Doctor Who star - who
appeared in the series from 2006 to 2008 - has revealed her views about
the BBC show having a female Doctor.
Catherine Tate has hinted she could
return to Doctor Who and "hopes" there will be a female Time Lord one
day.
The 47-year-old comedienne portrayed the Doctor's companion Donna Noble
from 2006 to 2008 alongside David Tennant, who played the Tenth Doctor,
and she admitted the sci-fi show's bosses are experts in finding ways of
bringing back characters fans aren't expecting.
When she sat down with Lorraine Kelly on her morning show, Catherine
hinted that she could come back as Donna's great-great grandmother or
her great-great granddaughter, referring to the show's time travelling
element.
She said: "Yes, it doesn't matter.
"They do tend to find really clever ways of bringing people back where
you think, 'There's no way.'"However, Catherine admitted she isn't
expecting to reprise her role as Donna after her character departed at
the end of series four, when she effectively saved the universe at a
huge cost after having her memory wiped.
She said: "With my character I don't think she could because of the
nature of how she left ... she sort of can't come back."
Meanwhile, there has been months of speculation that the Time Lord role
could be taken on by a woman one day, and Catherine would love to see a
female play the part.
She said: "I hope there is ... I'm sure there will be a female Doctor
one day."
While Catherine may not play Donna on screen again, she has thoroughly
enjoyed recording some Doctor Who audiobooks.
She said: "We've recorded some audio plays ... I that is the right word
because they're not books they're plays. That was lovely. Lovely."
Changes are afoot on 'Doctor Who' in 2017 with current executive
producer Steven Moffat set to leave.
Peter Capaldi is also rumoured to be departing his role as the current
Time Lord in 2017 to give new showrunner Chris Chibnall a "fresh start." |