Sherlock (series)

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Sherlock was a television series broadcast on BBC One created by Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss, both of whom have historically been prominent writers on Doctor Who.

Crossover[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Sherlock versions of Holmes and Watson appear in Sprout Boy meets a Galaxy of Stars alongside the Twelfth Doctor.

Cast and crew connections[[edit] | [edit source]]

Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]

Name DWU role Sherlock role
Jonathan Aris Department Head Philip Anderson
Nicholas Asbury Etoine Landlord
Zawe Ashton Journey Blue Sally Donovan
Tim Barlow Tyssan Wilder
Sasha Behar Spurrina Louise Mortimer
Louise Brealey Charlotte Willis, Millicent Belanger III Molly Hooper
Bertie Carvel Mysterious man Sebastian Wilkes
Gemma Chan Mia Bennett Soo Lin Yao
Debbie Chazen Foon Van Hoff Vicky
Paul Chequer Eugene Jones DI Dimmock
Tim Chipping Grigori Rasputin Duty Sergeant
Lauren Crace Jemima, Kitty Lucy Harrison
Benedict Cumberbatch Howard Carter Sherlock Holmes
Phil Davis Lucius Petrus Dextrus, Titus Jeff Hope
Peter Davison Fifth Doctor Planetarium Voiceover
Simon Paisley Day Steward, Rump Major Barrymore
Sacha Dhawan Spy Master Ajay
Lindsay Duncan Adelaide Brooke Elizabeth Smallwood
Mark Gatiss Richard Lazarus, Danny Boy, Gantok, Archibald Hamish Lethbridge-Stewart, Walther Schwieger, Jasper Jeake, Karl Hendryk, Roboman, Thinnes, Vincenzo, Unbound Master, George Sheldrake, Borusa, The Doctor, William Bruffin, Georgie, Alfred Emerson, Kell, Third Doctor Mycroft Holmes
Gabrielle Glaister Maggie Bishop, Cowley, Veronica Bland Ambassador
Rupert Graves John Riddell Greg Lestrade
Ian Hallard Alan-a-Dale Defense Barrister
Jalaal Hartley Richard Burbage Jonathon Small
Daniel Hoffmann-Gill Bors Gold Teeth Man
Stephanie Hyam Heather Jane
Sam Jones Toobert Jailert Henry Knight
Toby Jones Dream Lord, Kotris Culverton Smith
Gerald Kyd Logan Thomas Ricoletti
Joseph Long Rocco Colasanto, the Pope Oscar Dzundza
Art Malik Absolute, Ilin Prison Governor
Clive Mantle Oliver Cromwell, Tuvold, Tillegat, Treeves, Chuke Bob Frankland
Eleanor Matsuura Jo Nakashima, Dana Tanaka DI Hopkins
Tomi May Dowell Unnamed torturer
Tim McInnerny Klineman Halpen, Dolne, King of Tanto Eustace Carmichael
Tanya Moodie Marathanga, Martha, Kilda Ella Thompson
Matthew Needham Old Swarm Barry Berwick
Katherine Parkinson Danika Meanwhile Kitty Riley
Alistair Petrie Harris, German lieutenant, Dethras, The Count, Richard Tipple, Julius Caesar, Magnus Drake, Wallace Richards James Sholto
Olivia Poulet Myrren, Felsa Mavelock, Jerastra, Carla, Ros Green, Jakernia Amanda
Malcolm Rennie Anzor The Judge
Vinette Robinson Abi Lerner, Rosa Parks, Cynthia Quince Sally Donovan
Amanda Root Madeleine Fairweather Emma Welsborough
John Sessions Tannis, Gus, Mozart, Roland of Brittany, George Wilson Kenny Prince
Jeany Spark Florence Nightingale, Igor Tragacanth, Cham'Yal, Carol Protraxus, Jelena, Daisy Chapel, Gonch, Piir Mother Homeless girl
Una Stubbs Flo Mrs Hudson
Russell Tovey Alonso Frame Henry Knight
Kevin Trainor Lucern Portillon, Swallow, Janek Billy
Wanda Ventham Jean Rock, Thea Ransome, Fendahl Core, Faroon Mrs Holmes
Sydney Wade Melody Pond Claudie Bruhl
Danny Webb John Jefferson, Byron, Ori, Irit, Tuin DI Carter
Victoria Wicks High Priestess Margaret Patterson
Stephen Wight Unsworth Fletcher
Katy Wix Rhiannon Davies Nurse Cornish

Crew[[edit] | [edit source]]

As of 2023, every individual to have written for the television series Sherlock has also written something for Doctor Who or one of its spin-offs. These are Guy Adams, Joseph Lidster, Mark Gatiss, Steven Moffat, and Steve Thompson.

Directors the series have in common are Rachel Talalay, Euros Lyn, Douglas Mackinnon, Toby Haynes, Colm McCarthy and Nick Hurran.

Sherlock's producer, Sue Vertue, also produced The Curse of Fatal Death [+]Loading...["The Curse of Fatal Death (TV story)"]. Gatiss, Moffat and Vertue were all executive producers on the series, as was Beryl Vertue, Moffat's mother-in-law and Sue's mother, who had been the agent of Terry Nation.

David Arnold has worked as a composer for Big Finish Productions and on Sherlock.

Arwel Wyn Jones has worked as a production designer for Sherlock, Doctor Who and The Sarah Jane Adventures.

more to be added

References to Sherlock in the DWU[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Sherlock (in-universe)
A poster for Sherlock. (COMIC: Killer App [+]Loading...["Killer App (comic story)"])

In Killer App [+]Loading...["Killer App (comic story)"], a poster for Sherlock is seen on the wall. In The Shining Man [+]Loading...["The Shining Man (novel)"], the Twelfth Doctor mentions the series.

In the eleventh episode of The Fan Show, Stealing Series 9 Scripts [+]Loading...["Stealing Series 9 Scripts (webcast)"], pinned to a wall in a fictionalised version of Steven Moffat's study, a project on a wall can be seen that says "Wholock: The Musical". A fan-made Wholock: The Musical exists in real life.

References to the DWU in Sherlock[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Torchwood logo cameos in Sherlock.

In the first episode of the second series of Sherlock, The Empty Hearse, which is largely a homage to The Talons of Weng-Chiang [+]Loading...["The Talons of Weng-Chiang (TV story)"], some letters in the closing credits are highlighted red. Rearranged, they spell out Weng-Chiang.

In the second episode of the second series, The Hounds of Baskerville, what appears to be the Doctor's TARDIS can be seen through some trees.

In the third episode of the second series, The Reichenbach Fall, the wifi password that is used in The Bells of Saint John [+]Loading...["The Bells of Saint John (TV story)"] can be seen on Sherlock's phone.

In the second episode of the fourth series of Sherlock, The Lying Detective, the Torchwood logo can be seen on a letter addressed to Sherlock Holmes.

Also in The Lying Detective, a journalist by the name of Harold Chorley is mentioned.

In a short promotional video for the series, a book by Lavinia Smith can be seen. [1]

Other connections[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Other versions of Sherlock Holmes have appeared in the DWU multiple times, perhaps most notably in All-Consuming Fire [+]Loading...["All-Consuming Fire (novel)"].
  • Fandom for Sherlock and Doctor Who was often interconnected with each other, frequently leading to fan content celebrating the shows together, often by crossing them over with each other (the term "SuperWhoLock" tended to be used with this mixed fandom activity, which included fans of the American dark fantasy drama Supernatural). A prominent example of this was the short film Wholock, depicting Sherlock meeting the Eleventh Doctor, made by Ben Pickles under his John Smith VFX YouTube channel, prior to him working on Doctor Who officially.
  • Matt Smith auditioned for John Watson, but was deemed too young and too wacky for the role. It was this audition that landed him the role of the Doctor.
  • Titan Comics have produced comics for both Doctor Who and for Sherlock.

"Wholock"[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Superwholock

Likely due to a shared demographic of fans between the series, popular fan opinion in the 2010s was that Sherlock and Doctor Who should officially cross over.[source needed] However, as of 2024, there has never been an official crossover between the series (discounting the brief animated ident Sprout Boy meets a Galaxy of Stars [+]Loading...["Sprout Boy meets a Galaxy of Stars (TV story)"] and the minor appearances as Easter Eggs of Doctor Who elements in Sherlock). The name for this phenomenon was "Wholock", a name also given to a fan production by Ben Pickles, who would later create visual effects for Doctor Who.

More notably, "Superwholock", a term much like "Wholock", but also encompassing the fandom of the show Supernatural, gained a good deal of traction, being a notable enough term to gain a Wiktionary entry on Wiktionary, the free online dictionary.

Possibility of a crossover[[edit] | [edit source]]

According to the website Flickering Myth, when quizzed on whether he would like a crossover between Sherlock and Doctor Who, Steven Moffat said the following:

Look I’m going to come clean on this: I would… Go speak to Benedict Cumberbatch, Martin Freeman, Mark Gatiss and Sue Vertue, OK? They’re all in the way. I’m not the killjoy, it’s that lot. It’s probably not going to happen [...] You know in some ways, I think Mark [Gatiss] has got a point when he says that however good you imagine [the crossover], it would be almost better in your imagination than it would be if the two grand old egotists actually met. They’d just both go off in opposite corners and sulk that there was someone cleverer than them.Steven Moffat [src]

However, in an interview with Collider, he said:

That’s a question that I get asked so often, and I can’t keep answering it. It’s all right for Doctor Who. That’s fine. But it would change Sherlock’s life, if he met the Doctor and knew that time travel was possible. He’d have to factor that into every crime he solved. And do we really think that Sherlock Holmes lived through a Dalek invasion? I don’t think he did. I think he’d have mentioned it by now. It’s not going to happen. That’s just the truth of it.Steven Moffat [src]

Mark Gatiss, on the other hand, said:

It may be possible to do a crossover for Comic Relief or as a sketch, but that’s it. We should be careful about not giving people everything they want. I don’t want to be a killjoy or Ebenezer Scrooge, but I don’t see why people are so obsessed with the idea. When I was a kid, I had no desire for TARDIS to appear alongside the Starship Enterprise. I liked them as they were. Having said that, I can say that if we did do it, it would disappoint people. Because the image they have in their heads will always be better.Mark Gatiss [src]

Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]