Fifteenth Doctor

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference

The Fifteenth Doctor was the Fourteenth Doctor's successor.

Biography

A day to come

to be added

A new body

After an adventure involving "Ruby S", (PROSE: First Day of the Doctor [+]Loading...{"page":"31","1":"First Day of the Doctor (short story)"}) the Doctor[nb 1] decided that the attire of his previous incarnation "[wouldn't] do", choosing his new clothing in the TARDIS, sturdy boots and a new hat being amongst the items chosen. (POEM: Contents [+]Loading...{"page":"16","1":"Contents (poem)"}) He also wrote in his diary about his adventure, quoting himself saying "what the h[...] here?" (PROSE: First Day of the Doctor [+]Loading...{"page":"31","1":"First Day of the Doctor (short story)"})

Further adventures

After the seed of a World Tree landed on Earth on 19 August 1987, the Eleventh Doctor sealed it in a Time Bubble to prevent its exponential growth from destroying the planet, which looped the same day over and over, akin to the plot of Groundhog Day. However, Nora Wicker was inadvertently trapped within the bubble after the Doctor misjudged its size, for forty-six years, so he — using a hard light hologram to enter the bubble transmitted from the moon of Vega — secured the help of a future Doctor to use his sonic screwdriver outside the bubble at the same time he did to create a temporary exit out of the bubble for Nora to escape through. Seconds before the Doctors used their screwdrivers, Nora told the Eleventh Doctor she wanted to remain in the bubble, to accompany the sapient tree, and this caused the Doctor to hesitate, and the sync failed. The Fifteenth Doctor, unable to complete the plan, returned to the TARDIS to return the next day in the loop, however he presumably did not return as to respect Nora's wishes. (AUDIO: The World Tree [+]Loading...["The World Tree (audio story)"])

Other realities

In the Daft Dimension, Ncuti Gatwa was on the cover of an issue of Doctor Who Magazine. (COMIC: The Daft Dimension 579 [+]Loading...["The Daft Dimension (DWM 579 comic story)","''The Daft Dimension'' 579"])

Appearance

The Doctor had a "nice" new face which fitted well into place, with his hair being short and his nose being just right. His legs were firm and his eyes were bright.

Wearing the clothes of their predecessor for a short time and believing them to be "off-the-peg", the Doctor first pondered on wearing a frilly shirt and a scarf before deciding they were "over them" and "a touch too soon" respectively. The Doctor finally chose some sturdy boots, believing them to be handy for the Moon and a "nice" new hat. (POEM: Contents [+]Loading...{"page":"16","1":"Contents (poem)"})

Behind the scenes

The Fourteenth Doctor?

Initially, Gatwa was announced by the BBC simply as portraying the Doctor, following Jodie Whittaker's Thirteenth Doctor.[1] Naturally, numerous sources presumed that his incarnation would be the "Fourteenth Doctor" and so incorrectly reported as such.[2][3][4][5] It was following the broadcast of The Power of the Doctor, which featured the Thirteenth Doctor's surprise regeneration into a new incarnation portrayed by Tenth Doctor actor David Tennant, that Russell T Davies officially confirmed the new Doctors' numbered designation in an article posted to the official doctorwho.tv website, clarifying that Tennant's new incarnation was the Fourteenth Doctor, who would himself be followed by Gatwa's Fifteenth Doctor.[6]

The first black Doctor

The Fifteenth Doctor was the first "main" ordinal incarnation of the Doctor in the programme's history to be played by a black man, namely Rwandan-Scottish actor Ncuti Gatwa;[2][7] however, other black Doctors have previously appeared in the Doctor Who universe.

Comedian Lenny Henry was the very first non-white actor to portray the Doctor; in an untitled skit from an episode of The Lenny Henry Show broadcast on 3 October 1985, Henry portrayed a parodical Seventh Doctor. Upon Gatwa's casting in 2022, Henry praised the development, noting "a lot of black fans have been looking at our watches for a while! More power to Russell T Davies."[7] While Henry's incarnation is not considered part of Doctor Who's "main continuity", it would take thirty-three more years for a black Doctor to appear in any media.

Russell T Davies's novelisation of Rose, released on 5 April 2018, featured a photograph in conspiracy theorist Clive Finch's possession that showed a tall, bald, black female Doctor who wielded a flaming sword.

The 2020 episode Fugitive of the Judoon introduced the "Fugitive Doctor", a mysterious, previously unknown incarnation of the Doctor portrayed by BAME actor Jo Martin. This unseen incarnation, a predecessor to the First Doctor, joins the ranks of the eight other “pre-Hartnell” Doctors introduced in the 1976 serial The Brain of Morbius. Within the same series as Fugitive, several of the Timeless Children — seven youthful incarnations of the Doctor — were played by BAME child actors, most notably including the first.

In addition, various "bodyswaps" have been depicted wherein the Doctor temporarily possesses the body of a BAME individual, such as Daniel Anthony’s Clyde Langer being possessed by the Eleventh Doctor in Death of the Doctor, and Damian Lynch portraying Benjamin Chikoto, who the Third Doctor uses as a means to communicate in Ghost in the Machine.

At the time of production for Silence in the Library and Forest of the Dead, Steven Moffat secretly intended Doctor Moon to be a future Doctor, meaning that Colin Salmon would have been the first BAME actor to portray a main ordinal Doctor, although this was never revealed in any later work of fiction. In Showrunner Showdown in 2020, Moffat commented that he thought a version of this idea could still work and Russell T Davies revealed that he always thought of the character as the Doctor while watching the episode.

Appearances prior to his first full television story

Continuing the trend set by the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Doctors, the Fifteenth Doctor appeared multiple times in expanded media before his television debut.

  • Interestingly, the Fifteenth Doctor's first appearance was technically before the Thirteenth Doctor's television debut in The Woman Who Fell to Earth; he appeared implicitly in the 2017 poem Contents, as an ambiguous then-future Doctor with short hair, wherein this Doctor rummaged through a chest looking for a new costume, settling on a hat and boots. As revealed on the Official Doctor Who Twitter account, the Fifteenth Doctor does indeed have very short hair, wears a stetson,[8] and boots.[9]
  • His second appearance was also implicitly in the audio drama The World Tree, which, while ambiguous as to which future Doctor appeared in it, Nick Slawicz, the story's author, confirmed that the Fifteenth Doctor was indeed the Doctor present in that story.[10]
  • The pink-painted TARDIS that appeared as part of a cross-promotion exhibit with the 2023 film Barbie could be argued to be Fifteen's, owing to the fact that Ncuti Gatwa also played a Ken in the film.

Footnotes

Notes

  1. This poem features an ambiguous future Doctor who was later shown to be the Fifteenth, as their physical appearances match. Please see the behind the scenes section for more details.

Sources