Colin Baker: Difference between revisions

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==== BBC Audio ====
==== BBC Audio ====
* ''[[Fortunes of War (audio story)|Fortunes of War]]''
* ''[[Fortunes of War (audio story)|Fortunes of War]]''
==== Doctor Who Audio Annuals ====
* ''[[Time Wake (short story)|Time Wake]]''


Other Roles
Other Roles
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* ''[[The Age of Chaos (comic story)|The Age of Chaos]]''
* ''[[The Age of Chaos (comic story)|The Age of Chaos]]''


=== Prose ===
=== Short Stories ===
==== Brief Encounters ====
==== Brief Encounters ====
* ''[[A Wee Deoch an ...? (short story)|A Wee Deoch an ...?]]''
* ''[[A Wee Deoch an ...? (short story)|A Wee Deoch an ...?]]''

Revision as of 12:26, 27 April 2022

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Colin Baker (born 8 June 1943[1]) played the Sixth Doctor from 1984 to 1986, beginning with an appearance at the conclusion of The Caves of Androzani, continuing from The Twin Dilemma to The Ultimate Foe.

He reprised the role for the 1989 stage show The Ultimate Adventure and the 1993 Children in Need special Dimensions in Time, as well as for numerous Doctor Who audio stories for Big Finish Productions.

Prior to becoming the Doctor, he was considered for the role of Persuasion in Four to Doomsday (TCH 34).

Profile

Before being selected to replace Peter Davison as the Doctor, Baker was an established television actor. His most notable role was Paul Merroney in The Brothers. Baker also guest starred as Bayban the Butcher in the Blake's 7 episode City at the Edge of the World.

Prior to being cast as the Doctor, Baker had guest starred in Doctor Who as Commander Maxil in the Peter Davison serial Arc of Infinity. At one point in the serial, Maxil shoots the Doctor; Baker often joked that he got the part of the Doctor by killing the incumbent. Before that, he had been considered by director Christopher Barry for the role of Arnold Jellicoe in Robot, which debuted Tom Baker as the Doctor. (REF: The Fourth Doctor Handbook) He was also considered for the roles of Scobie, Bilton and Sheard in Time-Flight. (TCH 35)

Baker's era of the show was interrupted by an eighteen-month hiatus, officially because the show was moved back from the spring to the autumn schedule. He was ultimately dismissed from the part at the insistence of BBC management, who wanted to refresh the show. The Controller of BBC One at the time, Michael Grade, criticised Doctor Who, saying that the programme had become overly violent and its storylines farcical. Baker was offered the first four episodes of the next season in order to pave the way for a regeneration, which he turned down as he did not wish to miss out on other work in the meantime. He did offer to do the whole season and have the Doctor regenerate at the end, but this was refused. As of 2021, he is the only actor to play the Doctor who has been fired by the BBC. Years later, Baker would express regret for this decision, claiming he was being "selfish" and "not thinking about the fans". Prior to his dismissal, Baker claimed he would gladly have done the show for as many as eight years.

Since leaving Doctor Who, Baker has continued to act, mainly on the stage, where he played the Doctor again in The Ultimate Adventure, replacing Jon Pertwee in the part. He returned to television as the Doctor in the 1993 charity special Dimensions in Time. He has played a Doctor-like character in the BBV Productions video series The Stranger, reprised the role of the Doctor in a series of audio plays produced by Big Finish Productions, and played an alternate version of the Doctor in AUDIO: Disassembled. In a poll conducted by Doctor Who Magazine,[which?] fans voted Baker the "greatest" of the Doctors in the audio plays.

Baker's post-Who television work during the 1990s included guest appearances in the BBC's medical drama Casualty and Channel 4's adaptation of A Dance to the Music of Time. He also appeared as himself as the resident celebrity in 'Dictionary Corner' on the daytime quiz show Countdown, also on Channel 4. He appeared in the first episode of Jonathan Creek and in an episode of the George Lucas TV series The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, making him one of four classic series Doctors (the others being Jon Pertwee, Tom Baker and Peter Davison) to appear in an American TV series after leaving the role. In an appearance in an episode of the BBC's long-running medical drama series, Casualty, Baker played a Doctorish patient named David Vincent (named after Roy Thinnes' character in The Invaders TV series) who was a UFO nut, and in an episode of Al Murray's pub sitcom, Time Gentlemen Please, made by Sky TV, he appeared as a character named Professor Baker.

In 1994, Colin Baker had the distinction of being the first Doctor to have written a Doctor Who story, penning The Age of Chaos, a graphic novel published by Marvel UK featuring the Sixth Doctor and Frobisher. He has also written several short stories for Doctor Who Magazine and its Yearbooks featuring the Sixth Doctor. Although Matt Smith is known to have written several short stories featuring the Doctor in preparation for playing the Eleventh Doctor, as of 2019 none have been published and thus it was not until the release of the Scratchman by Tom Baker that another Doctor actor has been credited for writing published Doctor Who fiction.

Since 1995, Baker has written a column for the Bucks Free Press. In 2010, Hirst Books published a volume of a hundred of these columns called Look Who's Talking. They announced a second collection, including Baker's Doctor Who fiction entitled Gallimaufry. Baker both wrote and read The Wings of a Butterfly for Short Trips - Volume I.

Since Nicholas Courtney's death in 2011, Baker has been the honorary President of the Doctor Who Appreciation Society. Although it is said the two didn't really know each other, Baker paid his respects to the late Elisabeth Sladen after she died the same year.

In 2013, Baker appeared alongside Peter Davison and Sylvester McCoy in The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot, in which they attempt to appear in the 50th anniversary special The Day of the Doctor.

In 2015, Baker finally saw a chance to perform a genuine regeneration story for his Doctor in the Big Finish audio anthology The Sixth Doctor: The Last Adventure, putting to bed his jest that he had never handed over the role, which he discussed at length in the commentary featured with the release. At 28 years since his exit from Doctor Who, he holds the record for the longest time an actor who played the Doctor has waited to perform a regeneration scene after leaving the series, even surpassing Paul McGann's extensive wait of 17 years.

In 2019, Baker appeared on the Doctor Who Youtube channel in The Sixth Doctor is on trial AGAIN!, a short video promoting the the upcoming release of the Blu-ray Season 23 collection.

He was once married to Liza Goddard but the pair divorced. Baker later re-married and had five children. His son, Jack, sadly died of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome in 1983, activating Baker's support for the Foundation for the Study of Infant Deaths. Since then, Baker has had 4 daughters, including Rosie Baker. All four daughters, as well as Baker's wife, played themselves in The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot.

Colin Baker is of no relation to Tom Baker, who played the Fourth Doctor.

In the DWU

Colin Baker appeared as himself in the webcast The Sixth Doctor is on trial AGAIN!, where he is put on trial for an unpaid parking fine which he received whilst filming new material for Doctor Who Season 23.

Credits

as the Sixth Doctor

Television

Doctor Who

Mini-episodes

Stage

Webcasts

Doctor Who

The Collection

Other

Audio

BBC Radio

Doctor Who Main Range

Special Releases

The Lost Stories

The Sixth Doctor Adventures

Classic Doctors, New Monsters

The Stageplays

The Tenth Doctor and River Song

The Companion Chronicles

Short Trips

Doctor Who Unbound

The Diary of River Song

Peladon

Jago & Litefoot

The Lives of Captain Jack

Audiobook readings

Target Novelisations

BBC Audio

Doctor Who Audio Annuals

Other Roles

Television

Doctor Who

Audio

Doctor Who Main Range

Stranded

Doctor Who Unbound

As The Warrior

Bernice Summerfield

Gallifrey

Writing Credits

Comics

Short Stories

Brief Encounters

The Target Storybook

Audio

Short Trips

Footnotes

External links