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The Shakespeare Code (TV story)

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The Shakespeare Code was the second episode of the third series of Doctor Who. It saw the first televised appearance of William Shakespeare since a cameo in DW: The Chase in 1965. This was one of the most costly stories ever produced, with large expenditures on costumes and sets.

Gareth Roberts was well known as a fan of Shakespeare; he had included him as a character in A Groatsworth of Wit, a Ninth Doctor comic strip. This meant he had some background knowledge of the two plays Shakespeare was alleged to have written which form the basis of this story's plot. The Carrionites were also derived from the Bard's work, specifically the witches in Macbeth. Further knowledge can be seen in the many references to Shakespeare's works, notably Sycorax from The Tempest.

Synopsis

The Doctor takes Martha to Elizabethan England, where William Shakespeare is under the control of deadly, witch-like creatures.

Plot

London, 1599. A nymph is serenaded from her balcony by a lute-playing swain, Wiggins. She bids him enter, but to his shock he finds it full of witching artefacts. The woman, Lilith, kisses Wiggins — but, on pulling away, he finds her transformed into a wrinkled hag. She introduces her two "mothers", Mother Doomfinger and Mother Bloodtide, who cackle and lunge at the screaming youth, apparently devouring him.

Meanwhile, the TARDIS has just landed nearby. Martha questions whether it is safe to walk around in the past, citing familiar time travel paradoxes as the Grandfather paradox and a reference to the Ray Bradbury short story "A Sound of Thunder" and worries about her reception as a black woman in a time when slavery still exists. The Doctor tells her not to worry. He isn't even human and Elizabethan England is far more tolerant and like the 21st century than she might think. He depones they have arrived in London in 1599 and takes her to the Globe Theatre. At the end of the play, Love's Labour's Lost, Shakespeare announces there will soon be a sequel, Love's Labour's Won. Lilith, using a poppet, influences Shakespeare to aver rashly the new play will premiere the following evening. Martha asks why she has never heard of Love's Labour's Won. The Doctor knows of the lost play. He, decides to find out more about why it was never published — and extends Martha's "one trip".

The two go to The Elephant, the inn where William Shakespeare is staying. They chat with the playwright, who intends to finish writing the final scene of Love Labour's Won that night. An instantly beguiled Shakespeare ("Hey nonny nonny!") tries to woo Martha, describing her as "a queen of Afric" or a "Blackamoor lady", which she finds slightly offensive. The Doctor claims she comes from "Freedonia". Shakespeare sees past the Doctor's psychic paper, which the Doctor cites as proof of the man's genius.

Lynley, Master of the Revels, demands to see the script before he allows the play to proceed. When Shakespeare offers to show him the finished script in the morning, the official leaves proclaiming that this slight means he will ensure the play will never be performed; the Doctor assumes that this explains why Love's Labour's Won was never shown. The three 'witches' watch the scene in a cauldron. Lilith, who works at the inn, secretly takes some of Lynley's hair and makes another poppet, which she plunges into a bucket of water. The Doctor, Martha and Shakespeare hear a commotion in the street and run out, where Lynley vomits water. Lilith stabs the doll in the chest, and Lynley collapses, dead. The Doctor calmly announces that Lynley has died of an imbalance of the humours, privately tellling Martha that any other explanation would lead to panic about witchcraft. When Martha asks what did kill Lynley, the Doctor responds "Witchcraft".

Martha and the Doctor stay at the inn. The Doctor gives a disgruntled Martha mixed signals by casually sharing a bed with her only to then openly bemoan the lack of Rose's insight. Meanwhile, Lilith entrances Shakespeare and, using a marionette, compels him to write a strange concluding paragraph to Love's Labour's Won. She is discovered by the landlady (also the Bard's lover), whom she frightens to death. On hearing another scream, the Doctor runs in and finds the body. Through the window, Martha sees a witch fly away on a broomstick.

In the morning the Doctor, Martha and Shakespeare proceed to the Globe Theatre, where the Doctor asks why the theatre is tetradecagal; the architect thought it would make sound carry well. Shakespeare admits he eventually went mad and talked of witches. The three then visit the architect, Peter Streete, in Bedlam, where patients are whipped to entertain the gentry. Martha is disgusted at the practice, but Shakespeare defends it, saying that fear of the place helped "set him right". The Doctor explains that Shakespeare fell into depression after his son's death. The Doctor helps Streete to emerge from his catatonia long enough to reveal that the witches dictated the Globe's design to him. He also tells the Doctor that the witches were based in All Hallows Street.

The witches observe this interview in their cauldron. Doomfinger appears in the cell and kills Peter with a touch. She threatens the others but the Doctor names the creature as a Carrionite, which causes her to disappear. The Doctor explains the Carrionites produce their "magic" through an ancient science based on the power of words.

Back at the Elephant, the Doctor deduces that the Carrionites intend to use the words of a genius — Shakespeare — to break their species out of eternal imprisonment when Love's Labour's Won is performed. The Doctor tells Shakespeare to stop the show whilst he and Martha go to All Hallows Street to thwart the witches. Shakespeare bursts on to the Globe's stage to make the announcement, but two of the Carrionites are already there and use one of their dolls to render him unconscious. The actors — thinking Shakespeare has passed out drunk — carry the playwright offstage and the performance proceeds.

The Doctor and Martha reach All Hallows Street and confront Lilith, who is expecting them. She confirms the Doctor's suspicions: the three Carrionites hope to gain entry for the rest of their species, eliminate the humans, begin a new empire on Earth and spread out from there. Martha, mimicking the Doctor's actions at Bedlam, tries to neutralise her by speaking the name Carrionite, but Lilith mocks her, since naming only works once. Instead, she names Martha Jones, rendering her unconscious.

Lilith tries to do the same to the Doctor, but fails, unable to discover his real name. She tries to weaken him by naming "Rose", but he assures her that that name keeps him fighting and demands to know how the Carrionites came to be on Earth. Lilith explains the Eternals found the correct word to banish the Carrionites into darkness, but the three were able to escape using the power of Shakespeare's grief over his son — the grief of a genius — and intend to free the others. Shefeigns an attempt at seduction, which brings her close enough to the Doctor to steal a lock of his hair. Taking flight through the window, she attaches the hair to a doll — which the Doctor explains is essentially a DNA replication module — and stabs it in the heart. The Doctor collapses. Assuming that he is dead, Lilith flies to the Globe. Martha wakes, and helps the Doctor restart his left heart , then race to the Globe.

The actors have already spoken the last lines of the play, a series of directions and instructions that have opened a portal allowing the Carrionites back into the universe. The Doctor tells Shakespeare that only he can find the words to close the portal. Shakespeare improvises a short rhyming stanza but is stuck for a final word. Martha comes up with "Expelliarmus" (a magic word coined by author J.K. Rowling in her Harry Potter books) and the Carrionites — together with all the extant copies of Love's Labour's Won — are sucked through the closing portal. Martha, Shakespeare and the actors are left to take the applause of the audience who believe it all to be special effects. The Doctor finds the three 'witches' trapped, screaming in their own crystal ball and appropriates it for safekeeping in a "dark attic" of the TARDIS.

In the morning, Shakespeare flirts once more with Martha...and with the Doctor. He reveals his deduction that the Doctor is not of the Earth and that Martha is from the future. For his "Dark Lady", he produces the sonnet, "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" in her honour, but is interrupted when two of his actors burst in, heralding the arrival of the Queen. Queen Elizabeth enters, recognises the Doctor as her "sworn enemy" and declares, "Off with his head!" The Doctor is surprised at her outburst, since he says he has not yet met the Queen, but comments that he is looking forward to finding out what he will do to offend her. He and Martha flee to the TARDIS, slamming the door just as an arrow embeds itself in the TARDIS' exterior before dematerialisation.

Cast

Crew

General production staff

Script department

Camera and lighting department

Art department

Costume department

Make-up and prosthetics

Movement

Casting

General post-production staff

Special and visual effects

Sound



Not every person who worked on this adventure was credited. The absence of a credit for a position doesn't necessarily mean the job wasn't required. The information above is based solely on observations of the actual end credits of the episodes as broadcast, and does not relay information from IMDB or other sources.


References

  • Lilith mentions the Eternals (DW: Enlightenment).
  • The Doctor mentions the Sycorax from Christmas Day (DW: The Christmas Invasion). Sycorax was the name of the witch mentioned in the Shakespeare play The Tempest, and Shakespeare says at the end of the episode that he would use the name.
  • Psychic paper doesn't work on Shakespeare. This is apparently proof he is a genius.
  • The Carrionites have several similarities to the Shadeys who were also involved with Shakespeare at one point.

Culture

  • There are numerous Harry Potter mentions and references; "Expelliarmus", as well as "Wait till you read book seven, I cried." (The episode was broadcast roughly three months before the book was released.) David Tennant also had a role in the fourth Harry Potter film.
  • The Doctor uses the 1980s film Back to the Future to explain the mechanics of the infinite temporal flux in relation to time travel to Martha.
  • The Doctor quotes a line from Dylan Thomas' poem "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night", before telling Shakespeare he can't use it.
  • In attempting to explain Martha to Shakespeare, the Doctor claims that she comes from Freedonia, a fictional country featured in the Marx Brothers film Duck Soup.
  • Near the climax, the Doctor admonishes Shakespeare that "We can have a good flirt later." Shakespeare coyly replies, "Is that a promise?", to which a stunned Doctor says "And 57 academics just punched the air!" This is a reference to current academic theories that claim that many of Shakespeare's sonnets were penned as love sonnets to a man, and that Shakespeare himself was either bisexual or homosexual.
  • David Tennant went on to play the title character in the Royal Shakespeare Production of Hamlet following his role as the Doctor, reciting the famous "To be, or not to be?" monologue.
  • Shakespeare's attraction to Martha, and referring to her as "The Dark Lady" seems to be a reference to Shakespeare's purported lust for black women, also referenced in Anthony Burgess' novel Nothing Like the Sun.

Story notes

  • The episode bears some similarities to the previous Gareth Roberts' penned comic story featuring Shakespeare and the Ninth Doctor, A Groatsworth of Wit which may have provided some of the inspiration for this episode.
  • The title appears to be a play on The Da Vinci Code, which is also a story based around a well-known figure of the Renaissance.
  • This episode's working title was 'Theatre of Doom' and 'Love's Labours Won'
  • Freedonia is a fictional country from the comedy film Duck Soup.
  • Shakespeare did use the word Sycorax in his play The Tempest.
  • Shakespeare referred to Martha as the "Dark Lady," the mysterious subject (though perhaps allegorical) of many of his sonnets.
  • The story plays on the speculation around Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Won, a possible 'lost play' or alternate title for an existent play.
  • The Story has Elizabeth I mentioning that she swore to have the Doctor killed, this probably has something to do with the Doctor mentioning she could no longer be called the Virgin Queen in DW: The End of Time.
  • Lilith's name is a probable reference to the mythical "first wife of Adam" in Christian and Jewish folklore.

Ratings

  • 7.22 million viewers - BARB final ratings
  • 6.8 million viewers - Overnight ratings
  • 1.039 million viewers - BBC3 Repeat ratings

Myths

to be added

Filming locations

  • Ford's Hospital, Greyfriar's Lane, Coventry
  • Lord Leycester Hospital, Warwick
  • Newport Indoor Market (Basement), Newport
  • Chelesmore Manor House, Greyfriar's Lane, Coventry
  • Shakespeare's Globe, Southwark, London
  • BBC Studios, Upper Boat, Tonteg Road, Treforest Industrial Estate, Pontypridd
  • Stageworks, Unit H1, Colchester Industrial Estate, Colchester Avenue, Penylan, Cardiff
  • Black Horse Ltd, St William House, Tresillian Terrace, Cardiff

Production errors

  • When The Doctor and Martha are in their bedroom, there are many candles lit. Later, when Martha blows out one candle, the whole room goes black.
    If you'd like to talk about narrative problems with this story — like plot holes and things that seem to contradict other stories — please go to this episode's discontinuity discussion.

Continuity

Timeline

Home video releases

 
Series 3 Volume 1 DVD Cover

See also

to be added

External links

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