield]] audio drama not to be confused with the 2005 ''Doctor Who'' episode of the same title - was first released
*  [[3 September|03]] - The BBC officially announced that [[Series 5 (Doctor Who)|Series 5]] of ''Doctor Who'' would not air until 2010. According to [[Russell T Davies]] the announcement was originally to have been made prior to an 11th September press conference by the Royal Shakespeare Company announcing [[David Tennant]]'s appearance in ''Hamlet'' in the fall of 2008, but the release of an RSC brochure in late August required an immediate announcement.
*  [[3 September|3]] - The BBC officially announced that [[Series 5 (Doctor Who)|Series 5]] of ''Doctor Who'' would not air until 2010. According to [[Russell T Davies]] the announcement was originally to have been made prior to an 11th September press conference by the Royal Shakespeare Company announcing [[David Tennant]]'s appearance in ''Hamlet'' in the fall of 2008, but the release of an RSC brochure in late August required an immediate announcement.
** [[DW]]: ''[[The Time Warrior]]'' was released to DVD in the UK.
* 3 - [[DW]]: ''[[The Time Warrior]]'' was released to DVD in the UK.
** [[BBC Audio]] launched [[Target Books (BBC Audio releases)|a series of audio releases]] adapting [[Target novelisation|Target Books novelisations]]. These recordings, virtually unabridged, featured (for the most part) veteran cast members reading the long-out-of-print books. The first releases were [[DWN]]: ''[[Doctor Who and the Cave-Monsters]]'' and [[DWN]]: ''[[Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon]]''.
* 3 - [[BBC Audio]] launched [[Target Books (BBC Audio releases)|a series of audio releases]] adapting [[Target novelisation|Target Books novelisations]]. These recordings, virtually unabridged, featured (for the most part) veteran cast members reading the long-out-of-print books. The first releases were [[DWN]]: ''[[Doctor Who and the Cave-Monsters]]'' and [[DWN]]: ''[[Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon]]''.
** [[BBCR]]: ''[[Doctor Who at the BBC: The Tenth Doctor]]'', a radio documentary presented by [[Elisabeth Sladen]], was first released on CD by [[BBC Audio]].
* 3 - [[BBCR]]: ''[[Doctor Who at the BBC: The Tenth Doctor]]'', a radio documentary presented by [[Elisabeth Sladen]], was first released on CD by [[BBC Audio]].
*  [[4 September|04]] - Cast read-through for [[DW]]: ''[[The Fires of Pompeii]]''.
*  [[4 September|4]] - The cast read-through for [[DW]]: ''[[The Fires of Pompeii]]'' took place.
*  [[6 September|06]] - [[Russell T Davies]] revealed to [[Benjamin Cook]] that, despite previous scheduling conflicts, [[Billie Piper]] would return as [[Rose Tyler]] in [[DW]]: ''[[Partners in Crime]]'' and [[Series 4 (Doctor Who)|Series 4]]. <ref name="WritersTale"/>
*  [[6 September|6]] - [[Russell T Davies]] revealed to [[Benjamin Cook]] that, despite previous scheduling conflicts, [[Billie Piper]] would return as [[Rose Tyler]] in [[DW]]: ''[[Partners in Crime]]'' and [[Series 4 (Doctor Who)|Series 4]]. <ref name="WritersTale"/>
** Russell T Davies completed his initial draft of [[DW]]: ''[[Partners in Crime]]''.
* 6 - Russell T Davies completed his initial draft of [[DW]]: ''[[Partners in Crime]]''.
*  [[13 September|13]] - Filming began on [[DW]]: ''[[The Fires of Pompeii]]'' at the Cinecitta Studios in Rome, the first time, save the [[Doctor Who (1996)|1996 telefilm]] and second-unit filming on [[DW]]: ''[[Daleks in Manhattan]]'', that major shooting for a regular episode had taken place outside the UK since 1985's [[DW]]: ''[[The Two Doctors]]'' was filmed in Spain.
*  [[13 September|13]] - Filming began on [[DW]]: ''[[The Fires of Pompeii]]'' at the Cinecitta Studios in Rome, the first time, save the [[Doctor Who (1996)|1996 telefilm]] and second-unit filming on [[DW]]: ''[[Daleks in Manhattan]]'', that major shooting for a regular episode had taken place outside the UK since 1985's [[DW]]: ''[[The Two Doctors]]'' was filmed in Spain.
*  [[23 September|23]] - The American animated series ''[[Wikipedia:Family Guy|Family Guy]]'' broadcasted the episode "Blue Harvest", a nearly scene-by-scene parody of ''Star Wars: A New Hope''. A joke involving hyperspace featured a brief clip of the classic mid-1970s opening sequence of ''Doctor Who'' featuring [[Tom Baker]] and a few bars of the [[Doctor Who theme|''Doctor Who'' theme]]. This was the first time any footage from the Tom Baker era, or the classic [[Delia Derbyshire]] arrangement of the theme, had appeared on an American commercial network. The episode, with DW clip intact, would be released to DVD in North America in early 2008.
*  [[23 September|23]] - The American animated series ''[[Wikipedia:Family Guy|Family Guy]]'' broadcasted the episode "Blue Harvest", a nearly scene-by-scene parody of ''Star Wars: A New Hope''. A joke involving hyperspace featured a brief clip of the classic mid-1970s opening sequence of ''Doctor Who'' featuring [[Tom Baker]] and a few bars of the [[Doctor Who theme|''Doctor Who'' theme]]. This was the first time any footage from the Tom Baker era, or the classic [[Delia Derbyshire]] arrangement of the theme, had appeared on an American commercial network. The episode, with DW clip intact, was released to DVD in North America in early 2008.
*  [[24 September|24]] - [[SJA]]: ''[[Revenge of the Slitheen]]'' was first broadcast, launching the first full season of ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]'' (following the pilot episode, [[SJA]]: ''[[Invasion of the Bane]]'', which had aired months earlier). This was the first half-hour episode produced by the televised ''Doctor Who'' franchise since episode 3 of [[DW]]: ''[[Survival]]'' in 1989.
*  [[24 September|24]] - [[SJA]]: ''[[Revenge of the Slitheen]]'' was first broadcast, launching the first full season of ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]'' (following the pilot episode, [[SJA]]: ''[[Invasion of the Bane]]'', which had aired months earlier). This was the first half-hour episode produced by the televised ''Doctor Who'' franchise since episode 3 of [[DW]]: ''[[Survival]]'' in 1989.
** Nearly five years after it was released to DVD in North America (Region 1), the complete [[Season 16|Key to Time]] season was finally released in Region 2 (UK). This version, issued in a somewhat limited release, included featurettes and other extra features not included in the 2002 version. This was the first UK release of a complete classic series season in one set. Episodes: [[DW]]: ''[[The Ribos Operation]]'', ''[[The Pirate Planet]]'', ''[[The Stones of Blood]]'', ''[[The Androids of Tara]]'', ''[[The Power of Kroll]]'' and ''[[The Armageddon Factor]].''
* 24 - Nearly five years after it was released to DVD in North America (Region 1), the complete [[Season 16|Key to Time]] season was finally released in Region 2 (UK). This version, issued in a somewhat limited release, included featurettes and other extra features not included in the 2002 version. This was the first UK release of a complete classic series season in one set. The episodes were [[DW]]: ''[[The Ribos Operation]]'', ''[[The Pirate Planet]]'', ''[[The Stones of Blood]]'', ''[[The Androids of Tara]]'', ''[[The Power of Kroll]]'' and ''[[The Armageddon Factor]].''
*  [[27 September|27]] - [[Russell T Davies]] and [[Julie Gardner]] decided to reject a script by [[Tom MacRae]] which was planned for [[Series 4 (Doctor Who)|Series 4]]. Davies took on the job of writing a replacement, which ultimately became [[DW]]: ''[[Midnight (TV story)|Midnight]]''.<ref name="WritersTale"/>
*  [[27 September|27]] - [[Russell T Davies]] and [[Julie Gardner]] decided to reject a script by [[Tom MacRae]] which was planned for [[Series 4 (Doctor Who)|Series 4]]. Davies took on the job of writing a replacement, which ultimately became [[DW]]: ''[[Midnight (TV story)|Midnight]]''.<ref name="WritersTale"/>
*  [[28 September|28]] - [[Steven Moffat]] informed [[Russell T Davies]] that he agreed to take over the executive producer/head writer's position when Davies leaves. <ref name="WritersTale"/>
*  [[28 September|28]] - [[Steven Moffat]] informed [[Russell T Davies]] that he agreed to take over the executive producer/head writer's position when Davies left. <ref name="WritersTale"/>


=== [[October]] ===
=== [[October]] ===

Revision as of 04:27, 13 June 2012

Timeline for 2007
21st century | 2000s

2001 • 2002 • 2003 • 2004 • 2005 • 2006 • 2008 • 2009 • 2010 • 2011 • 2012 • 2013
WikipediaInfo.png

Events

January

February - March

June

July

June-September

June-December

September-December

  • Three months after her death, Suzie Costello was resurrected for a short period by Gwen, who used the resurrection gauntlet. Suzie drew life energy from Gwen over time. She died again when the gauntlet was destroyed. (TW: They Keep Killing Suzie)
  • After his friends falsely inflated a bid for it on eBay, Eugene Jones swallowed a Dogon Sixth Eye to make sure they couldn't flog it themselves. He continued existing as a ghost for a time after his death. He helped Gwen Cooper investigate his death (which he couldn't recall) and passed on. (TW: Random Shoes)

December

Unknown dates

The events with the Sycorax on Christmas 2006 happened on "Christmas just gone" from the timeframe of this story.
  • Around this time the discovery of a bizarre message encoded as Easter eggs on seventeen different DVD releases caused a flurry of interest on the internet due to the message's cryptic nature. The message, which appeared to have been shot on film many years earlier, depicted a man with glasses conducting what appeared to be a one-sided conversation with an unknown person; he was occasionally interrupted by a young black woman. Among those interested in the message was London video store employee Larry Nightingale. He began intensively studying the message, much to the annoyance of his sister, Kathy Nightingale. The Tenth Doctor and Martha Jones, following information provided to them by Sally Sparrow, investigated the Wester Drumlins estate near London, where by choice or accident they were touched by the Weeping Angels and transported to 1969; the TARDIS remained behind and was later taken into custody by London police. Sally Sparrow received a bizarre message addressed to her from the Doctor in 1969 while investigating Wester Drumlins. Sparrow learnt of the Weeping Angels, her friend Kathy Nightingale was transported back to 1920 and a policeman named Billy Shipton was sent back to 1969. Sparrow encountered an elderly Shipton, who died soon after revealing he was responsible for adding the cryptic message from the Doctor to a number of DVDs. The Easter egg mystery was solved when Sally realised the one-sided conversation was from the Doctor and directed at her. Ultimately, Sparrow stopped the Weeping Angels from capturing the Doctor's TARDIS and with the help of Larry Nightingale, sent the vessel back to 1969. After this Sally and Larry took over the DVD rental store where Larry worked, turning it into a bookstore, but Sally remained distant from Larry as she awaited the final resolution of her involvement with the time-travelling Doctor. (DW: Blink)
  • Professor Mallingan and his team of scientists began draining the power of the icy planet Asharoth, hoping it would put an end to global warming on Earth. The Tenth Doctor came across Mallingan's plans and enlisted the help of one of his scientists to destroy his lab, saving Asharoth. (DWA: Cold War)

Donna's World timeline

June

December

  • 24 - As a consequence of never joining H.C. Clements, the Tenth Doctor never met Donna and he died after thwarting the Empress of the Racnoss' plans. Rose Tyler, travelling between dimensions, ended up in this alternate timeline and arrived soon after the Doctor's corpse had been retrieved by UNIT. (DW: Turn Left)
While the Empress of the Racnoss died the same way, the TARDIS had no-one left to pilot it, let alone park it on the Cardiff Rift, so Mr Saxon would have remained as Professor Yana on Utopia.

Pete's World

February

  • 2 - The TARDIS fell into a parallel universe dubbed "Pete's World", where it almost died. With twenty-four hours before the TARDIS could return to its home universe, Rose discovered a living version of her dad, Pete Tyler, alive and a successful businessman. To meet her "father", Rose snuck with the Tenth Doctor into the birthday party of a parallel version of her mother. The President of Great Britain forbade the use of John Lumic's new cybernetic lifeform, but Lumic ignored him. Mickey, mistaken for his parallel self, Ricky Smith, was taken by the Preachers, who fought Lumic. The cybernetic life, dubbed Cybermen, attacked Jackie Tyler's birthday party, killing most of those inside, including the President. (DW: Rise of the Cybermen)
  • 2 - The Doctor and Rose escaped the Cyberman attack with the Preachers, Mickey and Pete. They infiltrated the Cyberman factory, where every Londoner in EarPods was being upgraded, including Pete's wife, Jackie. After a Cyberman whose emotional inhibitor was broken died of shock, the Doctor sent a signal that deactivated every one of them. Mickey and Jake destroyed the transmitter controls so the hypnotised EarPod bearers could escape. Mickey also sent the Doctor the codes to break the inhibitor controls, destroying the Cybermen. The survivors of the resistance escaped the burning factory in a zeppelin. (DW: The Age of Steel)
  • 3 - With the TARDIS cells charged, the Doctor and Rose returned to their universe. Mickey stayed behind, taking his deceased counterpart's place in shutting down more Cyberman factories. (DW: The Age of Steel)
See Pete's World.

Behind the scenes

January

February

  • BFA: Nocturne was first released.
  • BFBS: The Tub Full of Cats was first released.
  • 8 - The cast read-through for DW: The Sound of Drums/Last of the Time Lords took place.
  • 15 - After a month's delay due to the CBC still airing the episodes, the Canadian release of the Series 2 DVD box set took place.
  • 18 - Russell T Davies and Doctor Who Magazine writer Benjamin Cook began exchanging e-mails in a project to document the production of several episodes of the upcoming fourth series for DWM. The project eventually grew into what became the book release Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale.
  • 19 - The Canadian broadcast of DW: Doomsday on the CBC took place, concluding Series 2; the season was broadcast over a longer than usual period due to the decision by the CBC to insert a mid-season hiatus. Doomsday attracted some two hundred thousand fewer viewers than part 1, DW: Army of Ghosts, a possible consequence of Series 2 being released to DVD in Canada a few days prior to Doomsday being broadcast.
  • 20 - Derek Waring (Shardovan in DW: Castrovalva) died.
  • 26 - Christopher Eccleston made his fifth and, to date, final appearance on Heroes in one of the series' most acclaimed episodes, "Company Man". Eccleston's appearances in Heroes were among the highest-profile American TV appearances by a former Doctor Who actor.
  • 26 - The DVD Torchwood Series 1 Part 2 was released in the UK.
  • Late February - In a meeting with Jane Tranter, Catherine Tate expressed interest in returning as Donna Noble for a couple of episodes of Series 4. At this point there had been no discussion of her returning to the series full-time. [1]

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Unknown dates

  • Keith Ashley died.
  • Early winter - Doctor Who was nominated in the "Favourite Sci-Fi Show" category for the 2008 People's Choice Awards, to be presented in January 2008 on the CBS network. This was the first mainstream American award nomination for the series (which previously was only nominated for awards in genre awards such as the Hugos). The award winner was determined by an Internet poll, and the award ultimately went to Stargate Atlantis.
  • As production began on Series 4, news leaked out that Billie Piper would return as Rose Tyler, including images of her filming scenes for the series. Initially denied by the BBC, this was later confirmed (with the BBC including her in a cinema trailer distributed prior to the season premiere in 2008). Piper filmed scenes for four episodes, and a brief piece of footage that would be added to two others.

Footnotes