The Monk (The Persistence of Memory): Difference between revisions

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* The Twelfth Doctor would have faced an earlier incarnation of the Meddling Monk on-screen (one that would precede the incarnation played by [[Peter Butterworth]]) in an ultimately unproduced TV story called ''[[How The Monk Got His Habit (TV story)|How the Monk Got His Habit]]'', pitched by Peter Harness for [[Series 9 (Doctor Who)|Series 9]], would have seen the Monk (prospectively cast as [[Matt Berry]]) inadvertently drive [[Grigori Rasputin]] mad. The Doctor would have him regenerate into a duplicate of Rasputin, forced to live out the remainder of his lifetime; explaining that his habit of disguising as a monk began when he was forced to portray "the Mad Monk".  
* The Twelfth Doctor would have faced an earlier incarnation of the Meddling Monk on-screen (one that would precede the incarnation played by [[Peter Butterworth]]) in an ultimately unproduced TV story called ''[[How The Monk Got His Habit (TV story)|How the Monk Got His Habit]]'', pitched by Peter Harness for [[Series 9 (Doctor Who)|Series 9]], would have seen the Monk (prospectively cast as [[Matt Berry]]) inadvertently drive [[Grigori Rasputin]] mad. The Doctor would have him regenerate into a duplicate of Rasputin, forced to live out the remainder of his lifetime; explaining that his habit of disguising as a monk began when he was forced to portray "the Mad Monk".  
** While the story was ultimately rejected, [[How The Monk Got His Habit (short story)|a prequel]] would later be released as part of ''[[Doctor Who: Lockdown!]]'' as an "unproduced novelisation", although it is not considered [[Tardis:Valid sources|a valid source]] on this wiki.
** While the story was ultimately rejected, [[How The Monk Got His Habit (short story)|a prequel]] would later be released as part of ''[[Doctor Who: Lockdown!]]'' as an "unproduced novelisation", although it is not considered [[Tardis:Valid sources|a valid source]] on this wiki.
* [[Colin Brake]] described himself as having not been "entirely up to speed" with what [[Big Finish Productions]] had done with the character of the Monk at the time he wrote ''[[The Persistence of Dreams (audio story)|The Persistence of Dreams]]''. Thus, as he put it, "[his] Monk was… a Monk, probably not [[First Monk|the one we saw on TV]]"; Brake did not formulate a specific name for this incarnation of the Monk, nor explicitly consider his place in the Monk's timeline relative to Big Finish's Monks.<ref>[https://twitter.com/CJBrake/status/1414637899941879809 Colin Brake on Twitter, 2021]</ref>
* [[Colin Brake]] described himself as having not been "entirely up to speed" with what [[Big Finish Productions]] had done with the character of the Monk at the time he wrote ''[[The Persistence of Memory (short story)|The Persistence of Memory]]''. Thus, as he put it, "[his] Monk was… a Monk, probably not [[First Monk|the one we saw on TV]]"; Brake did not formulate a specific name for this incarnation of the Monk, nor explicitly consider his place in the Monk's timeline relative to Big Finish's Monks.<ref>[https://twitter.com/CJBrake/status/1414637899941879809 Colin Brake on Twitter, 2021]</ref>


== Footnotes ==
== Footnotes ==

Revision as of 01:46, 13 July 2021

One incarnation of the renegade Time Lord often dubbed the Meddling Monk, postdating the Last Great Time War, returned to primarily calling himself Mortimus. After an encounter with the Twelfth Doctor, he ended up sent away in his TARDIS with the memories of his scheme erased by a memory worm.

Biography

This incarnation of the Monk knew that Gallifrey had survived the events of the Last Great Time War and were "hiding themselves away" from the universe, (PROSE: The Persistence of Memory) something which the "Reverend Mortimer" Monk had discovered shortly before his travels with Missy. Before his regeneration, that Monk had voiced his intention to deal with the Doctor. (AUDIO: Divorced, Beheaded, Regenerated)

On one occasion, the Monk discovered an abandoned ship manned by robots and full of time scoop technology. He took the ship to Loch Ness in 1979 with plans to use the time scoop to depopulate the planet and sell it to an alien race. Before doing that, he used the scoop to bring a plesiosaurus to the loch, increasing the amount of Loch Ness Monster sightings and attracting attention to the loch.

The Twelfth Doctor and Clive Finch came to the loch to see the monster and discovered the Monk's plan. The Doctor used his sonic screwdriver to take control of the ship and had its robots restrain the Monk. The Doctor found his TARDIS, disguised as a plain white wardrobe, and decided it would be best to let Mortimus go. The Doctor retrieved a memory worm, erased Mortimus' knowledge of the plan, along with the rest of his short-term memory, and sent him away in his TARDIS. (PROSE: The Persistence of Memory)

Personality

This incarnation of the Monk, much like his predecessors, enjoyed meddling with history to suit his own selfish ends. Mortimus, in particular, was considerably more jovial than those that came before him, but his schemes lacked any attempt of moral justification. He deemed the Twelfth Doctor a "killjoy" whose insistence upon causality was "naïve and boring". (PROSE: The Persistence of Memory)

Appearance and clothing

In this incarnation, Mortimus was powerfully built. He had pronounced laughter lines and eyes that twinkled with humour, as though he found a lot to laugh about in life.

During his encounter with the Twelfth Doctor in Loch Ness, he wore a richly patterned scarlet robe and a paisley scarf for a belt, pairing this with a pair of sturdy shoes. (PROSE: The Persistence of Memory)

Behind the scenes

  • The Twelfth Doctor would have faced an earlier incarnation of the Meddling Monk on-screen (one that would precede the incarnation played by Peter Butterworth) in an ultimately unproduced TV story called How the Monk Got His Habit, pitched by Peter Harness for Series 9, would have seen the Monk (prospectively cast as Matt Berry) inadvertently drive Grigori Rasputin mad. The Doctor would have him regenerate into a duplicate of Rasputin, forced to live out the remainder of his lifetime; explaining that his habit of disguising as a monk began when he was forced to portray "the Mad Monk".
  • Colin Brake described himself as having not been "entirely up to speed" with what Big Finish Productions had done with the character of the Monk at the time he wrote The Persistence of Memory. Thus, as he put it, "[his] Monk was… a Monk, probably not the one we saw on TV"; Brake did not formulate a specific name for this incarnation of the Monk, nor explicitly consider his place in the Monk's timeline relative to Big Finish's Monks.[1]

Footnotes