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==Behind the scenes==
==Behind the scenes==
=== Casting ===
*Michael Bentine, [[Bernard Cribbins]], Graham Crowden, Richard Hearne and Fulton Mackay were all considered for the role of the Fourth Doctor.
=== Fan Speculation ===
* Since the Fourth Doctor was the youngest yet and, as such, closer in age to his companions, the Tom Baker era was the first in which concern was expressed of possible "hanky panky in the TARDIS" (a term often used in the tabloid press to suggest the impression of off-screen dalliances between the various Doctors and their young, female companions). Perhaps to address this, according to the Information Text commentary on the 2007 DVD release of ''[[The Stones of Blood]]'', Baker tried to emphasize the asexuality of the character -- or at least his version of the character, given that [[William Hartnell]]'s Doctor actually entered into a brief romance with another character in ''[[The Aztecs]]'', while [[Jon Pertwee]]'s Doctor exhibited romantic tension (not to be confused with sexual tension) with companions [[Jo Grant]] and [[Sarah Jane Smith]], the latter carrying over into Baker's era. Despite this, Baker was not above tossing in occasional visual jokes that suggested sexual tension. For example, in ''The Stones of Blood'' the Doctor and Romana have to huddle close in order to be within the confines of a transporter beam and enter what would, in normal circumstances, be seen as a romantic clinch, but neither character appears to recognize this.
* Since the Fourth Doctor was the youngest yet and, as such, closer in age to his companions, the Tom Baker era was the first in which concern was expressed of possible "hanky panky in the TARDIS" (a term often used in the tabloid press to suggest the impression of off-screen dalliances between the various Doctors and their young, female companions). Perhaps to address this, according to the Information Text commentary on the 2007 DVD release of ''[[The Stones of Blood]]'', Baker tried to emphasize the asexuality of the character -- or at least his version of the character, given that [[William Hartnell]]'s Doctor actually entered into a brief romance with another character in ''[[The Aztecs]]'', while [[Jon Pertwee]]'s Doctor exhibited romantic tension (not to be confused with sexual tension) with companions [[Jo Grant]] and [[Sarah Jane Smith]], the latter carrying over into Baker's era. Despite this, Baker was not above tossing in occasional visual jokes that suggested sexual tension. For example, in ''The Stones of Blood'' the Doctor and Romana have to huddle close in order to be within the confines of a transporter beam and enter what would, in normal circumstances, be seen as a romantic clinch, but neither character appears to recognize this.



Revision as of 06:04, 12 May 2009

You may be 'a' doctor but I'm The Doctor, the definite article you might say.The Fourth Doctor to Harry Sullivan [Robot [src]]

Biography

Independence

Having regenerated for a third time, the Fourth Doctor seemed to be in a hurry to leave Earth, but was eventually persuaded to stay and help Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart deal with Think Tank and their K1 robot. The Fourth Doctor took Sarah Jane Smith and Harry Sullivan to travel with him in the TARDIS. (DW: Robot)

In the midst of another adventure, a Time Lord appeared to the Doctor and offered him a mission, to intervene in the creation of the Daleks, either to prevent it, or to induce the Daleks to develop into less dangerous creatures. (DW: Genesis of the Daleks)

This set into motion a series of events that would eventually lead to open war between Daleks and Time Lords and the destruction of Gallifrey.

Upon his return to Earth and the defeat of the Zygons, Harry decided to remain. (DW: Terror of the Zygons)

The Doctor had begun, even more so with this regeneration, to break his ties with Earth. However, despite intending to resign from UNIT (DW: Pyramids of Mars), the Doctor never formally left his position as their unpaid scientific adviser. (DW: The Sontaran Stratagem)

Return to Gallifrey

After many adventures together, the Doctor received a telepathic summons from Gallifrey and returned Sarah to Earth (DW: The Hand of Fear), though mistakenly, not to her home in South Croydon but to Aberdeen. (DW: School Reunion)

On Gallifrey, the Doctor defeated the Master and renewed his acquaintance with his former teacher Borusa. He also re-experienced, to his disgust, the decadence of Time Lord civilization. (DW: The Deadly Assassin).

The Doctor travelled for an unknown period of time alone.

New friends

Visiting a nameless jungle world, he made the acquaintance of Leela of the Sevateem. (DW:The Face of Evil)

Lord President of Gallifrey

Returning once more to Gallifrey and, posing as vainglorious and power-mad, sought and attained the office for Lord President as part of a scheme to save his home world from an invasion force of two separate enemies, the Vardans and the Sontarans. Leela decided to remain on Gallifrey with K-9 and Andred, a Gallifreyan in the Chancellory Guard. However, the Doctor left the Capitol with a duplicate K-9, Mark II, in a crate (DW: The Invasion of Time).

The Doctor and K-9 Mark II spent an indeterminate period of time together.

Quest for the Key to Time

The White Guardian summoned the Doctor to initiate a quest to locate and assemble the segments of the Key to Time. For this purpose, the White Guardian introduced him to a new companion, Romana (DW: The Ribos Operation).The Doctor and Romana located, assembled and disassembled the Key, and to escape the wrath of the White Guardian's opposite, the Black Guardian, the Doctor installed a randomiser in the TARDIS console (DW: The Armageddon Factor). Afterwards, Romana regenerated (DW: Destiny of the Daleks), and the two, along with K-9, continued to travel together.

The Doctor, Romana and K-9 Mark II spent an indeterminate period of time together, potentially quite long given the Doctor and Romana's longevity as Time Lords.

E-Space

After spending some time trapped in a pocket universe called E-Space (DW: Full Circle), during which Romana and K-9 left (DW: Warriors' Gate) and Adric joined (DW: Full Circle), the Doctor entered into battle against the Master, who had reconstituted himself. While struggling with his enemy, the Doctor fell off the Pharos Project radio telescope down to the ground hundreds of feet below. The mysterious entity known as the Watcher, which had been tracking him through time and space, then merged with him and he regenerated. (DW: Logopolis)

File:Logopolis part4.JPG
Seconds before his regeneration

Characteristics

Appearance

In stark contrast to the elegant, refined figure of his third incarnation, the Doctor was an unkempt, awkward-looking figure, dressed in battered clothing and an impossibly long multi-coloured scarf, knit for him by Madame Nostradamus. (DW: Robot). His dark curly hair was often partially hidden by a large floppy hat. His appearance is arguably the most famous of any of the Doctor's incarnations.

Age

Whilst on Earth the Doctor stated his age to be 749 years. (DW: The Seeds of Doom)

Psychological profile

Personality

I'm a very dangerous fellow when I don't know what I'm doing.The Doctor. [Destiny of the Daleks [src]]

This incarnation was most definitely not Human, and stood apart from others, even most of his own people. (DW: The Deadly Assassin, The Invasion of Time)

When Sarah upbraided him over his callousness at the sight of a man killed by the animate corpse of his own brother, the Doctor reminded her of the larger issue of stopping Sutekh. (DW: Pyramids of Mars). His mind is five leaps ahead of anyone, including himself; only Romana seemed able to keep up with the Doctor's trains of thought. He delighted in keeping both friends and foes alike off guard with oddball humour and curious pranks, as in his second incarnation. Although generally peace-loving and kind-hearted, as per most of his other incarnations, the Doctor could also react with sudden violence when necessary; he was also not against taking a life in extreme circumstances (DW: The Brain of Morbius, The Ribos Operation).

He could judge character keenly, almost instantly whether knowing who to trust or seeing through Unstoffe's faux guilelessness (DW: The Ribos Operation). Out of all the Doctor's selves, this incarnation had perhaps the most consistently anti-authoritarian attitude, having little tolerance for religious dogma (DW: The Brain of Morbius, Underworld, The Stones of Blood, The Power of Kroll) or nationalism (DW: Robot, The Armageddon Factor). The Doctor often played the fool to lull his opponents, such as Count Scarlioni, into underestimating him (though it did not work in that case.) But he was also a very intense, brooding individual, at times displaying a seriousness and fury belying his usually whimsical attitude, such as when telling the scientist Sorenson that he must put right what he done wrong, even if he must sacrifice his life to do so (DW: Planet of Evil).

Unlike his third incarnation, this Doctor did not have a close working relationship with UNIT or The Brigadier, reacting with anger when UNIT recalled him to Earth (DW: Terror of the Zygons). Except for this and a handful of other occasions, the Doctor kept his distance from UNIT (even at the expense of abandoning his predecessor's beloved roadster, Bessie), and later incarnations have never reestablished the same rapport that existed between the Doctor and UNIT before his fourth incarnation.

As the youngest-appearing incarnation to date, the Doctor found himself drawing closer to some of his companions than he might have previously, in particular with Sarah Jane Smith, who later admitted having fallen in love with him (DW: School Reunion). If any of his other female companions felt the same way, the Doctor -- through intent or quirk of personality -- did not appear to notice, and he likewise tended not to display such feelings himself, even when accompanied by the often scantily clad Leela, although during one adventure he acknowledged the fact that Romana was attractive (DW: The Pirate Planet), although he was more likely to make remarks such as telling Countess Scarlioni, "You're a beautiful woman ... probably." (DW: City of Death)

Habits and Quirks

Souvenirs from many different worlds littered his pockets. (DW: Robot, Genesis of the Daleks). He would sometimes relax by playing with a yo-yo and liked to drink ginger beer (DW: The Android Invasion).

He would often have with him and offer jelly babies as a greeting, and while past and future incarnations would also show occasional fondness for the sweet, it is most closely associated with this version of the Doctor. In his later life he developed a great fondness for tinkering about in his TARDIS. He relied upon his sonic screwdriver at least as much as in his previous incarnation.

He was also not adverse to winding up his companions on occasion; such as once fooling Leela into standing and playing with a yo-yo for an extended period of time, with her believing it was an experiment. (DW: The Robots of Death) On another occasion, he caused Romana to nearly panic when he pretended to become possessed by the Black Guardian (DW: The Armageddon Factor).

Mysteries and Discrepancies

Unrecorded adventures

The Doctor occasionally adjusted his costume to fit his surroundings
  • Presumably by himself, the Doctor visited Leela's home planet, encountered the supercomputer Xoanon and inadvertently installed in him a program copied from his own personality (DW: The Face of Evil).
We do not know at what time in the Fourth Doctor's life this event could have occurred or the reason why, later, he would fail to remember his adventure. One theory for the amnesia explains that this adventure as happening very early in his life, when he still suffered from post-regenerative trauma, possibly during the incident described below when he temporarily leaves following his regeneration.
  • In the first episode of the fourth Doctor, Robot, he is delirious from his regeneration and placed in a UNIT sickbay. He escapes in the TARDIS, appearing to abandon Sarah Jane on Earth. He then returns, a little more stable.
  • There are conflicting accounts surrounding some of the Doctor's activities circa 1979 involving Professor Chronotis, due to an incomplete surviving record of the events (DW: Shada) which may have been due in part to the Doctor being briefly abducted by Borusa's timescoop at around the same time (DW: The Five Doctors). Whether these events actually occurred, occurred in a different timestream, or in fact occurred to an later incarnation (WC: Shada) remain unknown.

Key Life Events

Behind the scenes

Casting

  • Michael Bentine, Bernard Cribbins, Graham Crowden, Richard Hearne and Fulton Mackay were all considered for the role of the Fourth Doctor.


Fan Speculation

  • Since the Fourth Doctor was the youngest yet and, as such, closer in age to his companions, the Tom Baker era was the first in which concern was expressed of possible "hanky panky in the TARDIS" (a term often used in the tabloid press to suggest the impression of off-screen dalliances between the various Doctors and their young, female companions). Perhaps to address this, according to the Information Text commentary on the 2007 DVD release of The Stones of Blood, Baker tried to emphasize the asexuality of the character -- or at least his version of the character, given that William Hartnell's Doctor actually entered into a brief romance with another character in The Aztecs, while Jon Pertwee's Doctor exhibited romantic tension (not to be confused with sexual tension) with companions Jo Grant and Sarah Jane Smith, the latter carrying over into Baker's era. Despite this, Baker was not above tossing in occasional visual jokes that suggested sexual tension. For example, in The Stones of Blood the Doctor and Romana have to huddle close in order to be within the confines of a transporter beam and enter what would, in normal circumstances, be seen as a romantic clinch, but neither character appears to recognize this.

External links