Tuesday 30 April 2024

Blog Update


I'm taking a short holiday this week, visiting London once again, so there won't be any new updates before 9th / 10th May.
As well as sightseeing locations where Daleks once trundled, or Cybermen once stomped, I'll also be dropping in to the sci-fi exhibition at Gunnersbury Park Museum, so expect a post on that very soon - hopefully on the 9th.
(You'll recall that I was there last year, for a VFX talk by Mike Tucker).

With Series 14 almost upon us (none of your Disneyfied Season One nonsense here) there will be a slight rejig of the weekend posts. "Episodes" will be moving to the Saturday for the duration of the new series, freeing up the Sunday for reviews of the new instalments. 
As I've previously mentioned, I don't want to post anything until after the BBC One broadcast on the Saturday evening, even if I watch the episodes on the i-Player earlier in the day.
Be back soon.

N is for... Nardole


The Doctor first met Nardole on the Earth colony world of Mendorax Mellora, at Christmas 5343. He had been sent by his wife to fetch a medic whom she had arranged to meet here. Due to a mix-up, the Doctor thought that it was he whom Nardole sought, whilst he believed the Doctor to be the medic.
Taken to a crashed spaceship on the edge of the village where the TARDIS had materialised, the Doctor was shocked to discover that Nardole's spouse was River Song. Not only that, but he was supposed to help treat another husband - the brutal King Hydroflax. Only his head remained of him, attached to a robot body. An explosion had resulted in a precious gem being embedded in his skull, which River wished removed. She did not recognise the Doctor in his twelfth incarnation.
River actually only wanted to steal the gem, and she and the Doctor ended up taking the King's head. The semi-autonomous robot body decapitated Nardole to use as its new head. The same fate befell a third husband of River - Ramon. The robot would swap heads over time, with the unused one continuing to function within its torso. It would later come to be employed as a waiter in a restaurant beside the famous Singing Towers of Darillium.
The Doctor later saved Nardole from this fate, building a makeshift artificial body for him. 
The pair travelled together for a time, and at one point Nardole actually ruled the early Byzantine Empire.
However, River had given Nardole a role to perform before she and the Doctor parted for the final time.
He was tasked with guarding a vault in which Missy was to be incarcerated for a thousand years, after preventing her execution. The Doctor hid this vault in the basement of St Luke's University in Bristol where he took on a teaching role. Nardole joined him there, acting as his valet but also to ensure that he adhered to his vow to oversee the vault.
It was in his role as valet that he first met canteen assistant Bill Potts, whom the Doctor agreed to tutor.


Frustrated with being tied to one place and time for so long, the Doctor wanted Bill to travel with him and see the stars. Nardole disliked her for making the Doctor want to go against his vow, and attempted to stop their travels - but to no avail. He even tried to sabotage the TARDIS by removing a fluid link, but the Doctor predicted his actions.
Instead, he decided to go with them so that he could ensure that the Doctor remained safe and able to go back to his responsibilities at the university.
Their first journey was forced on them, as Bill was stalked by a sentient water-borne AI which resembled her potential girlfriend, and now wanted to travel through space with her as her co-pilot.
Over time, Bill came to learn that Nardole had led an extremely interesting life himself - often engaging in illegal activities such as smuggling and black-marketeering. It was his efforts to escape a life of crime which had led him to being employed by River Song, whom he subsequently married.
When the Doctor became blind after being exposed to the vacuum of space, outside the Chasm Forge asteroid mining station, he kept this secret from Bill but told Nardole, who naturally challenged him about the dangers of abandoning their mission to guard the vault.
However, when the Doctor and Bill became stranded on Mars in Victorian times, Nardole actually opened the vault to allow Missy to pilot the TARDIS back to the Red Planet to rescue them.
The Doctor attempted to rehabilitate his old enemy, allowing her to accompany them on their travels - much to Nardole's concern. On encountering a tribe of Picts in 2nd Century Scotland, Nardole managed to be accepted into the community as a story-teller.
Nardole's travels with the Doctor came to an end when they visited a vast colony ship trapped on the edge of a Black Hole. This originated on Mondas, and they witnessed the evolution of a new race of Cybermen. Missy also encountered a previous incarnation of herself. Nardole befriended a woman named Hazran who looked after a group of orphaned children, protecting them from encroachment by the Cybermen.
With the vault no longer needing guarding, the Doctor gave Nardole a new role - to continue to protect Hazran and the children as they moved to a new home within the vessel.
Just before his next regeneration, the artificial intelligence Testimony allowed the Doctor to see a glass avatar of Nardole, holding all his memories, for a final time, along with similar duplicates of Bill and Clara Oswald.


Played by: Matt Lucas. Appearances: The Wedding of River Song (2015) to Twice Upon A Time (2017).
  • Lucas first came to public attention when he featured in several series with surreal comics Vic Reeves & Bob Mortimer, before finding fame with David Walliams in Little Britain
  • He and Walliams were huge Doctor Who fans, leading Little Britain narrator Tom Baker to declare that he was now being employed by the children who had grown up with his Doctor.
  • The actor was originally intended as guest artist on the 2015 Christmas Special only, but everyone enjoyed his presence so much that Steven Moffat brought him back the following year in The Return of Dr Mysterio. Similarly, a brief appearance in the 10th series was expanded so that he featured throughout. Lucas was living abroad and working on his autobiography at the time.
  • The Target novelisation of Twice Upon A Time claims that Nardole spent the rest of his life on the colony ship, defending everyone from annual attacks from the Cybermen. He died aged 728, after marrying six times.

N is for... Nancy


The Doctor encountered a girl named Nancy in the East End of London during the Blitz of 1941. She exploited the air-raids to feed a group of orphaned children who lived rough in the bombed-out parts of the city. As the homeowners sheltered from the bombs, she would enter their houses and allow the children to eat their interrupted meals. 
The Doctor had first met her when she warned him not to use the TARDIS telephone. A child's voice was heard on the line - despite it not being connected to anything. Later Nancy advised him to avoid contact with a small boy wearing a gas-mask, who was prevented from joining the air-raid meals.
This despite him being her younger brother, Jamie. 
The Doctor discovered that anyone who came into physical contact with Jamie was transformed to resemble him - with a gas-mask forming part of the skull, and with the same injuries which he had sustained when caught up in a bomb blast. Later, this infection became airborne. The Doctor came to realise that Jamie wasn't Nancy's brother at all, but her son. She looked younger than she was.
A crashed alien medical ship had released nanogenes into the atmosphere and these had repaired the dead boy's body, but had no concept of what a human being ought to be like. Using him as a template, they were transforming everyone to be like him.
The Doctor was able to use Nancy, as his biological parent, to reprogramme the nanogenes and they began correcting their work. 
The Doctor and Rose were able to assure Nancy that Britain would eventually defeat the Nazis. Dr Constantine from the nearby Albion Hospital agreed to look after her and her son, after losing his own family in the Blitz.

Played by: Florence Hoath. Appearances: The Empty Child / The Doctor Dances (2005).
  • An early role for Hoath was as one of the girls who photographed the Cottingley Fairies in the film Fairy Tale: A True Story. In this her father was played by Paul McGann. 
  • She featured in the 2004 ITV adaptation of the Miss Marple mystery The Body in the Library along with a number of future Doctor Who guest artists.

N is for... Namin


Human servant of Sutekh, the evil Osirian whom he believed to be one of Egypt's ancient gods. His family had served Sutekh for generations, helping prepare for his release from millennia-long captivity.
After Egyptologist Marcus Scarman had unwittingly broken into the tomb where he was held immobilised by a force-field, Namin was despatched to his country house in England to prepare for his freedom. He was given a special ring which controlled the mummy-like Osirian servo-robots.
Namin's task was to secure the house and grounds to establish a base of operations. 
When an old friend of the archaeologist - Dr Warlock - arrived demanding to know the whereabouts of Scarman, Namin attempted to kill him. He was saved by the Doctor's intervention, though badly wounded. Namin sent the robots to search the grounds and kill them.
Sutekh took over the reanimated corpse of Marcus Scarman and sent him to the house via a time tunnel, deeming him to be a more effective servant. His usefulness now at an end, his first task was to kill Namin.

Played by: Peter Mayock. Appearances: Pyramids of Mars (1975).
  • Mayock returned to Doctor Who the following year, playing Solis - the hypnotised Chancellery Guard officer who tried to kill the Doctor in The Deadly Assassin.

N is for... Naismith


Joshua Naismith was a telecommunications billionaire who used his money and influence to obtain black market alien technology. One item, taken from the defunct Torchwood organisation, was a device which he called the "Immortality Gate". Experiments had found that this could repair damaged human tissue, and Naismith sought to get it working fully so that he could make his spoilt daughter Abigail immortal.
Donna Noble felt compelled, subconsciously, to buy his autobiography - Fight The Future - for her grandfather, Wilf, as a Christmas gift.
He employed a private army at his country estate, and sent them to capture the resurrected Master, who had been brought back to life in London's Broadfell Prison just before it burned to the ground.
Brought to his home, the Master was tasked with repairing the Gate and make it fully functional.
However, the Master knew what it was capable of and ensured that it would help him rather than the businessman. Rather than heal individuals, the Gate could be used to restructure the genetic code of entire planets. He turned everyone on Earth into versions of himself - including Naismith and his daughter.
The Doctor had seen fleeting mental images of Naismith when communing with the Ood Elder, warning him of the Master's return. Wilf's book allowed him to realise where the Master had been taken, but he and Wilf were too late to stop the Master's transformation of the world's population.
After the Time Lord Rassilon had undone the Master's work, Naismith tried to flee but was captured along with Abigail and imprisoned.

Played by: David Harewood (Joshua), Tracy Ifeachor (Abigail). Appearances: The End of Time I (2009), The End of Time II (2010).
  • Harewood played Friar Tuck in the BBC's 2000's version of Robin Hood
  • He was a regular on the Supergirl TV series, as well as guesting in its stable-mates Arrow, The Flash and Legends of Tomorrow.
  • Ifeachor also appeared in an episode of Legends of Tomorrow. She has recently featured in Wonka.

N is for... Nagata


Commander of a military mission to the Le Verrier space-station, in orbit around the planet Neptune in the 38th Century. Communications had been cut off with the station, and Nagata's team had been sent to discover why. Following tectonic disturbances back on Earth, Indo-Japan was now a major power bloc. She hailed from a colony on Triton.
The station was found to be deserted apart from lead scientist Gagen Rassmussen, who had taken refuge in a sleep pod. In the 38th Century, people could condense their sleep in these units in order to maximise their working life.
Rassmussen was hiding from a group of creatures which now infested the station - Sandmen. It transpired that they were formed of organic matter - "sleep" from the users of the pods.
Nagata's squad were picked off one by one until only she remained, accompanied by the Doctor and Clara.
The scientist had apparently been killed by Sandmen, but this was a ruse. He was actually intent on creating more of the creatures from pod users across the entire solar system.
Nagata was taken off the station by the Doctor before it crashed into Neptune's atmosphere.

Played by: Elaine Tan. Appearances: Sleep No More (2015)
  • Tan's career took off after appearing in a National Theatre production of musical South Pacific. UK work has included EastEnders and Auf Wiedersehen Pet, whilst US work includes Boston Legal, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation and Hawaii Five-0.

Sunday 28 April 2024

Episode 115: A Holiday For The Doctor


Synopsis:
After eating one of Cyril's sweets, the Doctor has collapsed in agony...
Steven and Dodo fear he has been poisoned, but it transpires that he has been struck down by a terrible toothache.
The TARDIS materialises in a stable-yard and the travellers discover that they have arrived in what they think of as the "Wild West". They are in the town of Tombstone, Arizona, and it is October 1881.
Steven and Dodo don generic cowboy and cowgirl outfits from the TARDIS stores, and give the Doctor an appropriate hat. 
As Steven plays around with his pistol, they are confronted by the town's Marshal - Wyatt Earp. 
The Doctor quickly introduces them all as being travelling players, hence the costumes of his companions - Mr Steven Regret, Miss Dodo Dupont, and he is Dr. Caligari. He explains his need for a dentist and is directed to a new practice along Main Street.
The Doctor arranges for Steven and Dodo to wait for him in the Last Chance Saloon whilst he sees the dentist.
In the saloon, a group of men are plotting a death. The three Clanton brothers - Ike, Phineas and Billy - have employed a gunslinger named Seth "Snake-Eyes" Harper to help kill the notorious John Henry "Doc" Holliday, in revenge for his killing of their sibling Reuben.
Earp and sheriff Bat Masterson are concerned by Holliday's presence in town, knowing of the feud with the Clantons. 
On hearing Steven refer to the Doctor as "Doc", the men assume him to be a friend of their enemy, and learn that he is due to meet them here shortly. They decide to set a trap, and force Steven and Dodo to perform a song for the saloon to stop them from going to warn him.
The Doctor, meanwhile, has discovered that Holliday is the new dentist in town. Offered the choice of whiskey or a rap on the head for pain relief, both of which he declines, the Doctor undergoes a tooth extraction.
Holliday and his girlfriend Kate decide to make use of the Doctor, aware that the Clantons are gunning for him.
They talk him into carrying a pistol and send him on his way to meet his friends - hoping that he will be mistaken for him.
The Doctor makes his way slowly along the street towards the saloon - oblivious of the danger that awaits him there...
Next episode: Don't Shoot The Pianist

Data:
Written by: Donald Cotton
Recorded: Friday 15th April 1966 - Television Centre Studio TC4
First broadcast: 5:50pm, Saturday 30th April 1966
Ratings: 6.5 million / AI 45
Designer: Barry Newbery
Director: Rex Tucker
Guest cast: John Alderson (Wyatt Earp), Anthony Jacobs (Doc Holliday), Sheena Marshe (Kate), Shane Rimmer (Seth Harper), David Graham (Charlie the Barman), William Hurndall (Ike Clanton), Maurice Good (Phineas Clanton), David Cole (Billy Clanton), Richard Beale (Bat Masterson)


Critique:
Bet you didn't know that The Gunfighters, as this story is generally known, is the worst Doctor Who story ever...
That's what "received wisdom" stated throughout the 1970's and well into the '80's. This goes back to what we discussed under the last episode - the opinions of a small group of influential fans, recalling what they had seen on broadcast. 
Principal of these individuals, in that he acted as "historian" for the Doctor Who Appreciation Society, was Jeremy Bentham. He was employed to provide factual content for the new Doctor Who Weekly and its Monthly successor, and later acted as a consultant on the first significant non-fiction treatise on the series - Peter Haining's Doctor Who: A Celebration, which was released to tie in with the 20th Anniversary.
Bentham rated The Celestial Toymaker highly, and hated The Gunfighters. The first was brilliant - a lost masterpiece - whilst the latter was utter rubbish, with no redeeming features.
 DWW / DWM would go on to perpetuate the myth that the Wild West story achieved the lowest ever ratings, and was directly responsible for Innes Lloyd and Gerry Davis dropping the Historicals.

Originally known as "The Gun-Fighters", the choice to do a Western story had been Donald Cotton's - written for his old pal Donald Tosh as a follow-up to his Trojan War-set The Myth Makers.
For research, Cotton contacted an old cabaret friend - Tony Snell - who was touring the States, once the decision had been made to focus on one particular incident in Western history - the celebrated Gunfight at the OK Corral. In the end, Snell's research was set aside as it was decided to concentrate more on what a British TV audience thought a Western should look like.
The genre had been hugely popular in cinema and on TV since the 1950's in the UK, so people had preconceived ideas of what they should look and sound like.
A similar process was followed by designer Barry Newbery, when he discovered that period houses in Tombstone in the 1880's resembled those which could still be seen in London's East End. 
Authenticity was set aside in favour of the look and feel of TV series like Rawhide and The Virginian.

In a nutshell, the Tombstone event revolved around a feud between the Clanton family and "Doc" Holliday. The Clantons were known cattle thieves, and Holliday was a notorious gambler and gunslinger who had killed one of the Clantons. 
There were only two Clanton brothers involved in the Gunfight - Ike and Billy - and they joined forces with Billy Claiborne and the McLaury brothers, Frank and Tom. Seth Harper was created for the story to replace these other characters. Kate Fisher and Warren Earp were also fictitious. Holliday's girlfriend was Kate Elder, known as "Long Nose" Kate.
Other people who did exist weren't necessarily involved in the Gunfight. Bat Masterson wasn't present in Tombstone at the time.
Virgil Earp was Marshal, whilst Wyatt and Morgan were simply special policemen, so roles have been rejigged along with personnel.
Wyatt owned a saloon - the Oriental - and whilst Holliday was a dentist, he never opened a practice in Tombstone.
We'll return to the actual events of 26th October, 1881, and compare them with Cotton's version, once we get to the fourth instalment.

Rex Tucker had been Doctor Who's first ever producer - a role foisted on him in 1963 which he never really wanted. His vision for the show would have seen a younger actor take on the role of the Doctor, made up to appear much older. Hugh David - star of Knight Errant and future Doctor Who director - had been his first choice.
Even after he had been allowed to move on, replaced by Verity Lambert, he continued to be associated with the show in that he was earmarked to direct one of the opening stories of the first season.
Even this he had been reluctant about, seeing the series as somewhat beneath his talents.
He managed to avoid this engagement due to the delays in launching the series, but by late 1965 John Wiles had been able to talk him into directing a story for him.
(Ironically, the only reason Tucker is known even slightly today is because of his connection with the series).
Around the time that the final script had been accepted, retitled as "The Gunslingers", both Wiles and Tosh quit the series. Lloyd and Davis were unhappy to inherit the Historicals in general - and "The Gunslingers" in particular. Both men wanted the series to move towards purely science-fiction stories, which they thought the audience preferred, and considered that period-style dramas were handled much better elsewhere within the Corporation.

On joining as director, Tucker arranged to view the 1957 movie of Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, directed by Preston Sturges.
Having serious reservations about the idea of making a British Western, the director - with Lloyd's blessing - decided to accentuate the humour. It was Tucker who decided that the song - The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon - should be made more prominent. It would comment on the action throughout the serial. A similar song, sung by Frankie Laine, had ran through the Sturges film.
The composer was Tristram Cary, a friend of the director who had been earmarked to provide the Doctor Who theme music back when he had been nominal producer.
To sing it, Tucker decided to give it to his own daughter Jane. However, the ballad was written in the wrong key for her, so it went to actress Lynda Baron instead - but only after Sheena Marshe had a go. Jane Tucker would instead get to feature as a crowd artist on the programme. (Later, she would become known to a generation of children as one third of Rod, Jane and Freddy from Rainbow).
Most of the song was written by Cotton, but Tucker added other verses as the script developed.
Gerry Davis found the script requiring rewrites, but Cotton was proving difficult to get hold of.

Peter Purves is on record as claiming that he felt that Tucker really didn't care much for the regular cast, giving preference to the actors whom he had cast himself.
Tucker attempted to cast Canadian Donald Sutherland in a role (possibly Billy Clanton), but he was unavailable. David Burke (the first of the Granada TV Dr Watsons) was considered for either a Clanton or an Earp, whilst Alan Tilvern (Forester in Planet of Giants) was a possible Seth Harper.
Ewen Solon, Philip Madoc and Derek Newark were also under consideration for roles.
Of those who were cast, Shane Rimmer was Canadian, and well used to American accents from his lengthy association with Gerry Anderson puppet series.
John Alderson had actually featured in Western movies and TV series in the USA, as well as series such as The Man From UNCLE.
He and Rimmer were the only cast members comfortable with the accents - as can be heard in the finished serial.

Pre-filming took place at Ealing between 28th - 31st March, 1966. None of these scenes could feature the Doctor as William Hartnell was on a two-week holiday at the time.
Scenes filmed included use of firearms, stunt falls, and shots of the main street, with horses - primarily for the first and fourth episodes.
Purves had a bad time on the story. As well as his feelings about the director, he hated the song and was unsettled with his imminent departure, after Lloyd had made it clear he did not rate him much as an actor. This knock to his confidence would contribute to his year of unemployment following the next story.
Lane, however, really enjoyed the story due to its humour, and Tucker claimed that he got on very well with Hartnell for the same reason, and also because he was more comfortable with more experienced directors.
As Billy Hartnell, the star's earliest acting career had been in comedic roles, and he always upped his performance when he got to demonstrate his comedic skills.

Due to double-booking that week, the production moved from its regular space of Riverside Studio 1 to Television Centre's studio TC4.
Tucker avoided a TARDIS materialisation in studio be relying on sound effects only.
Hartnell ad-libbed the mispronunciations of Wyatt's surname. 
The Doctor claims to be teetotal in this episode, despite him having been seen to drink alcohol in previous stories. He also appears to have a gun collection in the TARDIS, which does not fit at all with his usual expressions of distaste for violence. (However, he did once seem impressed with a Sensorite weapon, describing it as a handy little thing, and he has often given mixed messages on this subject).
It's just possible that he's referring to the gun as part of the overall cowboy outfit and this is part of the collection he's referring to - a collection of costumes. The gear worn by Steven and Dodo are not realistic period outfits, only "stage" versions.
There were a total of seven recording breaks planned for the evening - the first two allowing for the costume change for Purves and Lane, and for dismantling the stable-yard set and getting rid of the TARDIS prop.
Camera angles hid the fact that Lane was not playing the piano. Pianist Tom McCall played the music on another instrument just off camera.
No guns were fired in studio, with sound effects only being used.

Trivia:
  • The ratings do see a fall from The Celestial Toymaker, but are higher than two of the episodes of The Ark and three of The Massacre - so we can already see that talk of this story having the poorest viewing figures is unfair. 
  • It should also be noted that we were moving into the better weather at the end of April, which always saw viewing figures dip. Competition in some ITV regions included Thunderbirds, The Addams Family, Lost in Space, and "proper" Western series Bonanza. Only London offered weak competition.
  • In an interview with the Daily Mirror, just before this opening episode aired, William Hartnell claimed that the idea for a Western had actually been his.
  • It was originally intended that Steven would play the piano and Dodo would sing the Ballad, but it was found that Lane couldn't sing a note whilst Purves had performed on the stage of the London Palladium.
  • The Doctor names himself after the villainous lead in German Expressionist classic The Cabinet of Dr Caligari (Robert Wiene, 1920).
  • The Doctor is told that Tombstone does not have a theatre. This is incorrect, however, as the town had the Schieffelin Hall, which opened four months before the Gunfight.
  • Anthony Jacobs arranged for his young son Matthew to visit the set. He would one day write the final script for 1996's Doctor Who - The Movie.
  • It was actor Maurice Good who decided to give his character a stutter. Good had quite a sci-fi / horror CV, appearing in the film version of Quatermass and the Pit, The Skull, Trog, and They Came From Beyond Space.
  • Lynda Baron would finally get to feature in the show in her own right in 1983's Enlightenment, returning in 2011's Closing Time.
  • She found the song very difficult to master, and they actually ran out of time recording it due to the number of retakes.
  • David Graham was best known for Dalek voices but, like Rimmer, had also essayed many American accents in Anderson productions.
  • Richard Beale had recently voiced the invisible Refusians in The Ark and was another old friend of the director's. John Alderson, who normally resided in Hollywood, stayed with him during production of this story. Beale will be back in The Green Death as the Ecology Minister, after having voiced the Macra.
  • The BBC staff magazine Ariel covering April / May featured the Ealing filming.
  • Radio Times opted to include an image from the concluding part of the story when it introduced the new story. (From this week onwards, Innes Lloyd required RT to print cast lists in order of appearance, rather than by seniority / prominence as before).