Ninth Doctor

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference

The Ninth Doctor was a direct survivor of the Last Great Time War, but left the conflict with the excruciating knowledge of his hand in its grisly conclusion. Now cut off from the Time Lord race, the Doctor found himself alone and bereaved. Emotionally haunted by the war's apparently catastrophic outcome, he entered a darker period of his life spattered by resentment, where he tended to brood and act crossly to those who rubbed him the wrong way. Despite this, he remained jovial and quite friendly towards anyone he took a liking to, slowly reasserting himself as the Doctor while letting go of his lingering wartime persona.

Rose Tyler was his most constant companion, although he did share several adventures with Jack Harkness as well. During the Slitheen's attempt to destroy the Earth for profit, he gained temporary allies in Rose's mother Jackie, Rose's ex-boyfriend Mickey, and Harriet Jones. He also had a single adventure with Adam Mitchell, an employee of Henry van Statten, at Rose's request, but evicted him for almost dramatically altering human history. Adam later returned to exact revenge on the Doctor for booting him from the TARDIS, but redeemed himself as a companion in a sacrifice to defeat the Tremas Master.

He regenerated after he directly absorbed time vortex energy that had converted Rose briefly into the Bad Wolf entity. Though this saved her, it caused massive damage to his body at the cellular level.

Biography

Post-regeneration

The Ninth Doctor is born at the end of the war. (TV: The Day of the Doctor)

This incarnation was born when his predecessor's physical age had advanced well into that of an old man, who was "wearing a bit thin", and when his regenerative processes sensed this body was due to fail, it initiated automatically at the end of the Time War. Due to the timelines not being synchronised by the presence of his future selves, (TV: The Day of the Doctor) the new Doctor lost all memory of saving Gallifrey, thus he considered himself to have been "born in battle" (TV: Journey's End) and was left to think he had brought forth the death of billions of innocent Gallifreyans and Time Lords. He thus commenced the new life devastated from the apparent genocide, full of anger. (TV: The End of the World)

Meeting Rose Tyler

The Doctor meets Rose. (TV: Rose)

Shortly after regenerating, and still "not quite calibrated" to his latest body, the TARDIS sensed a temporal problem in 2005 London and alerted the Doctor to the presence of the Nestene Consciousness. (PROSE: The Beast of Babylon) While tracking down the Nestene, the Doctor found a chief electrical officer murdered in the London shop, Henrik's. Continuing his investigation, he found a horde of Autons surrounding a young woman. The Doctor pulled employee Rose Tyler away from them, and they ran. He warned Rose he was going to use explosives to blow up the transmitter which was animating the Autons, and told her to run. When she left the shop, the Doctor blew up the store, but he managed to escape.

A day later, the Doctor tracked the signal from the amputated Auton arm he had given Rose the night before to the Powell Estate, a council estate where Rose lived. After saving her from its attack, that was meant for him, the Doctor took it to his TARDIS, telling Rose to forget him.

The Doctor ran into Rose again when he saved her from an Auton duplicate of her boyfriend, Mickey Smith, pulling off the Auton's head. Escaping from the Auton Mickey's rampaging body, the Doctor and Rose entered the TARDIS, where the Doctor used the head to trace the signal of the Nestene Consciousness. Discovering the Consciousness and the original Mickey in a base beneath the London Eye, the Doctor asked the Consciousness to leave Earth, and find another planet to feed off. It refused, and ordered two Autons to take the Doctor prisoner and confiscate the anti-plastic he was holding.

The Doctor demands to seek an audience with the Nestene Consciousness. (TV: Rose)

Unable to escape the Nestene Consciousness' base without access to the TARDIS, Rose kicked the Autons and the anti-plastic into the vat containing the Nestene Consciousness. This saved the Doctor's life, and destroyed the Consciousness. Taking Rose and Mickey to safety in the TARDIS, the Doctor asked Rose to travel with him, but specifically noted that Mickey was not invited due to his apparent cowardice. Rose rejected his offer, and he dematerialised the TARDIS. (TV: Rose)

Further adventures

The Doctor at the Kennedy Assassination. (TV: Rose)

The Doctor appeared in Dallas at the assassination of U.S. President John F. Kennedy on 22 November 1963, in Southampton just before the voyage of the RMS Titanic in April 1912 and in Indonesia on the day of Krakatoa's eruption in August 1883. (TV: Rose)

The Doctor teamed up with all of his other incarnations to save Gallifrey from destruction at the end of the Last Great Time War, but lost all memory of the event due to the timelines not being synchronised. (TV: The Day of the Doctor)

In 21st century Istanbul, the Doctor fought a Sontaran in a sword fight. Sally Sparrow saved him from a second one and gave him her Christmas homework from 2005, and told him to keep it on him at all times. (PROSE: What I Did on My Christmas Holidays by Sally Sparrow)

The Doctor delivered letters from his fifth incarnation to Clarrie and his former companions Peri Brown and Erimem at the Kingmaker inn in 1483, (AUDIO: The Kingmaker) tended to Honoré Lechasseur's injuries after a bunker exploded in 1951, (PROSE: The Albino's Dancer) and took Alexander Pope and Theobald to see William Shakespeare's Cardenio. (PROSE: Double Falsehood)

Landing in a garden shed in Devon on Christmas Eve 1985, the TARDIS "burped", jumping forward in time twenty years. Reading Sally's homework, the Doctor found where to leave messages for Sally at the nearby house and garden so her twelve-year-old self could read them in the future. One of these messages included telling her to find a video tape at the back of the living room top shelf. He recorded a message for the tape, and spoke in a conversation with Sally from 2005, explaining where the TARDIS was and that the Christmas essay had the conversation transcript.

The TARDIS arrived and Sally exited, telling the past Sally to use the TARDIS' reset button next to the phone to return the TARDIS to the Doctor. The Doctor reminded the past Sally to complete her homework before she went to the TARDIS and placed the message on the shelf so she could read it in 2005. (PROSE: What I Did on My Christmas Holidays by Sally Sparrow)

Adventures with Rose

After an adventure in Babylon battling against the Starman, his one-time companion Ali persuaded the Doctor to return to Rose and get her to join him. (PROSE: The Beast of Babylon) He rematerialised by Rose, from her point of view seconds later, told her the TARDIS was capable of travelling anywhere in time as well as space; Rose then finally accepted, and joined the Doctor as his companion. (TV: Rose)

For her first voyage, the Doctor took Rose to Platform One in the year 5,000,000,000 to observe the Earth's destruction via the sun expanding. After finding out that metal spiders were sabotaging the platform and killing the staff, he caught one, which led back to the "last human", Lady Cassandra O'Brien.Δ17. As a backup plan, Cassandra used her spiders to disable the platform's safety and teleported away to profit from the deaths of the visitors through the shares she held.

The Doctor explains to Rose that he's the last Time Lord left. (TV: The End of the World)

The Doctor met and befriended a tree representative of the Forest of Cheem, Jabe. She scanned the Doctor for a background check when a scanner on Platform One had refused to admit his existence, and learned that he was the only known survivor of the Time War. Jabe consoled him and felt sorry for his loss, causing the Doctor to shed a tear out of regret and thankfulness at her sympathy.

The Doctor and Jabe eventually reached a control panel blocked by several high-powered fans working much faster than usual to cool down Platform One. Jabe stayed behind to slow the speed of the fans by holding a breaker lever in place so the Doctor could pass through them. Unfortunately, it still required a heavy amount of concentration to time his jumps through the spinning fan blades, and by the time he got through them all, Jabe's wooden body began to combust as the Sun's heat engulfed Platform One. At the cost of Jabe's life, the Doctor restarted the platform's safety and saved the other visitors' lives. No longer spinning frantically to keep the internal temperatures of Platform One down, the cooling fans slowed down to a safe speed with the exoglass repaired and the Doctor stepped through unscathed, regretting Jabe's death as he passed by what little remained of her. He teleported Cassandra back and let her frame of skin dry out and explode as punishment, showing her no mercy even when Rose asked him to help her. (TV: The End of the World) The frame of skin exploded, though Cassandra's brain meat survived. (TV: New Earth) Comforting Rose about the Earth's "death", he faced his own demons by telling her about the Last Great Time War, and how he was the last of the Time Lords, which had left him a very damaged man. (TV: The End of the World)

At Christmas in 1869 Cardiff, the Doctor and Rose found a deceased woman possessed by a Gelth, a creature turned to gas by the Time War. The Doctor met one of his idols, Charles Dickens. When Rose was kidnapped by Sneed and Company funeral parlour, the Doctor allied with Dickens to find her, following Gabriel Sneed and Gwyneth there, where other "zombies" had also been animated by the Gelth.

The Doctor and Rose are trapped by the Gelth. (TV: The Unquiet Dead)

In the morgue, the Doctor had Gwyneth try and pull the Gelth through the Rift using her psychic connection to it from a young age. The Gelth, numbering in the billions rather than just a few, wished to wipe out humanity and take over their bodies, starting with dead bodies in Sneed and Company. The Doctor, Rose and Dickens escaped from the Gelth by filling the room with gas, sucking out the Gelth from the cadavers. Gwyneth, who had already died from contacting the Gelth, blew the house up with a match, trapping them and saving the world. After this, the Doctor said goodbye to Dickens, telling him that his work would be remembered "forever". (TV: The Unquiet Dead)

The Doctor referees a football game between opposing WWI soldiers on Christmas ceasefire. (COMIC: The Forgotten)

The Doctor and Rose visited the Christmas truce of World War I, where he got the German and the British armies to play football on Christmas by using his psychic paper to pose as a FIFA referee, leading to a day of peace before they were forced to continue fighting. (COMIC: The Forgotten)

The Doctor watches history unfold. (TV: Aliens of London)

The Doctor tried to take Rose home, but arrived a year late. To his surprise, a spaceship crashed into the Thames and finally alerted the world to the presence of aliens. He went to Albion Hospital to take a look at the spaceship pilot. After UNIT officers shot the awakened Space Pig, the Doctor and Toshiko Sato discover the alien pig had been sent up to space from Earth in the spaceship by other aliens and that the crash had been set up to put the world on red alert.

After returning to the Powell estate, the Doctor planned to go undercover to unmask the aliens within the government. However, Rose's mother, Jackie alerted UNIT of the Doctor's involvement and they escorted him and Rose to 10 Downing Street to help deal with the state of emergency. When the Doctor came to discuss the crisis, Rose was left with the MP Harriet Jones to look after her. The alien experts in the room were electrocuted by the Slitheens, since they posed a threat to their plans. (TV: Aliens of London)

"Mickey the Idiot, the world is in your hands. Fire." (TV: World War Three)

Being a Time Lord, the Doctor held off electrocution and transferred it to one of the Slitheen whilst all the other human experts died. The Slitheen framed the Doctor for their murders and a Slitheen disguised as a Colonel ordered the troops to kill the Doctor. Escaping, the Doctor saved Rose and Harriet from a Slitheen. Harriet led the Doctor and Rose to the Cabinet Room, and the Doctor shut them behind a steel barrier, trapping the three inside but saving them from harm. The Doctor learnt the spaceship belonged to the Slitheen, who planned to reduce Earth to radioactive waste to sell as cheap fuel on the intergalactic market, using nuclear launch codes held by the United Nations. The Doctor contacted Rose's boyfriend Mickey, telling him to launch the Harpoon missile, UGM-84A, at Downing Street from the HMS Taurean. Rose found a small, sturdy cupboard inside the Cabinet Room, and while the Slitheen were destroyed by the missile, the Doctor, Rose and Harriet hid in the room whilst 10 Downing Street was ripped apart and reduced to a pile of rubble.

After instigating Harriet's reign as Prime Minister, the Doctor invited Mickey to join Rose and him in the TARDIS, but was refused as Mickey couldn't handle the dangerous life led by the Doctor. He gave Mickey a computer virus to wipe out all mentions of him on the internet. (TV: World War Three)

The Doctor witnesses Ben propose to Polly. (COMIC: The Love Invasion)

The Doctor and Rose investigated a spate of murders in 1966 London connected to the Lend-a-Hand Agency. They discovered the agency had been infiltrated by the Kustollons, who would invade Earth in the 31st century, instigating a war that would have resulted in the destruction of both humans and Kustollons. The Doctor foiled their plot to destroy the Moon, which would avert the 31st century war. During this adventure, the Doctor witnessed his old companions, Ben Jackson and Polly Wright, get engaged, although he didn't reveal his identity to them. (COMIC: The Love Invasion)

The Doctor and Rose next journeyed to London in 1924 to visit the British Empire Exhibition, where they became embroiled in an adventure involving a Katurian tyrant called Shade Vassily, and attempt to investigate the appearance of clockwork men. (PROSE: The Clockwise Man)

Their next trip brought the Doctor and Rose to Justicia in 2501. There, he encountered the Blathereen, cousins of the Slitheen family, who were plotting to use the planet's sun to reduce other worlds to cinders to use as fuel. However, the Doctor managed to stop them with the remnants of the Slitheen family, whom he was unable to stop from stealing their rival's technology. (PROSE: The Monsters Inside)

On a return trip to the Powell Estate, the Doctor helped defeat the Quevvil, who were using video games to choose victims for their mind control missions into the bases of their enemies, the Mantodeans. (PROSE: Winner Takes All)

The companion who couldn't

The Doctor confronts the "last" Dalek. (TV: Dalek)

Tracking a distress signal, the Doctor went to the Vault in Utah in 2012. To his horror, he found a lone Dalek had survived the Time War and was being kept amongst other alien artefacts by Henry van Statten. Still haunted by his actions in the war and consumed with hatred towards his oldest foes, the Doctor delighted in electrocuting the Dalek, refusing to stop when it begged for his pity. Van Statten's men eventually stopped the Doctor, who interrogated him; Van Statten refusing to kill the Dalek.

By extrapolating Rose's DNA, which contained radiation from the Time Vortex, the Dalek escaped. With no orders, it chose to destroy everyone inside. The Doctor was released in an attempt to fight off the Dalek. He was forced to close the bulkhead door with Rose trapped on one side to keep the Dalek from slaughtering all of humanity. The Dalek was unable to kill Rose, but the Doctor let it through, not wanting to risk losing her.

With the Doctor prepared to kill his oldest enemy once and for all, Rose stood in the Doctor's way. To the Doctor's shock, the Dalek's personality changed after absorbing Rose's DNA. Considering its new feelings "sickness", it committed suicide. Henry's memory was wiped by his staff as punishment for the deaths caused by his refusal to kill the Dalek. Rose invited one of Van Statten's young employees Adam Mitchell, who was out of a job as the Vault was being filled with cement, and didn't have anyone else, into the TARDIS. The Doctor left the TARDIS doors unlocked for Adam to wander inside as it dematerialised. (TV: Dalek)

On Adam's first trip, the Doctor took his two companions to the Fourth Great and Bountiful Human Empire to see the human race at its zenith. Pretending to be management on the news broadcaster, Satellite Five, the Doctor and his companions found the Empire had been manipulated; its development stunted, and the technology being decades behind what it should have been. Adam, who was suffering from severe culture shock, was left on his own to "acclimatise".

The Doctor shows Cathica the strange ventilation of heat emitting from Floor 500. (TV: The Long Game)

After hacking into the computer system, the Doctor and Rose found that the unusual levels of heat on the Satellite was because of cooling systems being vented to Floor 500. The Editor, discovering their interference, gave the Doctor and Rose the key to reach him on Floor 500 and imprisoned them. He revealed the Mighty Jagrafess was manipulating the information distributed by Satellite Five to control humanity, even having them develop backwards technology to assist in this matter. The Jagrafess and the Editor tried stealing the TARDIS key from Adam, but thanks to one of the workers who learned the truth, the safety was breached, freeing the Doctor, Rose and Adam and rerouting the heat to Floor 500 to destroy the Jagrafess. The Doctor believed that this would have accelerated the human race's development, "all back to normal".

Upon finding out Adam was trying to learn about the future of the 21st century's technology for his own gain, the Doctor "evicted" him from his TARDIS travels and took him home, leaving him with the forehead implant he got at Satellite Five as punishment. When Adam begged for another chance, the Doctor was unsympathetic to his plight. (TV: The Long Game)

The Doctor frees Rose from Cazkelf's mind-subjugating headphones. (COMIC: Art Attack)

The Doctor next took Rose to the grand opening of the Oriel, a transdimensional art gallery in the 37th century, only to find that everyone in the gallery had been enslaved by an artist called Cazkelf. Cazkelf sent a psychic distress signal to his species. The signal was diverted. The Doctor took Cazkelf to his homeworld, which had been devastated by a disaster. After this, the Doctor convinced Cazkelf to go on the straight and narrow, putting him in charge of the Oriel so that he could make the gallery a success. (COMIC: Art Attack)

He next took Rose on a cruise on 22nd century Mars, where they attended the wedding of plutocrat Alvar Chambers to his eighth wife. As the Doctor fell into the Martian sea, he encountered an entity that killed people by feeding on their worst fears, putting them into a state where their identities would dissolve within him while they were dreaming. The entity stole his body and began to torment Rose with a nightmare of a villainous Doctor coming back too late in Rose's life for her to be a companion and then sending it spiraling into ruins to spite her. Rose saw through this illusion and found the real Doctor trapped within the entity, tasking her with freeing his victims while he dealt with the actual creature.

The Doctor's consciousness uses the TARDIS as a body of sorts while an entity has possessed his own. (COMIC: The Cruel Sea)

The Doctor confronted the entity in a warped reality, where it pledged to use the Doctor's TARDIS to feed on all creatures throughout time and space despite the risk of overfeeding himself. However, the Doctor merged with his TARDIS, a living being in its own right, as a means of regaining control of his own body, while allowing Rose to overcome her nightmare and release all the people the entity had imprisoned, save for Chambers, who revealed he had only married so many women to leech off their collective riches, and callously allowed some of them to die at the hands of the entity.

Chambers, after a selfish life of treating wives like material possessions, was consumed by the entity when his multiple wives revealed they did not love him and left him behind in disgrace, causing his will to crumble and succumb to being devoured. Then, the entity, failing to heed the Doctor's warning, learnt it had indeed "swallowed up" too many people. It self-destructed when they were awakened from its nightmares by both the Doctor and Rose, preventing it from digesting them. (COMIC: The Cruel Sea)

Taking Rose home once again, the Doctor saved the Powell Estate from Zargath and his invasion force. (COMIC: Death to the Doctor!)

At Rose's request, the Doctor took her to her mother and her father, Pete Tyler's, wedding. After this, he took her to the church where Stuart Hoskins and Sarah Clark were to be wed in 1987, not far from where Pete died. Rose crossed the path of her past self, who was unable to go to Pete as he died, and saved Pete from a hit-and-run death. Rose's actions caused the TARDIS to be thrown off into the time vortex. Enraged by her actions, the Doctor suspected that she had only agreed to travel with him to save Pete and considered abandoning her in the past, though Rose insisted she hadn't planned it and the Doctor didn't go through with leaving Rose.

The Doctor is amazed by the sort of ordinary life that brought Stuart and Sarah together. (TV: Father's Day)

The Doctor, telling Rose and the wedding guests to rush inside the church, tried devising a way of stopping creatures from outside time that were attacking the Earth to seal off the paradox Rose had created. They reconciled; the Doctor admitting he wouldn't have really left. He started working on a way to repair the damage to the universe while leaving Pete alive for Rose. He used his TARDIS key, which was still linked to the TARDIS' interior, to bring the TARDIS back. However, after Pete accidentally made Rose hold her infant self, the Doctor sacrificed himself to the creature brought by the paradox and the creature was zapped by the key, interrupting the TARDIS' return. He was restored to life when Pete let himself get hit by the car (which was stuck in a time loop, awaiting him). Thanks to these events, the new timeline had Rose be there for her father when he passed. (TV: Father's Day)

The Doctor discovered an alien spaceship was trapped between real space and the time vortex, and investigating further led him and Rose to the house of Lord Farthingale in 1920. Inside, the Doctor overheard the detective, Dr Merrivale Carr, had identified the murderer of two people in the house as society hostess, Glenda Neil. The Doctor and Rose entered the room, explaining to the house guests that "invisible aliens" were the real cause of death. A haze appeared in the house and another guest, Bart Faversham, was suddenly thrown into the fireplace. After the guests reached safety, Rose explained that the trapped spaceship's engines was releasing an energy field that had been killing people in an attempt to move.

The Doctor signalled the spaceship with the standard galactic code of the 455th century. As they were teleported on board, the Doctor and Rose discovered the ship's crew had died in the crash and the ship's computer had been moving on its own through an emergency programme. The Doctor repaired the ship and he and Rose returned to the TARDIS on Earth. (PROSE: Doctor vs Doctor)

Soon after, the Doctor was asked to be a representative for an alien planet that reminded him of Gallifrey, his lost homeworld. Haunted by the loss of his home and the Time Lords, the Doctor declined, until Rose persuaded him to reconsider. However, the Doctor soon discovered the planet's "spokesperson", Akimus Makassar, had set him up and was planning to take over his, and the other visiting representatives', minds. The Doctor placed him and Rose in a dreamscape to save them from Makassar and his army of Units. Escaping from the Units, the Doctor created a psychic projection of himself. The projection stole a Unit's mask and placed it over Makassar, trapping him in a mental feedback. (PROSE: The Masks of Makassar)

The Doctor watches the Vandos Tribunal accuse Phil Tyson of being a Vandosian criminal reincarnated into human form. (COMIC: Mr Nobody)

The Doctor and Rose travelled to a Vandosian ship, saving "a loser" called Phil Tyson from execution by the Vandos Tribunal. While attempting to return Tyson to Earth, the Doctor was told Phil was a reincarnation of Shogalath, whom the Vandosians claimed was a "monster" for toppling the Vandos Imperium. While escaping, Phil saved the Doctor and Rose from the Bailiffs and made it to the TARDIS. The Tribunal threatened to destroy Great Britain if Phil wasn't handed over to them. They fired, but thanks to the Doctor's earlier efforts, the ship backfired on itself. Returning Phil home, the Doctor explained that Shogalath was in fact the leader of a peaceful revolt against the Imperium and a "hero". Phil departed their company with a new lease on life, seeking to make a good future for himself. (COMIC: Mr Nobody)

On a human colony planet, the Doctor and Rose were under attack by the falling rain, but Jack and Susie saved their life by bringing them into their shelter. The Doctor discovered the rain was a living creature and it was killing off colonists in their downpour because the life form was being killed. He went outside, persuading the rain to stop. With the family the last humans left, the Doctor guided them home in their spaceship, and he also inspired their son, Andy, to become a space traveller. (PROSE: Pitter-Patter)

The Doctor is unaffected by the life-robbing Shadeys possessing Robert Greene. (COMIC: A Groatsworth of Wit)

Returning to 2006 London, the Doctor and Rose encountered two Shadeys from another dimension and stopped them from manipulating dying playwright Robert Greene to assassinate William Shakespeare in 1592. Going back in time to protect the famous playwright, the Doctor briefly took over his position on stage. It became clear to the Doctor and Rose that Greene's biggest reason for attacking Shakespeare was the thought of being upstaged in the limelight and forgotten in the public eye.

In return for relinquishing the power of the Shadeys, the Doctor promised to remember him, along with Rose. Greene complied and cast the aliens back to whence they came, though it meant he would soon perish. He was then transported back to a poor shoemaker's house, where he had been spending the final days of his waning life madly obsessing over Shakespeare's popularity. History said he passed with thoughts of envy and hatred, but the Doctor thought that this would be different. As he suspected, Greene passed on happily, with the realisation he would be remembered by them as, in Rose's own words, "bigger than Shakespeare". From personal experience, the Doctor supposed that everyone gets forgotten in the end, and it would be best for everyone make the most of life while still alive. He mused that the fate of being forgotten would happen to him one day, but Rose embraced the Doctor and assured him, "Nobody's ever gonna forget you." (COMIC: A Groatsworth of Wit)

An older, vengeful Adam Mitchell confronts the Doctor for kicking him out of the TARDIS. (COMIC: Prisoners of Time)

After helping Drake Ayelbourne of Altair VII, the wealthiest man in the outer rim of the galaxy, with a robot problem, the Doctor and Rose were confronted by a cloaked figure, who introduiced himself as an older Adam Mitchell, who had sworn revenge on the Doctor after his mother had die from a brain illness because he could not use future technology to save her. Teaming up with the Tremas Master, the most frequently associated companions of every known incarnation up to his final incarnation. However, Adam had a change of heart when the Master attempted to destroy the universe instead, and sacrificed himself to prevent an ultimate annihilation from coming to pass. The Doctor mourned his death alongside his other incarnations and honoured him as a true companion on his memorial. (COMIC: Prisoners of Time)

Joined by Captain Jack

The Doctor follows Nancy, trying to question her about the mysterious boy. (TV: The Empty Child)

The Doctor tracked a "mauve and dangerous" object to 1941 London. After Rose had wandered off — unknown to the Doctor, she had been pulled away by a loose barrage balloon — he discovered the phone on the side of his TARDIS was ringing. The Doctor answered; on the other side, there was a boy asking for his mother. Investigating further, he followed Nancy, a homeless young woman who was feeding homeless children by stealing from people's meals that were still fresh on their tables. Nancy was being chased by a child in a gas mask, the same boy that could speak through speaker grills. Nancy told the Doctor the "bomb that wasn't a bomb" landed near Limehouse Green station. Following Nancy's advice, the Doctor went to the nearby Albion Hospital. There, he found living dead creatures, with gas masks fused to their face, and identical symptoms, including a scar on the hand in the same place as the child that pursued Nancy.

The conman, Captain Jack Harkness, who had rescued Rose, tracked down the Doctor, thinking he and Rose were members of the Time Agency, and revealed the object was a Chula ambulance, which Jack himself had used to attract one of the agency as part of a con to sell half of the object right before a German bomb hit it, instead bringing the attention of the Doctor and Rose. Jack believed the object was empty space junk. (TV: The Empty Child)

In fact, the ambulance contained nanogenes. The nanogenes had not seen a human before; they took the gasmask for the child's face and fused it to him, spreading to other people who touched him, also transforming them into undead creatures with no lifesigns.

Jack teleported the Doctor and Rose to his warship, and they went to the bombsite near the hospital, where they realised the truth. The ambulance started its emergency protocols, causing the creatures, who had been armed as "Chula warriors", and were ready to "tear the world apart" to find the boy's mother.

The Doctor cures the Empty Child plague. (TV: The Doctor Dances)

Every patient and soldier at the bombsite converged on the Doctor, Rose and Jack. The Doctor fixed the nanogenes' mistakes by comparing the DNA of the child and Nancy, who was his mother, restoring the infected zombies to normal. Jack stopped the bomb from hitting the bombsite by placing it in stasis inside his warship and when everyone got to safety, the Doctor destroyed the ambulance, making sure that history said that a bomb hit that location. The Doctor rescued Jack from his Chula warship just before it exploded, taking him aboard the TARDIS as his latest companion. (TV: The Doctor Dances)

The TARDIS materialised on an abandoned Soviet naval base. There, the Doctor, Jack and Rose were hunted by something that predated even the stone circle on the cliff top. (PROSE: The Deviant Strain)

The Doctor, Rose and Jack arrived on New Vegas in the 23rd century, where they intended to assist the police department investigate the Whisper, a strange vigilante that had terrorised the city's underworld. This involved Rose working undercover as a nightclub waitress and Jack as a reporter for the Daily Galaxy. (AUDIO: Night of the Whisper)

The Doctor intended to take Rose and Jack to the planet Kegron Pluva, but upon discovering a time distortion arrived in 2005 Bromley to investigate. There, he encountered Das, a Neanderthal who was transported from 29,185 BC to 2005 by a rip engine - a crude method of time travel which prevented anyone who used it from travelling in time again. Unable to return Das to his native time zone, the Doctor and Rose left him in 2005 with Jack, and travelled to 29,185 BC to investigate further. There, they encountered a genius named Chantal Osterberg, who intended to wipe out humanity and replace it with Hy-Bractors. After stopping Chantal, the Doctor and Rose reunited with Jack, who had spent a month introducing Das to the ways of modern life, and resumed their travels together. (PROSE: Only Human)

When the TARDIS became unable to travel through time, the Doctor went to 2006 Cardiff so that the TARDIS could refuel via a scar in the rift that was closed by Gwyneth. Whilst in Cardiff, the Doctor and his two companions, joined by Mickey, captured Blon, the sole Slitheen survivor of the attack on Downing Street, who had become Lord Mayor.

The Doctor dines with Blon before she's scheduled to be executed. (TV: Boom Town)

Though Blon tried fleeing, the Doctor reversed her teleportation device several times until she gave up and took her prisoner aboard the TARDIS until he could return her to Raxacoricofallapatorius to face execution after her family had already been sentenced to death in their absence. The Doctor confiscated her extrapolator to use as a "power-booster" on the TARDIS and took her to a restaurant for dinner as her last request.

After he remained unmerciful towards her, Blon tried to tear the TARDIS and the Earth apart by making the extrapolator lock onto an alien power source that was refuelling on the rift, using the extrapolator as an interstellar surfboard to escape the Earth. However, the damage she caused to the ship opened the heart of the TARDIS, which turned her into a Slitheen egg. Realising Blon had a "second chance" in life, the Doctor decided to drop her off in the hatchery on her homeworld. (TV: Boom Town)

The Doctor, Rose and Jack next stopped off at a dull colony world, where all fiction was banned. They discovered that the locals had become confused, believing that fiction was true. He cured the population of "fiction madness", contracted from spores in the air. (PROSE: The Stealers of Dreams)

The Battle of the Game Station

"You have got to be kidding." (TV: Bad Wolf)

After escaping from 1336 Kyoto, Japan, the Doctor, Rose and Jack were teleported to Satellite 5 a hundred years after their last visit, only to be put in deadly versions of TV game shows. After escaping Big Brother alongside a contestant called Lynda Moss, whose request to travel with him he accepted, the Doctor met up with Jack and they raced to save Rose from The Weakest Link hosted by a deadly Anne Droid; they were unsuccessful in preventing the Anne Droid from seemingly killing Rose. Completely broken, the Doctor, along with Jack and Lynda, was arrested for breaking in and out of the games. However, he and Jack physically overpowered the guards and set off to stop the deadly "entertainment".

The Doctor realises the Daleks are behind Satellite Five's transmissions. (TV: Bad Wolf)

Taking "hostages" in the control room, Jack found the TARDIS stowed away in an archive room. Using the TARDIS, Jack discovered the laser that "killed" the games' losers was actually teleporting them across space. Puzzled, the Doctor discovered that the Game Station was unknowingly broadcasting a secondary signal to an empty location of space, which was where all the losers ended up. Disabling the signal, the Doctor was horrified to find two hundred Dalek battleships. Establishing contact, the Doctor learned his old foes had taken Rose hostage, but promised the Daleks that he would rescue her and destroy them for the final time. (TV: Bad Wolf)

The Doctor and Jack flew the TARDIS straight into the Dalek command ship and rescued Rose. However, the Doctor soon discovered the Dalek Emperor had also survived the Last Great Time War; it had been shaping humanity for many centuries, converting the contestants into Daleks for its army. Devastated at the thought of the Time Lords perishing for nothing, the Doctor knew his fight against the Daleks was suicidal and sent a reluctant Rose back to the 21st century in the TARDIS while he and Jack prepared for the inevitable extermination whilst also gathering a possible resistance consisting of gameshow contestants and operatives. He built a delta wave generator, a device that would "fry the brain stems of every living thing within a thousand miles of the satellite", but was not able to perfect it to work only on Daleks: the resistance were all killed, including Lynda Moss and Jack.

When it came time to choose whether he would destroy his greatest enemies once and for all or let the population on Earth be killed out of an act of cowardice, the Doctor proudly told the Emperor that he would choose to be a coward rather than killer. Much to the Doctor's surprise, in the 21st century, Rose opened the heart of the TARDIS and looked upon it; she became the powerful Bad Wolf entity, which had been following the Doctor ever since his first meeting with Rose. Having absorbed the energy of the Time Vortex into herself, she brought the TARDIS to the Game Station and scattered all the Daleks and the Emperor's atoms into dust, ending the Time War. (TV: The Parting of the Ways)

Death

The Doctor kisses Rose. (TV: The Parting of the Ways)

The Doctor knew that Rose would burn up if she kept so much power in her body. He kissed her, drawing the time vortex from her body and into his before sending it back into the heart of the TARDIS. (TV: The Parting of the Ways) He took an unconscious Rose into the TARDIS, abandoning Jack on the deserted Game Station. Rose had resurrected Jack, but accidentally converted him into an immortal fixed point in time; the Doctor, as a Time Lord, could not stand being around someone "wrong". (TV: The Parting of the Ways, Utopia)

The Doctor regenerates for the tenth time. (TV: The Parting of the Ways)

Knowing that his brief possession of the vortex energy had caused cellular damage to his body, the Doctor told Rose that he had wanted to take her to so many places, such as the planet Barcelona. Trying his best to explain regeneration, he said that he still might do so, but not as he was now. When regeneration energy briefly spiked, he warned Rose away from him for her own safety. Before "going", the Doctor told Rose she had been absolutely fantastic - "And you know what? So was I!" - then regenerating into his next incarnation. (TV: The Parting of the Ways)

Undated adventures

Psychological profile

Personality

A pensive Doctor (TV: The End of the World)

The Ninth Doctor was an emotional incarnation of great sorrow and anger, plagued by the outcome of the Last Great Time War. (TV: Dalek) Emotionally exhausted, he would break down when faced with pain, suffering, or death. (TV: The End of the World) He hid his sorrow with a façade of manic energy and a sharp, offbeat wit, but would drop the masquerade when deeply displeased. (TV: Rose, The End of the World, World War Three, Dalek, The Long Game, The Parting of the Ways)

The Doctor expresses joy when no casualties can be found. (TV: The Doctor Dances)

When he realised that he could reverse the pain and suffering he had encountered with the Empty Child technological plague, the Doctor became overjoyed, whooping that "Just this once - everybody lives", with Rose Tyler claiming he was "beaming away like [you're] Father Christmas". Indeed, the Doctor himself noted he needed "more days like this", proclaiming that he was "on fire!" (TV: The Doctor Dances)

This Doctor possessed a new appreciation for the wonders of the universe and more keenly than ever burned with a desire to keep the universe safe from harm. Despite this, he was more adept at noticing the flaws of humanity than any of his predecessors.[source needed] Nevertheless, he still retained the selfless and caring attitude that he carried throughout his previous lives, never once hesitating to put himself in harm's way in attempt to save those around him. (TV: The End of the World, World War Three, Father's Day, The Parting of the Ways)

The Ninth Doctor displayed a huge sense of authority and justice against his enemies. He was willing to let them die when he felt it justified their actions, such as with Lady Cassandra O'Brien, claiming that everything had its time and that everything eventually ends, (TV: The End of the World) but was willingly to use diplomacy with the Nestene Consciousness. (TV: Rose) He showed a particular dislike for those who tried to justify their actions by saying they were only following orders, telling the Female Programmer she had "lost the right to even talk to [me]" when she tried to use that excuse. (TV: Bad Wolf)

Despite his initially coming across as emotionally scared and melancholy, the Ninth Doctor displayed a fun side from time to time, popping his head to Britney Spears' "Toxic", (TV: The End of the World) and openly flirting with Jack Harkness. (TV: Boom Town)

The Doctor expressed a keen interest in history, particularly Earth's, once claiming he travelled in time specifically so he could see history unfold. (TV: Aliens of London) He was also a fan of Charles Dickens, reacting with glee when he met the man, both admiring and criticising his work, (TV: The Unquiet Dead) and had a fondness for bananas, calling them a "good source of potassium". (TV: The Doctor Dances)

He was overconfident about his plans, even if he didn't think they would work. (TV: Rose) Preferring to remain unnoticed in the background, the Doctor would encourage others into acts of heroism, such as Rose Tyler, Mickey Smith, Cathica Santini Khadeni, Pete Tyler, and Jack Harkness. (TV: Rose, World War Three, The Long Game, Father's Day, The Doctor Dances) However, he was unafraid to confront his adversaries directly. (TV: Rose, The End of the World, World War Three, The Long Game, Bad Wolf, The Parting of the Ways)

The Doctor cared very deeply about his companion, Rose Tyler, and was willing to let a lethal Dalek loose on Earth to keep her safe. (TV: Dalek) He was also reluctant to use a missile to destroy the Slitheen because he feared he would kill Rose too. (TV: World War Three) When the Daleks invaded Satellite Five, the Doctor lied to Rose about being able to use the TARDIS to stop them and sent her back home to protect her. He deliberately absorbed the time vortex energy in her to save her life knowing full well that he would have to regenerate. (TV: The Parting of the Ways)

The Doctor realizes the madness of the Daleks. (TV: The Parting of the Ways)

When dared by the Dalek Emperor, the Doctor struggled with the decision to destroy the Daleks and the Earth or simply allow the Daleks to kill him and take over the universe. In the end, the Doctor couldn't bring himself to destroy the Earth, even to rid the universe of the Dalekks. (TV: The Parting of the Ways) In doing so however, the Doctor had proven that he had become a better man than he was when he last encountered a Dalek, whom he had tortured sadistically. (TV: Dalek)

When talking about his possible death in a holographic message, the Doctor showed no concern of his demise, only hoping for a good death. Indeed, when he believed the Daleks were going to exterminate him, his only reaction was to close his eyes and wait for the end.

The Doctor beams one last grin. (TV: The Parting of the Ways)

In the closing moments of his life, the Doctor proudly faced regeneration and made peace with his past actions, smiling from ear to ear. (TV: The Parting of the Ways)

Habits and quirks

The Ninth Doctor spoke with a distinctive Northern English accent. He had a fondness for saying "fantastic" whenever he saw something of interest (TV: Rose) or especially dangerous. (TV: The End of the World) While his previous incarnations were rarely heard uttering curse words, the ninth incarnation tended to use minor curses more freely, (TV: The End of the World) and often used "oi" to get people's attention. (TV: The Unquiet Dead)

Like his first and seventh incarnations, the Ninth Doctor was often critical of human nature, calling humans "stupid apes", especially when angered by their actions, (TV: Rose, Father's Day) and, on one occasion, "Brainless sheep". (TV: Bad Wolf) He also displayed a certain level of joy when it came to toying with people emotionally, often addressing them by the wrong name or insulting their intelligence. (TV: Aliens of London)

He did not "do domestic", as he put it, which led to tension in his interactions with Jackie Tyler, (TV: Aliens of London, World War Three) and rarely spoke of his past to others. (TV: The End of the World) He often made dry jokes to those around him to diffuse tension, but usually ended up failing. (TV: The Unquiet Dead)

The Ninth Doctor had a habit of folding his arms and frowning when lecturing or listening intently. (TV: The Long Game) He would also grin when happy (TV: Rose) or when he found something funny. (TV: Boom Town) He also made a habit of lounging when sitting down, propping himself up on an arm. (TV: The End of the World, The Long Game, Bad Wolf)

He often gave speeches about things (TV: Rose) or lectured those he wished to scold. (TV: Father's Day)

Skills and abilities

This incarnation of the Doctor could be quite violent, (TV: Dalek) and sometimes got into physical combat, being able to wrestle the head off an Auton copy of Mickey Smith, hold his own against Idris Hopper, and throw a guard against a wall whilst breaking out of prison. (TV: Rose, Boom Town, Bad Wolf) Despite being bad at card tricks, (TV: Rose) he was a good pickpocket, swapping Jack's sonic blaster with a banana. (TV: The Doctor Dances)

The Doctor was also skilled at video games, (PROSE: Winner Takes All) knew how to handle explosives, (TV: Rose, The Doctor Dances) and could be a capable swordsman when the situation called for it. (PROSE: What I Did on My Christmas Holidays by Sally Sparrow)

The Doctor could slow down his perception of time just by concentrating on it, being able to pass through spinning blades with his eyes shut as a result. (TV: The End of the World) He also showed the ability to suck the power of the Time Vortex out of Rose Tyler with a kiss, saving her life at the cost of forcing him to regenerate. (TV: The Parting of the Ways)

When he took Blon Fel-Fotch Passameer-Day Slitheen out for a last meal, the Doctor showed keen reflexes by catching a poisoned dart-like claw in mid-air with his fingers without even looking up from the menu, and repealing her exhaled poison with some mouthwash before she could exhale the full force of her fatal breath. (TV: Boom Town)

Appearance

The Doctor asks Lynda Moss to join him. (TV: Bad Wolf)

This incarnation had pale blue eyes and was rather tall. He had dark brown hair, which he wore close-cropped, unlike many of his previous incarnations who had had longer hair. (TV: Rose) At times, much like his successor would regularly sport, he had a five o' clock shadow (TV: Rose, The End of the World), and was said to shave. (TV: The Doctor Dances)

The Doctor said he "had the nose" for following. When Nancy said that people usually couldn't follow her, he claimed his nose had "special powers". Nancy began to respond with, "Is that why your nose is so—" before catching herself. She jokingly asked if his ears had magical powers as well. (TV: The Empty Child) Ironically, before his regeneration, his previous incarnation hoped that his ears would be a bit less conspicuous this time. (TV: The Day of the Doctor)

Clothing

In stark contrast to the extravagant dress of most of his predecessors, the Ninth Doctor wore a plain leather jacket, identified by Jack Harkness in World War II as that worn by a German U-boat captain. (TV: The Empty Child) It was strikingly similar to the overcoat worn by his past life, but this one was from a newer era and showed less chipping away of the leather exterior, with slightly larger collar lapels. His jacket also had sew-through buttons place of his earlier jacket's shanked buttons. He wore a plain maroon (TV: Rose, TV: The End of the World, TV: Boom Town), military green (TV: Dalek, TV: The Long Game, TV: Father's Day), navy blue (TV: The Unquiet Dead, TV: Aliens of London / World War Three), dark purple (TV: The Empty Child, The Doctor Dances) or black (TV: Bad Wolf / The Parting of the Ways) V-neck jumper, which Charles Dickens thought made him look like a navvy, (TV: The Unquiet Dead) dark trousers, a pair of laced, black leather boots, and a black, strapped wristwatch, (TV: The End of the World) in contrast to his previous incarnations, who preferred fob watches. (TV: The Ribos Operation, Revelation of the Daleks, PROSE: All-Consuming Fire, TV: Doctor Who)

The Doctor wears Victorian clothing. (TV: Rose)

At one time, whilst at the launch of the RMS Titanic in 1912, he was photographed wearing clothes reminiscent of those worn by his eighth incarnation. He was also discovered in a photograph from 1963, taken shortly before the assassination of John F. Kennedy, wearing a navy blue polo-neck jumper rather than a V-neck jumper. (TV: Rose)

During an adventure in World War I, the Doctor wore a military trenchcoat to fit in with the British soldiers. (COMIC: The Forgotten)

Behind the scenes

Casting

Originally, Russell T Davies approached Hugh Grant, who previously played the Doctor's alternate twelfth incarnation, to play the Ninth Doctor. He turned down the role, thinking the show would not take off. He expressed deep regret over this in 2007 after seeing how successful the show had become.[1]

The Brilliant Book 2011

The non-narrative source The Brilliant Book 2011, which this wiki does not consider a valid source, stated that in 1944, the Ninth Doctor took Winston Churchill on a trip to ancient Rome, where they encountered a creature disguised as one of Emperor Tiberius's reclining benches. Winston then realised why the Second Doctor had taught him how to address a table in Latin back in 1882.

whoisdoctorwho.co.uk

The website whoisdoctorwho.co.uk had a list of sightings of the Doctor from which people had ostensibly been submitting to Clive, a conspiracy theorist character from TV: Rose, who had pictures of the Doctor's ninth incarnation on the website, asking if anyone had seen him.

A submission from Steven Hudson claimed that Steven saw the Doctor "a couple a years ago" [sic] wearing an Edwardian outfit, rather than his usual leather jacket, but still the individual in Clive's photographs — the Ninth Doctor. He saw the Doctor wandering around a building development on Totter's Lane. According to Steven, he was muttering "They're all gone, I'm the only one left", alluding to the Doctor's involvement in the Last Great Time War.

A submission from H.J. Hardeman claimed to have seen "someone very much like him about a year ago". He had tried swapping "Edwardean gear" [sic] at an Oxfam in Sheffield for a pair of jeans and trainers.

A submission from Richard J. Kingston vividly recalls seeing the Ninth Doctor. In the summer of 1962, Richard had been working at a psychiatric institution when the Doctor was admitted inside. Prior to his arrival "a number of strange 'incidents'" had been happening where there fights between the staff and their wards. After a week of incarceration, where the Doctor easily escaped sedation and capture, he vanished. Richard had "no idea" how the Doctor escaped, but suspected a connection between his escape and the disappearance of the psychiatric ward's head, Dr Sirius Drake, and a "mysterious fire" that destroyed Dr Drake's private quarters and laboratory the same night. He warned to be aware of him and not to trust or follow him.

A submission from a "Matthew" said he saw the Doctor on a trip to Chepstow Castle. Matthew's tour guide mentions how people attacked the castle, when afterwards, "a man with short hair, a leather jacket and a northern accent" said, "I didn't see them do it that way". Later on, the people on the trip heard "a strange noise like some sort of engine".

A submission from Helva Soprano said that "this guy" did contract work for her firm of architects "last summer". She said that his designs were unusable, as the "doofus" kept making floor plans that were bigger than the outside of the building.

A submission from "trevor french" was "certain" that "20 years ago", "this guy" worked at the Planetarium at London. On a school visit to the Planetarium, trevor sighted him. trevor said that he "kept talking" about Halley's Comet and gave everyone orange fruit gums.

A submission from "blue" recounted that while travelling in Tibet "several years ago", blue remembered thinking to himself that "backpackers dont wear leather jackets" [sic]. The man blue saw was in "deep conversation" with some Buddhist monks, whom he was "surrounded by", and they "seemed to listen to everything he said". blue bumped into the man again "outside the monastry outside Lhasa" [sic]. He grinned at him and said, "keep on going. you will see" [sic].

A submission from Peter D claimed that Peter spotted the Doctor during the "Royal Wedding". He said to check the footage in the background near one of the OB vans, and to also check footage from Aintree over 100 miles away less than an hour later. Peter identified the individuals in the footage as the same man. He also saw him the previous day near the OB unit at "St Peter's, funeral". As well as this, he saw a blue box behind the stands.

A submission from Ted Prendergast sighted him posing as a photo-journalist in "the north east" in the mid-1990s.

According to a submission from Marcus Butler, a bloke in a leather jacket, described by Marcus as the "spitting image" of the man in Clive's photo, would turn up to to Marcus' father's skiffle band in the 1960s while they were busking. He said that the man would "turn up, take out his spoons and play along with the band". Marcus claimed that the man would have to have been in his 70s "now".

A submission from Richard Kilpatrick claimed that at a concert in 1987, he swore he saw the Doctor playing guitar in a session band for one of Marillion's support acts. Richard said that the Doctor kept "frantically" looking at one of the exits and that soon after, Fish "mysteriously left the band".

A submission from Terrance Chua stated that while researching the American Civil War at the University of Georgia, Terrance had found a picture from the Battle of Gettysburg in 1863, where a man in a Union Army captain's uniform was standing next to a converted field hospital "that looked slightly out of place". What puzzled Terrance was that in these photographs, he saw another photograph of "apparently the same man", with a bandaged arm, but this time wearing a Confederate colonel's uniform. He said that both looked exactly like "this Doctor".

A submission from Chris Steel simply said, "I believe I saw this gentleman on "Survivor" on American television".

A submission from Julie B said that there was a statue in "the Egyptian museum" that bore a striking resemblance to the Doctor and that it was made in 2500 BC.

A submission from "j q public" had sighted "someone who looked like him" arguing with "a little man with an umbrella" on a university campus.

A submission from Gerard Shannon mentioned his visit to a Megalithic tomb in Newgrange in County Meath "recently". Gerard was with a group of his friends, when he saw "this guy" walking out of the tomb with "some blond haired girl" [sic]. The man Gerard identified as the Doctor said "... well not to worry! They're trapped down there for another 5000 years!" Gerard initially thought they were just "some kind of archaeologists", but had his mind opened upon reading Clive's website.

A submission from Charlie Pocket stated that during his Las Vegas wedding in 1992, he was in a hurry to find a best man and a witness, so he "grabbed the first couple who passed by". He said it was uncanny how similar the man looked to the Ninth Doctor on Clive's website and that he was with "a blonde haired girl of about 19 or so". Charlie said that the best man's signature on his marriage certificate was "Doctor John Smith". [2]

Other matters

  • With only one season, the Ninth Doctor's television run is the second shortest, behind that of the Eighth Doctor's two appearances in the 1996 made-for-television movie Doctor Who and the mini-episode; The Night of the Doctor.
  • The Ninth Doctor is only one of two incarnations to date to have the same companion throughout all his television appearances (Rose Tyler); he shares this distinction with the Eighth Doctor, who had only one companion - Grace Holloway - in the 1996 movie Doctor Who (discounting his reappearance in TV: The Night of the Doctor, where he travelled alone and mentioned companions that had not been seen on screen, but in the Big Finish Doctor Who audio stories). In spin-off fiction, the only ninth incarnation stories to date where he is not depicted travelling with Rose are the 2006 annual short story What I Did on My Christmas Holidays by Sally Sparrow and the Puffin eshort The Beast of Babylon.
  • With the total sum of TV, novels, comics and other media, the Ninth Doctor stands out as having the shortest era of any non-current Doctor.
  • The ninth incarnation was also the first never to face another Time Lord as an opponent on screen. As of 2013, the only other incarnation to share this distinction is the Eleventh Doctor, unless the Dream Lord or Mr Clever are technically considered to be Time Lords, each being an amalgam of the Doctor; or Melody Pond, who had Time Lord traits and served as the antagonist in Let's Kill Hitler, is counted. However, both face off against the Master in Prisoners of Time, meaning every incarnation has had a Time Lord opponent in some form of media.
  • The ninth incarnation's era, due to its short length, stands as the first incarnation's era to be completely released to DVD in Australia, North America and the UK. The single film that made up the eighth incarnation's era was not available in North America and Australia at the point when Series One was released.
  • In the Japanese dubbing of the show, the Ninth Doctor is played by Katsuyuki Konishi.
  • Assuming his predecessor's recollection of age was correct, the Ninth Doctor began his life around 800 years old (TV: The Day of The Doctor). Considering the fact that he had adventures on his own when Rose initially declined his offer to travel with him, and he gave his age as 900 following the point he accepted Rose as a companion (TV: Aliens of London, The Empty Child), this suggests he travelled alone for about a century.
  • The original plan for The Day of the Doctor was for the Ninth Doctor to be the one who fought in the Time War, as hinted throughout his era. However, Steven Moffat admitted that he had difficulty with this since the Ninth Doctor is clearly "a new man" at the beginning of his adventures with Rose. (He makes several comments about his physical appearance upon looking in a mirror, indicating that he has recently regenerated and not yet gotten used to his appearance.) Though Christopher Eccelston enjoyed his time as the Ninth Doctor, he declined a part in the 50th anniversary special. When Eccleston turned down the offer to return, as Moffat thought that he would, the character of the War Doctor was created to take his place. Moffat later explained Eccleston's reasons for passing on the reprisal in an interview:

I sort of knew that he wouldn’t. I know Chris a bit. I did a couple of meetings, and there was a moment, I suppose, a giddy moment where [I thought] ‘Would he actually do it?’ This wasn’t the kind of decision he took in a funk or that he was cross. He was very measured, very kind, very gentlemanly about it. He’s a good bloke. If you look at Chris’s career, this is not what he does. The Ninth Doctor turns up for the battle and not the party.Steven Moffat [src]

Footnotes

  1. Rubio, A. (21 February 2007). Hugh Grant in Doctor Who: Could have been the Doctor.... Bits of News. Retrieved on 23 July 2013.
  2. Contact Us. whoisdoctorwho.co.uk. Retrieved on 23 July 2013.