1963: Fanfare for the Common Men (audio story)
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1963 (disambiguation)
for other, similarly-named pages.
1963: Fanfare for the Common Men was the one hundred and seventy-eighth story in Big Finish's monthly range. It was written by Eddie Robson and featured Peter Davison as the Fifth Doctor and Sarah Sutton as Nyssa.
The first story in the 1963 audio trilogy celebrating the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who, the story shone more light on the musical group John Smith and the Common Men, first mentioned in the very first episode of the series, giving them an "origin story".
It was added for free to the podcast Into the TARDIS as part of Big Finish's 25th anniversary of creating Doctor Who audio stories. It was released in four parts on 11, 18, 25 May and 1 June 2024 and hosted by Sixth Doctor actor Colin Baker.
Publisher's summary[[edit] | [edit source]]
If you remember the Sixties, they say, then you can't have been there.
The Doctor remembers the Sixties. That's why he's taking Nyssa on a trip back to November 1963. Back to where it all began. Back to the birth of the biggest band in the history of British music. Back to see those cheeky lads from Liverpool...
Mark, James and Korky. The Common Men. The boys who made the Sixties swing with songs like "Oh, Won't You Please Love Me?", "Just Count To Three" and "Who Is That Man".
The Doctor remembers the Sixties. And there's something very wrong with the Sixties, if the Beatles no longer exist...
Full audio of part one[[edit] | [edit source]]
Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]
Part one[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Fifth Doctor takes Nyssa to 31 October 1963, just in time to watch the Beatles exiting a plane. Much to his surprise, however, it's not the Beatles who emerge — but the Common Men, returning from a tour in Sweden.
A bigger problem ensues, though. As Nyssa pins down a man with an impulse laser in the crowd, she and the gunman seemingly fade away, courtesy of a matter dematerialisation device. The Doctor deduces that this has to do with the change in history — the seeming erasure of the Beatles — and agrees to go out for a drink with his new friend Rita and the Common Men: Mark, James and Korky.
Meanwhile, Nyssa appears in Hamburg in 1960, and meets the same group before their success. They think they're at the peak of their career, which will last for a maximum of one year — "then they'll find a new group, with longer hair or tighter trousers."
Back in 1963, the Common Men reveal to the Doctor that much of their success came from other groups having to complete national service. They quickly drop the subject, though, when they find out that Rita's brother Greg died in training. But national service ended in 1960, right? Someone's been meddling in time.
He decides to take Rita to 1957, when mandatory service began to wind down. But the 1950s are time-locked; someone has changed history, and is now preventing the Doctor or anyone else from changing it back.
Back in 1960, Nyssa watches the Common Men perform "Who Is That Man" with a fan named Sadie.
Going back to 1963, the Doctor and Rita research the Beatles in this new timeline. John's in his own group called the Famous Five with two Petes and a Chaz. Paul is a clarke at a shipping office. Both Paul and George did their services. George is back already, but apprenticed to his father. Ringo wasn't enlisted because of health problems. George, Paul and Ringo all knew the Common Men from the pubs in Hamburg.
The Beatles simply don't exist. The question is, can the Common Men keep it up like the Beatles did? "I suppose we'll see on Monday how good they are."
The Common Men perform "Just Count To Three" for Nyssa, who claims to have liked it, despite being used to more classical-type music on Traken.
Meanwhile in 1963, they perform "Oh, Won't You Please Love Me?" at the Royal Variety; the entire audience is entranced into loving them. Even the Queen Mother starts dancing the twist! When the Doctor comments on their similarities to the Beatles, Rita suddenly becomes even more obsessed and gets angry at him for spoiling the moment; she feels like she could kill for them.
The Doctor is forced to drag Rita out of the theatre and hypnotise her into focusing. So what is giving the crowd an artificial obsession for the group? The two find a machine making a similar sound to the gunman's, and the Doctor uses it to trace exactly when he took Nyssa.
Before they can get to the TARDIS, though, the crowd grows restless. With Rita having accused the Doctor of calling the Common Men "rubbish" earlier, a riot ensues around them. "Kill him! Kill him! Kill him!"
Part two[[edit] | [edit source]]
Rita comes up with an idea: she throws her backstage pass down some steps, and the entire crowd fights over it, forgetting them.
Back in 1930, Nyssa admits to the Common Men that she came to Hamburg unprepared and doesn't even have any money. Korky offers his bed; he's prepared to sleep on the floor.
The Common Men already have over a million fans in England alone. Soon, they'll be known all over the world. Will all their fans be made to act like the ones which the Doctor and Rita have just encountered? Fearing for her safety, the Doctor leaves Rita behind in 1963 and asks her to research their background before leaving in the TARDIS, promising to catch up with her later.
The Doctor arrives in 1967 Wales. While squeezing past a crowd of fans, he encounters Lenny Kruger, a man with an American accent who reveals his ambitions to become the Common Men's new manager. The Doctor then sees James and warns him that he may be in danger; James recognises the Doctor and allows him through. Soon afterwards, Sadie appears and tells Lenny that the Doctor was the man from the Royal Variety.
The Common Men are getting a private seminar with a guru named Paravatar, who reportedly can change your perspective on life. Suspicious, the Doctor joins the seminar, and demands a private talk with the man. He can see that Paravatar is clearly a time sensitive — Time Lords can sense that with ease — and Paravatar gives in, revealing to the Doctor that he's a retired time traveller who too noticed the problem in time. However, he did not cause it and has not time-travelled in years.
They participate in a meditation session; Paravatar puts the Common Men under hypnosis. None of them have deliberately interfered with Earth's history, nor do they know who did.
Nyssa, meanwhile, performs a blood test on Korky and finds out he's an alien. Paravatar confirms that they all are. Mark Carville's real name is Myamus and he's from the Court of Caldee; his mother was the Queen there, while his father was a simple miner. James' real name is Jecomen and he hails from the Convents of Health; his parents own the place and he will eventually inherit it. And finally, Korky's real name is Kappaban, and he's from the Wheel of Contact; his father's one of the ambassadors there. They all come from the planet Byulna... and they don't even know it.
Korky wonders why Nyssa came halfway across the galaxy just to see the Beatles, and she fills him in on all the details. Suddenly, the man with the impulse laser appears. He's found them.
In 1967, the crowd gets in, and the Doctor and Paravatar are forced to end their hypnotism session early. Lenny Kruger then approaches them as a friend, and gets the mob to leave, promising them autographs as the Common Men leave the building. As the Doctor outside assures Paravatar he was helpful, the Common Men strike a deal with their new manager Lenny.
Back with Nyssa, the American man from the airport catches up to her and Korky, and threatens to kill them...
Part three[[edit] | [edit source]]
To escape, Korky pretends that Mark and James have arrived, and kicks the man's gun out of his grasp. They run to "the docks". While Korky suggests moving to a busier place, Nyssa refuses — she doesn't want innocent people getting hurt.
Sometime later in history, three years after the Common Men's breakup, Rita interviews Mark at his house in New York; they've been talking for six days. They've already used up all twenty tapes she's brought! He tells her that he now actively ignores the Doctor's attempts to contact him ever since the incident with Paravatar. As he talks about the Doctor, the information changes; time is being rewritten. While out to get more tapes, Rita bumps into the Doctor. The Doctor inquires about the Common Men's manager, Lenny Kruger, and tells Rita that he's clearly trying to use them for his own purposes.
Meanwhile, Nyssa and Korky manage to get hold of the American's gun, and the tables turn. They demand to know everything, before Sadie points a gun at Korky and demands that the American be released. A hostage situation is formed.
Rita returns to Mark's house with milk and eggs... and the Doctor. Despite protests at first, the two talk. Mark decides that Rita must make their interview into a book, to let the public know how things really were. Maybe then the crowds will leave him alone.
A few years earlier in November 1970, Lenny brings the Common Men to New York City. He plans for them to do three shows in London, New York and Los Angeles.
At Mark's place, the Doctor is shown images from a gig in Hamburg; he recognises Nyssa in one of the photos. Apparently, the girl disappeared a few nights after she arrived, never to be mentioned again by Korky. What happened to her?
Back in Hamburg, Sadie ties Nyssa and Korky up. The man is revealed to be from the same planet as Korky and the others — Byulna. After revealing his plans to insert them into Earth's history, he and Sadie wipe Korky's memory so that he can't remember the man or his alien status.
While he discusses old photos with the Doctor, Mark Carville suddenly transforms into his true form. In a different voice, he orders the Doctor to give him the photographs, and throws him to the other end of the room. He's drawing energy from the photos and remembers the truth about himself. But where is the energy coming from? Everyone across the globe is thinking about them, looking at pictures of him, reading about him. The attention, the popularity, gives him unimaginable power.
James and Lenny then barge into the house, and discover the transformed Mark. Lenny has planned this all along, but hoped that all three would transform at the same time. As the Doctor notes, though, Lenny didn't put himself in the spotlight, preferring to remain behind the scenes. He's using the Common Men to acquire power, yet at the same time he's afraid of that power. Mark complains about James' controlling nature, and then kills him in anger. When his life is threatened too, Lenny flees, leaving Mark alone with the Doctor. Mark wants to burn everything that refuses to be his... "And I'm gonna start with you."
Part four[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Doctor escapes death by lighting a match after purposely leaving the gas on a couple of minutes earlier. The photographs are set on fire; Mark loses his main source of power, and the Doctor flees.
Meanwhile, Sadie and Lenny discuss how they're going to kill Nyssa. It has to look like an accident, so that people don't suspect Korky of being the murderer. As Lenny's about to do the deed — by making her "accidentally" slip, fall down stairs and break her neck — his time machine suddenly appears, piloted by an older Lenny.
The TARDIS materialises, and the Doctor returns to retrieve Nyssa. The two discuss the situation, and swap notes. The Doctor thinks that there must be a risk involved in what Lenny is making the Common Men go through; otherwise, he'd do it himself. They find a lovely doughnut shop named the Pfannkuchen and enter.
The older Lenny discusses events with the younger Lenny and Sadie. As he explains, Mark "ascended" and killed James, so they need to further manipulate time and change history so that all three members of the band ascend together, before they can split up. They insert instructions into Korky's head on what to do if the others threaten to split up, hoping he can stop it from happening. The older Lenny then travels to 1970 to see how his plan worked out.
At the Pfannkuchen, they meet Mark and James, and try to explain to them that they're not human. Suddenly, a space-time ship appears overhead. Lenny phones the restaurant, and informs him that the ship has come from a future where he won, and became the most powerful man in all of Mutter's Spiral. He urges them to leave, leading the Doctor to realise that Lenny doesn't want them to discover something. "Does anyone know when this club was built?"
Lenny orders a commander to draw the TARDIS team out. The Doctor orders everyone except the Common Men in the club to leave the premises, to protect them from whatever comes next. He then discovers something very interesting indeed... The Pfannkuchen is only a disguise. In reality, it's a spaceship — the spaceship that originally brought the Common Men to Earth. They flee in the ship, and go to Liverpool. Just as the Doctor begins to figure out how to use its time travel capabilities, though, they get caught in a tractor beam and Lenny appears. He threatens to wipe their memories of everything they've learned; he has the power of controlling them by subliminal suggestion. He leaves, taking Mark and James with him. But with the two Common Men gone, Lenny's army has no reason not to destroy them...
The Doctor and Nyssa manage to escape and arrive in June 1966. They go to one of the Common Men's gigs. They've just gotten back together, but Lenny tells Sadie that they'll be taken soon. He's shocked to see the Doctor greet him. The Doctor's plan then goes into action. The police arrive and try to arrest Lenny for the murder of James O'Meara, when he pulls his gun. He orders his men to slaughter everyone on the premises, but the Doctor tells him that they're now in a different track of history, where he didn't gain an army. He achieved this by getting Korky to remove the batteries.
Lenny kills the police officer, and escapes, shooting everyone in his way. Rita has spread a false story about Lenny killing James back in May 1966. A body was supposedly found, and identified as James. As a newsreader announces to the public, Lenny subsequently replaced him with a look-alike. The newsreader interviewed the other Common Men, who admitted that they knew of the swap, but were told that the real James had simply undergone a mental breakdown. All of this, of course, is a lie created by the Doctor to weaken Lenny. The corpse was actually a lifeless dummy produced by him using the genetic modifier onboard the Pfannkuchen. As bad press about him spreads across the US, and soon the world, Lenny will be dead within a day.
The Doctor gives him an offer. If Lenny gives him the key to the time lock on 1957, the Doctor will go back and undo what he did. None of his hard work will have happened — he won't even remember it — but he'll live. Lenny reluctantly agrees and the Earth is restored to its proper timeline.
The Doctor and Nyssa attend one of the Common Men's gigs. The musicians briefly think they recognise the two time travellers, but dismiss it. The group isn't doing too well without Lenny's influence, and are "interested in anything that pays". The Doctor suggests that they become a backing group for "Chris Waites", real name Aubrey, from Chris Waites and the Carrollers. And thus is born John Smith and the Common Men...
Reflecting back, the Doctor recalls that his granddaughter Susan used to play one of John Smith and the Common Men's records in the TARDIS — he didn't like it, "but I was so much older then". As he explains to Nyssa, this was how things always were, now that they have set history on its path; Lenny always brought the group to Earth, and was always caught by his own people and taken back home. Mark, James and Korky weren't returned to their home planet Byulna as well, because no one knew they were there. John Smith and the Common Men have reached #34 in the charts. In three weeks' time, they'll peak at #2, only ranked under the Beatles themselves. Rita appears next to them in the crowd; in the corrected timeline, she dismisses the Common Men as "a bit naff", and is now obsessed with the Beatles instead... And here they come on stage!
Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Doctor - Peter Davison
- Nyssa - Sarah Sutton
- Mark Carville - Mitch Benn
- James O'Meara - Andrew Knott
- Korky Goldsmith / Compere / Pedestrian - David Dobson
- Lenny Kruger / Shop Assistant - Ryan Sampson
- Rita / Sadie / Control Officer - Alison Thea-Skot
- Paravatar / Waiter / Barman / Policeman - Jonty Stephens
- Commander / Newsreader - Barnaby Edwards
Crew[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Cover Art - Anthony Lamb
- Director - Barnaby Edwards
- Executive Producers - Nicholas Briggs and Jason Haigh-Ellery
- Music and Sound Design - Howard Carter
- Producer - David Richardson
- Script Editor - Alan Barnes
- Writer - Eddie Robson
Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Doctor notes that his hypnosis skills were far better in previous regenerations.
The TARDIS[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The TARDIS's translation circuits do not function when out of range.
Planets and species[[edit] | [edit source]]
- All three Common Men — Mark, James and Korky — as well as Lenny come from the planet Byulna, and belong to a race known as Byulnians.
Technology[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The gunman and Nyssa travel in time by matter dematerialisation circuit.
Languages[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Nyssa, stuck in Hamburg without the TARDIS translating for her, begins to grow fond of the German language.
Cultural references to the real world[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Korky compares his name to Korky the Cat.
- As the Doctor exclaims in shock, the Queen Mother dances the twist to "Oh, Won't You Please Love Me?"
- Korky exclaims that Superman, also the last of his kind, would get along "like a house on fire" with Nyssa.
Music from the real world[[edit] | [edit source]]
- One of the Beatles' songs is "A Day in the Life".
- When Nyssa responds, "the who?" after being told of the Common Men, the Doctor says, "No, they don't get together until next year".
- Korky suggests that Little Richard, Chuck Berry and Elvis Presley are better musicians to go halfway across the galaxy to see than the Beatles.
Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- This story was recorded on 18 and 19 March 2013 at the Moat Studios.
- For this release, the CDs were specially designed to look like vinyl records.
- Paul Spragg and his then-girlfriend appear on the cover of this story as two of the fans of the Common Men. Spragg's girlfriend is the fan just above Nyssa's right arm, while Spragg himself is located just behind the 50-years logo in the bottom left.[1]
- The Doctor promises to "explain later" who Elvis Presley is, but doesn't. This was a common trope in the classic series. (TV: Day of the Daleks, The Time Monster, Time-Flight, The Mark of the Rani and Timelash) This was parodied multiple times, most notably in The Curse of Fatal Death, and to a lesser degree in The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith.
- This was one of four Big Finish stories to air on BBC Radio 4 Extra to celebrate its 50th anniversary in November 2013. The other stories were Lucie Miller/To the Death, Protect and Survive and Farewell, Great Macedon. The story was transmitted over the 18th and 19th November.
- Subscribers whose subscriptions included this story also received the audio short story Methuselah.
- A vinyl version, retitled slightly to Fanfare for the Common Men, was released at selective Asda stores on 25 September 2020.
Gallery[[edit] | [edit source]]
Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Doctor mentions his recent experience with aeroplanes. (TV: Time-Flight)
- The late 1950s have been time-locked. (TV: The Stolen Earth, The End of Time)
- The Doctor mentions the Ferutu. (PROSE: Cold Fusion)
- Kruger thinks Nyssa is an Adjudicator. (PROSE: Original Sin)
- Nyssa recounts the destruction of her homeworld Traken by an entropy field in 1981. (TV: Logopolis)
- The Doctor mentions that Susan Foreman had an album by John Smith and the Common Men aboard the TARDIS. He says that he did not like it much, "but [he] was older then." (TV: An Unearthly Child)
- The gunman is carrying an impulse laser. (TV: Arc of Infinity)
External links[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Official 1963: Fanfare for the Common Men page at bigfinish.com