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'''''The Two Doctors''''' was the fourth story of [[Season 22]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. It was the first appearance of the [[Sontaran]]s since [[Season 15|Season 15's]] ''[[The Invasion of Time]]''. The [[Second Doctor]] returned, played by [[Patrick Troughton]], | '''''The Two Doctors''''' was the fourth story of [[Season 22]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. It was the first appearance of the [[Sontaran]]s since [[Season 15|Season 15's]] ''[[The Invasion of Time]]''. The [[Second Doctor]] returned, played by [[Patrick Troughton]], as did [[Jamie McCrimmon]], played by [[Frazer Hines]], who had last appeared in the twentieth anniversary special ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]''. It was the first Sontaran story set on contemporary [[Earth]], [[Peter Moffatt]]'s last contribution to the show and [[Robert Holmes]]' first [[Sixth Doctor]] script. | ||
After the success of ''The Five Doctors'', [[John Nathan-Turner|Nathan-Turner]] was keen to do another multi-Doctor story. He quickly secured Troughton as the returning incarnation. It was suggested the story be set in [[New Orleans]], but Holmes found it to have little merit as a setting and the idea was quashed when funding was pulled. [[Venice]] was chosen by Nathan-Turner, but this was too expensive, leaving them with [[Seville]], a [[Spanish]] town. Holmes reluctantly agreed to a rewrite, disappointed he would have to cut his jokes about the differences between British and American English. As a [[vegetarian]], Holmes wrote ''The Two Doctors'' as an allegory of meat-eating, hunting and butchering. | After the success of ''The Five Doctors'', [[John Nathan-Turner|Nathan-Turner]] was keen to do another multi-Doctor story. He quickly secured Troughton as the returning incarnation. It was suggested the story be set in [[New Orleans]], but Holmes found it to have little merit as a setting and the idea was quashed when funding was pulled. [[Venice]] was chosen by Nathan-Turner, but this was too expensive, leaving them with [[Seville]], a [[Spanish]] town. Holmes reluctantly agreed to a rewrite, disappointed he would have to cut his jokes about the differences between British and American English. As a [[vegetarian]], Holmes wrote ''The Two Doctors'' as an allegory of meat-eating, hunting and butchering. |