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It should be relocated at Gita Kapoor because the two share the same actor + character name, and there's seemingly no conflicting information necessitating treating them as separate people.
Talk about it here or check the revision history for additional comments.
Gita (PROSE: Doctor Who: The Encyclopedia [+]Loading...{"ed":"2011 edition","1":"Doctor Who: The Encyclopedia (reference book)"}) was a human who was captured by the Daleks during the Dalek invasion of Earth in the 2000s,[1] and was one of the test subjects for the Reality Bomb.
Biography[[edit] | [edit source]]
After being captured on Earth, Gita was transported to the Dalek Crucible for testing of the Reality Bomb, a narrow test focused on disintegrating organic matter only.
Terrified, she found herself standing next to Jackie Tyler as the countdown to the Daleks' test began. Profusely apologising to her in whispers, Jackie teleported out of the testing area, leaving Gita and the other prisoners to their fate. She was thus vaporised to nothingness by the test a matter of seconds later, alongside the other prisoners. (TV: Journey's End [+]Loading...["Journey's End (TV story)"])
Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]
Although evidently not the only "scared woman" in the story, Shobu Kapoor's character was specifically named as "Scared woman" in the end credits of Journey's End [+]Loading...["Journey's End (TV story)"]. In Doctor Who: The Encyclopedia [+]Loading...{"ed":"2011 edition","1":"Doctor Who: The Encyclopedia (reference book)"}, her name is given as Gita.
Incidentally, Gita is also the name of the EastEnders character Gita Kapoor, also portrayed by Shobu Kapoor. The character appeared in the programme's crossover with Doctor Who, Dimensions in Time [+]Loading...["Dimensions in Time (TV story)"].
Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- ↑ Though The Stolen Earth [+]Loading...["The Stolen Earth (TV story)"] and Journey's End [+]Loading...["Journey's End (TV story)"] themselves do not give a date for the episodes or the surrounding era, TV: The Fires of Pompeii [+]Loading...["The Fires of Pompeii (TV story)"], TV: The Waters of Mars [+]Loading...["The Waters of Mars (TV story)"], PROSE: A Brief History of the Daleks, and AUDIO: SOS place this time as 2008, while PROSE: Beautiful Chaos, COMIC: Ghosts of the Northern Line and PROSE: The Secret Lives of Monsters instead put it in 2009.