Untitled (Tonight's the Night TV story)
Tonight's the Night was a BBC talent series hosted by John Barrowman which aired in the spring of 2009. In a promotion connected with the series, a contest winner was given a chance to play a villain in a specially written Doctor Who scene featuring Jack Harkness and a surprise guest which was broadcast during the 23rd May 2009 episode of Tonight's the Night.
The mini-episode itself carries no on-screen title, however Russell T. Davies referred to it by the title Tonight's the Night in his June 2009 column in Doctor Who Magazine #410.
Plot
Jack Harkness enters the Doctor's TARDIS and discovers a blue-headed alien who claims to be a regenerated Doctor. The alien gives the game away when Jack notices that he's armed, something the real Doctor would never be. The alien identifies himself as Sao Til, a literal arms dealer who trades in limbs. Jack draws his gun and the two enter into a Mexican standoff before ... David Tennant enters the TARDIS set and asks John what he's doing. John introduces Tim Ingham of Stoke-on-Trent, who is pretending to be Sao Til. David chides John for being in "my TARDIS" and exits the set. After a moment of giddiness at having seen David Tennant, John and Tim resume their characters and pretend to shoot at each other as they run around the TARDIS set.
Cast
- Jack Harkness/Himself - John Barrowman
- Sao Til/Himself - Tim Ingham
- Himself - David Tennant
Crew
Uncredited.
References
- Jack mentions having been to a party on Alpha Centauri that had something to do with "organ donation" (given the nature of the skit, it's doubtful this has any bearing on canon).
Story Notes
- The skit has no opening or closing credits.
- Running just over 3 minutes in length, this is the shortest televised Doctor Who story of all time. (The shortest canonical television story remains as SJA:From Raxacoricofallapatorius With Love.)
- Also, as Tennant does not appear as The Doctor in this skit, it is the first Doctor Who story since Mission to the Unknown in which the character does not appear, and it is the first and only time a televised story has featured the TARDIS, but no Doctor. Given the acknowledged non-canon nature of this skit, Mission to the Unknown remains as the only DW story to not feature the Doctor (when viewed as a stand-alone story independent of The Daleks' Master Plan.)
- There was no Doctor Who Confidential for The Episode but there was a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the skit followed its broadcast (on Tonight's The Night).
- According to Russell T. Davies, writing in Doctor Who Magazine #410, Tonight's the Night is likely to be the last Doctor Who story he'll write.
- Davies also said in DWM that he was originally going to have this story as "canon" with the Doctor in it - but changed his mind.
Ratings
to be added
Myths and rumours
- When first announced it was thought the skit would be a potentially canonical mini-episode along the lines of Music of the Spheres and Time Crash, but this turned out not to be the case. According to Davies in his column Doctor Who Magazine #410, he did initially intend to write such a mini-episode, but on realizing this would be the last Doctor Who story he'd likely ever write, he couldn't bring himself to create something canonical in this context.
Continuity
- Barrowman and Ingham break character and Tennant appears as himself, and we see the equipment surrounding the TARDIS set at Upper Boat Studios. This renders the story completely non-canonical and thus it doesn't fit into any timeframe of the series. Davies also explicitly indicates in DWM #410 that the story is not canonical. This is actually only the second BBC-made Doctor Who production, after the Scream of the Shalka webcast, to be officially disqualified from canon (the Dimensions in Time mini-serial of 1993 has been "decanonized" by fan opinion, but the BBC has never itself given an opinion).
DVD, Video and Other Releases
- No DVD release of this skit has been announced as of June 2009, nor has a DVD release of the Tonight's the Night series itself been announced.