Disney Time (TV story)
A stub named Disney Time special (TV story) about this same special was apparently deleted last year, with the rationale that this isn't the Fourth Doctor at all, but merely Tom Baker "as" the Fourth Doctor.
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Disney Time 1975 was a special edition of the yearly Disney Time programme, a holiday schedule filler produced by the Walt Disney Company in which clips from various Disney films (animated and otherwise) were linked by new footage from celebrities. In this particular edition, it was hosted by the Fourth Doctor (played as always by Tom Baker).
Synopsis
The Fourth Doctor, frolicking in various areas of London, tells a series of stories which introduce clips from various Disney films.
Plot
The Fourth Doctor materialises in London and asks a passerby if they know Donald Duck, Mickey Mouse or Goofy. After some prompting, the man recalls that those are all "Disney toons". The Doctor then explains that, as he was passing by the planet Mars in his TARDIS, he realised he hadn't seen Mickey and the gang in a long time. He cites this as the reason for his arrival in London, "just in time for Clock Cleaners" — Clock Cleaners being a Mickey Mouse cartoon which is then shown.
After the cartoon concludes, the Doctor observes passersby and muses that it would be "fun" to have a friend who was invisible to all but oneself. As he fleshes out this fantasy, it becomes clear that he is introducing a clip from the movie Blackbeard's Ghost, about a man who is the only man in the world able to see the rambunctious ghost of the pirate Blackbeard. The camera then cuts to a scene of that movie playing in a movie theatre.
After the scene concludes, the Doctor is shown manning the ticket booth. He lets in a little girl for free, stating that he is "not without influence", and then begins to tell the story of Mowgli, a little boy lost in a jungle and raised by wolves, who met a snake called Kaa; this introduces a segment from Disney's The Jungle Book. After the segment wraps up, the Doctor admits that real wolves, tigers and snakes are "rather different" than what is shown in Disney's fantasy, introducing a sequence from the documentary African Lion.
The Doctor then sums up the stories of The Apple Dumpling Gang and Escape to Witch Mountain (introducing clips of both these features). Afterwards, standing on a stairway somewhere in London, he tells his audience that fantasy can include such whimsy as talking fish and people breathing underwater, and argues that if they do not believe this, then they have obviously never seen the film Bedknobs and Broomsticks, from which a sequence is soon shown.
The Doctor then announces that Disney is making a new film, entitled Return of the Big Cat, set to come out on Christmas. No one has seen it yet, but the Doctor, being a traveler in time and space, is able to show an extract from it. Following this, the Doctor muses on the life of dogs (who, he points out, rarely sings) before reminding his audience that all of this is null and void to Disney, at least as far as their film Lady and the Tramp is concerned. This leads directly into a scene from that picture.
The camera then cuts to the Doctor, alone in the movie theatre as the screening concludes. Even as he prepares to tell one more story, a disembodied hand rises from between the rows, holding a sheet of paper. After examining the paper, the Doctor explains that it is a message from the Brigadier, who is "in trouble again", and needs his scientific advisor's help. The Doctor hurriedly returns to the TARDIS, reassuring his audience, telling them that he'll be seeing them "very soon — next Saturday, in fact".
Cast
- The Doctor - Tom Baker
- Presenter - Richard Evans
Crew
to be added
References
to be added
Notes
The ending of the episode, where the Doctor receives a message from the Brigadier about some urgent business, was meant to tie in with the following regular Doctor Who serial which started broadcasting just a few days after the broadcast of this special, namely Terror of the Zygon. Indeed, the Doctor and his companions begin this story hurrying to the Brigadier because of a message he sent them.
Interestingly, two years earlier, previous editions of the Disney Time programmed had been hosted by Roy Castle (Ian Chesterton in Dr. Who and the Daleks) and Jon Pertwee (the Third Doctor), though not as their Doctor Who characters; Castle returned in 1976, followed in short order by Bernard Cribbins (Tom Campbell in Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A.D. and, later, Wilfred Mott in Series 4).