The Lost Stories

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Not to be confused with missing episodes, televised Doctor Who that was made, transmitted, and subsequently lost by the BBC.

The Lost Stories was a range of Doctor Who audios released by Big Finish Productions, beginning in 2010. It took scripts and/or story treatments that had been officially proposed to the BBC from 1963 to 1990, converted them into audio-appropriate scripts, and recorded them with as many of the original cast members as was possible at the time of recording. The line was wholly separate from their monthly Doctor Who and Companion Chronicles ranges. During the production of this series, the Doctors and companions involved continued to be as active as they normally were in other ranges.

Concept

Initially, the range was to have produced the stories that had been intended for production during season 23. When that season was delayed, these stories were abandoned in favor of what became The Trial of a Time Lord.

However, Big Finish expanded the ambition of the range fairly quickly after announcing it. As the range developed, it migrated from being about "the season 23 that never was", to more generally producing a whole range of never-made television stories. As of 2010, Big Finish had announced stories from the First, Second, Sixth, and Seventh Doctors' eras. Stories involving the Sixth and Seventh Doctors were full cast audios, while stories from the First and Second Doctors' eras had a format more akin to the "enhanced audiobooks" of the Companion Chronicles range.

The key factor for the producers was that the stories in this range must have at some point been officially proposed to the BBC. In some instances, the scripts produced by Big Finish were essentially those that had been delivered to the BBC; in others, they were wholly written for Big Finish based upon story ideas that had been proposed to the script editor of the era. In a few cases, wholly finished scripts, like The Song of Megaptera (originally titled The Song of the Space Whale), were tweaked for the audio medium. In others, as with Leviathan, they were more substantially altered.

Sixth Doctor stories

As the original impetus for the range, the Sixth Doctor stories deserve special explanation. Originally, the idea was that all known season 23 scripts and story ideas would be produced. However, due to rights issues and writer availability, this proved impossible. Additionally, Big Finish research into "the season that never was" revealed additional scripts and story ideas that were actually meant for season 22. The producer of the range thus decided to take a more liberal approach to the concept. He put together a "new" season, comprised of most of the stories known to have been destined for season 23 along with some stories meant for season 22. Then he knit all the stories together with some continuing narrative elements that were not present in the original television scripts and story treatments. The result was thus an enhancement to the original goal of simply adapting the known stories for audio. The very fact that there were eight stories in the first run of Sixth Doctor stories immediately suggests a different season length than would have been possible on television during the Colin Baker era.

Nevertheless, as produced, the Sixth Doctor stories do possess a different tonality than is present in the standard Big Finish Doctor Who range. For instance, they employed a style of electronic music evocative of the one that would likely have obtained had the stories been produced for television in 1985. Moreover, the characterizations of Peri and the Sixth Doctor are closer to the Season 22 versions of the characters than what was typical in the main Big Finish Doctor Who range.

Big Finish announced in a special Lost Stories podcast that further Sixth Doctor stories beyond the initial eight were possible, depending upon sales. A second series of Sixth Doctor stories could include those meant-for-season-23 stories that were not produced during the first run.

Seventh Doctor stories

In addition to the full-cast Sixth Doctor stories, the Lost Stories range will also include a Seventh Doctor series. By contrast to the first Sixth Doctor series, the first Seventh Doctor series will hew more closely to the intention of the unmade Season 27. Perhaps due to the personal involvement of then-script editor, Andrew Cartmel, this branch of the Lost Stories will hit the main beats planned for that season. Thus, Ace will be written out and replaced by the new companion, Raine Creevy. Also, Brigadier Winifred Bambera and UNIT will return, as had been planned. The effect of these rather major character developments on the Seventh Doctor's general usage in the main Doctor Who range has not been revealed as of June 2010. Of particular interest is whether Raine Creevy, having been established in The Lost Stories, will cross over into the main, monthly line.

List of stories

# Title Author Doctor Featuring Season which was meant to be broadcast Released
1 The Nightmare Fair

Graham Williams (Adapted by John Ainsworth)

6th Peri, Celestial Toymaker 23 November 2009
2 Mission to Magnus Philip Martin 6th Peri, Sil, Ice Warriors 23 December 2009
3 Leviathan Brian Finch (Adapted by Paul Finch) 6th Peri 22 January 2010
4 The Hollows of Time Christopher H Bidmead 6th Peri, Tractators 23 February 2010
5 Paradise 5 PJ Hammond and Andy Lane 6th Peri 23 March 2010
6 Point of Entry Barbara Clegg and Marc Platt 6th Peri 22  April 2010
7 The Song of Megaptera Pat Mills 6th Peri 22  May 2010
8 The Macros Ingrid Pitt and Tony Rudlin 6th Peri 22 June 2010
9 Double release
*Farewell Great Macedon
*The Fragile Yellow Arc of Fragence
Moris Farhi (Adapted by Nigel Robinson) 1st Susan Foreman, Ian Chesterton, Barbara Wright 1 November 2010
10 Double release
*The Prison in Space
*The Destroyers
Dick Sharples (adapted by Simon Guerrier) & Terry Nation (adapted by Nicholas Briggs) 2nd Jamie McCrimmon, Zoe Heriot 6 December 2010
11 Thin Ice Marc Platt 7th Ace, Ice Warriors 27 April 2011
12 Crime of the Century Andrew Cartmel 7th Raine Creevy 27 May 2011
13 Animal Andrew Cartmel 7th Raine Creevy 27 June 2011
14 Earth Aid Ben Aaronovitch and Andrew Cartmel 7th Raine Creevy 27 July 2011