Dalek annual: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
22 bytes added ,  31 October 2011
m
Robot: Automated text replacement (-Doctor Who annual +''Doctor Who'' annual)
m (Robot: Automated text replacement (-Doctor Who Annual +Doctor Who annual))
m (Robot: Automated text replacement (-Doctor Who annual +''Doctor Who'' annual))
Line 3: Line 3:


==Overview==
==Overview==
The [[Dalek]] annuals were released in two groups. Three came out during the earliest stirrings of [[Dalekmania]] in the [[1960s]], and the remaining four came out in the late [[1970s]]. [[The Dalek Book|The first so-called "Dalek annual"]] actually preceded the first ''[[Doctor Who annual]]'', and was one of the very first pieces of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' merchandise. The 1960s books — published by [[Souvenir Press]] —all had different names, while the 1970s [[World Distributors]] "sequels" were all printed under the name, ''Terry Nation's Dalek Annual''.
The [[Dalek]] annuals were released in two groups. Three came out during the earliest stirrings of [[Dalekmania]] in the [[1960s]], and the remaining four came out in the late [[1970s]]. [[The Dalek Book|The first so-called "Dalek annual"]] actually preceded the first ''[[Doctor Who annual|''Doctor Who'' annual]]'', and was one of the very first pieces of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' merchandise. The 1960s books — published by [[Souvenir Press]] —all had different names, while the 1970s [[World Distributors]] "sequels" were all printed under the name, ''Terry Nation's Dalek Annual''.


Only ''The Dalek Book'' had a direct tie to ''Doctor Who'', in that it featured a photo-montage of ''[[The Daleks]]'', and therefore showed images of [[Susan Foreman|Susan]] and other characters from the original Dalek [[serial]]. All the remaining books were efforts to build the mythology of the Daleks indepently of the parent programme. In the two later 1960s annuals, there was an effort create a "team" of people who could fight the Daleks. ''[[The Dalek Outer Space Book]]'', in fact, used [[Sara Kingdom]] and the [[Space Security Service]] from ''[[The Daleks' Master Plan]]''. Some elements from these initial books would later feature in ''[[The Destroyers (unproduced spin-off)|The Destroyers]]'', Nation's unproduced effort to launch an [[American]] television series based on the Daleks. One element introduced in the 1960s annuals — the notion of an [[android]] named "Seven" opposed to the Daleks — would see future use in ''The Destroyers'' and all of the 1970s annuals. Each use of the character, eventually known as "Mark Seven" was somewhat different, however.
Only ''The Dalek Book'' had a direct tie to ''Doctor Who'', in that it featured a photo-montage of ''[[The Daleks]]'', and therefore showed images of [[Susan Foreman|Susan]] and other characters from the original Dalek [[serial]]. All the remaining books were efforts to build the mythology of the Daleks indepently of the parent programme. In the two later 1960s annuals, there was an effort create a "team" of people who could fight the Daleks. ''[[The Dalek Outer Space Book]]'', in fact, used [[Sara Kingdom]] and the [[Space Security Service]] from ''[[The Daleks' Master Plan]]''. Some elements from these initial books would later feature in ''[[The Destroyers (unproduced spin-off)|The Destroyers]]'', Nation's unproduced effort to launch an [[American]] television series based on the Daleks. One element introduced in the 1960s annuals — the notion of an [[android]] named "Seven" opposed to the Daleks — would see future use in ''The Destroyers'' and all of the 1970s annuals. Each use of the character, eventually known as "Mark Seven" was somewhat different, however.
Bots, Bureaucrats, emailconfirmed, Administrators
765,429

edits

Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.