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Season 6 (Doctor Who 1963)

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
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Season 6 of Doctor Who ran from 10 August 1968 to 21 June 1969. It starred Patrick Troughton as the Second Doctor, Frazer Hines as Jamie McCrimmon and Wendy Padbury as Zoe Heriot. The season opened with The Dominators and concluded with The War Games.

You may wish to consult Series 6 for other, similarly-named pages.

Overview[[edit] | [edit source]]

It consisted of seven serials comprised of forty-four episodes. This season featured the first ever UNIT story, The Invasion, which showcased the return of Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart.

It also featured the first official appearance of Time Lords and the as yet unnamed Doctor's home planet (another member of Susan and the Doctor's race, the Monk, had appeared previously, but without much elaboration and without using the term "Time Lord").

It also marked the tenure of Patrick Troughton as the Second Doctor. It consisted of seven serials and forty-four episodes, including two epic-length storylines: the eight episodes of The Invasion and the ten-episode The War Games.

This season was the last to be filmed in black and white. Season 6 is also the last season of Doctor Who to contain missing episodes, with all subsequent seasons affected by the then-in-effect junking policy restored through various means.

This season is, fortunately, more complete than the previous three seasons, of which only five serials exist. Seven episodes from this season are lost, although audio recordings remain for all; as a result, the DVD release of The Invasion used animation to recreate the two missing episodes from that story. To date, it is the most complete season of the Patrick Troughton-era.

Television stories[[edit] | [edit source]]

# Title Writer Episodes Notes
1 The Dominators Norman Ashby, aka
Mervyn Haisman
Henry Lincoln
(episode 5: with Derrick Sherwin, uncredited)
5 First story to be written under a pseudonym. First, and only, televised appearance by the Quarks.
2 The Mind Robber Peter Ling
(episode 1: with Derrick Sherwin, uncredited)
5 Introduction of the Land of Fiction. First story to be directed by David Maloney.
3 The Invasion Derrick Sherwin
Concept by Kit Pedler
8 First appearances of UNIT and John Benton.
4 The Krotons Robert Holmes 4 Robert Holmes' debut script for Doctor Who.
5 The Seeds of Death Brian Hayles
(with Terrance Dicks, uncredited)
6 First Terrance Dicks script for Doctor Who.
6 The Space Pirates Robert Holmes 6 First story of Doctor Who to be filmed using a "double banking" strategy. Currently the last story to have missing episodes.
7 The War Games Terrance Dicks
Malcolm Hulke
10 Final regular appearances of the Second Doctor, Jamie McCrimmon and Zoe Heriot. First identified appearances by the Time Lords, and first look at Gallifrey. Final episode to be filmed in black and white and the final story broadcast during the 1960s.

Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]

Season 6 was the first season since Season 1 in which the core cast remained unchanged for the entire series:

Recurring[[edit] | [edit source]]

Guest[[edit] | [edit source]]

Stories set before this season[[edit] | [edit source]]

The following stories are the known stories to be set between the Season 5 finale The Wheel in Space and Season 6 opener The Dominators.

to be completed

Stories set during this season[[edit] | [edit source]]

Adaptations and merchandising[[edit] | [edit source]]

Home media[[edit] | [edit source]]

VHS releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The Dominators (1990)
  • The Mind Robber (1990)
  • The Invasion (with narration of episodes 1 and 4) (1993)
  • The Krotons (1991)
  • The Seeds of Death (1985/1987) (Edited Movie Format)
  • The War Games (1990/2002) (on 2 tapes)
  • The Troughton Years (1991) (The Space Pirates episode 2)

Loose Cannon VHS releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The Invasion (2003) (Episodes 1 and 4 only)
  • The Space Pirates (1998/2007) (Episodes 1, 3-6 only)

DVD & Blu-ray releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

Serial name Number and duration
of episodes
R2 release date R4 release date R1 release date
The Dominators 5 × 25 min. 12 July 2010 2 September 2010 11 January 2011
The Mind Robber 5 × 20 min. 7 March 2005 5 May 2005 6 September 2005
The Invasion (with animated reconstructions of episodes 1 & 4) 8 × 25 min. 6 November 2006 3 January 2007 6 March 2007
The Krotons 4 × 25 min. 2 July 2012 2 August 2012 10 July 2012
The Seeds of Death 6 × 25 min. 17 February 2003 5 May 2003 2 March 2004
The Seeds of Death – Special Edition
Only available as part of the Revisitations 2 box set in Regions 2 and 4.
Only available individually in Region 1.
6 × 25 min. 28 March 2011 5 May 2011 12 June 2012
The War Games 10 × 25 min. 6 July 2009 3 September 2009 3 November 2009
Lost in Time: Patrick Troughton

The Space Pirates (episode 2 of 6)

(also includes surviving clips from The Space Pirates)

1 × 25 min.
1 November 2004 2 December 2004
(Original release)
1 July 2010
(Re-release)
2 November 2004

Download/streaming availability[[edit] | [edit source]]

Serial name Amazon Video BritBox Google Play iTunes
The Dominators
(5 episodes)
The Mind Robber
(5 episodes)
Except UK
The Invasion
(8 episodes
with animated reconstructions of episodes 1 & 4)
The Krotons
(4 episodes)
UK
The Seeds of Death
(6 episodes)
UK
The Space Pirates
The War Games
(10 episodes)

BritBox is available only in the US. iTunes stores carry Doctor Who serials in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the UK and US, unless stated otherwise.

Novels[[edit] | [edit source]]

Other information[[edit] | [edit source]]

Novels and other media contend that further adventures of the Second Doctor occurred during Season 6B prior to his regeneration into the Third Doctor as seen in Season 7 of the television series.

External links[[edit] | [edit source]]

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