Julius Grayle: Difference between revisions
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|origin = [[United States of America]] | |origin = [[United States of America]] | ||
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|appearances = [[TV]]: ''[[The Angels Take Manhattan (TV story)|The Angels Take Manhattan | |appearances = [[TV]]: ''[[The Angels Take Manhattan (TV story)|The Angels Take Manhattan]]'' | ||
|actor = Mike McShane | |actor = Mike McShane | ||
|other actor = | |other actor = |
Revision as of 03:59, 19 December 2012
- You may be looking for Sebastian Grayle.
Julius Grayle[note 1][note 2] was a crime boss as well as a collector of Weeping Angels and other artefacts in New York City.
Biography
Grayle was a powerful crime boss, and a collector of unusual or unique artefacts, such as ancient Chinese vases and pottery. His home, located at 406 94th Street in Manhattan, held a myriad of antiques and otherwise intriguing specimens. By 1938, Grayle had acquired several baby Weeping Angels, which he kept locked away in his cellar, and an adult Angel he kept chained in his office. He had the latter tortured to see if it could feel pain.
Grayle hired private investigator Sam Garner, ostensibly to look into the claims of Weeping Angels at Winter Quay. Garner was captured there by the Angels, who fed off of his time energy by sending him backwards to live out his life in a room at Winter Quay.
In order to gather more information on the Angels, Grayle had River Song captured and tightly held in the grasp of his captive adult Angel, which resulted in her breaking her wrist to escape. He also had Rory Williams thrown into the cellar, where he was set upon by the young Angels and as a result, was sent to Winter Quay.
When the Doctor's TARDIS arrived nearby, the time distortion energy released from the unstable landing caused Grayle to collapse from shock, and his defenceless mansion was invaded by a duo of Angels. Grayle's fate is unknown, but he was presumably either killed or sent backwards in time by the Angels. (TV: The Angels Take Manhattan)
Behind the scenes
The envelope addressed to Grayle that was on his desk when he paid Sam Garner bears a ZIP+4 Code: 18095-7___. Five-digit ZIP Codes were first introduced on 1 July 1963, and many years elapsed before their use became commonplace on personal mail. The "plus-four code" extensions were not introduced until 1983. Whether the code's inclusion was a production error, or if the envelope had been posted by a sender from the future, has not been confirmed.