Check the behind the scenes section, the revision history and discussion page for additional comments on this article's title.
The Thompsons — Alex and Claire, and their son George — lived in (PROSE: My Special Book) a flat in the Rowbarton Estate. (PROSE: Night Terrors)
Appearance[[edit] | [edit source]]
The flat was small, with the kitchen and living room being separated merely by an dividing counter as opposed to a proper wall. George had a bedroom, filled with toys and a cupboard, in which he stored things that scared him, (TV: Night Terrors, PROSE: Night Terrors, My Special Book) such as some metal soldiers, and a collection of peg dolls and dolls house. (PROSE: My Special Book)
History[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Thompsons lived in their flat in the estate since George was little, as he had memories of going in the lift since when he was aroun five. By the time George was seven and a quarter, he had developed phobias of things in the estate, such as the noise of the lift and Mrs Rossiter. He wrote about these fears in his special book. (PROSE: My Special Book)
When George was eight, he misinterpreted his parents dicussing him getting help with his phobias as rejectment, sending a psychic messgae to the Eleventh Doctor's psychic paper, and George began to send things, such as Mrs Rossiter and Jim Purcell, that scared him into his dolls house, where they were hunted by peg dolls, and transformed into additional dolls after capture. After the Eleventh Doctor and Alex got George to confront his fears, the people that had transformed were reverted to normal. (TV: Night Terrors)
Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]
Neither the flat or council estate is named in TV: Night Terrors; it is in PROSE: Night Terrors that the council estate is identified as the Rowbarton Estate, however it doesn't name the specific flat in which the Thompsons live in. However, NOTVALID: Doctor Who: The Encyclopedia which identifies that flat as number 58, albeit as "58 Rowbarton House". As this is an invalid source, the name can only be used to conjecturally name the article.