DWM 216: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary
Tag: 2017 source edit
m (Spacing issues)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{real world}}
{{real world}}
{{Infobox Magazine
{{Infobox Magazine
|image=DWM 216.jpg
|image = DWM 216.jpg
|issue number= 216
|issue number= 216
|cover date= [[31 August (releases)|31 August]] [[1994 (releases)|1994]]
|cover date= [[31 August (releases)|31 August]] [[1994 (releases)|1994]]
Line 8: Line 8:
|publisher= [[Marvel Comics UK]]
|publisher= [[Marvel Comics UK]]
|series=[[Doctor Who Magazine|''Doctor Who Magazine'' issues]]
|series=[[Doctor Who Magazine|''Doctor Who Magazine'' issues]]
|release date=[[4 August (releases)|4 August]] [[1994 (releases)|1994]]}}
|release date=[[4 August (releases)|4 August]] [[1994 (releases)|1994]]
}}
The '''216th issue''' of ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' was released on [[4 August (releases)|4 August]] [[1994 (releases)|1994]] and removed from [[Great Britain|British]] newsstands on [[31 August (releases)|31 August]] 1994.
The '''216th issue''' of ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' was released on [[4 August (releases)|4 August]] [[1994 (releases)|1994]] and removed from [[Great Britain|British]] newsstands on [[31 August (releases)|31 August]] 1994.



Revision as of 12:46, 9 March 2023

RealWorld.png

The 216th issue of Doctor Who Magazine was released on 4 August 1994 and removed from British newsstands on 31 August 1994.

Contents

Articles

  • Into 1994 Readers' Survey Results
  • Sowing the Seeds - The long-awaited video release of The Seeds of Doom has at last brought one of Doctor Who's best-loved six-parters to an appreciative new audience. In 1976, however, the BBC planned a version that we will never see. Edits by Douglas Camfield. Archaeology by Philip Newman.
  • BBV - Nottingham-based do-it-yourself director Bill Baggs has so far released a number of video dramas featuring, amongst others, four Doctors, three companions and two people who work in the Who Shop. Marcus Hearn spent a day at the location of the latest production, Breach of the Peace only to discover it has absolutely nothing to do with Doctor Who.

Comic content

Fiction

Archives

By Andrew Pixley

Telesnap archives

Compiled by Marcus Hearn

Interviews / Profiles

  • The Real McCoy: Part One - Sylvester McCoy was recently informed - by a letter from a fan - that he was the longest-running of all the Doctors. Three short seasons on television, then years of uncertainty have gradually solidified into the realisation that he is unlikely to play the Doctor again... In a candid interview with Sylvester, Nick Briggs discovers the man, the actor and the Time Lord
  • Out of the Soundhouse - Keff McCulloch was perhaps the last Doctor Who composer to redefine the overall sound of the series. Austen Atkinson-Broadbelt asked the versatile musician about his career, discovering that he got that same old feeling returning to handle Dimensions in Time.
  • Acting the Part - As The Seeds of Doom finally germinates from the flowerbeds of BBC Video's archives, two of the actors involved with the production remember their roles with fondness. Anthony Townsend met up with John Challis while Liam-Michael Rudden tracked down Kenneth Gilbert.

Reviews - Shelf Life

Reviews by Craig Hinton

Regular features

Credits

Editorial: Gary Russell & Marcus Hearn
Design: Peri Godbold
Production: Julie Pickering & Mark Irvine
Bionic Kiwi: Warwick Gray

Additional details

to be added