Bureaucrats, content-moderator, emailconfirmed, Administrators (Semantic MediaWiki), Curators (Semantic MediaWiki), Administrators, threadmoderator
85,404
edits
m (Protected "Dalek annual": "Annual" is not part of the title. Indeed, there is no official title for the "series" so "annual" wouldn't be capped in standard English rules. ([move=sysop] (indefinite))) |
(→Overview: "Doctor Who annual" is only captalised when speaking of a specific year. In general, the concept of a "Doctor Who annual" does not involve a capital "A".) |
||
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 | 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. |
edits