Winning (poem): Difference between revisions
(→Notes) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
|image = Missy pregnant.jpg | |image = Missy pregnant.jpg | ||
|team = {{Gomez}} | |team = {{Gomez}} | ||
|featuring = {{Delgado|n=The "UNIT enemy" Master}}, {{Ainley|n=the "Tremas" Master}}, {{Simm|n=the "Saxon" Master}}, [[ | |featuring = {{Delgado|n=The "UNIT enemy" Master}}, {{Ainley|n=the "Tremas" Master}}, {{Simm|n=the "Saxon" Master}}, [[Twelfth Doctor]] | ||
|year = [[Pharos Project]] | |year = [[Pharos Project]] | ||
|writer = [[James Goss]] | |writer = [[James Goss]] | ||
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
== Notes == | == Notes == | ||
* This poem focuses on the Master's personality. | * This poem focuses on the Master's personality. | ||
* This poem is written in first person from the point of view of the Master, but at the end of the poem | * This poem is written in first person from the point of view of the Master, but the Doctor has some speech at the end of the poem. | ||
* The illustration of Missy holding a [[Missy's child|baby]] was inspired by a conversation between [[Steven Moffat]] and [[Russell T Davies]]. The plan follows that Moffat would have ended his era of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' on a [[List of televised cliffhangers|cliffhanger]] in which Missy told the Master and the Doctor that she was [[pregnant]]. | * The illustration of Missy holding a [[Missy's child|baby]] was inspired by a conversation between [[Steven Moffat]] and [[Russell T Davies]]. The plan follows that Moffat would have ended his era of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' on a [[List of televised cliffhangers|cliffhanger]] in which Missy told the Master and the Doctor that she was [[pregnant]]. | ||
{{TitleSort}} | {{TitleSort}} | ||
Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
[[Category:Multi-Master stories]] | [[Category:Multi-Master stories]] | ||
[[Category:The Master short stories]] | [[Category:The Master short stories]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Twelfth Doctor short stories]] |
Revision as of 12:24, 30 June 2020
Winning was a poem contained within the anthology Now We Are Six Hundred.
Plot
to be added
References
- The Master's hypnotic abilities are referenced.
Notes
- This poem focuses on the Master's personality.
- This poem is written in first person from the point of view of the Master, but the Doctor has some speech at the end of the poem.
- The illustration of Missy holding a baby was inspired by a conversation between Steven Moffat and Russell T Davies. The plan follows that Moffat would have ended his era of Doctor Who on a cliffhanger in which Missy told the Master and the Doctor that she was pregnant.
|