Seventh Doctor comic stories: Difference between revisions

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* ''[[The Last Word]]'' (DWM 305 with Benny & Ace)
* ''[[The Last Word]]'' (DWM 305 with Benny & Ace)


=== Doctor Who Magazine Specials ===
=== Doctor Who Magazine specials ===
* '''[[Plastic Millennium]]''' (DWMS 94 with Mel)
* ''[[Plastic Millennium]]'' (DWMS 94 with Mel)
* '''[[Seaside Rendezvous]]''' (DWMS 1991 with Ace)
* ''[[Seaside Rendezvous]]'' (DWMS 1991 with Ace)
* '''[[Evening's Empire]]''' (DWM 180 & DWCC AS 1993 with Ace)
* ''[[Evening's Empire]]'' (DWM 180 & DWCC AS 1993 with Ace)
* '''[[Flashback (comic story)|Flashback]]''' (DWMS 1992 with Benny)
* ''[[Flashback (comic story)|Flashback]]'' (DWMS 1992 with Benny)
* '''[[Younger and Wiser]]''' (DWMS 1994 with Benny)
* ''[[Younger and Wiser]]'' (DWMS 1994 with Benny)


=== Death's Head Vol 1 ===
=== Death's Head Vol 1 ===

Revision as of 03:12, 20 September 2013

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Somewhat after the broadcast of Time and the Rani, Doctor Who Magazine's Seventh Doctor comic stories began. While the cancellation of the television series was undoubtedly bad news for Sylvester McCoy's longevity in the role, it was an unexpected boon to the Seventh Doctor's comic life. With no new Doctor on the horizon, the Seventh Doctor lived on in the pages of DWM for years after the transmission of his final televised adventure.

In fact, the Seventh Doctor became the first incarnation of the Doctor to be in two regular comic publications simultaneously. Pre-figuring the Tenth Doctor's later "double-duty" in DWM and Doctor Who Adventures, the Seventh Doctor was, briefly, in both DWM and The Incredible Hulk Presents, another Marvel publication.

Several different approaches were taken by DWM during this era. At first, they told stories which had no obvious connection to the television series. Frobisher briefly ushered in the new Doctor's era, before scampering off. The Doctor then travelled around either on his own or with one-off companions.

After the television series ended, and the Virgin New Adventures series began, there was an effort to try to fit the comic stories into the novels' continuity. This period, though, came to a definitive end when DWM killed off Ace in Ground Zero —and act that deliberately returned DWM to its own, separate continuity.

By this stage, however, DWM had taken the editorial decision to consider the Seventh Doctor as a "past" incarnation. They began to use the comic space to tell stories of the other incarnations, which gave modern artists and writers the chance to feature Doctors and companions who hadn't really been a part of the DWM strip before. Thus, though the Seventh Doctor had a much longer reign in comics than television, it was a few years shorter than the gap between Survival and McGann's televised outing. By contrast, the Eighth Doctor's era ended only when the Ninth Doctor's began.

Comic Strip companions of the Seventh Doctor

Seventh Doctor comic strip stories

Doctor Who Magazine

Doctor Who Magazine specials

Death's Head Vol 1

The Incredible Hulk Presents

Doctor Who Yearbook

External links