After years apart, the Doctor and Rose are returning to the Tardis for new intergalactic adventures – but with a bit of a twist.
You see, this time the pair (played by David Tennant and Billie Piper) are back in the Doctor Who world thanks to the efforts of long-running audio drama producer Big Finish, who previously brought Tennant back with co-star Catherine Tate (companion Donna Noble) for a series of untold adventures last year and are now doing the same for the Tenth Doctor and his earlier companion.
And while this isn’t the first time the actors have reunited in the Whoniverse since Rose and the Doctor parted ways in 2006 (Rose came back for a few episodes in the 2008 series and in Tennant’s final regular episode in 2010, and Piper starred as The Moment in the 50th anniversary special alongside Tennant’s returning Doctor), it’s still the first time we’ve seen the pair in action for a while – and now they’ve explained what tempted them back into the weird and wonderful world of Who.
“It just feels like another opportunity to keep the flame alive,” Piper (making her Big Finish debut) said in the latest issue of Doctor Who Magazine.
“You know, I felt as through because everyone’s doing [Big Finish] was I missing out? Also, it’s all the people who ask me at conventions. It was getting awkward.”
“It never quite goes away, does it?” Tennant agreed. “There’s no escaping it, nor would I want to, really.
“Because Doctor Who sort of runs through my life like a stick of rock. It’s sort of always bubbling under, and you know it always will.”
He added: “I always feel fond towards it. I always feel like it’s a happy place to be.
“Obviously a day like this brings it all back a little more keenly, but it’s always a very fond thing to return to, the world of Doctor Who. It’s always very welcoming, and friendly, and familiar. I suppose I don’t feel detached enough from it to feel sentimental, really. Maybe if I’d been completely banished from it for ten years…?”
Well, fingers crossed we’ll never have to wait that long to find out. For now, at least, the Doctor and Rose are off on their travels once more.
Doctor Who: The Tenth Doctor Adventures – Volume 2 will be released next month
FIRST LOOK! THE DOCTOR AND DONNA IN ‘DR. TENTH CHRISTMAS SURPRISE!’
Out now is an adorable new Doctor Who book just in time for the festive season – Dr. Tenth Christmas Surprise!
The greatest mash-up in the Whoniverse continues with this Christmas adventure starring the Tenth Doctor and fan-favourite companion, Donna!
And we have a sneak preview look inside – check out three pages below:
Doctor Who meets Roger Hargreaves’ Mr. Men in this fun and charming Christmas story; a seasonal special to complement the twelve Dr. Men titles in the ongoing series written and illustrated by Adam Hargreaves.
Dr. Tenth Christmas Surprise! is a new keepsake hardback format makes this the perfect Christmas gift for any Doctor Who fan.
Dr. Tenth Christmas Surprise! is available now
MATT LUCAS: ‘LUCKIEST MAN’ IN THE WORLD TO BE IN DOCTOR WHO
The latest edition of Doctor Who Magazine – issue 518, out now – has been chatting with Narolde actor Matt Lucas all about his time on Doctor Who, from 2015’s Christmas Special to this year’s epic Series 10 finale.
During the interview, Matt discusses the lighter tone of the Doctor Who Christmas Specials, filming Series 10 and laments not visiting the now-closed Doctor Who Experience.
Lucas tackles the issue of the “long days” on filming Doctor Who over nine months or so whilst also writing his autobiography; the actor states:
“And you only get half an hour for lunch! You start work at 7.30 – and that’s already in costume and make-up. That’s 7.30, on set, rehearsing.
But every day I thought I was so lucky that someone’s paying me to write about my life.
And also, I’m the luckiest man in the world to be an assistant in Doctor Who. So, to be honest with you, even though I was tired, I was never fed up.”
Matt rues his lack of free time due to his busy schedule, he says:
“I never even made it to the Doctor Who Experience, to my great disappointment.
When I first signed up to do [the 2017 series of] Doctor Who, I originally thought I was just doing another three episodes. Then it kind of grew and grew and grew, until I ended up doing every one.
When I did the book deal, I thought, ‘Oh, I’ll probably have a little bit of spare time on my hands,’ because Nardole is just in it a bit here and there. But I actually ended up being in it far more than I anticipated.
So consequently, my life was: learning lines, saying lines, writing book. Those three things. I’d get up at six in the morning, go to the set, and then I’d get back at 7.30 in the evening. I’d learn my lines, write for a couple more hours, and then go straight to bed.”
Attention turns to his Doctor Who debut, as Nardole in 2015’s The Husbands of River Song (you can watch a clip in the player above). Matt describes the more comedic aspect of his role in the festive special:
“When you’re making the Christmas Special you muck about more!
I mean, you muck about more on camera. I don’t mean off camera. Off camera you just do the same.
Also they’re longer, so there’s more time for a bit of comedy business.”
You can read the full interview with Matt in the latest edition of Doctor Who Magazine which also includes a fantastic interview with Tenth Doctor actor David Tennant and much, much more.
Doctor Who Magazine 518 is available now
DOCTOR WHO FAN ART PUBLISHED IN ‘100 ILLUSTRATED ADVENTURES’
Coming next month is a brand new guide illustrated with over 100 pieces of original fan art, showcasing the best stories from 54 years of Doctor Who.
Doctor Who – 100 Illustrated Adventures profiles 100 of the most beloved Doctor Who TV stories and is filled with essential information and original art drawn by fans themselves.
Spanning the First Doctor’s era to the Twelfth, this stunning book is a must-have luxurious Christmas gift and keepsake for any Whovian. From thousands of entries, the illustrations inside were chosen as winning pieces as part of an official Puffin Doctor Who fan art competition held in early 2017.
Doctor Who – 100 Illustrated Adventures will be released in hardback and features original art on every spread with an illustration per episode.
Check out the cover art below.
Doctor Who – 100 Illustrated Adventures is available from Nov 2, 2017
DAVID TENNANT: DOCTOR WHO ‘RUNS THROUGH MY LIFE LIKE A STICK OF ROCK’
Tenth Doctor actor David Tennant has been chatting with Doctor Who Magazine 518 all about his time on Doctor Who and what it means to him. The issue is available from Oct 19, 2017.
David was asked how he feels looking back on the role which he started playing in 2005, he commented:
“I always feel fond towards it. I always feel like it’s a happy place to be. Obviously a day like this brings it all back a little more keenly, but it’s always a very fond thing to return to, the world of Doctor Who. It’s always very welcoming, and friendly, and familiar. I suppose I don’t feel detached enough from it to feel sentimental, really. Maybe if I’d been completely banished from it for ten years…?
But of course it never quite goes away, does it? There’s no escaping it, nor would I want to, really.
Because Doctor Who sort of runs through my life like a stick of rock. It’s sort of always bubbling under, and you know it always will.”
Tennant was also seen as the Doctor in the 2013 50th Anniversary special, The Day of the Doctor, in which he delivered the immortal line, describing the Time Lord’s name as a promise – “Never cruel or cowardly”. David describes it as a “mission statement.” The actor continues:
“We can all have mottos that we live by; it doesn’t necessarily mean that we’re entirely faithful to them. It can be who you aspire to be. It doesn’t mean you can’t be inconsistent sometimes. That’s what makes any character and any person interesting – their inconsistencies, the little flaws in the weft of their character.
I don’t know if the Doctor always needs to be consistent to that, but I think broadly speaking he is. At least, he tries.”
You can read the full interview with David in the latest edition of Doctor Who Magazine which also includes a fantastic interview with Nardole actor Matt Lucas and much, much more.
THE TENTH DOCTOR AND ROSE ARE BACK! ISSUE 518 OF DOCTOR WHO MAGAZINE CHATS EXCLUSIVELY TO DAVID TENNANT AND BILLIE PIPER!
Over a decade on from their time together in the TARDIS, David Tennant and Billie Piper reunite for a series of Big Finish Doctor Who audio adventures featuring the Tenth Doctor and Rose…
David tells DWM, “It’s always a very fond thing to return to, the world of Doctor Who. It’s always very welcoming, and friendly, and familiar.” (David Tennant)
Billie tells DWM, “It’s like when you hang out with an old friend who you haven’t seen for years, and then loads of stuff has happened between you, but it’s sort of just like you’re immediately there again. I love it.”
ALSO INSIDE THIS ISSUE…
SYLVESTER McCOY INTERVIEW
The second part of our interview with Seventh Doctor Sylvester McCoy reflects back on Doctor Who‘s 50th anniversary and looks forward to the show’s future.
MATT LUCAS INTERVIEW
DWM chats to Matt Lucas about his new autobiography Little Me: My Life from A-Z which he wrote while playing Nardole in the latest series of Doctor.
CAMILLE CODURI INTERVIEW
Camille Coduri’s Jackie Tyler joins the Doctor and Rose for The Tenth Doctor Adventures: Volume Two.
WHITE WITCH OF DEVIL’S END
We find out how a project to make a DVD sequel to the classic 1971 TV story The Dæmonscame about.
TARDIS SHED OF THE YEAR
DWM meets Paul Foden, the man who recently appeared on Channel 4’s Amazing Spaces: Shed of the Year with his TARDIS-replica shed.
MATILDUS
There’s a brand-new comic strip adventure for the Doctor and Bill in Matildus; a one-parter written and illustrated by Scott Gray.
THE TIME TEAM
The Time Team continues its mission to watch every episode of Doctor Who with 2012’s The Rebel Flesh.
PLUS! Previews, book and audio reviews, news, the Watcher’s column, prize-winning competitions and much, much more.
Doctor Who Magazine 518 is on sale from Thursday 19 October, price £5.99.
TIME AFTER TIME: A HISTORY OF ‘SHADA’ FROM THE ESSENTIAL DOCTOR WHO
With the news that the long unfinished Doctor Who story Shada, featuring Tom Baker as the Fourth Doctor, is to be finally completed, we bring you an in-depth look at the (mis)adventure from Doctor Who Magazine.
Time After Time was originally presented in The Essential Doctor Who: Time Lordspublished by Panini UK in 2016 and presents the legacy of the Douglas Adams tale which will now be completed using the original footage from 1979 and hand-drawn animation.
The following article is reproduced by very kind permission of the author and Doctor Who Magazine.
Time After Time
By Paul Kirkley
“The day after we finished filming Shada,” Tom Baker once claimed, “it was already mythology to me.”
Baker recorded his final scenes for the ill-fated serial on 5 November 1979. They weren’t supposed to be his final scenes, of course: with work scheduled to run into December, there was still plenty to be done. But when the cast and crew arrived at Television Centre for the next studio session they found the doors locked. Production had been halted by an industrial dispute which, depending on who you believe, may have boiled down to a row about whose job it was to move the hands on the Play School clock.
The doors were finally unlocked later that month, but BBC bosses decided to prioritise Television Centre for more ‘prestigious’ shows like Fawlty Towers and The Morecambe and Wise Christmas Special. So, despite several studio sessions and a whole week’s worth of location filming in Cambridge having been completed, Shada was cancelled. And that was seemingly that.
Except this was only the beginning of a long and extraordinary afterlife that has ironically gifted Shada a much richer legacy than many stories that did actually make it into viewers’ living rooms. While there may be many Doctor Who adventures that are better regarded, few can match Shada in terms of its sheer – thanks Tom – mythology.
(Pic: Douglas Adams on the set of The Hitchhikers’ Guide To The Galaxy)
Douglas Adams’ story concerned the villainous Skagra’s search for Salyavin, a notorious Time Lord criminal. Salyavin had been imprisoned by his people on Shada, their prison planet, but had escaped and was now living in retirement as Professor Chronotis at St Cedd’s College, Cambridge. Approaching the end of his regeneration cycle, Chronotis asked for the Doctor’s help in returning a stolen book called The Worshipful and Ancient Law of Gallifrey to the Time Lords. Dating back to the early days of Rassilon, the book – which had previously been kept in the Panopticon Archives, and over which time ran backwards – was also the key to the Time Lord prison.
The first attempt to salvage Shada came while the ink was still wet on the Do Not Resuscitate order: in April 1980, incoming producer John Nathan-Turner attempted to remount the story as two 50-minute episodes to be broadcast that Christmas. It was hoped recording could take place at Television Centre in October, with the only cast change being John Leeson replacing David Brierley as the voice of K9. In June, however, Nathan-Turner was informed that no studio space could be made available.
Three years later, relatively generic sequences from Shada’s location filming were used to cover Tom Baker’s absence from The Five Doctors. If anything, Shada’s contribution to the twentieth anniversary special only piqued interest in the missing story. By the mid-1980s illicit VHS copies of the existing footage were being circulated by fans, some of whom had helpfully added explanatory subtitles produced on a BBC Micro.
(Pic: A BBC Micro in its prime)
In 1984, former Doctor Who production assistant Snowy Lidiard-White suggested to John Nathan-Turner that Shada might be a candidate for the BBC’s new range of Doctor Who home videos. “We’re toying with the idea of getting Colin [Baker] to fill in the missing bits with commentary,” Nathan-Turner told a convention audience the following year – possibly in the form of specially filmed scenes in which the current Doctor would recount the adventure to his companion Peri (Nicola Bryant). Once again, however, the idea came to nothing.
Shada’s next reappearance came in an even more unexpected form, when Douglas Adams cannibalised parts of his script – including Professor Chronotis, no longer a Time Lord but still a Cambridge academic with a time machine in his study – for his 1987 novel Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency. Two decades later, the book would be adapted for BBC Radio 4, starring Henry Enfield as Gently and Andrew Sachs as Chronotis.
By late 1991, fans had gone without new Doctor Who for two years. But Nathan-Turner hadn’t given up on the show – or Shada – just yet. In his new role administering the BBC’s range of Doctor Who video and audio cassettes, he concocted another plan to bring the long-lost story to the screen.
“This time I was determined,” he said, as part of the memoirs he wrote for Doctor Who Magazine in 1997.
“I persuaded Tom to do the linking material. Actually, Tom was quite keen – he told me he’d always liked this particular story, and he suggested that his links were done in the first person.”
Baker recorded his on-camera narration – in character, but not in costume – at London’s Museum of the Moving Image on 4 February 1992.
(Pic: Tom Baker narrating the VHS release of Shada)
“We wanted to avoid the sort of dull presentation you see so often on television these days,” Baker told DWM at the time.
“We wanted something fresher, more dynamic, if you like. They were my memories, not some unconnected presenter’s.
I talked about it on and off for ages, because everyone who worked on it in 1979 realised it was so valuable. We always thought it was a terrible sadness. I don’t suppose it could have been released without some kind of links, and so we’ve sort of made it into a collector’s item.”
“I was extremely pleased with it,” wrote Nathan-Turner, who also commissioned new visual and sound effects along with a score composed by Keff McCulloch.
“What was originally filmed and recorded amounted to the bulk of Part One, less of Part Two, even less of Part Three and so on, resulting in very little for Part Six!
I took liberties with what was available from the archives; I split scenes, I invented backgrounds, I used material unintended for transmission, so the tape didn’t conclude with little more than a ‘talking head’ – even if it was Tom Baker’s.”
Someone who was less than pleased was Douglas Adams. The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy author had written the script in a frantic hurry to fill a hole at the end of the season, later describing his effort as “a mediocre four-parter stretched over six weeks.”
(Pic: Tom Baker and Lalla Ward take a break during filming)
Adams was equally lukewarm about any efforts to revive Shada. “The story was a bit of a patchwork quilt to begin with,” he said in 1990, “so making a patchwork quilt out of the remains of a patchwork quilt would produce something very peculiar indeed.” In fact, he was so horrified by the idea of Shada being stitched together for video like some kind of Frankenstein’s monster (according to some reports, he signed over his permission for the project by accident) he refused to have his name appear on the cover. He donated his fee to Comic Relief.
The video was packaged with a miniature copy of the script and released on 6 July that year – finally appearing on viewers’ screens a mere 4,918 days later than originally planned.
It would be another decade before Shada reared its head again. This time the initiative was led by James Goss at BBCi, as the BBC’s digital operation was then known. Goss approached Gary Russell and Jason Haigh-Ellery of Doctor Who audio producers Big Finish with the idea of recording Shada as a webcast to mark the series’ fortieth anniversary in 2003.
“We’d already done [Sixth Doctor webcast] Real Time with BBCi,” recalls Gary. “Jason had had dealings with Douglas’ estate and was on good terms with them, so he had a relatively easy time getting the agreement to do it. There seem to have been lots of myths over the years about the estate being evasive or tricky, but we found them delightful, encouraging and pleasant. They even suggested finding out if there were earlier drafts of scripts to see if there was anything exorcised we might want to put back in, even if it was just odd lines.”
(Pic: a scene from the Shada webcast)
Lalla Ward, who played Romana, declared herself perfectly happy to work with Tom Baker again, even though she hadn’t seen her ex-husband for more than 20 years. In the end, however, Gary adapted the script for Paul McGann’s Eighth Doctor.
“I knew I could get Paul McGann’s voice into it rather than just have him say lines originally written for Tom,” Gary explains. “It didn’t need much alteration – I mean, it’s Douglas Adams for heaven’s sake, it’s as close to perfect as it’s ever going to be. But there were subtle nuances in delivery and flow that I opted to make more McGann-esque.
“Then there was just the task of audio-ising some of the more visual bits, and I had to create the opening few minutes with Romana and the Eighth Doctor, to explain why we were doing Shada all over again. That was fun. After that I handed it over to Nick Pegg, the director, and wished him well!”
McGann, Ward and John Leeson were joined by an impressive cast, including James Fox as Chronotis, Andrew Sachs (as Skagra in this version), Susannah Harker, Melvyn Hayes and Hannah Gordon. Flash animation featuring illustrations by Lee Sullivan completed an impressive package, which was made available in six instalments through May and June 2003, and later released on CD.
Did it feel strange for Lalla Ward to be recreating those scenes with a new Doctor? “Everything about Doctor Who is pretty strange,” she says, laughing.
“This didn’t seem any stranger than other strangenesses. It was lovely to return to a story I had always liked – largely because of Douglas – and with not just the good fortune to be working with Paul, but with an amazing cast altogether.
The actual filming of the original Shada wasn’t altogether easy – filming never is – so in many ways I had a much happier time on this.”
(Pic: Shada on audio from Big Finish)
Tom’s are big shoes to fill – does Lalla think Paul McGann succeeded in putting his own stamp on it? “I don’t think any version of the Doctor is to do with filling shoes,” she says. “You can only bring your own take to it and find a new pair of shoes.”
That advice might have proved equally useful to Gareth Roberts when, in late 2010, he was asked to adapt Adams’ Shada scripts into a novel.
Roberts was a natural choice: as well as being one of Doctor Who’s wittiest scriptwriters, he had penned several well-received novels based on his personal dream team of the Fourth Doctor and Romana II, and had long been a cheerleader for that period of the programme. Despite this, by his own admission, the book proved to be the toughest challenge of his career.
“It was very much harder than I was expecting,” he says. “I thought, ‘The story’s all there, the dialogue’s all there, it’ll be a doddle.’ But the story didn’t make much sense. That’s not me going, ‘I’m better than Douglas Adams!’ – it was just that you could tell it had been written very, very quickly. So although it’s brilliant, it was hanging out all over the place.”
Honoured and daunted in equal measure, Gareth didn’t attempt to emulate Adams’ style, (“I gave up on that idea at the very beginning”) and says he was left to get on with it by the late writer’s estate. “They stood well back, really. To be frank, because it was a Douglas Adams project, I thought it might go bigger in the publishing world. But it was really Doctor Who first, Douglas Adams second, and anything with ‘Doctor Who’ on it is never going to be a massive bestseller. Which is a shame!”
(Pic: From BBC Books, Shada by Gareth Roberts)
Despite the labour pains, Gareth was happy with the finished novel. “Looking back, I think I did it pretty well, really,” he says. Lalla Ward, who performed the audiobook reading, agrees. “I thought Gareth did a really good job of it,” she says. “Very clever, very Douglas. I think Douglas would have been impressed.”
The following year Shada was issued on DVD, packaged with thirtieth anniversary documentary More Than 30 Years in the TARDIS as a box set entitled The Legacy Collection. The main feature was a reissue of the VHS edition, albeit brought up to current technical standards with new transfers from film negatives.
At one point, the producers of the DVD had entered into discussions with fan and former continuity adviser Ian Levine about featuring an unofficial version of Shada he had financed himself. As well as new animation to cover the missing scenes, Levine had reconvened many of the original cast – though, crucially, not Tom Baker – to record their lines from the abandoned studio sessions. It was ultimately decided to stick with the 1992 version.
“We are here to restore, as best as possible, content that’s in existence,” the DVD’s commissioning editor Dan Hall told DWM at the time. “It’s not our role to create what was never there. Shada is a great unfinished story, but it’s just that – unfinished. Creating brand-new Doctor Who editorial content is the remit of the BBC, not BBC Worldwide.”
One of the bonus features, Taken out of Time, saw several of the cast and crew returning to Cambridge to discuss the making of the story, and its aftermath.
(Tom Baker in the documentary Taken Out Of Time)
“You always look forward to the ones where something went wrong!” says Chris Chapman, who produced and directed the documentary.
“Going into it, we knew we had some meat – the very fact it was cancelled meant we had a really good story to tell. We didn’t really have to coax stories out of anyone,” he continues. “For the people who experienced Shada at the time, it’s a big memory. For Tom… he doesn’t always have very clear memories of individual stories, but he remembered Shada very vividly, because of Cambridge and Douglas, and because of how it turned out.”
In retrospect, one of the most poignant aspects of Shada’s cancellation was that the serial was supposed to serve as the Doctor Who swansong both for Douglas Adams and producer Graham Williams – two men who, as Tom Baker reflects sadly in Taken out of Time, died at a young age. With the abandonment of Shada it was left to the underwhelming The Horns of Nimon to bring the curtain down on 1970s Doctor Who, before John Nathan-Turner brought in sweeping changes for the start of the new decade.
(Pic: The Horns Of Nimon, underwhelming?)
For all its writer’s reservations, Doctor Who’s most tantalising near-miss has proved exceptionally enduring over the years. It could even be argued that cancellation did Shada something of a favour.
“It has had a strange afterlife,” says Gareth Roberts, “and one of my main aims [with the novel] was to finish that off! People were so much more obsessed with it because it hadn’t been made than they would have been if it had. I thought it was time to move on. Which was absolutely bonkers – people are never going to move on from Shada.”
Lalla Ward was good friends with Douglas Adams up until his death in 2001. She feels he would have been “intrigued by the life of this once-doomed story… I think it would have had a particular interest to people anyway, because it was so ‘Douglasy’, but its chequered history has certainly added to its allure.”
(Pic: Lalla Ward as Romana in Shada)
“It’s partly to do with Douglas dying and partly to do with Shada itself dying a young man’s death,” she says. “It was like a poet dying young, or Marc Bolan. They take on a sort of mythical quality.”
And no doubt Shada will continue making myths for many years to come.”
One man who had reason to be thankful for Shada’s cancellation was Terrance Dicks. By the start of 1983, the veteran writer had just about managed to juggle all the characters and elements required for the show’s 20th Anniversary Special, The Five Doctors, into a workable script. At which point, Tom Baker decided not to take part.
“I discovered that there’s a bit of Shada where Tom could be picked up, and another where he could be released,” Terrance told Doctor Who Magazine in 1998. “So I said, ‘I’ll trap the bugger in a time loop, and that will be him gone from the rest of the show.’”
And so it was that The Five Doctors saw two location sequences from Shada – one of the Doctor and Romana punting on the River Cam, and another of them leaving in the TARDIS – finally making it to air. “It went like clockwork,” said Terrance. “Actually, I think it improved the story.”
(Pic: the Fourth Doctor and Romana on the River Cam in Shada)
A notable story in the DVD documentary Taken Out Of Time is the revelation that Daniel Hill, who played student Chris Parsons, married production assistant Olivia Bazalgette after meeting her in Cambridge during the filming of Shada. The couple went on to have three children together. If you’re looking for the ultimate proof of Shada’s afterlife, it’s surely that there are people in the world who owe their existence to that heady week by the Cam in the winter of 1979.
“That was such a gift,” says the documentary’s producer/director Chris Chapman. “We went to Daniel and he said, ‘Are you going to speak to Olivia, too?’ And I didn’t know why he was talking about Olivia. But that was lovely – it meant that, despite it all going wrong, there was a sense of something good that came of it.”
This article was originally presented in The Essential Doctor Who: Time Lords, published by Panini UK in 2016.
Special thanks to Doctor Who Magazine, Peter Ware and Paul Kirkley.
THE ‘WHOGRAPHICA’ GUIDE TO CLASSIC DOCTOR WHO STORY ‘SHADA’
This week BBC Worldwide announced that Shada – a Fourth Doctor story which filming remained unfinished – is to be released later this year with the original footage and completed with hand-drawn animation.
Some fans may be curious as to the history of this adventure, written by The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy author (and Doctor Who script editor), Douglas Adams.
Well, good news – BBC Books’ Whographica: An Infographic Guide To Space And Timeis here to help!
Released last year, the Whographica is a fantastic and fun reference book from Simon Guerrier (The Scientific Secrets of Doctor Who), Steve O’Brien (Doctor Who Magazine) and Ben Morris (Radio Times).
Included in the book is a double page spread timeline on Shada and its many incarnations over the years – and we have the extract to share with you!
Find below, an abridged version of the Whographica’s unique look at Shada…
Shada, Shada, Shada!
The repeatedly completed uncompleted adventure…
c. 29 June 1979
Doctor Who script editor Douglas Adams begins work on Sunburst, a six-part Doctor Who story intended to be broadcast in January and February 1980.
15 October 1979
Filming begins in Cambridge on the story, now called Shada, with Tom Baker as the Fourth Doctor and Lalla Ward as companion Romana.
19 November 1979
The cast and crew are locked out of the recording studio due to industrial action at the BBC.
10 December 1979
Though the industrial dispute is resolved, there is no studio space available for the five days needed to complete Shada in time for broadcast in January.
5 June 1980
Plans to complete Shada as two 50-minute episodes for broadcast over Christmas 1980 are abandoned because of lack of available studio space.
September 1980
Publication of issue 45 of Doctor Who Monthly (now Doctor Who Magazine), with a three-page feature on Shada – the first time many fans will have heard about it.
4 October 1980
Lalla Ward completes work on Warriors’ Gate and leaves Doctor Who – so there’s little chance that the material already recorded for Shada will ever be completed.
24 January 1981
Tom Baker completes work on Logopolis and leaves Doctor Who.
29 December 1982
Tom Baker declines to join production of The Five Doctors, a special story being planned to mark the 20th anniversary of Doctor Who in 1983.
10 January 1983
Permission is granted to use footage from Shada in The Five Doctors so that the Fourth Doctor (and Romana) will appear, if only briefly.
September 1983
“The story you never saw!” declares the cover of issue 81 of Doctor Who Monthly (cover dated October), with photographs, interviews and features telling the story of Shada’s cancellation.
25 November 1983 The Five Doctors is broadcast – the first time any material from Shada is aired.
June 1987
Publication of Douglas Adams’s novel Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency, which reuses some material from Shada (but not the Doctor and Romana).
6 July 1992
BBC Video release of Shada – with new linking material presented by Tom Baker and a printed copy of the rehearsal script. (Pictured above.)
29 November 1993
The documentary Thirty Years in the TARDIS is shown on BBC One (in Scotland, on BBC Two) and includes footage from Shada – the first time this material is broadcast.
2 May 2003
Webcast begins of a new, animated adaptation of Shada starring Paul McGann as the Eighth Doctor and Lalla Ward as Romana, illustrated by Lee Sullivan. (Pictured below.)
December 2003
CD release of this version of Shada, without the illustrations.
10 September 2007
BBC Radio 7 broadcasts this version of Shada.
15 March 2012
BBC Books publish a new novelisation of Shada by Gareth Roberts, and AudioGO release an unabridged audiobook version read by Lalla Ward.
7 January 2013
The 1992 version of Shada is released on DVD as part of The Legacy Collection, together with the 2003 animated version. (Pictured below.)
Since the publication of Whographica: An Infographic Guide To Space And Time, we have some new dates and information on Shada to add…
10 Oct 2017
BBC Worldwide announce that Shada will be completed using the previously shot footage and hand-drawn animation for digital download, bluray and DVD.
William Shatner, the star of the original Star Trek series, has inexplicably gotten hold of the script for Peter Capaldi and Steven Moffat’s last ever episode – the upcoming Christmas special – and is auctioning it off in an online charity.
The actor – who is a Whovian – took to Twitter to announce that the highly coveted prize, which appears to have been signed by both Capaldi and Moffat, will go to the highest bidder in his 2017 Hollywood Charity Horse Show silent auction, which commences online this Sunday.
Whovians! A special treasure in my auction! The shooting script for Peter Capaldi’s last episode as Dr. Who – the Christmas episode! pic.twitter.com/X9V8MFVe95
Doctor Who fans round the world will be keen to get their hands on the script, but it will likely cost them a pretty penny. Plus, as Shatner confirmed in a later tweet, the highest bidder will have to wait until AFTER Christmas to claim their prize, so as to avoid the potential leak of spoilers.
Shatner’s charity horse show has been running each year since 1990. While all proceeds of the event were initially donated to a therapeutic riding group for handicapped children known as Ahead with Horses, it has since expanded to incorporate a number of different charities, including Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Pets for Vets and the Blind Children’s Center.
So, the good news is, whatever mammoth sum this ends up selling for, it’ll go to a worthy cause.
However, most of us will have to wait it out until Christmas day to find out what happens in the new episode.
The Doctor Who Christmas Special will air on Christmas Day 2017
DOCTOR WHO: COMPLETE SERIES 10 COMING TO BLURAY AND DVD
Fans can now enjoy the latest run of episodes with their favourite Time Lord, Bill Potts and Nardole in Doctor Who: The Complete Series 10, available on DVD and bluray.
Doctor Who: The Complete Series 10 will be available from Nov 13, 2017 on DVD, bluray and limited edition steelbook.
In Series 10, the Doctor is keen to show his new friend, Bill Potts, the wonders of the universe, and their travels bring them face-to-face with Ice Warriors and Cybermen. His adventures draw to a terrifying conclusion as a long lost face from the past returns.
Doctor Who: The Complete Series 10 DVD and bluray includes all the episodes from Series 10, the 2016 Christmas Special, and a whole host of extras listed below:
Doctor Who Complete Series 10 Extras
Becoming the Companion
Travel with new companion Pearl Mackie from the London stage through the doors of the TARDIS to a once-in-a-lifetime role, or as Pearl says, “the most insane thing that’s ever happened to me.” Featuring exclusive interviews with Pearl, Peter Capaldi, and Steven Moffat. Narrated by Ingrid Oliver (who played UNIT scientist, Osgood).
Out of This World
As Pearl Mackie steps aboard the TARDIS for her first adventure as Bill Potts, Ingrid Oliver looks back at the debuts of the Doctor’s recent companions. What can we learn from their first voyages on the TARDIS, coming face to face with their first monster, and their first encounters with the mysterious stranger called the Doctor?
Acclaimed writer Frank Cottrell-Boyce is back for Bill’s first big adventure into the future, and Frank provides a unique insight into the writing and filming of this chilling episode, along with the perks of the job! Featuring interviews with Peter Capaldi, Pearl Mackie and Steven Moffat, and narrated by Ingrid Oliver.
…Who’s There?
We creep silently through this spooky adventure as writer Mike Bartlett and Director Bill Anderson reveal the secrets of how to make a truly scary episode of Doctor Who. And find out why they couldn’t have chosen a more terrifying location… Featuring interviews with David Suchet, Peter Capaldi and Pearl Mackie. Narrated by Ingrid Oliver.
Rona Munro – A Modern Classic
No writer has ever penned an episode of both classic Doctor Who and the new series – until now! Rona Munro, writer of the 1989’s Survival, explores the similarities between her classic and modern episodes. And Peter, Pearl and Steven turn their eagle eyes on an ancient mystery! Narrated by Ingrid Oliver.
The Finale Falls
Behind the scenes on the 2016 Series 10 finale featuring the return of the Cybermen and John Simm as The Master.
Doctor Who: The Fan Show – After Shows
Join Christel Dee and a host of Doctor Who actors, writers and creatives to discuss the making of Series 10, and most importantly, assess the intensity of TARDIS crew’s hairstyles along the way, in this original companion show.
Doctor Who: The Finale Countdown
Interview with Pearl Mackie and unseen film footage from the Concert.
Knock Knock Binaural Sound
The Binaural Sound edition of episode 4. Binaural Sound gives an immersive spatial sound experience for headphone listeners.
Doctor Who Extra: The Return of Doctor Mysterio
Behind the scenes on the 2016 Doctor Who Christmas Special.
The Doctor: A New Kind of Hero
A short documentary that accompanied The Return of Doctor Mysterio, which looks at the character of the Doctor and how he’s a unique hero.
Inside Looks
12 episodes looking at each episode in Doctor Who Series 10.
Deleted Scenes
Audio Commentaries (details to follow)
Doctor Who: The Complete Series 10 is available from Nov 13, 2017