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Davros was the forty-eighth story in Big Finish's monthly range. It was written by Lance Parkin and featured Colin Baker as the Sixth Doctor and Terry Molloy as Davros.
It marked the first appearance in an audio story of Davros, played by Terry Molloy. This story was among the ones advertised in Davros with Big Finish.
Publisher's summary[[edit] | [edit source]]
TAI stock has shot up by over fifteen percent on news that galaxy-famous scientist Davros, controversial creator of the Daleks, has been hired to work on unspecified technological projects.
Davros has been given the chance to redeem himself.
Humanity stands on the verge of a new era, but it needs the help of the galaxy's greatest ever scientist. But Davros is dead... isn't he?
From the bunkers and shelters of ancient Skaro to the gleaming domes of the future Earth Empire, Davros has always been a man of destiny. Now he's working for mankind's benefit. But how much do we really know about Davros?
Has Davros really turned over a new leaf? The Doctor certainly doesn't think so. But is the Doctor always right?
Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]
Part one[[edit] | [edit source]]
"When I press this switch, I will die. The poison in that projectile injector will kill me in a moment." Davros is about to die, forced to carry out his own execution. He, however, refuses to press the switch to do the deed, intending to create "the supreme power in the universe". "This is not the end; this is only the beginning..."
Meanwhile, Davros' body is found by Arnold and Lorraine Baynes. They steal the corpse with the chair, shooting their pilot in Davros' place to trick the patrols. The advanced medical equipment available to them on the ship confirm that the Kaled is dead. They shouldn't give up, though; Lorraine decides to bring him "back home", where even better equipment can be found. All hope is not lost yet.
Meanwhile, the Sixth Doctor arrives, having been called by a journalist named Willis. He and Kimberly Todd explain to the Doctor that TransAllied, Inc. — TAI — are planning to shut down every mining colony, a plan which would render 12 billion people out of jobs, devastating planets for generations. Kim works for the company's computer section, and has found secret files. All the mines are profitable... so why are TAI closing them down?
Against all evidence, Davros is alive. He recalls past events in his life: the Kaled Supreme informs Davros of the council of Elites' decision that he must die for his crimes. None of them, though, can do it — "If Davros is to die, it must be by his own hand." The Supreme hands him a projectile poison injector.
A spaceship suddenly appears overhead, and the Doctor and company use this opportunity to escape into the TAI dome. Baynes — revealed to be the chief executive of TAI — and his wife exit the ship, and bring Davros with them. Davros, meanwhile, is still dreaming of his past. His larynx was damaged in an attack, and was replaced with a voice box. His skin is badly burnt; even the most powerful sedatives can't help with the pain. Davros demands to see his face, and cries in terror and despair at the sight of it.
Outside, the Doctor confronts Baynes about his harbouring Davros, "the most evil being this galaxy has created". Even though Baynes assures the Doctor that the Kaled is dead, the Doctor is not convinced. He lets it slip that he could potentially revive Davros, and Baynes takes him to inspect the corpse. When there, though, Baynes' wife Lorraine notices that Davros has brain activity. He has been in suspended animation. At the Doctor's voice, Davros awakes. The Doctor can't bring himself to flick the switch to kill him himself. He soon stabilises, laughing maniacally.
The Doctor watches in horror as Arnold and Lorraine Baynes introduce themselves to the newly revived Davros, and offer him a job as head of TAI's R&D department. After being shown a commercial for the company — propaganda, in the words the Doctor — Davros agrees. "We have a deal."
The Doctor, though, desperate, offers a counter-offer: he will offer himself to do the same work. Davros assures the Baynes' that the Doctor's intellect is very much equal to his own. But, with the Doctor threatening to return him to suspended animation, he accuses the Time Lord of being an obvious potential saboteur — he must be incarcerated. Baynes has a better idea. Both will work for him — together.
The Doctor is woken up in the morning by a device placed in his inner ear during his sleep. He goes back to sleep, telling it to wake him up 5 minutes before the start of his work day. After having breakfast, he arrives in the lab, and purposely ruins two hours of Davros' work. He turns the tables around, making Davros act as his assistant — even getting him to make him some tea.
Meanwhile, Willis is conducting an interview with Baynes. After bringing up the mines, though, Baynes destroys his tape recorder and demands that Willis stay for a few days. Willis, in no situation to bargain being trapped in the dome with no way of calling for help, is forced to oblige.
The Doctor and Davros have a discussion about their past. Davros considers the Doctor to be the closest thing to a friend he's ever had, and tries to convince him that he has changed his ways after 90 years of nothing to do but think and remember.
They break for lunch, as is government-required. Baynes shows the Doctor to the computer centre, the centre of all the dome's electronic systems. Though, as the Doctor notes, a tactical disadvantage with everything in one place, its walls are heavily fortified, and the fortress of a centre has everything in it for men to survive for weeks on end.
In the computer centre, Kim tells the Doctor of what she and Willis had seen earlier: a secret automated production line for a whole army of robots. What is going on? What is TAI preparing for? They decide to meet again.
Lorraine sits dinner with Davros, whom she admires greatly. She wants to write the definitive biography of Davros, and intends to interview him for it. He reminisces about his past, about the food pills offered on Skaro. While the Doctor warns Baynes about Davros, Davros does the opposite with Baynes' wife.
Within their first day at work, the Doctor and Davros complete a prototype of the alpha matrix, something Baynes thought would take them months. He then tasks Davros with something far more complex: to end the galactic famine, and feed Mutter's Spiral. The Doctor doesn't trust him, and expresses this to Willis and Kim in their prearranged meeting.
Baynes expresses the same thing to his wife Lorraine: the Doctor may be right, and they should be prepared for this possibility. The Doctor and co. explore the dome, to find the secret robot factory Willis and Kim discovered earlier. He inspects one of the robots, and finds out where his work has gone. His invention has not been used as a starship's navigation computer — it's in a robot's central processing unit.
When Willis contemplates destroying an approaching robot, though, it goes into defensive mode. The machine advances; it is just about to kill them.
Part two[[edit] | [edit source]]
to be added
Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]
Crew[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Cover Art - Clayton Hickman
- Director - Gary Russell
- Executive Producer - Jacqueline Rayner
- Music - Jane Elphinstone
- Producers - Gary Russell and Jason Haigh-Ellery
- Sound Design - Jim Mortimore
- Writer - Lance Parkin
- Davros created by Terry Nation
Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]
Individuals[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Lorraine Baynes has a degree in space medicine.
- The Doctor has skimmed Lorraine's two best selling books on the Daleks: Dalek Genius and The Dark Side of Skaro. In her personal future, she will teach at the University of Oxford.
- The Baynes do not have any children.
- Willis is a member of the Galactic Press Association. He works for an independent news corporation.
- Baynes describes Willis as "an asteroid hugging halfwit."
- Peri Brown is on the other side of the galaxy, attending a botany symposium.
Davros[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Davros was grievously wounded by a Thal bombardment of his laboratory in the Kaled Dome.
- According to Davros, he was forced to relive his entire life experience during every second of his 90-year imprisonment in cryogenic suspension.
- Davros has no eyes or taste buds. Even before his accident, he had only eaten food pills and the occasional rodent.
- Davros is discovered by the Baynes locked in a bank vault.
Humanity[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Humanity has colonised more than 60% of the habitable planets in Mutter's Spiral, and are within a century of colonising the rest.
- By this point, the humans have all but abolished the death penalty, in the belief that even the worst criminal might change his or her way of thinking.
- Earth's ecosystem collapsed during the 21st century. Baynes dismisses this as "ancient history."
- The Doctor disagrees with universalisation.
Skaro[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Skaro is in the same galaxy as Earth, namely Mutter's Spiral.
- Skaro has two moons: Falkus and Omega Mysterium.
Species[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Towards the end of the Thousand Year War, no Kaled had died of old age in ten generations.
- The Mutos engaged in cannibalism.
- Davros refers to Neanderthals and homo sapiens.
Conflicts[[edit] | [edit source]]
- By the time that Davros was born, no one on Skaro could remember how the Thousand Year War had started.
Galactic Law[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Treaty of Parlagon prevents private individuals from owning nuclear weapons.
Companies[[edit] | [edit source]]
- TransAllied, Inc (TAI) is one of the largest corporations in the galaxy. It is owned and run by Arnold Baynes.
Foods and beverages[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Doctor orders orange juice and toast with marmalade for breakfast and tea.
- The Doctor has Davros make him tea.
Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- This story marks the first appearance of Davros in an audio drama.
- This marks the first story to feature only Davros without the Daleks.
- This was the first time that Terry Molloy had played Davros since the television story Remembrance of the Daleks in 1988.
- Lorraine Baynes' name is most likely intended as a reference to the 1985 science fiction comedy film Back to the Future as Marty McFly's mother's maiden name is Lorraine Baines.
- This audio drama was recorded on 27 and 28 January 2003 at the Moat Studios.
- An illustrated preview by Martin Geraghty appeared in DWM 335.
- This is the second part in a loose tetralogy of "villain"-focused stories to celebrate Doctor Who's 40th anniversary, beginning with Omega and ending with Zagreus.
- The story was reissued in 2007 as part of The Complete Davros Collection DVD boxset.
- In January 2020, Davros was provided as a free gift to purchasers of DWM 547, along with Omega and Master, as part of the so called Classic Villains Trilogy with a brand new cover.
- The music to this story was remastered in 2013 and released on Jim Mortimore's Bandcamp account.[1]
- A number of scenes for this story are reprised in Corruption, in which Katarina Olsson and David Bickerstaff reprise their roles as Shan and Scientist Ral respectively. Councillor Valron, who is mentioned in this story, appears in Corruption as played by Seán Carlsen. There is a notable difference in actors' performances across the two releases. Enough that Davros's recollections to himself here or the Supreme Dalek in I, Davros can be considered the result of an unreliable narrator.
- The pairing of Davros and Shan as creators of the Daleks echoes the real-world duo of Raymond Cusick and Terry Nation. Each responsible for the iconic design of the Dalek and their initial conception, respectively.
Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The events surrounding the flashback sequences would later be revisited and explored in more detail in AUDIO: Corruption.
- Lorraine Baynes mentions that Davros himself created his life support chariot. (AUDIO: Guilt)
- Lorraine Baynes refers to the fact that the Daleks repeatedly betrayed Davros. She believes that the Doctor's presence at these events was incidental to his defeat. The Doctor rebukes her by saying he succeeded "fair and square." (TV: Genesis of the Daleks, Destiny of the Daleks, Resurrection of the Daleks)
- Baynes mentions that Davros was seemingly killed by the Daleks only days after he created them. (TV: Genesis of the Daleks)
- Davros describes in detail how it felt when he was imprisoned in cryogenic suspension for ninety years. (TV: Destiny of the Daleks, Resurrection of the Daleks)
- Arnold and Lorraine Baynes discuss the ethics of cloned bodies in relation to Davros's life support chariot. (TV: Revelation of the Daleks)
- The Doctor has already visited Stella Stora. This is the reason that Willis, who reported on "that business," has asked for his assistance. (TV: Terror of the Vervoids)
- Davros refers to the Fifth Doctor threatening to kill him on the Prison Station. The Sixth Doctor's solution to the dilemma echoes a similar approach taken on Varos. (TV: Resurrection of the Daleks, Vengeance on Varos)
- Davros previously considered the implications of emotions such as love in himself and his creations in PROSE: An Incident Concerning the Continual Bombardment of the Phobos Colony.
- Davros would use the resources gained during his time at TransAllied Inc to assume control of Tranquil Repose and plot his revenge against the Doctor. (TV: Revelation of the Daleks)
- This is Davros' first of, at least, five known encounters with the Doctor during his sixth incarnation. The others occurred in Tranquil Repose on Necros, (TV: Revelation of the Daleks) in the Dalek City on Skaro following his trial (COMIC: Emperor of the Daleks, Up Above the Gods), at Waterloo in Belgium in June 1815, (AUDIO: The Curse of Davros) and at the Outreach Corporation mining colony on Lethe. (AUDIO: The Juggernauts)
Cover gallery[[edit] | [edit source]]
Classic Villains Trilogy 2020 cover (DWM 547 digital promo)
Illustrated preview from DWM 335 by Martin Geraghty
Review illustration by Roger Langridge in DWM 338
External links[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Official Davros page at bigfinish.com; note that it is out of print and is available as download only.
- Davros at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- DisContinuity for Davros at Tetrapyriarbus - The DisContinuity Guide