First Doctor comic stories: Difference between revisions
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* ''[[Funhouse (comic story)|Fun House]]'' (the ''DWM'' version) | * ''[[Funhouse (comic story)|Fun House]]'' (the ''DWM'' version) | ||
* ''[[Time & Time Again]]'' | * ''[[Time & Time Again]]'' | ||
=== Parodic === | === Parodic === | ||
* "[[Doctor Ooh]]" | * "[[Doctor Ooh]]" | ||
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* ''[[Happy Deathday (comic story)|Happy Deathday]]'' (the story does fit into [[Eighth Doctor]]/[[Izzy]] continuity, but it takes place inside a video game Izzy's playing on the [[Time-Space Visualiser]] | * ''[[Happy Deathday (comic story)|Happy Deathday]]'' (the story does fit into [[Eighth Doctor]]/[[Izzy]] continuity, but it takes place inside a video game Izzy's playing on the [[Time-Space Visualiser]] | ||
* ''[[Death to the Doctor!]]'' | * ''[[Death to the Doctor!]]'' | ||
=== IDW Publishing === | === IDW Publishing === | ||
==== Miniseries ==== | ==== Miniseries ==== |
Revision as of 07:52, 7 July 2017
As with the television series, the William Hartnell version of the Doctor was the original comic strip Doctor. However, the actor's portrayal of the character was often lost in TV Comic, the dominant publication to feature First Doctor stories. At a superficial level, the character wasn't called "the Doctor", but "Dr. Who". Yet at a basic level, the comics were hampered by the inclusion of two children as his companions. Though they may well have made it easier for kids — the primary target audience for the comic strips — to relate to the Doctor, they made it almost impossible for a well-rounded portrayal of the First Doctor's many qualities. Especially profound was the loss of the Doctor's inherent "grumpiness"; with no adults around, the Doctor had no target for his anger. Thus, the comic First Doctor was reduced to being just a grandfather with a time-space ship.
However, even these two points were somewhat in doubt.
The comic TARDIS wasn't actually much of a time-travel device. As almost every story was set in the far future, it was little more than a simple spaceship. That threw the First Doctor's inclination towards historical adventures out the window. In addition, his status as "grandfather" was a point of incredulity, as well. How could he be the grandfather to John and Gillian? What was their relationship to the never-referenced Susan? How did the stories told in the comic strips relate to the television series? These were all questions left completely unanswered.
Worse still, the comic First Doctor was deprived even of the Daleks. Since Terry Nation had licensed the comic Daleks to appear only by themselves from 1965 to 1967, the comic First Doctor never encountered them. He was forced instead to repeatedly face the TV Comic "substitute", the Trods.
The best the TV Comic First Doctor could muster by way of resembling himself was a lone story that tied in with an atypical television adventure: Dr. Who and the Zarbi on the Web Planet.
It really wasn't until Doctor Who Magazine began publishing a handful of original First Doctor stories that the William Hartnell portrayal was really seen in comics. Consequently, most of the First Doctor's companions didn't have their comic debuts until the early 1990s. By then, thirty years after the fact, it was really a case of "too little, too late". Comic readers are still waiting for the First Doctor to encounter the Daleks.
Given these facts, it is perhaps not surprising that, as a matter of Doctor Who Magazine continuity, the entirety of the First Doctor's TV Comic run was retconned out of existence as a dream of the Eighth Doctor. (COMIC: The Land of Happy Endings)
Comic strip companions of the First Doctor
List
Many of the early comic strip stories did not have individual story titles so there is no "correct" title for many of the strips. Commentary and listings from older sources may use variant titles.
- The titles given below conform to widely accepted titles (as referenced by Jean-Marc Lofficier and revised by John Ainsworth (comic historian)). The titles below were also adopted and used by Doctor Who Magazine and throughout Doctor Who Classic Comics (to which John Ainsworth was a major contributer).
- The titles used below are firstly taken from the strip itself or from titles given by the preceding issue. In some cases the writer/artist has been able to provide a title for a given piece of work.
The listing below shows first publication details only. Reprint details can be found by following the story links.
Doctor Who annuals
- Mission for Duh (Doctor Who Annual 1967)
TV Comic
- The Klepton Parasites (TVC 674-683)
- The Therovian Quest (TVC 684-689)
- The Hijackers of Thrax (TVC 690-692)
- On the Web Planet (TVC 693-698)
- The Gyros Injustice (TVC 699-704)
- Challenge of the Piper (TVC 705-709)
- Moon Landing (TVC 710-712)
- Time in Reverse (TVC 713-715)
- Lizardworld (TVC 716-719)
- The Ordeals of Demeter (TVC 720-723)
- Enter: The Go-Ray (TVC 724-727)
- Shark Bait (TVC 728-731)
- A Christmas Story (TVC 732-735)
- The Didus Expedition (TVC 736-739)
- Space Station Z-7 (TVC 740-743)
- Plague of the Black Scorpi (TVC 744-747)
- The Trodos Tyranny (TVC 748-752)
- The Secret of Gemino (TVC 753-757)
- The Haunted Planet (TVC 758-762)
- The Hunters of Zerox (TVC 763-767)
- The Underwater Robot (TVC 768-771)
- Return of the Trods (TVC 772-775)
- The Galaxy Games (TVC 776-779)
- The Experimenters (TVC 780-783)
TV Comic annuals
- Prisoners of the Kleptons (TV Comic Annual 1966)
- The Caterpillar Men (TV Comic Annual 1966)
- Deadly Vessel (TV Comic Annual 1967)
- Kingdom of the Animals (TV Comic Annual 1967)
TV Comic holiday specials
- Prisoners of Gritog (TV Comic Holiday Special 1965)
- Guests of King Neptune (TV Comic Holiday Special 1966)
- The Gaze of the Gorgon (TV Comic Holiday Special 1966)
Doctor Who Magazine
- Operation Proteus (DWM 231-233 featuring Susan)
- Food for Thought (DWM 218-220 featuring Ben Jackson and Polly Wright)
Seventh/First crossovers
No doubt inspired by Remembrance of the Daleks, the Seventh/First "non-crossover" comic story deserves special mention. The basic setup of this type of story follows the pattern established in Remembrance: the First Doctor does something in the past that the Seventh Doctor later revisits. The Doctors don't cross paths. The Seventh Doctor doesn't "de-age" into the First. It's just a simple look into the past. There have been three examples of this kind of story.
Doctor Who Magazine special
- Flashback (Winter 1992, features Benny and the Seventh Doctor viewing a holographic recording of the First Doctor before he left Gallifrey)
- Are You Listening? (Summer 1993, features Steven and Vicki, resolved in the Seventh Doctor story Younger and Wiser)
Doctor Who Yearbook
- A Religious Experience (1994, principally features a story with the First Doctor, Ian and Barbara, but ends with a latter-day visit to the setting of the First Doctor story by the companionless Seventh Doctor.)
Multi-Doctor appearances
Since Hartnell relinquished the role, the First Doctor has generally appeared in multi-Doctor comic stories, in which other versions of himself have appeared alongside him. They have taken one of three approaches. Either they've featured serious attempts at justifying the reappearance of the First Doctor, they've been flat parodies. or they've been a little bit of both.
Non-parodic
- Timeslip
- Fun House (the DWM version)
- Time & Time Again
Parodic
- "Doctor Ooh"
- The Comic Relief Comic (untitled story)
- It's Bigger on the Inside!
- numerous editions of the three-panel cartoon, Doctor Who?
Mixture
- Happy Deathday (the story does fit into Eighth Doctor/Izzy continuity, but it takes place inside a video game Izzy's playing on the Time-Space Visualiser
- Death to the Doctor!
IDW Publishing
Miniseries
Doctor Who (2012)
- Dead Man's Hand (DW12 15 featuring Matrix projections of the first eleven Doctors and the War Doctor)
Prisoners of Time
- Unnatural History (POT 1 featuring Barbara Wright, Ian Chesterton, and Vicki Pallister)
- Endgame (POT 12 featuring Barbara Wright, Ian Chesterton, and Vicki Pallister, the first eleven Doctors (save the War Doctor), and numerous other companions)
Titan Comics
Back-up strips
- Prologue: The First Doctor (featuring Susan Foreman)
First Doctor-only parody
- "An Unearthly Child (The Unscreened Edition)" featured only the original TARDIS crew.
External links
- Altered Vistas - In the Comics - The First Doctor
- Doctor Who Magazine strips featuring the First Doctor at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- TV Comic strips featuring the First Doctor at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
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