Pseudonym: Difference between revisions

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==== Television ====
==== Television ====
* [[Norman Ashby]]: A pseudonym employed by [[Mervyn Haisman]] and [[Henry Lincoln]] for ''[[The Dominators]]'' after they felt mistreated by the production team.
* [[Norman Ashby]]: A pseudonym employed by [[Mervyn Haisman]] and [[Henry Lincoln]] for ''[[The Dominators]]'' after they felt mistreated by the production team.
* [[Guy Leopold]]: A pseudonym used by co-writers [[Barry Letts]] and [[Robert Sloman]] for ''[[The Dæmons (TV story)|The Dæmons]].''
* [[Guy Leopold]]: A pseudonym used by co-writers [[Barry Letts]] and [[Robert Sloman]] for ''[[The Dæmons (TV story)|The Dæmons]]''.
* [[Robin Bland]]: [[Terrance Dicks]] was dissatisfied with re-writes to his script for ''[[The Brain of Morbius]]'' by [[script editor]] [[Robert Holmes]]. He requested that it air under "some bland pseudonym". Robert Holmes arranged that the story came out as by "Robin Bland".
* [[Robin Bland]]: [[Terrance Dicks]] was dissatisfied with re-writes to his script for ''[[The Brain of Morbius]]'' by [[script editor]] [[Robert Holmes]]. He requested that it air under "some bland pseudonym". Robert Holmes arranged that the story came out as by "Robin Bland".
* [[Stephen Harris]]: ''[[Pyramids of Mars]]'' had originally been written by [[Lewis Greifer]]. However the script was considered unworkable. Greifer was unavailable to rewrite the script, so [[Robert Holmes]] rewrote it and used "Stephen Harris" as a pseudonym.
* [[Stephen Harris]]: ''[[Pyramids of Mars]]'' had originally been written by [[Lewis Greifer]]. However the script was considered unworkable. Greifer was unavailable to rewrite the script, so [[Robert Holmes]] rewrote it and used "Stephen Harris" as a pseudonym.

Revision as of 05:29, 4 July 2017

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The Brain of Morbius was attributed to Robin Bland, a psuedonym used due to Terrance Dicks' dissatisfaction with Robert Holmes' rewrites.

A pseudonym is a false name under which a writer publishes his or her work. Few Doctor Who writers have regularly written under an assumed name, usually under very specific circumstances; most often, writers have used a pseudonym when they wrote a story but weren't legally entitled to receive credit for it. On other occasions, a pseudonym was used as a way to share credit amongst several writers or to express dissatisfaction in the way their story had been handled by the producers or publishers.

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