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Month: July 2015

STANDBY FOR AN ANNOUNCEMENT TONIGHT AT 10.30PM (BST)

STANDBY FOR AN ANNOUNCEMENT TONIGHT AT 10.30PM (BST)

It’s been announced that something special is heading our way and whatever it is will hit tonight (Thursday, 9th July) at around 10.30pm…

But we can’t say exactly what it is! So, we suggest checking out the official Doctor Who twitter feed later tonight when all be revealed!

News Source: BBC

DOCTOR WHO: THE FATE OF KRELOS

DOCTOR WHO: THE FATE OF KRELOS

It’s the darkest hour for a most faithful companion, in the penultimate story of The Fourth Doctor Adventures Series 4, released today.

Doctor Who: The Fourth Doctor Adventures – full cast audio dramas, starring Tom Baker, effortlessly recreating the trademark wit, wisdom and humour of his incarnation of the legendary Time Lord. Paired with his faithful companions, it’s a nostalgic trip back to the 1970s in stories designed to capture the distinctive flavour of that era.

There are dark skies on Krelos… and something gigantic is descending.

Meanwhile, the Doctor and Leela set off for some fishing in the mountain pools of Krelos. K9 has interfaced with the TARDIS and has reactivated the architectural configuration from the days of the Doctor’s second incarnation. In passing, the Doctor notes it could do with a good clean. And there’s a familiar piece of material snagged on the console.

Far up the mountain, an aged explorer is in trouble. Will the Doctor and Leela be able to save him and his planet? And what is it that K9 has discovered in the TARDIS?

Doctor Who: The Fate of Krelos, a new story by Nicholas Briggs, stars Tom Baker, Louise Jameson and John Leeson, and it’s available to buy and downloadtoday.

Join us in August for the climactic adventure of The Fourth Doctor Adventures Series 4 – Doctor Who: Return to Telos, where an old companion, older enemies and a deadly new threat await the Doctor…

You can catch up on the series so far today on the Big Finish website.

News Source: Big Finish

SERIES 9 FINALE WILL BE “COMPLICATED” AND “DIFFERENT”

SERIES 9 FINALE WILL BE “COMPLICATED” AND “DIFFERENT”

Director Rachel Talalay certainly makes the last few episodes sound exciting…

If you thought you knew what to expect from the Doctor Who series 9 finale, then think again – because apparently it’s going to be unlike anything we’ve seen so far.

“These episodes are completely different from what I did last year,” said the finale’s director Rachel Talalay in a newly-released video, referring to her work on the series 8 finale Dark Water/ Death in Heaven.

“Episode 11 is one of the most complicated and different episodes that I’ve ever done – I can’t tell you anything about it, but it’s completely different and it just has my head in spaghetti.”

She added: “The first call to do it was incredibly exciting, and the opportunity to do a Steven Moffat finale again is phenomenal.”

Sadly, we don’t know what exactly will be complicated or different about episode 11 yet as all plot details have been kept firmly under wraps. Still, head writer Steven Moffat also seems to think there’s something special about series 9’s penultimate episode.

“I’ve got a script where I’ve set myself a ludicrous challenge,” he said at an event in New York earlier this year. “When Episode 11 comes up, you’ll see just how ludicrous a challenge I’ve set myself. I’m in a state of panic about it.”

Previously, he described the cliffhanger at the end of episode 11 as a “whopper” to Doctor Who Magazine, adding “Ohh, I don’t think you’ll see this coming!”

In other words, it’s time for speculation over the twist to start – personally, we’re calling for the triumphant return of the Cyber-brigadier to take on a horde of Daleks. Or the reveal that Ian Chesterton has been dreaming the whole Doctor Who thing back in 1963 after a bad day of teaching…

Doctor Who returns this autumn

News Source: Radio Times

THEATRE OF WAR – COMING SOON

THEATRE OF WAR – COMING SOON

‘What the Shakespeare… !?!’ The cast for our upcoming Novel Adaptation has been revealed!

Coming in December, Doctor Who: Theatre of War continues Big Finish’s run of special adaptations of the Virgin New Adventures &ndash first published in the early 1990s.

Adapted by Justin Richards from his 1994 debut novel, Theatre of War features the Seventh Doctor (Sylvester McCoy), Ace (Sophie Aldred), and Bernice Summerfield (Lisa Bowerman) arriving on the planet Menaxus, where a Shakespearean tragedy is playing out.

“Theatre of War is a book that would prove incredibly important for Big Finish,” explains Producer Cavan Scott. “Justin’s novel introduced the character of Irvin Braxiatel, who, played by Miles Richardson, would go on to be a major player in both the Bernice Summerfield adventures and Gallifrey. It only seemed right to invite Miles to return for Benny’s first meeting with the great man. Of course, in typically timey-wimey style, it’s not the first time that he has met her. Then, there is Brax’s long rumoured history with the Doctor to deal with…”

Director Scott Handcock adds: “I’ve had the pleasure of working with Miles on Bernice SummerfieldGallifrey and even The Confessions of Dorian Gray, so it’s a joy to go right back to the beginning and establish his most notorious character! Miles knows Brax inside-out, has a fantastic dynamic with Lisa, and is simply a joy to work with. So if you’ve never heard any Braxiatel before, watch out! You won’t know what’s hit you!”

Other featured artists in the new release include Kirsty Besterman, Richard Vranch, Ed Stoppard (The Pianist), Bryan Dick, Gus Brown, Milo Twomey and UNIT: The New Series regular Ramon Tikaram (This Life, Fortitude).

Scott says: “It never ceases to amaze me how quickly actors bond, even after only a couple of days, and Theatre of War was no exception. Our guest cast feel like they’ve known each other for years, the histories of their characters’ relationships shine through.Their enthusiasm for the script and storyline really does grab you with both hands, and I can’t wait for people to hear it!”

Doctor Who: Theatre of War will be released in December, alongside Doctor Who: All-Consuming Fire – on which more casting clues will be revealed soon! You canpre-order both of these titles today. Three further adaptations will follow in 2016 and you can order all five titles as part of a specially discounted bundle.

Our six previous Novel Adaptations are still available to order now, including Doctor Who: Love and War, in which the Doctor and Ace first meet Bernice Summerfield and Doctor Who: Damaged Goods, our critically acclaimed adaptation of the novel by Russell T Davies.

And for more adventures with this TARDIS crew, check out Doctor Who: The New Adventures of Bernice Summerfield Volume 2: The Triumph of Sutekh – our blockbuster summer release!

 

News Source: Big Finish

DOCTOR WHO’S DEMON HEADMASTER MR FINCH “IS KEEN TO MEET THE DOCTOR AGAIN” SAYS ANTHONY HEAD

DOCTOR WHO’S DEMON HEADMASTER MR FINCH “IS KEEN TO MEET THE DOCTOR AGAIN” SAYS ANTHONY HEAD

We thought School Reunion villain Mr Finch was dead but the Buffy and Merlin star says he’s not done with the Doctor just yet…

When we last saw Doctor Who villain Mr Finch, he and his evil Krillitane cohorts were trapped in the kitchens of the school they’d taken over as it was consumed by a massive explosion. But Anthony Head, who played the demonic headmaster in question, believes we may not have seen the last of him after all…

“I don’t think the chip fat got him,” Head told RadioTimes.com. “I know him personally and I think he’s keen to meet the Doctor again…”

Head was speaking after winning a recent RadioTimes.com poll to find the best Doctor Who guest star: he beat James Corden, Carey Mulligan, John Hurt and Georgia Moffett – among others – to claim the honour.

The actor best known to cult TV fans as Giles from Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Merlin’s King Uther Pendragon, took on the role of the bat-like Mr Finch in Doctor Who series-two episode School Reunion back in April 2006. The adventure saw the Tenth Doctor (David Tennant) and Rose (Billie Piper) infiltrating a school to investigate some rather mysterious goings-on.

DOCTOR WHO: THE TIME LORD LETTERS

DOCTOR WHO: THE TIME LORD LETTERS

Synopsis

No one could travel through history – past present and future – as much as the Doctor does without leaving an impression. Much of what we know about this mysterious figure comes from what he does – the planets he saves and the monsters he defeats. But until now we’ve had little knowledge of his writings.

The Time Lord Letters is a unique collection of over one hundred letters, notes, and jottings both by and to the Doctor – correspondence by turns entertaining and inspiring, funny and flippant, brilliant and incredible.

From the Doctor’s plea to the Time Lords to help end the War Games to an extract from the written defence he submitted at his subsequent trial; from his application for the post of Caretaker at Coal Hill School to his apology to the Queen for missing dinner; from telepathic messages to the High Council on Gallifrey to his famous letter to Santa Claus – like the Doctor himself, the mood can change in an instant.

The Time Lord Letters captures the best and most dramatic moments of an impossible life. You’ll never see the Doctor in quite the same way again.

Pre order from 24th September 2015 (Hardbcover)

News Source: BBC Books

A GLIMPSE INSIDE THE LIFE OF DOCTOR WHO’S FIRST PRODUCER VERITY LAMBERT

A GLIMPSE INSIDE THE LIFE OF DOCTOR WHO’S FIRST PRODUCER VERITY LAMBERT

Richard Marson gives us a sneak preview of his book about “Hurricane Verity”, the BBC’s first female drama producer.

In a career spanning half a century, Verity Lambert produced some of the most popular and ground-breaking dramas on British television from Doctor Who to Minder to Jonathan Creek. Now Richard Marson, also a TV executive, has written the definitive book of her life…

What drew you to Verity as the subject for your biography?
I’ve always admired strong women in television. I worked for Esther Rantzen and Biddy Baxter, then became Biddy’s successor as editor of Blue Peter. Verity was the ultimate – she had an extraordinarily prolific, diverse career. I’d grown up watching her output (Doctor Who, Rock Follies, Edward & Mrs Simpson), though we met only once – in a BBC car park, where she launched into a tirade about her corporation bosses.

For the book, I spoke to 130 of her friends and colleagues. Melvyn Bragg speaks of her “combustible creativity”. Michael Palin, whom she cast in Channel 4’s GBH, says, “Someone would tell her that something couldn’t be done and she would get about a foot taller, her terrific eyes would blaze, she’d take a great drag on her cigarette and go into battle.”

Can you give a snapshot of Verity in her 1963 prime, launching Doctor Who?
She was the BBC’s first female drama producer and, at just 27, one of its youngest. “A bit of a freak” is how she put it herself. She was only too aware that many expected her to fail, believing she’d slept with her boss, Sydney Newman, to get the job. Both vehemently denied this. Newman, characteristically blunt, said he’d offered her the break because she was full of “p*** and vinegar” – just what the fledgeling Doctor Who needed. She had a sharp mind, and her volcanic temper inspired the nickname “Hurricane Verity”. Immaculately dressed, her hair styled by Vidal Sassoon, she chain-smoked her way through long working days and partied by night, propelled by her formidable energy and ambition.

Those days were captured in the BBC2 biopic An Adventure in Space and Time (2013) but in the book, her friends say they didn’t recognise the Verity they’d known.
“I think she would have wept with laughter,” is the verdict of fellow TV executive Linda Agran, while eminent director Moira Armstrong says, “Jessica Raine didn’t have the star quality necessary. Verity wasn’t beautiful but she was striking, unlike pretty-pretty Jessica Raine.”

Which other key shows did she produce?
Verity had extraordinary success throughout the 1970s. Her hits included ITV’s bittersweet Budgie (a vehicle for Adam Faith) and Shoulder to Shoulder, the BBC’s groundbreaking series about the suffragettes (starring Siân Phillips). Later, as head of drama at Thames Television and Euston Films, she made the innovative musical fantasy Rock Follies.

After the BBC passed on Rumpole of the Bailey, Verity spotted its potential for ITV, where it ran for years. She produced Edward & Mrs Simpson and the hugely popular Minder. She cast George Cole as the conman Arthur Daley (a name she also gave to her beloved Great Dane, who accompanied her everywhere).

Verity also championed The Naked Civil Servant in 1975…
She steamrollered through Thames TV’s financial objections and the IBA’s fears that viewers would be up in arms over such controversial subject matter. Instead, the film (in which John Hurt brilliantly interpreted the life of “stately homo” Quentin Crisp) was very successful and won a clutch of awards. “When you make television,” she explained, “you want to make contact with the audience.”

Did she ever find time for a private life?
Verity had tempestuous affairs with a string of men, including the film directors Ted Kotcheff (First Blood) and Alan Clarke (Scum). Her friends were aghast when she married Colin Bucksey, who was ten years younger and, as a cameraman, very much her professional junior. He’s now a high-profile director in America and won an Emmy for Fargo. Their marriage lasted ten years; he told me he’d wanted a family but Verity was adamant she didn’t.

Eldorado, BBC1’s 1990s soap, was a rare flop. How did she lose her Midas touch?
The show so nearly worked; it was rushed into production. There was a clash of egos between the producer Verity hired, Julia Smith (who’d launched EastEnders), and almost everyone else involved. Once Smith was fired, the show began to turn round. If the BBC had kept faith with it, it would almost certainly still be running today.

But usually Verity enjoyed collaborating with other women – supporting and elevating them in the business.
She didn’t regard herself as a pioneering woman but there’s no doubt she empowered many other women. She commissioned Lynda La Plante to write her first hit crime drama, Widows, despite telling her that her name sounded “like a transvestite trucker”. Her only condition was that La Plante let the women get away with the heist at the heart of the story. “A tigress and one of the most talented women we have ever had on television,” is how La Plante views Verity today.

Another famous protégé was Joanna Lumley, whom she invited to co-produce the lavish costume drama The Cazalets. “Extraordinarily generous,” says Lumley. “She was like the senior prefect; I walked around behind her watching how she did things.” Polly Hill, the BBC’s new drama controller, began her illustrious career in the early 1990s developing ideas for Verity.

What were her most important final projects?
She took over Jonathan Creek for its second series. Its creator David Renwick adored Verity and valued her honesty. “We became such great friends. You get to a stage where you can just say whatever you want to each other.” Her final project was Renwick’s BBC1 comedy drama Love Soup. Tamsin Greig had just had a baby and Verity made it a contractual obligation that she be given regular breaks to breast-feed.

She worked until just a few weeks before her death, from breast cancer, in 2007. At her humanist funeral service, which was packed with the great and the good of British showbusiness, Rock Follies writer Howard Schuman said, “Dying was a very un-Verity thing to do…”

Drama and Delight: the Life of Verity Lambert by Richard Marson
To order for £16.29 (normally £17.99) including p&p,
call RT Bookshop on
01326 555752 or visit radiotimes.com/lambert27
Your contract is with Sparkle Direct Ltd.

BRAND NEW DOCTOR WHO SERIES 9 PICTURE – BUT WHERE IS IT?

BRAND NEW DOCTOR WHO SERIES 9 PICTURE – BUT WHERE IS IT?

The latest snap from series nine was shared on Twitter by the official Doctor Who account, and it looks very mysterious and misty. Where do you think it could be?

It’s not like Doctor Who to keep an air of mystery surrounding his new series of adventures – actually it is, and this picture from series nine, shared on Twitter today, is no different.

At first glance it might be a beach, but if you look closely you can see that the area around the Tardis and Peter Capaldi’s Time Lord is more hilly and rugged.

We reckon that the picture is probably taken at Dragon Studios in Bridgend.

Also rugged is Peter Capaldi’s expression, which suggests that wherever he’s meant to be, isn’t particularly friendly!

News Source: Wales Online

THE NEW SERIES FINALE: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW!

THE NEW SERIES FINALE: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW!

Filming has begun on episode 11 of the new series of Doctor Who with Rachel Talalay back in the director’s chair! Episodes 11 and 12 are written by Steven Moffat, produced by Peter Bennett and form the series’ finale.

Rachel helmed last year’s finale, the barnstorming Dark Water/Death in Heaven and her previous credits include Tank Girl and several episodes of The Dead Zone. This year’s series finale includes a cliff-hanger to episode 11 that Steven Moffat has promised we won’t see coming… Can’t wait!

The Doctor (Peter Capaldi) and Clara (Jenna Coleman) return to BBC One this Autumn with a guest cast including Maisie Williams, Michelle Gomez, Rebecca Front, Rufus Hound, Paul Kaye, Jaye Griffiths and Joivan Wade. Further casting is to be announced so stay tuned!

News Source: BBC