Kensington: Difference between revisions
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== References == | == References == | ||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist}} | ||
[[Category:London | [[Category:London boroughs]] | ||
[[Category:Locations from the real world]] | [[Category:Locations from the real world]] | ||
[[Category:Locations visited by the Fourth Doctor]] | [[Category:Locations visited by the Fourth Doctor]] | ||
[[Category:Locations visited by Iris Wildthyme]] | [[Category:Locations visited by Iris Wildthyme]] |
Revision as of 11:15, 25 May 2020
Kensington was the location of an art gallery to which the Fourth Doctor and Romana I went to locate a painting that had been stolen from the Braxiatel Collection. (AUDIO: Tales from the Vault) The Royal Albert Hall was located in Kensington. (TV: Deep Breath)
Kensington shared a western border with Hammersmith, a north-western border with Brent and an eastern border with Westminster. The south-eastern border was the River Thames, across which was Wandsworth. (TV: Revenge of the Slitheen)
After being released from a time bubble, Jamie McCrimmon emerged in Kensington in 1968. (PROSE: The Avant Guardian)
In the 1970s, the Ministry for Alien Incursions and Ontological Wonders (MIAOW) was based in South Kensington. (PROSE: The Dreadful Flap, AUDIO: Find and Replace)
Anne Hartman moved to a small flat in Kensington after John Hartman's death in 2003. In 2007, she resigned from the Land Registry and moved to Shropshire. (AUDIO: The Rockery)
In 2008, Coldfire Construction put up a new technology block in one of the schools in Kensington. (TV: Revenge of the Slitheen)
Behind the scenes
The BBC tv Special Effects Exhibition, open 1972–1973, was located in the Science Museum in Kensington.
A special screening of the Series 3 opening episode Smith and Jones was shown on 25 October 2019 as part of a Doctor Who theme night at Natural History Museum as part of their after-hours series Lates.[1]