1963
From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Timeline for 1963 |
1957 • 1958 • 1959 • 1960 • 1961 • 1962 • 1964 • 1965 • 1966 • 1967 • 1968 • 1969 |
For the Short Trips audio story see, 1963 (audio story).
Events
Doctor Who Universe
March
- 28 - Lizzie Lewis was murdered by Ed Morgan. (TW: Ghost Machine)
- Late March - The TARDIS materialised in the junkyard at 76 Totter's Lane, owned by I.M. Foreman, in the Shoreditch area of London, disguised, incongruously as a police box. While the First Doctor attempted repaired and worked out a plan for safely disposing of the Hand of Omega on Earth, Susan, against his wishes, registered at the nearby Coal Hill School. Britain, meanwhile, was in the grip of an unusual cold wave. (TN: Time and Relative)
- Whilst at a bar Susan witnessed a human mutate into an alien. She and the Doctor followed a trail that led to Raldonn, an alien trying to mutate humans to use as pilots for his spacecraft. (DWM: Operation Proteus)
April
- 1 - The Doctor fought off an invasion by the Cold. (TN: Time and Relative)
October
- The TARDIS landed on the Queen Mary, a ship the Fourth Doctor found was full of ghosts. (TN: Ghost Ship)
- Late October - The First Doctor made arrangements with a Shoreditch funeral parlor to bury the Hand of Omega in a nearby churchyard. (DW: Remembrance of the Daleks)
November
- Sometime before the 22nd - The Spacefleet fighter Tisiphone, which had fallen into a temporal rift in 2547 during a battle with Daleks, exited the temporal rift near Earth space. Its crew managed to escape to England. (NA: Return of the Living Dad)
- 22 - The Kennedy assassination took place, witnessed by the Ninth Doctor. (DW: Rose) The Master attempted to prevent the assassination in order to change history, but was prevented from doing so by James Stevens, who himself carried out the murder. (MA: Who Killed Kennedy)
- At roughly the same time in the Shoreditch area of London, Coal Hill School teachers Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright, following Susan Foreman home from the school, discovered the Doctor's TARDIS in 76 Totter's Lane. Fearing the consequences, the First Doctor abducted them. (DW: An Unearthly Child)
- The abduction of Ian and Barbara likely occurred on an earlier date, possibly the 21st, due to the fact Susan indicates that she will return a borrowed book to the school "tomorrow"; as 22nd November 1963 was a Friday, this makes it unlikely that these events occurred just before the weekend break.
- By this time the Imperial Dalek faction had a presence in London in this time zone. (DWM: Time & Time Again)
- After 22nd November - The disappearance of two teachers was noticed, but all thought Ian and Barbara had eloped. (PDA: The Face of the Enemy)
- 23 - In London, a man was stabbed in an alleyway with a flick knife. His murderer was never found. Elsewhere in the city, a baby boy was born and is named John Fitzgerald after the recently deceased U.S. President (ST: 1963)
- Jorjie Turner was sent from 2050 to 1963. She was retrieved by K9 Mark 2 and Starkey; together they saved William Pike from being arrested by Barker, thus preventing Darius Pike from being erased from history. (K9TV: The Cambridge Spy)
- 29-30 - The Doctor returned to Shoreditch in his seventh body to finish incomplete business and collect the Hand of Omega and aid the ICMG, the British Army's predecessor to UNIT. ICMG set up the evacuation of civilians out of three miles radius of a fight between Renegade and Imperial Dalek factions as they fought over the Hand, an event which saw activity in 76 Totter's Lane and Coal Hill School. Humans in the know would later call this event the Shoreditch Incident. (DW: Remembrance of the Daleks, MA: Who Killed Kennedy)
- Journalist David Bishop established the dates of Ian and Barbara's abduction and the Shoreditch Incident. (MA: Who Killed Kennedy)
December
- 6 - Burial of British Army sergeant Mike Smith. (DW: Remembrance of the Daleks)
Dates unknown
- Nemesis approached Earth before the Kennedy assassination and, the Seventh Doctor, implied, influenced it to happen. (DW: Silver Nemesis)
- In Liverpool, The Doctor takes Martha Jones to watch the Beatles perform. Whilst they are returning to the TARDIS. Martha is teleported to an alien planet. (DWAM: Signs of Life)
Alternate timelines
- The TARDIS landed in a parallel Earth in which World War II never ended, and the Fifth Doctor got drawn into the conflict. (DWM: Lunar Lagoon) With a native of this, timeline, Angus Goodman, he departed. (DWM: 4-Dimensional Vistas)
- The Daleks, using the Eye of Time to change history, exterminated humanity, ravaging and conquering Earth. This timeline was averted by the Eleventh Doctor and Amy Pond. (VG: City of the Daleks)
Other timelines
- In John Smith's possible future, he died, leaving behind Joan, his children and their children, all safe. (NA: Human Nature)
See also
Real world
January
- 11 - Jason Connery is born; his father is Sean Connery.
March
- 29 - C. E. Webber submits to Donald Wilson an outline for a proposed family-oriented science fiction series to be called The Troubleshooters. Some of the earliest concepts of what is to become Doctor Who appear in the document, which exists in the BBC Archives with notations from Sydney Newman.[1]
- At some point after this, Webber and Newman submit a revised outline which is now for a series to be entitled Dr. Who (sic).[2]
April
- 11 - Terry Weaver is born.
- 17 - Russell T Davies, Head writer and executive producer of Doctor Who from 2005-2009 and author of NA: Damaged Goods is born in Swansea, Wales.
May
- 2 - Esther Freud is born.
August
- 20 - Production of Doctor Who begins with a filming session at Ealing Studios for the first episode of DW: An Unearthly Child; the session involves the creation of the opening credits. This version of the first episode is beset by technical problems, and the BBC subsequently rejects it for broadcast, authorizing a rare "do-over" for later in the year. This version, dubbed The Pilot Episode later, would be finally broadcast in the 1990s. This is the earliest known production session related to Doctor Who. (Source: The Television Companion by Howe and Walker)
- 31 - A filming session is held at the BBC for DW: An Unearthly Child (aka The Pilot Episode).
September
- 18 - Gary Russell, author of several Doctor Who fiction and non-fiction works, former editor of Doctor Who Magazine, former Producer of the Big Finish Productions audios and current a member of the Doctor Who script editing team is born in Berkshire, England.
- 19 - A one day filming session at Ealing Studios is held for episode one of DW: An Unearthly Child (aka The Pilot Episode).
- 27 - The formal studio recording session for the never-broadcast version of the first episode of DW: An Unearthly Child, aka The Pilot Episode, is conducted at Lime Grove Studios.
- 30 - After viewing the pilot episode, Sydney Newman officially rejects The Pilot Episode during a lunch meeting with Verity Lambert and Waris Hussein and authorizes a remounting of the episode (according to Howe and Walker, this was a contingency that had been planned for). Over the next couple of weeks numerous revisions to the script and changes to costuming and characterization are undertaken.
October
- 09 - Filming resumes at Ealing Studios for DW: An Unearthly Child, as Episode 1 is re-mounted following September's false start.
- 11 - Filming ends at Ealing for DW: An Unearthly Child
- 18 - One day studio recording at Lime Grove Studio D for the remounted first episode of DW: An Unearthly Child (also entitled "An Unearthly Child").
- 25 - One day studio recording at Lime Grove Studio D for DW: An Unearthly Child episode 2, "The Cave of Skulls". Margot Maxine, an extra hired as a member of the tribe, walks out at 3:00 after refusing to have her teeth blackened.
- 28 - Initial filming begins at Ealing Studios for elements to be used in the upcoming DW: The Daleks.
November
- 01 - One day studio recording at Lime Grove Studio D for DW: An Unearthly Child episode 3, "The Forest of Fear".
- 08 - One day studio recording at Lime Grove Studio D for DW: An Unearthly Child episode 4, "The Firemaker", concluding the first Doctor Who serial.
- 11 - One day studio recording at Lime Grove Studio D for DW: The Daleks episode 1, "The Dead Planet". According to Howe and Walker's The Television Companion, this version is not transmitted and is remounted a month later.
- 22 - Recording of "The Survivors", episode 2 of DW: The Daleks, is interrupted by the news of the Kennedy assassination, but resumes later the same day.
- 23 - Doctor Who debuts on UK television with the first broadcast of episode 1 of DW: An Unearthly Child (which is also entitled "An Unearthly Child"). A few parts of the UK are unable to view the episode due to a power cut. Due to the events of the previous day, however, a franchise legend later emerges suggesting that news coverage of the assassination of Kennedy and/or subsequent killing of suspect Lee Harvey Oswald was the reason for the broadcast disruption; this is not the case. The first episode airs between a sports broadcast and a puppet series called The Telegoons. "The Medicine Men", an episode of The Avengers -- also created by Sydney Newman -- airs the same day.
- Likely the earliest Radio Times reference to the series occurs in the issue dated 23rd November.
- Joe Ahearne is born.
- 30 - "An Unearthly Child" (DW: An Unearthly Child Episode 1) is broadcast for the second time as many viewers missed the original screening as a result of a power cut; this is the first and for many years only rebroadcast of a Doctor Who episode. The rebroadcast is followed by the first broadcast of "The Cave of Skulls" (DW: An Unearthly Child Episode 2)
December
- 06 - Recording of Episode 1 of DW: The Daleks, "The Dead Planet", is remounted following a false start in November.
- 07 - "The Forest of Fear" (DW: An Unearthly Child Episode 3) is first broadcast.
- 14 - "The Firemaker" (DW: An Unearthly Child Episode 4) is first broadcast, concluding the series' first serial.
- 21 - "The Dead Planet" (DW: The Daleks Episode 1) is first broadcast. The episode ends with the series' first great cliffhanger, featuring the first-ever glimpse of a Dalek.
- 28 - "The Survivors" (DW: The Daleks Episode 2) is first broadcast.
- 30 - Audience Research Report on the first episode of Doctor Who is filed with the BBC.