Transmat:Doctor Who: Difference between revisions

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<div class="box two"><h1>Jane Tranter</h1>[[file:JaneTranter.jpg]]<br>Jane Tranter was an important advocate for the return of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' to [[BBC One]] in the early 2000s.</div>
<div class="box two"><h1>Jane Tranter</h1>[[file:JaneTranter.jpg|250px]]<br>Jane Tranter was an important advocate for the return of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' to [[BBC One]] in the early 2000s.</div>
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Revision as of 05:15, 8 October 2013

The Caves of Androzani was the final televised story to feature Peter Davison as the Fifth Doctor, who had decided to end his tenure on Doctor Who at a three-year milestone after taking advice from former lead Patrick Troughton. As such, it depicted the regeneration of the Fifth Doctor into the Sixth Doctor, played by incoming actor Colin Baker. The story is often cited with high regard for its dramatic elements, unusually action-heavy plot, and the dynamic style of its scenes, which were directed by Graeme Harper in his first credited instance as episode director, which broke free from the less engaged atmosphere of other classic stories. The Caves of Androzani is famous for topping a Doctor Who Magazine poll in 2009 that asked readers to vote for, the single best televised story at the time. Dubiously enough, the story that came directly after this one, TV: The Twin Dilemma, crashed to the bottom of the list as the lowest-regarded of all stories ever televised at the time.

Jane Tranter

JaneTranter.jpg
Jane Tranter was an important advocate for the return of Doctor Who to BBC One in the early 2000s.
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