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Rare Doctor Who photographs discovered after 53 years!

Rare Doctor Who photographs discovered after 53 years!

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Jon Pertwee as the Doctor and Roger Delgado as the Master in The Mind of Evil. (Photographed in 1970 by Don Smith © Radio Times Archive)

The Radio Times has reported finding a set of 25 black-and-white negatives within the personal files of Radio Times staff photographer the late, great Don Smith.

Never catalogued, never scanned nor printed before, they had lain forgotten since he took them in December 1970. Broadcasting historian Steve Arnold stumbled upon them while helping to sort through Don’s collection after his death last year.

During a career that began in the 1950s – much of it working for Radio Times – Don had preserved thousands of unused photos.
 
“He hated seeing anything go into a skip so took it upon himself to become a sort of archive of the unwanted,” says Steve, who became friends with Don and visited him in hospital the day he died.

Calling at Don’s house in the weeks that followed…

Steve encountered “stacks of material. I’d promised I’d help him but the task was monumental and I’m grateful to Don’s family that they trusted me to get on with it. The sheer volumes meant I couldn’t stop and fully comprehend what was there, although it was obvious there were long-lost Doctor Who images passing through my hands and into boxes to deal with later.”

The pictures were taken on Saturday 5th December 1970 on the set of a story called The Mind of Evil, in Studio 6 at BBC Television Centre in London. It was the recording day for Episodes Three and Four, which were subsequently broadcast in February 1971.

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Katy Manning as Jo Grant and Jon Pertwee as the Doctor under attack from the Keller Machine in The Mind of Evil. (Photographed in 1970 by Don Smith © Radio Times Archive)

Jon Pertwee was into his second year as the third Doctor, Katy Manning played his plucky companion Jo Grant, and together they were tackling the latest diabolical scheme of the Master (Roger Delgado). He had seized control of a men’s prison with the Keller Machine, which housed an alien parasite feeding on criminal impulses.

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Roger Delgado as the Master in The Mind of Evil. (Photographed in 1970 by Don Smith © Radio Times Archive)

Katy is delighted to see the pictures for the first time 53 years later.

“Back in my day they didn’t take a lot of studio shots that we ever saw, so seeing these now is absolutely wonderful. I think they’re extraordinary.”

They’re particularly luminous because they were taken on the higher-quality, two-and-a-quarter-inch-square film, sometimes called “medium format”, which by the early ‘70s Don Smith had been moving away from, in favour of 35mm film.

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Katy Manning as Jo Grant in The Mind of Evil. (Photographed in 1970 by Don Smith © Radio Times Archive)

“The Mind of Evil was only my second story – after Terror of the Autons – and a slightly different one for Jo,” says Katy. “She got to take on a whole prison full of blokes and show that she was made of tough stuff. People often forget that Jo was quite handy when necessary and was already starting to show her colours. It was a great story to have Roger in as well.”

The Doctor and Jo may have been bitterly opposed to the Master on screen but relations were very different off camera. “We all got on frightfully well, and by this point we’d also been to Roger’s house for dinner so we were all bonding, which became so apparent through the three years we worked together. We always discussed how we were going to do something and worked hard to make Doctor Who an incredibly strong show.”

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Jon Pertwee as the Doctor and Roger Delgado as the Master in The Mind of Evil. (Photographed in 1970 by Don Smith © Radio Times Archive)

She looks back on that formative period with immense fondness.

“Right from the start, Jon, Roger and I formed such a strong bond. They were mentors to me. I’d had very little television experience so was like a little sponge sucking everything up. I learnt from Roger especially a lot about the art of television acting, and from Jon I was already hearing the most wonderful stories about the entertainment business.

“I soon realised that I was in a very safe and happy place with people who were going to teach me so much but also seemed to warm to me. I adored them all. And I love Jon’s hair in these photos, that length. He was already going to my hairdresser!”

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Jon Pertwee as the Doctor and Roger Delgado as the Master in The Mind of Evil. (Photographed in 1970 by Don Smith © Radio Times Archive)

Jo Grant became the first long-running female companion, staying three years and winning the hearts of millions. Katy left in 1973, but the magic of Doctor Who has never left her.

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Katy Manning as Jo Grant in The Mind of Evil. (Photographed in 1970 by Don Smith © Radio Times Archive)

She adores her association with the show and has returned to the role many times. Now Jo Jones, she has featured in dozens of Big Finish audio dramas, in The Sarah Jane Adventures in 2010 and, in more recent times, in films shot especially for the BBC’s Doctor Who Blu-ray box sets. Last year, there was a surprise cameo in The Power of the Doctor, which she describes as “a tiny little ‘Hello, is that Jo?!’ in the 59th”.

How does it feel still being associated with the programme 50 years later?

“I’ve grown into Jo Jones. So it’s the same character but she’s had an enormous life that’s now arced into the loss of her husband Cliff. You’d never have imagined back then in 1971 that all this would happen for this wonderfully wacky, clumsy, naïve person.”

Just this year, Katy was back filming her own moving edition of Tales from the TARDIS. It brings us up to date with Jo, now a grandmother and a widow reflecting on love and loss. “It was very emotional for me,” says Katy, whose Doctor Who co-stars and friends died many years ago.

“I felt a flash of ‘double memory’ as both Jo and myself of some of the people that I had truly loved in my life.”

She even wore one of the Doctor’s original jackets, now owned by writer/actor/fan Mark Gatiss.

“It still feels Jon, it almost smells Jon – it’s filled with Pertwee!” says Katy. “I’d nestled under it on so many cold locations. Whenever someone has a velvet jacket on now, I get butterflies in my stomach. Velvet hugs!”


All of Katy Manning’s Doctor Who episodes are now on iPlayer, as is her 2023 return as Jo in Tales of the TARDIS.

Blind fan brings Doctor Who to life for thousands of visually impaired fans

Blind fan brings Doctor Who to life for thousands of visually impaired fans

Lifelong Doctor Who fan, Louis Moorhouse, raised almost £25,000 to bring his favourite show to life in a series of tactile-audio resources that help for blind and visually impaired fans experience iconic Doctor Who characters, props and sets through touch and sound.

For 60 years the immersive, visual universe of Doctor Who has been captivating the imaginations of audiences around the world. Now, for the first time, blind and visually impaired people can fully experience the spectacle too — thanks to an innovative new project.

The charity Living Paintings, which creates tactile-audio experiences for blind and visually impaired children and young people, have now released the first in a series of Doctor Who resources that fans of all ages can enjoy for free from the comfort of their own home. Within each pack, audio descriptions guide fingers over hand-made raised images of the show’s iconic characters, props and sets – helping blind and visually impaired fans to create a picture in their mind and ‘see’ through touch.

This project was all made possible by lifelong Whovian, Louis Moorhouse (22), who has been using the charity’s service since he was just 18 months old after losing his sight due to complications with childhood cancer. After approaching the charity with the idea in 2021, Louis raised almost £25,000 to make his dream a reality. Now, thanks to his monumental efforts, thousands of other blind people across the UK will also be able to access the Whoniverse at their fingertips.

“I can’t believe that an idea two years ago while walking my guide dog, Kizzy, has evolved into something so incredible,” Moorhouse explained. I’ve been a Doctor Who fan for as long as I remember, but I hadn’t fully met the weird and wonderful characters, aliens, monsters and devices used in the show until now. In my own way, I’m able to see the TARDIS, the Daleks, Cybermen and so much more. Knowing that this will benefit so many other fans, and maybe inspire new ones, is amazing.”

With 60 years of history to cover, the first release focuses on the TARDIS and the first four incarnations of The Doctor alongside a slew of legendary adversaries, and features audio descriptions from a host of fan-favourites including Tom Baker, Sir Derek Jacobi, Katy Manning and ‘voice of the Daleks’ Nichols Briggs. More releases in the New Year will take blind and visually impaired people on a further journey through space and time, meeting successive Doctors, friends and foes.

“Few shows have such rich, visual history as Doctor Who,” Publishing Manager Liz Davies said. “It’s been an honour to work with Louis in producing these fabulous new resources, helping blind and visually impaired people experience it – from the first doctor to the fourteenth. Beyond his incredible work raising the funds to make the project happen, he’s also been involved in the production process every step of the way. His wealth of knowledge and infectious passion has been invaluable to us. What we’ve created together has been a labour of love and we’re so incredibly proud to release it into the world during the show’s 60th anniversary celebrations.”

Living Paintings is a national charity on a mission to ensure every blind child in the UK has equal access to the visual world of pictures, books and learning. From adapting bestselling picture books into accessible, tactile-audio formats for blind children to developing resources designed to inspire, educate and entertain. Their free postal library gives thousands of blind children and young people the world at their fingertips. For more information and to join their free library, visit their website and check out their Instagram.

Doctor Who: Season 10 Comes To Bluray in July!

Doctor Who: Season 10 Comes To Bluray in July!

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Doctor Who: The Collection’ returns with Season 10, featuring Jon Pertwee as the iconic Time Lord.

All 26 episodes have been newly restored for Blu-ray and packed with hours of new and existing bonus material.

Originally broadcast from December 1972 to June 1973, the tenth season of Doctor Who will be the next to receive the Blu-ray treatment, principally starring Jon Pertwee and Katy Manning but with guest appearances from Patrick Troughton and William Hartnell, returning to the roles which established the show.

Comprising of five stories, The Three Doctors, Carnival of Monsters, Frontier in Space, Planet of the Daleks and The Green Death, season ten also saw the final appearances of Roger Delgado as the Master and Katy Manning’s Jo Grant as a regular character.

As well as special features imported from the previous releases, new features include –

Optional updated effects and 5.1 surround sound for Planet Of The Daleks.

Doctor Who and the Third Man: a new feature-length documentary covering the Pertwee era.

Keeping Up With the Jones: Katy Manning and Stewart Bevan return to Wales.

The 1973 omnibus repeat of The Green Death, available for the first time.

Doctor Who: The Collection Season 10 is due for release on July 8th.