The Three Doctors (TV story)
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The Time Lords find themselves beseiged by a mysterious enemy inhabiting the antimatter universe on the other side of the black hole from which they draw their power. They enlist the Doctor in his first three incarnations to battle this foe, who turns out to be a legend from the Time Lords's remote past.
Summary
To be added.
References
Aladdin, antimatter, black hole, Beatles, Cybermen, jelly baby, recorder, singularity, supernova, Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star, Yeti,
Cast & Characters
- The Doctor - Jon Pertwee
- Second Doctor - Patrick Troughton
- First Doctor - William Hartnell
- Jo Grant - Katy Manning
- Omega - Stephen Thorne
- Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart - Nicholas Courtney
- Sergeant Benton - John Levene
- Dr. Tyler - Rex Robinson
- President of the Council - Roy Purcell
- Mr. Ollis - Laurie Webb
- Chancellor - Clyde Pollitt
- Time Lord - Graham Leaman
- Mrs. Ollis - Patricia Prior
- Corporal Palmer - Denys Palmer
Crew
- Writer - Bob Baker and Dave Martin
- Producer - Barry Letts
- Director - Lennie Mayne
- Title Music - Ron Grainer and BBC Radiophonic Workshop
- Incidental Music - Dudley Simpson
- Special Sound - Dick Mills
- Film Cameraman - John Baker
- Film Sound - Bob Roberts
- Film Editor - Jim Walker
- Visual Effects Designer - Michaeljohn Harris
- Costume Designer - Jim Acheson
- Make-up - Ann Rayment
- Lighting - Clive Thomas
- Sound - Derek Miller-Timmins
- Script Editor - Terrance Dicks
- Designer - Roger Liminton
Notes
- This story celebrates the tenth year of Doctor Who on television.
- William Hartnell's last appearance as the Doctor before his death in 1975. Hartnell was too ill to play a more active role in the story. Instead his scenes were filmed in Ealing Television Film Studios while he read his lines from cue cards. The script was rewritten with the explanation that the First Doctor was stuck in a time eddy due to the power drain caused by Omega.
- The first of three mainstream return appearances by Patrick Troughton as the Second Doctor. His next two were in "The Five Doctors" (1983) and "The Two Doctors" (1985).
- The first appearance of Omega. Originally Omega's name was supposed to be Ohm, the word resulting from turning "who" upside-down. Ohm was later used as the name of an ancient Gallifreyan god in "The Infinity Doctors."
- The original script, entitled "Deathworld," had the Time Lords enlisting the three Doctors to battle a Federation of Evil led by Death. The idea of Death as an actual entity was later used in the Virgin New Adventure novels and Big Finish Audio Dramas, with Death as an Eternal who purposely arranges for the Seventh Doctor to be shot and die in 1999 San Francisco at the beginning of the television movie.
- Original plans were for Jamie McCrimmon and Zoe Heriot to appear in the story. However, Frazer Hines was unable to take time out from Emmerdale Farm for filming, and the idea of additional companions received objections from Jon Pertwee, who felt too many characters would detract from the story.
- This story featured a new redesigned TARDIS console room set by Roger Liminton. The one used in the previous story, "The Time Monster," warped in storage and had a design whcih Barry Letts disliked.
- The end of the Doctor's exile on Earth. This also marks the beginning of the gradual pasing out of UNIT on the series, as the Doctor spends more and more time away from 20th century Earth.
Influences
To be added.
Ratings
- Episode 1 - 9.6m viewers
- Episode 2 - 10.8m viewers
- Episode 3 - 8.8m viewers
- Episode 4 - 11.9m viewers
Statistics on Repeat and non UK Broadcasts
Myths
- William Hartnell's scenes were filmed in the garage of his home against a black backdrop. (His scenes were actually filmed at Ealing Television Film Studios.)
Location Filming
- Summerfield Bungalow in Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire served as the Ollis's cottage. The bird sanctuary was actually Springwell Reservoir, also in Rickmansworth. Exterior scenes set in Omega's universe were filmed at Springwell Quarry. Halings House in Denham Green, Buckinghamshire, served as the exterior of UNIT HQ. The fight between the Third Doctor and Omega's dark side, as well as the First Doctor's scenes, were filmed at Ealing Television Film Studios. Model shots were filmed at the BBC Television Centre Puppet Theatre, with all other scenes filmed at BBC Television Centre Studio 1.
Continuity
- The Second Doctor addresses Benton as Corporal, the rank he held in "The Invasion." He also refers to UNIT's battle with the Cybermen in that story. The Brigadier also mentions that adventure, as well as his first meeting with the Doctor during the Yeti attack in "The Web of Fear." Mention is also made of the two occassions the Doctor "changed his appearance," - the process was not yet called "regeneration," - which occurred respectively at the conclusions of "The Tenth Planet" and "The War Games."
- Omega returns again in "Arc of Infinity" and appears in the spin-off adventures "The Infinity Doctors" and "Omega."
Quotes
- The First Doctor assessing his successors: "Oh, so you're my replacements, - a dandy and a clown."
- The Second Doctor: "We have to keep it confused, feed it useless information, - I wonder if I have a television set handy."
- The Second Doctor summarizing Omega's use of the singularity: "I see, so you just think of a thing, rub your magic lamp over there and shali-kamali-ka-zoob, there it is! That's clever, I say that's jolly clever!"
- Omega's reaction (addressed to the Third Doctor): "Are you certain you two are of the same intelligence?"
Story Arcs
- UNIT
- Gallifrey
- The Time Lords
Discontinuity
- The fact that he has been brought into his own future and telepathicly linked with the Third Doctor leads to questions of the Second Doctor learning of his eventual capture, trial, and exile by the Time Lords. Season 6B is an attempt to reconcile the issues arising from this plot hole.
More Info
Public Releases
- DVD Release - Released on DVD as "Doctor Who: The Three Doctors" in 2003.
- DVD Features
- Commentary by Nicholas Courtney, Katy Manning and Barry Letts
- Pebble Mill at One - Bernard Wilkie and Patrick Troughton interviews from Christmas 1973.
- Blue Peter - Jon Pertwee and the Whomobile in the studio.
- BSB Highlights - Excerpts from BSB '31 Who' weekend.
- Five Faces of Doctor Who trailer.
- Original 1972 BBC1 trailer.
- PanoptiCon '93 - Jon Pertwee on stage at PanoptiCon '93
- TARDIS-Cam footage.
- Photo Gallery.
- Production Information Subtitles.
- Who's Who (Region 1 only).
- DVD Features
- Also released in the UK in a limited edition boxset, including a miniature Bessie model car.
- Video Release - Released as "Doctor Who: The Three Doctors".
- UK Release: August 1991 / US Release: January 1992
- PAL - BBC Video BBCV4650
- NTSC - CBS/FOX Video 3405
- NTSC - Warner Video E1100