Doctors Assemble! (webcast): Difference between revisions

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* [[David Bradley]] is the only actor featured to have also portrayed [[First Doctor|his Doctor]] on screen.
* [[David Bradley]] is the only actor featured to have also portrayed [[First Doctor|his Doctor]] on screen.
*When forming teams, the Third Doctor claims he'll take any not wearing a bow-tie while wearing one himself.
*When forming teams, the Third Doctor claims he'll take any not wearing a bow-tie while wearing one himself.
*A special edition of the audio was re-released online on January 1st 2021, the premise of the audio is the same as the original with new added scenes. The Twelfth Doctor was portrayed by Chris Walker - Thompson as well as reprising the Second Doctor, The Thirteenth Doctor was performed by Alia E. Torrie, And a different new incarnation known as the Quiff Doctor by Rob Baines. Jon Culshaw reprised his roles as The Third, Fourth and Fifth Doctors, Pete Walsh as The Ninth Doctor and Elliot Crossley as The Tenth Doctor. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vnaSXTKu1jU]
*On [[1 January (releases)|1 January]] [[2021 (releases)|2021]], an unofficial "Special Edition" was released on YouTube. Although unlicensed and thus [[Tardis:Valid sources|not covered by this Wiki]], it was notable for featuring new lines by [[Chris Walker-Thomson]], [[Jon Culshaw]], [[Elliott Crossley]] and [[Pete Walsh]]. Alia E. Torrie stepped in as the voice of the [[Thirteenth Doctor]] in place of [[Debra Stephenson]]. The "selling point" of the extended scenes was a guest appearance by Rob Baines' "Quiff Doctor", a long-running fanfilm incarnation of [[the Doctor]].  


=== Easter eggs ===
=== Easter eggs ===

Revision as of 15:05, 20 March 2021

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Doctors Assemble! was a webcast that made specifically for the Doctor Who: Lockdown! event, coinciding with a tweetalong for An Adventure in Space and Time. It was a multi-Doctor story featuring all thirteen of the Doctor's main televised incarnations, as well as the War Doctor.

Though the webcast had a visual element, it consisted only of CGI exterior and interior shots of the Doctor's TARDIS, with pictures appearing on the TARDIS scanner. All of the Doctors appeared via voiceover, though their likenesses were featured in humorous profile pictures in the emergency "group chat" on the scanner. Of the various Doctors, only the First Doctor, Fourth Doctor and Eleventh Doctor were played by actors who had portrayed them before, namely David Bradley, Jon Culshaw and Jacob Dudman respectively, while the other Doctors were voiced by impressionists, some of whom had never contributed to licensed Doctor Who media in the past.

Synopsis

Trapped in his TARDIS by a a mysterious entity intent on conquering Earth, the Fourth Doctor contacts his past and future selves via his TARDIS's telepathic circuits. Can the fourteen bickering Doctors come together across Time and Space to work out a solution before the Fourth Doctor is crushed by the collapsing internal dimensions of his Ship?

Plot

to be added

Cast

Crew

References

Notes

Easter eggs

  • The Third Doctor describes the Fourth Doctor's telepathic message as his having "reached out through the void beyond the mind", referencing the lyrics of "I Am the Doctor", from the album of the same name, a song which was performed by Jon Pertwee in-character as the Doctor.
  • The Second Doctor says that "some corners of the universe have bred the most terrible things" when he sees his first incarnation, referencing his famous speech from TV: The Moonbase.
  • The Fourth Doctor states that he used his TARDIS tuner to open the telepathic transtemporal communications channel, referencing the comic story Dr Who and the Turgids, which was released in early issues of Doctor Who Weekly.
  • When the Fourth Doctor calls the current crisis the "greatest peril in [Earth's] history", the Fifth Doctor rhetorically asks if it is Tuesday, with the Ninth Doctor and Thirteenth Doctor asking if it could be Saturday or Sunday, referencing the days in the week their episodes aired.
  • The Seventh Doctor gets his other incarnations to stop arguing using the same method he did in TV: Battlefield to stop a battle.
  • The Third Doctor promises to give the War Doctor "a hundred cats" in the same vain as how he tried to persuade his second incarnation to sacrifice his recorder in TV: The Three Doctors, with the Second Doctor also hinting to those events.

Continuity

Footnotes