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A Thousand Tiny Wings (audio story)

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A Thousand Tiny Wings was the one hundred and thirtieth monthly Doctor Who audio story produced by Big Finish Productions. Released in January 2010, it featured the return of Tracey Childs as Elizabeth Klein, a character whom she had previously played in Colditz in 2001. This story began a series of three audio releases featuring Elizabeth Klein travelling with Sylvester McCoy's Seventh Doctor.

Publisher's summary

1950s Kenya. The Mau Mau uprising. A disparate group of women lie low in a remote house in the jungle, waiting for a resolution or for rescue. Among these British imperialists is Elizabeth Klein, a refugee from a timeline that no longer exists... thanks to the Doctor.

Reunited, the Doctor and Klein are forced to set aside their differences by terrifying circumstances. People are dying in this remote place. One by one. And there's something out there, in the jungle, accompanied only by the flutter of a thousand tiny wings...

Plot

to be added

Cast

References

Culture

  • More than two weeks after the beginning of the Mau Mau Uprising, there is still very little coverage of the conflict on the BBC World Service. Instead, they are playing the music of the American composer Scott Joplin. Klein later sardonically remarks that in the event of a nuclear war wiping out all of humanity, the BBC World Service would still be broadcasting light entertainment to the mutated cockroaches.

The Doctor

  • The Doctor is wearing his linen suit and is wistful about travelling alone.

Individuals

  • Mrs Sylvia O'Donnell, who met her husband Heinrich in Munich in 1933, expresses the view that Great Britain had no business entering the Second World War. She blames the Mau Mau Uprising on the Prime Minister Winston Churchill, whom she calls "a senile old man."
  • When Klein inquires as to the whereabouts of "Miss McShane," the Doctor tells her that Ace has left the TARDIS, but does not go into details.
  • Klein mentions the German rocket scientist Wernher von Braun.
  • Mrs O'Donnell tells Klein that her husband Heinrich was a Waffen-SS officer who was stationed near Colditz Castle during the Second World War. They were acquainted with the Mitford sisters in the 1930s.
  • Klein, whose first doctorate was in physics, re-qualified as a medical doctor during her time in South America. She received her training from one of the many German doctors who escaped to that continent after 1945.
  • Mrs O'Donnell mentions the architectural achievements of Albert Speer in Berlin during the 1930s.
  • The Doctor once got into an argument with Frank L. Baum about flying monkeys.

TARDIS

  • The Doctor refers to the TARDIS' universal translation abilities. However, it cannot translate Esperanto.

Timeline

  • Klein is fervent that the Doctor destroyed her world and that her timeline is the proper one.
  • Klein refers to the Allies' victory in the Second World War as being "farcical." In 1945, she escaped to South America as did many other National Socialists including Hans de Flores. Klein claims that, in her timeline, De Flores was "always the Führer's favourite." Klein hopes that he will succeed Hitler as the Führer when the Fourth Reich is established.
  • Klein tells the Doctor that when the Mau Mau Uprising occurred in her timeline, the Luftwaffe was sent in immediately. On Hitler's orders, they proceeded to carpet-bomb the tribal areas and wipe out most of the native population. Within three years, a virulent plague had broken out in Kenya which killed many German soldiers. In 1957, Hitler placed Klein in command of a team of medical doctors and scientists who attempted to discover the cause of the plague. However, they were unable to do so.

Notes

  • Although the feather on the cover is yellow, the feathers in the story itself are repeatedly described as being blue and in the interior booklet they are presented as yellow and green.
  • This audio drama was recorded on 25 and 26 June 2009 at The Moat Studios.
  • This audio drama was available on BBC Radio 4 Extra from 23 May 2012 to 24 May 2012.

Continuity

External links

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