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Charlie Brown was, according to Donna Noble, "fiction". (TV: Journey's End [+]Loading...["Journey's End (TV story)"])
Biography
Red Nose Day 1991
Charlie Brown was depicted in a book released for Red Nose Day 1991 to raise money for Comic Relief, where he was depicted alongside a caption about "the little people without whom... etc. etc. ..". (COMIC: The Totally Stonking, Surprisingly Educational And Utterly Mindboggling Comic Relief Comic [+]Loading...["The Totally Stonking, Surprisingly Educational And Utterly Mindboggling Comic Relief Comic (comic story)"])
Legacy
During Donna Noble's brief transformation into a half-Time Lord, as her mind began to overload, she confused Charlie Chaplin with Charlie Brown immediately after suggesting that she and the Tenth Doctor go meet Chaplin.
She immediately corrected herself, noting that this was not a feasible idea because Charlie Brown "was fiction". (TV: Journey's End [+]Loading...["Journey's End (TV story)"])
Behind the scenes
- Charlie Brown, the main protagonist of Charles M. Schulz's Peanuts comic strips, was referenced in the comic story The Glorious Dead (part 5) [+]Loading...{"part":"5","1":"The Glorious Dead (comic story)"} where one of the Doctor's counterparts from parallel universes, Theta Stigma, resembles Charlie Brown, while the Rani resembled Lucy van Pelt.
- A version of Captain Britain featured in To Save Me, Why Must I Kill Me? [+]Loading...["To Save Me, Why Must I Kill Me? (comic story)"], is based upon Charlie Brown.
External links
- Charlie Brown at the Peanuts Wiki