Coronation Street: Difference between revisions
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{{dab page|Coronation Street (disambiguation)}} | |||
'''''Coronation Street''''' was a long-running [[British]] television drama airing in the final decades of the [[20th century]] and well into the [[21st century|21st]], as well. | |||
The [[Sixth Doctor]] had a [[dream]] in which his adventures were broadcast on [[television]] and taken off the air, and when they were returned they were placed opposite this series. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Christmas Special (ST short story)|Christmas Special]]'') | The [[Sixth Doctor]] had a [[dream]] in which his adventures were broadcast on [[television]] and taken off the air, and when they were returned they were placed opposite this series. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Christmas Special (ST short story)|Christmas Special]]'') |
Revision as of 16:45, 14 February 2023
- You may wish to consult
Coronation Street (disambiguation)
for other, similarly-named pages.
Coronation Street was a long-running British television drama airing in the final decades of the 20th century and well into the 21st, as well.
The Sixth Doctor had a dream in which his adventures were broadcast on television and taken off the air, and when they were returned they were placed opposite this series. (PROSE: Christmas Special)
Betsy, Bernard Watson's Irish wolfhound, had a penchant for barking during the theme tune. (PROSE: The Sleep of Reason)
While stuck in 1969 without the TARDIS, (TV: Blink) the Tenth Doctor and Martha Jones watched Coronation Street in their flat. (PROSE: Martha Jones' MySpace blog)
While in Prague in 1989, Heather Lake mentioned Corrie (a common nickname for the series) as one of the things that she missed about London. (COMIC: The Broken Man)
In 1998, it was watched by Robert Gibson while he was in a hospital. (PROSE: System Shock)
Among the casualties of the Vore invasion of Earth in 2005 were members of the cast of the series, though they lost less than EastEnders. (PROSE: The Gallifrey Chronicles)
In the 2000s, the TV at the community room at the Lavender Lawns Rest Home blew up half an hour before the latest Corrie (Coronation Street) wedding. (PROSE: Eye of the Gorgon)
Behind the scenes
Both Doctor Who and Coronation Street started in the 1960s, have had notably long runs and have entered into British culture as television institutions.
In the late 1980s, Doctor Who aired opposite Coronation Street, which is often considered a factor in the show's decline and cancellation. The short story Christmas Special includes a reference to this situation.
Coronation Street has included the odd reference to Doctor Who over the years, especially since the show returned in 2005. The young boy Simon Barlow is a Doctor Who fan. He made reference to Journey's End when he saw two men who looked similar to each other. He said "there's two of them, it's like Doctor Who" referencing the Tenth Doctor and the Meta-Crisis Tenth Doctor seen in that story.
The 2006 episode The Idiot's Lantern is set in Florizel Street, which was the original planned name of Coronation Street.
In the 2008 episode Turn Left, Donna Noble attempted to insult a woman standing in her doorway by calling her Vera Duckworth, who was a long-standing character in the series.
In the Doctor Who Confidential instalment, 'Ello, 'Ello, 'Ello, Derek Jacobi stated that one of his ambitions since the 1960s has been to take a part in Doctor Who and Coronation Street. In 2012, he appeared as an extra on the show.[1]
- Suranne Jones, Bruno Langley, Helen Worth, Gray O'Brien, Julie Hesmondhalgh, Shobna Gulati, Michelle Collins, Ian McKellen, and Millie Gibson are among the most notable Doctor Who actors to have appeared in the soap.
- Katherine Kelly also rose to fame through her six-year run (2006-2012) on the soap as Becky McDonald. Kelly briefly appeared as Becky in Dermot and the Doctor, 5 years before taking on the role of Miss Quill in Class.
- As part of the show's 50th anniversary celebrations in 2010, a feature-length docudrama detailing the soap's creation, The Road to Coronation Street, aired on BBC Four. Lynda Baron, Steven Berkoff, Shaun Dooley, and Celia Imrie were among the cast.