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A River Runs Through it

River Song will meet some other incarnations of the Doctor in a new Doctor Who spin off

Big Finish have announced the second audio series of The Diary Of River Song, set for release next year.

River Song met the Doctor in the middle of his pretty boy phase, but now here’s the real test: will she still love the Time Lord when he’s wearing THIS?

Big Finish have revealed that series two of their Diary of River Song audio adventures will feature Colin Baker and Sylvester McCoy bouncing off Alex Kingston’s cosmic archaeologist.

(Picture: Big Finish)
Alex Kingston with Sylvester McCoy and Colin Baker (Picture: Big Finish)

Producer David Richardson said: ‘We’re thrilled to have both Colin Baker and Sylvester McCoy appearing alongside Alex in this box set. I can promise that River and the Doctor might not necessarily be working to the same agenda. In fact, the two Doctors might not be working to the same agenda either…’

Yup, the faces may change, but that sounds like River and the Doctor all right.

The four hour-long episodes are called The Unknown, Five Twenty Nine, World Enough and Time and Eye Of The Storm.

(Picture: BBC)
River will be meeting the sixth and seventh Doctors (Picture: BBC)

Guest starts include Anna Maxwell Martin, Jessie Buckly, Robert Pugh and Dan Starkey.

Alex is also back as River Song for Doctor Who: Doom Coalition 2 on March 3, alongside another former Doctor, Paul, McGann.

Mirror, Mirror

Doctor_Who_s_Jenna_Coleman_reveals_that_she_almost_regenerated_into_River_Song

Somewhere out there, in the far, distant multiverse, is an alternative timeline where Jenna Coleman didn’t make her Doctor Who debut as companion Clara Oswald, but as Melody Pond in the 2011 episode Let’s Kill Hitler. That’s right – Jenna Coleman was nearly an incarnation of River Song.

The actress dropped the revelation at Canada’s FanExpo convention, where she was appearing on a special panel alongside former companion Karen Gillan – AKA, Amy Pond. Following a fan question regarding Melody (what life would have been like for her if she wasn’t abducted at Demon’s Run), Coleman sprung to life, her memory obviously jolted:

“I’ve got good gossip! Did you know… that I auditioned for Mels? That’s one part I didn’t get and my grandmother was so upset…”

“Thank god you didn’t get that!” replies Gillan, “because then you would have…” She trails off, interrupted, but it’s probably not a stretch to assume that she going to say something about her then not being able to land the bigger role of Clara Oswald. Not that a past appearance in Doctor Who hurt Gillan’s chances, of course. Or Peter Capaldi’s.

Soothsayer

Adeola Oshodi, a Torchwood Institute employee.
Or even
Maxil of The Chancellory Guard on Gallifrey
And certainly not…
A 2nd Doctor!

Mels went on to be played by Nina Toussaint-White. It was a brief role: a younger incarnation of River Song who had become childhood friends with the Ponds, her parents. Timey-wimey, and so on. Early on in Let’s Kill Hitler, after forcing the Doctor to travel back to 1938 Berlin, she regenerates into the real deal. 

Coleman goes on to say that she never had much faith in ever landing the role – mainly because of her and Gillan’s imbalance of height. 

“I never thought they would have cast us as childhood best mates because the height difference was too much,” she laughs. “I thought, ‘I’m never going to get that part.'”

Funny how things work out, eh? 

And if Coleman had played Mels, then been cast as Clara Oswald would that have added another layer of mystery to “The Impossible Girl” where the Doctor is trying to figure out why she looks exactly like his Wife’s school years incarnation but doesn’t seem to be her?

Or would it have been another way to bring River Song back into WHO, just not Alex Kingston?

Oh, the Time-Wimey of it…

Re-Evaluation

From Kasterboros:

As has been widely reported, there is an interview in the latest edition of Doctor Who Magazine with Colin Baker, in which he calls for a re-evaluation of his tenure as the Doctor, in light of comparisons with Peter Capaldi’s portrayal. You know what? He’s absolutely right. Like the Twelfth Doctor’s inaugural innings, Baker’s debut season was dark, divisive and often controversial. Like the recent Series 8, it has its gems and is well worth another look.

I wanna do this myself, just haven’t had the time. see also: http://www.kasterborous.com/2015/07/colin-baker-discusses-regeneration-in-doctor-who-magazine-489/

Season 22 represents a sea change for Who in the Eighties. Back in its traditional Saturday night slot after four years and pitted against action-filled US imports like The A-Team and Knight Rider, it is very much a product of its environment. The experiment a season before with double-length episodes to work round the BBC’s coverage of the Olympics, and the popularity of harder-edged stories like The Caves of Androzani paved the way for a run of stories different in format and tone to the more concept-driven tales of the Davison era.

Two words that always spring to mind when considering this season are ‘macabre’ and ‘unsettling’. It’s not horror in a Hinchcliffe era way, doffing its hat to the output of Hammer or Amicus, the violence and action are far more earthy, akin to not only the shows that Who was up against in the schedules, but also the market for ‘video nasties’ that had emerged during the home video boom of the time. Whereas there was a literary tradition to fall back on when fighting criticism of people being chased and dispatched by mummies or menaced by monsters made of body parts, Season 22 has no cultural leanings to hide behind when hands are being bloodily crushed or shot off, people are biting throats out of rats and hapless guards are falling into acid baths. Not bad going for teatime on a Saturday.

 

Attack of the Cybermen

What’s particularly unsettling is the role the Doctor plays in all this. Jon Pertwee is the acknowledged ‘action Doctor’, but it’s handbags stuff compared to the Sixth Doctor’s contretemps. By the end of Attack of the Cybermen Part One alone, he’s beaten up Lytton’s policemen, threatened to shoot Russell and stabbed a Cyberman in the chest. By the end of the season, he will have gassed Shockeye (The Two Doctors), survived being graphically throttled by a mutant (Revelation of the Daleks) and is debatably culpable for the second of the acid bath deaths mentioned earlier.

When Peri sums up what she and the Doctor do in the TARDIS with: ‘argue, mostly’, she could equally be describing the relationship between the current incumbent and Clara.

An extreme set of stories need an equally extreme Doctor to be able to tell them. Certain sets of circumstances have seen many Doctors resort to violence to defeat their enemies, but none have had the ready recourse to it as the Sixth Doctor. This moral ambivalence is where the closest comparison to the latest incarnation comes in. The Doctor that readily sacrifices those around him in Inside the Dalek or Mummy on the Orient Express has his beginnings in one that thinks nothing of putting his companion in an unstable time machine to prove a point. When Peri sums up what she and the Doctor do in the TARDIS with: ‘argue, mostly’, she could equally be describing the relationship between the current incumbent and Clara.

Everything about Season 22 is extreme. Almost self-referentially in this gory season, the show tackles video nasties in Vengeance on Varos, a story oddly prescient in its portrayal of audience interaction and media saturation. Eric Saward cites Evelyn Waugh’s The Loved One as an influence on Revelation; not your average Who source material, but Waugh’s dark world view is perfectly at home in this tale of commercial cannibalism set amongst the sort of grotesques that push the world toward war in Vile Bodies or exploit it in Scoop. The great Robert Holmes, too, has a field day once the gloves are off. The Two Doctors is a dark romp, full of gallows humour, unsympathetic characters and some very messy set pieces. From a visual perspective, in an era of outré pop acts making equally outré videos for the nascent MTV, neither Sil’s sparsely clad attendants nor the Rani’s heavies would have looked out of place in a Frankie Goes To Hollywood promo.

dw-sn22-revelationdaleks

Either by accident or design, the Sixth Doctor was not easy to warm to. For clarity’s sake, this is no slight on Colin Baker himself. He worked well with the material he was given (in both senses) and was a composite professional in doing so. Like the latest Doctor, Baker’s portrayal was very different to his recent predecessors, and as things went on, we, like Peri, got to see a different side to him. He is, in the space of thirteen episodes, a volatile action man (Attack), a flamboyant hero (The Mark of the Rani), a sleuth (The Two Doctors) and a protector and righter of wrongs (Revelation). As Capaldi’s Doctor starts to ‘get’ us, we started to ‘get’ the Sixth Doctor. And then he was gone.

Well, sort of. Eighteen months later, the Doctor and Peri were back, but things had changed. The show and its makers had been hauled over the coals for the content of the previous season. The Season 23 Doctor was a changed character, still bombastic but somehow muted at the same time. Off-screen, the lead actor was unfairly held responsible for the failure of the experiment and relations between JN-T and script editor Eric Saward broke down irretrievably, leading the latter to walk out during the making of the season. When the Doctor and Mel headed into space at the end, this previously explosive period of the show fizzled out in a cascade of carrot juice.

So, will it be a case of plus ça change for the Twelfth Doctor when he comes back in September? Apparently Steven Moffat has requested that writers ‘write him (the Doctor) funny’– is this an attempt to lose some of the abrasive edge? Let’s hope not. We’ve just had two energetic, funny Doctors – the more acerbic, distant portrayal is a breath of fresh air and the less predictable, less humane approach to problem solving is an interesting counterpoint, just as it was thirty years ago. If it helps newer fans discover an oft-maligned period of classic Who, so much the better.

Old Sixie

Colin Baker is featured in this month’s Doctor Who Magazine.

I have always thought that The Sixth Doctor got a raw deal from “the fans” back in the 1980s.

This was era of the grumpy fans who thought they knew better than anyone so they were always trying to get Producer John Nathan-Turner (in particular) sacked.

They spewed venom on the show they “loved”. Find a copy of Doctor Who Bulletin/DWB sometime…They were, to me, like many film critics, if they hated it I probably wouldn’t.

Then Colin does Big Finish nearly 15 years later and wins the Fan polls for Best Doctor 2 years running.

But the stigma and the myth, remains.

I have a friend who refuses to watch Colin Baker’s Doctor because he “hates” him.

And that is carried forward into the new era.

In the last Doctor Who Magazine the person in charge of the DVD range said that many 6th & 7th Doctor stories had massive amounts of behind the scenes and other material available for special features but because they sold less copies and were perceived to do so they didn’t spend the extra money they would on, say a Tom Baker DVD.

That’s a business decision but it is very sad none the less.

Sixth Doctor Colin Baker has opened up about the fact that his Time Lord often ends up being the lowest-rated Doctor on Doctor Who. The man who returned to the Whoniverse in the 2013 comedy spoof the Five(ish) Doctors Reboot says that it actually wounds him to see his Doctor being rated so low.

Baker took over the mantle of Fifth Doctor Peter Davison back in March of 1984 and ended his TARDIS run on December 6, 1986; playing the Mad Man in the TARDIS for three series before regenerating into Sylvester McCoy’s Seventh Doctor.

Speaking in the newest issue of Doctor Who Magazine (#489), Colin Baker said: “I know there are some people who rate my Doctor quite highly. It’s just there’s an even greater number of people who don’t rate him at all. And it wounds me. I should be able to rise above it, and pretend I don’t care, but I actually do care.”

He also talked about his feelings concerning Twelfth Doctor Peter Capaldi exploring some familiar ground with the role of the beloved Time Lord. “I wish people could have understood it in the 1980s as much as they do now.”

“[Capaldi’s Doctor] is grumpy and curmudgeonly and intolerant, and gosh – I should be playing it now. I wasn’t old enough when I did it. I can do intolerant!”

Colin Baker added: “It was drawn to my attention before I noticed it myself, but a lot of people said, ‘Peter Capaldi is just like your Doctor’. I don’t mean to diminish his performance, because I think he’s superb, and he might be appalled to think he was anything like me, and I would quite respect that. But there are certainly similarities of attitude.”

The man who played the very colorful sixth incarnation of the Doctor also offered his opinion on Peter Capaldi’s more subdued outfit. “[Capaldi’s] costume is less annoying! I love his style, and I love his character – and it’s kind of like mine. Every six, they get it right!”

What do you guys think? Where would you rate Six on the scale of Doctors on Doctor Who? 

Sixxy

As usual, the first trailer for Series 9 is meaningless marketing tease.

Some friends of mine were over last night and we watched “Revelation of The Daleks”.

I haven’t seen this one quite a few years.

My impression of it has not changed. It’s Script Editor/Writer Eric Saward’s attempt to mash together Stanley Kubrick and Robert Holmes.

Recap: The Doctor and Peri arrive on Necros to attend the funeral of an old friend of the Doctor who has recently died. However, Tranquil Repose is not all it seems and an attempt is made on the Doctor’s life. Soon the Doctor comes face to face with the Great Healer, only to discover it is none other than Davros, the creator of the Daleks, intent on rebuilding the Dalek race decimated by the Movellans.

And he’s not entirely successful. He has the Holmesian style characters but they still lack a spark. And Davros using people rejected for being Daleks as a protein source for the starving masses is very Soylent Green.

It’s not a bad episode (despite what one of my friends said), it’s just there yet. This was a problem with many of Colin’s scripts which is why if you want a real picture of “sixxy” as Colin calls him you need to go the Big Finish Audios where the Sixth Doctor has thrived under different management.

“The Unholy Terror” with The Sixth Doctor and Frobisher (shape changing penquin from Docgtor Who Magazine’s comic strip) is a beautiful thing.

Wanna see Sixxy and Holmes, watch “The Two Doctors” or “The Mysterious Planet” (Trial of a Time Lord 1-4).

I encourage people to revisit old episodes. They may or may not be the same as you remember it.

A Colin Carol

Colin Baker has just completed filming on a new production of A Christmas Carol and Doctor Who News is pleased to reveal an exclusive picture of Baker in the production.

The film, based on the novel by Charles Dickens, is being made Canadian Actor & Filmmaker Anthony D.P. Mann, whose previous productions include Terror of Dracula and Sherlock Holmes and the Shadow Watchers. Baker is narrating the production and will also appear as Dickens throughout the film.

The main photography on the film took place in February to April with Baker recording his contribution, in Niagara, earlier this month.

The film is expected to be released around Christmas 2015, and will initially be available on the production website.

Doctor Who Fests

Join us at the official Doctor Who Festival on 13, 14 and 15 November 2015. Tickets on sale from 5 June 2015, 10am BST!

(which means NOW!)

I know I can’t go because I spend my wad on The Symphonic Spectacular.

But closer to home…

http://www.tardisconventions.com/#!phoenixguests/ce4q

Phoenix, AZ

July 10, 11, 12

Sylvester, Colin, Nicola, Ian McNeice and Terry Molloy.

That’s more doable. 🙂

Home

I am now home. Tomorrow it’s back to the grind of reality.

What a time I had though.

I went to The Doctor Who Experience in Cardiff last Wednesday and saw the new Capaldi version of the “Experience” and the re-modeled Archive Display.

Still one of the best things to do ever, as a Doctor Who Fan.

Then the Symphony at Wembley Arena was in all words, Spectacular.

It was a very emotional night and a beautiful thing to see and hear.

Peter Davison had some more fun with himself and he good-naturedly pick on Colin Baker (his successor as the Sixth Doctor).

I was kind of underwhelmed by the monsters running in the audience but have a feeling that has more to do with the limitation of the venue but at one point being 12 feet from Dalek that looks right at you, that was a thrill. A Cybermen can even closer, as did a Dream Crab headed individual.

Both the Experience and the Symphony were Capaldi-centric but they hit a lot of heights.

If you get the chance, go for it. You won’t be sorry.

More to come as I get more sleep and process my hoard. 🙂

Reusable

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused ActorExpand

With the announcement of the Twelfth Doctor yesterday, there seemed to be a bit of confusion. “Well, it can’t be him”, people cried, “he’s been in it before!”. Turns out that this sort of thing is actually a pretty common trope in the world of Doctor Who. Let’s take a trip back in Time and… reused faces!

Nick Courtney

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

Long before he made his first appearance as Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart in 1970’s Spearhead from Space (in fact, the character had actually been introduced as a Colonel in the Troughton serial The Web of Fear 2 years earlier), the dearly missed Nicholas Courtney played the no-nonsense Space Security Agent Bret Vyon in the 12-episode epic The Daleks’ Master Plan, broadcast in 1965. Battling the Daleks alongside The Doctor and his companions, Bret would eventually meet his end at the hands of his sister, Sara, convinced by the villainous Mavic Chen that he was a traitor. Those two names might just pop up in this list later…

Jacqueline Hill

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

Jacqueline Hill, of course, is best known as one of Doctor Who’s original companions, Barbara Wright – who travelled with the first Doctor from An Unearthly Child (1963) to The Chase (1965) alongside fellow Coal Hill school teacher Ian Chesterton – but fans would have to wait 15 years to see her again in Doctor Who, this time as Lexa, the religious leader of the Deons in Meglos, marking the first (but not last) time a companion would reappear in the show as another character.

Mark Gatiss

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

Not just content with writing for Doctor Who, Mark Gatiss also wanted to play a part in it – which he went on to do twice! First, as the tragic genetic scientist Professor Lazarus in 2007’s The Lazarus Experiment, where he appeared both in and out of makeup in order to show Lazarus’ sudden de-ageing, but also in a cameo role as the space chess player Gantok in the Series 6 finalé The Wedding of River Song – for which he was credited as ‘Rondo Haxton’.

Gatiss also appeared uncredited as ‘Danny Boy’, one of the Spitfire Fighter pilots who battled the Dalek saucer in his Series 5 story Victory of the Daleks – making him the first Doctor Who actor to star in an episode they also wrote.

Adjoa Andoh

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

Continuing the trend of actors making appearances under heavy makeup and then without, Adjoa Andoh first came to Doctor Who as the wonderfully droll Cat-Nurse Sister Jatt, in 2006’s New Earth – but a year later, she would reappear (thankfully less feline) as Martha’s mum Francine, de facto head of the dysfunctional Jones family, popping up then and again across Series 3. She made a brief return as Francine in 2008’s guest-star-crazy series 4 finalé The Stolen Earth/Journey’s End.

Julian Glover

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

Best known amongst sci-fi fans as the sinister, AT-AT piloting General Veers in The Empire Strikes Back, Julian Glover is no stranger to Doctor Who either. 15 years before his movie moment on Hoth, Glover appeared in the Doctor Who historical The Crusade, as none other than the famous King of England Richard the Lionheart. Glover would then reappear in arguably one of the greatest stories in Doctor Who, 1979’s City of Death, playing the triple-role of Captain Tancredi, Count Scarlioni and Scaroth, last of the Jagaroth.

Lalla Ward

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused ActorExpand

Speaking of City of Death

Lalla Ward first appeared in Doctor Who as Princess Astra in The Armageddon Factor, who turned out to be part of the Key to Time that The Doctor and Romana were hunting for in the series-long story arc of the show’s 16th season. Lalla would appear again just 7 months later in the following serial, Destiny of The Daleks, as Romana’s second incarnation. For the first time the show would actually acknowledge this reuse of an actor – apparently, much to The Doctor’s disapproval, Romana took a liking to Princess Astra’s appearance, so she decided to emulate it when she grew tired of her original form.

Eve Myles

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

In only the third episode since Doctor Who returned in 2005, The Unquiet Dead, the lovely Eve Myles played Gwyneth, a tragic Victorian maid who eventually sacrificed herself to stop the Gelth from invading Earth through a rift in time and space. A year later it would be announced that companion Captain Jack Harkness would star in his own Who spinoff, Torchwood, with Myles joining him as the audience-surrogate-turned-Welsh-badass Gwen Cooper. Myles would return to Doctor Who alongside her fellow Torchwood cast members – and once again the show would lampshade her reuse by having the Tenth Doctor and Rose Tyler remark on how Cardiff’s space-time rift passed on genetic traits via the wonderfully technobabbly term ‘spacial genetic multiplicity’.

Geoffrey Palmer

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

The first triple-role actor (technically Julian Glover would be but Scaroth/Scarlioni/Tancredi are, like Oswin/Clara/Clara Oswald, merely shards of the same character, rather than actual different characters) on this list, Geoffrey Palmer was also one of the first actors to play a role in both ‘Classic’ era Doctor Who and its 2005 counterpart. First having played the civil servant Edward Masters in 1970’s Doctor Who and the Silurians (perhaps most iconic in the utterly terrifying scene where an infected Masters begins to spread the fatal Silurian Virus across London), Palmer would then appear as the Administrator in The Mutants two years later. It would be another 35 years for the actor to return to Doctor Who – this time playing Captain Hardaker, the ill-fated pilot of the Starship Titanic in Voyage of the Damned.

Colin Baker

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

As last night proved, playing a part in Doctor Who doesn’t necessarily rule you out of playing The Doctor later on – but it wasn’t the first time it happened. In 1983’s Arc of Infinity, Colin Baker played the zealous Commander Maxil (or perhaps specifically, the Time Lord attached to Commander Maxil’s fabulous helmet), part of Gallifrey’s Chancellery Guard – and then a year later, he would bring a similar standoffishness to his portrayal of the Sixth incarnation of The Doctor.

Freema Agyeman

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

Ah, yet another companion popping up as another character! Although not the first in the show’s history, Freema Agyeman was the first instance of this level of reuse occuring in Doctor Who’s 2005 revival. Agyeman played Adeola Oshodi in Army of Ghosts, the first part of Series 2’s finalé – a Torchwood One administrator killed and controlled by the Cybermen, before having her Cyber-implants gruesomely yanked out of her ear by Yvonne Hartman. Freema would return the following series as the new companion, Martha Jones – and would acknowledge her past role in the show in her first episode, 2007’s Smith and Jones, by telling the Doctor that Adeola was her cousin.

Jean Marsh

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

Another triple role – and this time it’s an actress who spanned the whole of Classic Doctor Who. Jean Marsh first appeared in The Crusade alongside fellow listee Julian Glover as Joanna of England, Richard the Lionheart’s Sister, in 1965 – and later that year she would return as the short-lived companion Sara Kingdom (another sister character, as she was related to Nick Courtney’s Bret Vyon) in The Daleks’ Master Plan. Marsh would then return to Doctor Who one last time in its final year – this time as a villain, rather than an ally, appearing as Morgaine in 1989’s Battlefield (once again starring alongside Nick Courtney!).

Kevin Stoney

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

Another triple-role, and another actor appearing both in and out of makeup – although in one of Stoney’s roles, that’s perhaps a little more discomforting to our modern sensibilities. Stoney first appeared in The Daleks’ Master Plan (which turns out to be quite the serial for reusing actors from!) as Mavic Chen, clad in makeup in an attempt to make the white actor look more stereotypically Asian. Stoney would appear again 3 years later, this time with no makeup, as the villainous Tobias Vaughn, head of International Electromatics and ally to the Cybermen in The Invasion. He then appeared one last time, again heavily costumed and made up, as Tyrum, Councillor of the Vogans in 1975’s Revenge of the Cybermen.

Chipo Chung

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

From one Beetle-based appearance, to another – just without the makeup! Chipo Chung first appeared as the bashful alien assistant to Professor Yana, Chantho, in 2007’s Utopia, before being cruelly killed off as Yana rediscovered his identity as The Master. She would return a year later in a slightly-less friendly role as the Fortune Teller on Shan Shen in Turn Left, who attempted to enthral Donna Noble under the control of the Time Beetle and the Trickster’s Brigade.

Karen Gillan

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

If The Daleks’ Master Plan is Classic Who’s haven for Actor reuse, then 2008’s The Fires of Pompeii might just become NuWho’s. Its first major reuse comes via Karen Gillan, who played a Soothsayer of the Sibylline Sisterhood that spied on The Doctor and Donna when they arrived in Pompeii. Of course, Gillan would then go on to play Amy Pond, companion to the Eleventh Doctor, from 2010 to 2012. But speaking of Pompeii…

Peter Capaldi

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

The man behind the idea for this very list, at last! Yes, last night it was revealed that Peter Capaldi will play the Twelfth Doctor, but it won’t be the first time the Glaswegian has shown up in the Whoniverse. A life long fan (Check out a Fanzine piece on Doctor Who’s opening titles young Peter wrote back in 1976, courtesy of Doctor Who News correspondent Matthew Kilburn!), Capaldi first appeared on his childhood show as Lucius Caecilius Iucundus, a marble seller from Pompeii, in 2008. A year later he appeared in spin-off series Torchwood’s breakout third series, Children of Earth, as John Frobisher, the civil servant tasked as humanity’s ambassador to the sinister alien group, the 456.

What will he bring to The Doctor though? We’ll catch a small glimpse of just that at Christmas…

Bonus Round: Bernard Cribbins!

Doctor Who and the case of the Reused Actor

Okay, so technically Bernard Cribbins hasn’t been reused in Doctor Who the TV show before, but are you really going to deny the bundle of wonderfulness that is the Cribbs-meister?

Didn’t think so.

Bernard Cribbins first appeared in Doctor Who (or perhaps more specifically ‘Dr. Who’) as Police Officer Tom Campbell in the second Peter Cushing Who film, Daleks – Invasion Earth: 2150 A.D, replacing the character of Ian from the first film. 41 years later, Cribbins would enter the show proper, first appearing as Wilfred Mott in 2007’s Christmas Special Voyage of the Damned, before returning as a series regular in Series 4 the year after, with the loveable Wilf being written in as Donna Noble’s grandfather. In that year Cribbins would go eye-to-eyestalk with a Dalek once more, in The Stolen Earth, making him the only actor to ever face the Daleks on both TV and Film.

Funnily enough, he could’ve almost had a third role in the show – when Jon Pertwee left in 1974, Cribbins approached Barry Letts in the hopes of getting the part of the Fourth Doctor.

 

Oh, and Philip Madoc, who played not one, but four villains on Doctor Who… six if you count playing Brockley in Daleks – Invasion Earth: 2150 A.D., and The Master in the Big Finish audio play.

the 1st Doctor and The Abbot of Amboise

The 2nd Doctor and Salamander

Expand

Romana I and Princess Strella

Nyssa and Ann Talbot

12 Doctors

12 Doctors, 12 stories, 12 jackets – a Doctor Who style celebration!

Authors including Neil Gaiman, Malorie Blackman, Charlie Higson and now Holly Black have written stories to celebrate each Doctor in Doctor Who in 12 Doctors 12 stories which is being published tomorrow. This gallery celebrates the each Doctor’s actual jacket (and in most cases tie) with this set of iconic book jackets – plus quotes from all the authors involved on ‘their Doctor’.

You can win a gift version of all the the stories in 12 mini-paper backs plus 12 postcards in a TARDIS slipcase by emailing childrens.books@theguardian.com telling us why you should be the one to win it with “12 Doctors” as your heading by 29 October 2014

Plus read an interview with Holly Black on writing the 12th Doctor story starring Peter Capaldi