The Doctor (Exile)

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In a parallel universe, the Doctor, whose previous incarnation had committed suicide and changed gender, arrived on Earth in 2000 and abandoned her TARDIS, all to hide effectively from the Time Lords.

Biography

Exile on Earth

After escaping the Time Lords, the Doctor fled to Earth. She took a job as a trolley stacker at Sainsbury's under the name "Susan Foreman" and spent her free time drinking copious amounts of alcohol with her workmates Cherrie and Cheese.

During some of her drinking binges, she communicated with her previous incarnation, who chided her for her actions. (AUDIO: Exile)

Capture and trial

Two Time Lords were sent to capture and return the Doctor to Gallifrey to stand trial. She eluded them on Earth for a time, but she ultimately found herself surrounded and too drunk to escape. She decided to come along quietly.

The Time Lords explained that her sentence was originally to be exiled to Earth, but since her escape had been such an embarrassment to all concerned, her sentence was elevated to death.

The Doctor was sent back to her TARDIS, to which she would be confined for the rest of her life. If she attempted to use the controls and escape, the TARDIS would dematerialise permanently, making it as though she had never existed.

Inside her TARDIS she found a note from one of the Time Lords who appeared to sympathise with her plight. However, in a conversation with his colleague unheard to her, it was revealed that this was not the case and that the two of them had set her up. The note explained that her TARDIS was supposedly not rigged to self-destruct after all, and that she was being given a chance to escape whilst seemingly fulfilling her sentence. As she set the controls and the TARDIS began to dematerialise, she began to wonder whether the letter was truthful. (AUDIO: Exile)

Behind the scenes

A female Doctor would not appear in the main Doctor Who universe until Jodie Whittaker's Thirteenth Doctor was introduced in 2017's Twice Upon a Time.

The Twelfth Doctor's regeneration, into Whittaker's Doctor, was not the result of suicide. In fact, by this time, the television series had established that changing gender was a normal aspect of the regenerative process. (TV: The Doctor's Wife, Dark Water, Hell Bent, World Enough and Time)

Another Thirteenth Doctor, also a woman, appeared in the 1999 story, The Curse of Fatal Death, and was played by Joanna Lumley.