2009 (production)

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Timeline for 2009
21st century | 2000s

2003 • 2004 • 2005 • 2006 • 2007 • 2008 • 2010 • 2011 • 2012 • 2013 • 2014 • 2015
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2009 was a year in which a number of events important to the production of Doctor Who and its spin-offs occurred.

January

February

March

  • March - An online version of Doctor Who DVD Files was launched, allowing those who already owned the DVDs, or unable to buy the magazine internationally due to licensing restrictions, access to the printed content of the magazine. The subscription-based site also made the contents of the Doctor Who: Battles in Time series available to international fans.
  • March - The BBC series Tonight's the Night launched a contest for viewers to create their own Doctor Who monster. Following the 28 March deadline, finalists would be chosen to take part in further competition on the series. The winner would appear in a specially written Doctor Who sketch.
  • March - A trailer for the upcoming K9 spinoff series was unveiled at the MIPTV show in Cannes and was later posted online.
  • 3 March - The BBC announced that outgoing Doctor Who executive producer Julie Gardner would join the Los Angeles branch of BBC Worldwide in June 2009, serving as executive producer of American-market projects.[3]
  • 5 March - The Big Finish audio story The Glorious Revolution was recorded at the Moat Studios.
  • 9-10 March - Big Finish's audio adaptation of the unproduced TV story The Nightmare Fair was recorded at the Moat Studios.
  • 16 March - A quarter-century after their use was phased out across the UK, Edinburgh's police department announced plans to reintroduce "TARDIS-style" police boxes.[4]
  • 16 and 18 March - The Big Finish audio story Patient Zero was recorded at the Moat Studios.
  • Mid-March - For the fourth consecutive year, episodes of Doctor Who written by Steven Moffat were nominated for the annual Hugo Award: Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead. Also nominated was Russell T Davies' episode Turn Left, resulting in fan controversy; his Midnight was expected to be nominated. Competition for the award included episodes of Battlestar Galactica and Lost; this year Doctor Who did not win, and the award went to the made-for-Internet short film Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog.
  • 18 March - In a speech to members of BAFTA, Russell T Davies revealed production of Series 3 of The Sarah Jane Adventures had been impacted by BBC budget cuts and had nearly been cancelled on three occasions.[5]
  • 21 March - A scene for The End of Time Part Two was shot early to accommodate Jessica Hynes' schedule and allow her to appear in a cameo.[1]
  • In the weeks following its broadcast of The Next Doctor, the Canadian television network Space confirmed it had obtained the Canadian broadcast rights to the 2009 specials and Series 5, and announced it would air Planet of the Dead in June. This ended speculation over the future of Doctor Who on the CBC, although it was not yet known whether the CBC or related networks would retain broadcast rights to the first four seasons. Up to at least the end of Series 4, the CBC had been a sometimes-credited co-producer of the series; presumably this announcement meant that arrangement had ended.
  • 23 and 25 March - The Big Finish audio Paper Cuts took place at the Moat Studios.
  • 26 March - The Big Finish audio story The Drowned World was recorded at the Moat Studios.

April

May

June

  • June - The Canadian cable network Space officially confirmed it had obtained the broadcasting rights to Doctor Who from the CBC, and would air the remaining 2009 specials along with Series 5 in 2010; in addition, it obtained Canadian broadcast rights to the first four seasons and the never-aired-in-Canada Voyage of the Damned in the spring of 2010.
  • 2 June - Shaun Lyon announced that the Outpost Gallifrey website, the Doctor Who News website, and the Doctor Who Forum would all close as of 31st July. A detailed reason for closing the sites was not offered.[10]
  • 7 June - The Sunday Mirror included a poster of the Tenth Doctor and a Dalek maze reprinted from Doctor Who Adventures.
  • 17 June - The UK tabloid The Sun published a leaked photograph of David Tennant and Timothy Dalton with Dalton in his Time Lord costume, spoiling what was to be a surprise reveal of the return of Gallifrey in The End of Time. This provoked an angered response from Russell T Davies in his correspondence with Benjamin Cook.[1]

July

August

  • 9 August - Steven Moffat's winning streak at the Hugo Awards ended when Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead was defeated by a Joss Whedon production, Dr. Horrible's Singalong Blog, in the Dramatic Presentation - Short Form category, which Moffat and Doctor Who had dominated since 2006. An examination of the voting results show only about a hundred votes separated Moffat from first place in the final tally. Turn Left by Russell T Davies had also been nominated for the award this year. As Moffat had not written any of the 2009 specials, the earliest he would be eligible again for a Hugo was in 2011.

September

October

November

December

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Davies, Russell T, Cook, Benjamin, 2008, Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale, BBC Books
  2. Gareth McLean (Friday 16 January 2009). The Doctor in Dubai: dubious indeed. guardian.co.uk. Retrieved on 1st September 2011.
  3. https://www.theguardian.com/media/2008/nov/12/bbc-television
  4. HAZEL MOLLISON (16 March 2009). Police bring Tardis-style boxes back into use. Scotsman.com. Retrieved on 1st September 2011.
  5. Who writer begs lotto for TV cash. BBC News (19 March 2009). Retrieved on 1st September 2011.
  6. Short Trips Announcement. Big Finish (17/04/2009). Retrieved on 1st September 2011.
  7. 7.0 7.1 CON: Allons-y!
  8. TV shows including Doctor Who 'giving children nightmares'
  9. Doctor Who assistant is unveiled. BBC News (Friday, 29 May 2009). Retrieved on 1st September 2011.
  10. DWF (June 3 2009). Outpost Gallifrey/Doctor Who Forum To Close. The Trek BBS. Retrieved on 1st September 2011.
  11. Margaret Lyons (Jul 27 2009). 'Doctor Who' named 'most successful sci-fi series' by Guinness: Suck it, 'Star Trek'. PopWatch. Retrieved on 1st September 2011.
  12. Michael Moorcock (11-11-2009). By TARDIS Through The Multiverse. Moorcock's Miscellany. Retrieved on 1st September 2011.
  13. Michael Moorcock (Saturday 21 November 2009). I'm writing the new Doctor Who. The Guardian. Retrieved on 1st September 2011.
  14. Proposed BBC Drama Village at Media Capital, Roath Basin. Welsh Government (14 December 2009). Retrieved on 1st September 2011.