Barry Letts
Barry Letts (born 1925, died 9 October 2009) is perhaps best known as the producer of Doctor Who during Jon Pertwee's tenure as the Doctor. A former actor, he also has considerable directorial experience.
Impact on Doctor Who
His influence ran deeper than the average producer of "classic" Doctor Who, as evidenced by his wide-ranging credits. He was the only executive producer of the 1963 version of the show, overseeing the work of John Nathan-Turner's first year as producer, and Tom Baker's last year as the Doctor. He was the only producer of Doctor Who to have also served as a director. He also held a number of uncredited positions with the production, varying from uncredited acting jobs to writing. In this latter capacity, he paired with Robert Sloman.
As the person who cast Tom Baker as the Doctor, commissioned Baker's first year of scripts, and significantly advanced Robert Holmes' career as a Doctor Who writer, he also had a profound, but sometimes under-appreciated, impact on Philip Hinchcliffe's time as producer. With Terrance Dicks, Letts is also generally seen as the effective co-creator of the Master [1], Sarah Jane Smith[2] and Harry Sullivan[3].
His contribution to the casting of these characters was especially profound. He felt it his duty to be on the look-out for suitable actors to replace companions during his tenure as producer, and kept meticulous records of various actors, on the off chance that one might be required to play a companion. Elizabeth Sladen was about the 250th actor whose details he had recorded. (BBC DVD: The Hand of Fear) Meanwhile, he was so taken with Ian Marter's qualities that he twice gave the actor the chance to become a series regular. (BBC DVD: Carnival of Monsters)
Letts is also credited with introducing certain themes that later appeared in Doctor Who. He was the first writer to insist upon including eco-friendliness and Buddhism — later seen in stories like The Seeds of Doom and Kinda — in scripts produced on his watch.
Outside the world of televised Doctor Who, he was the first writer of "past Doctor" adventures on audio, predating the rise of Big Finish audios by half a decade. He also contributed to the Target Books range of television novelizations, and he adapted his own radio dramas. Interestingly, his adaptation of The Paradise of Death was the final book released by Target, before their license passed to Virgin Books. He has also written a couple of novels for the BBC Past Doctor Adventures range.
He is also a frequent contributor to the BBC DVD range. While he unsurprisingly appears on commentaries of stories which he produced, he has also come to be used as a general "authority" on the classic series. Therefore, he has appeared in front of the camera as himself in various bonus documentaries. Depending on the subject, he is sometimes seen on DVDs of serials in which he had no formal role, as when he was part of a general retrospective on Sarah Jane for The Hand of Fear.
His autobiography, Who and Me, is scheduled for release in November 2009, and Letts had been scheduled to make several public appearances promoting the work.
Filmography
As Director
- The Enemy of the World
- Inferno (uncredited, episodes 3-7)
- Terror of the Autons
- Carnival of Monsters
- Planet of the Spiders
- The Android Invasion
As Writer
- The Dæmons (as Guy Leopold)
- The Time Monster (uncredited, with Robert Sloman)
- The Green Death (uncredited, with Robert Sloman)
- Planet of the Spiders (uncredited, with Robert Sloman)
As Producer
- Doctor Who and the Silurians
- The Ambassadors of Death
- Inferno
- Terror of the Autons
- The Mind of Evil
- The Claws of Axos
- Colony in Space
- The Dæmons
- Day of the Daleks
- The Curse of Peladon
- The Sea Devils
- The Mutants
- The Time Monster
- The Three Doctors
- Carnival of Monsters
- Frontier in Space
- Planet of the Daleks
- The Green Death
- The Time Warrior
- Invasion of the Dinosaurs
- Death to the Daleks
- The Monster of Peladon
- Planet of the Spiders
- Robot
- Logopolis (with John Nathan-Turner)