Browsed by
Tag: The Crimson Horror

Seven stories join the Doctor Who Target book range

Seven stories join the Doctor Who Target book range

Seven Doctors in seven unforgettable adventures join the Doctor Who Target book range, all publishing on 11th March 2021, each with newly commissioned cover artwork by Anthony Dry.

These latest novelisations, almost all by the original writers of the TV episodes, will help Target fans finally complete their classic-era collection, and take the Target range into its next incarnation.

Doctor Who Target collection

For Doctor Who fans, the range of novelisations published by Target Books in the 1970s and 1980s hold a special place. There was a novel published for almost every Doctor Who serial between 1963 and 1989, with a very few (five, actually) notable exceptions. Since 2012, BBC Books has been successfully reissuing these classic paperbacks and expanding the Target range to include all-new novelisations of modern-era Doctor Who episodes.

These seven novelisations include the long-awaited Target editions of Eric Saward’s Resurrection of the Daleks and Revelation of the DaleksThe Pirate Planet by James Goss which is based on the scripts by Douglas Adams; as well as a reissue of Gary Russell’s novelisation of The TV Movie starring Paul McGann. To complete the set are three new-era novelisations: The Crimson Horror by Mark Gatiss, Dalek by Robert Shearman, and The Witchfinders by Joy Wilkinson.

The Witchfinders is the first Thirteenth Doctor adventure to be published on the Target list, and the first to carry the new-look Target-branding, with the current Doctor Who logo, that will appear on all future Target releases.

The Pirate Planet

Doctor Who Target collection

The Fourth Doctor and Romana arrive at the right place to find the wrong planet.

You can pre-order The Pirate Planet here.


Resurrection of the Daleks

Doctor Who Target collection

The TARDIS is ensnared in a time corridor, catapulting it into derelict docklands on 20th century Earth. The Fifth Doctor and his companions, Tegan and Turlough, stumble on a warehouse harbouring fugitives from the future at the far end of the corridor – and are soon under attack from a Dalek assault force.

You can pre-order Resurrection of the Daleks here.


Revelation of the Daleks

Doctor Who Target collection

The Sixth Doctor and Peri land on the planet Necros to visit Tranquil Repose – a funerary home where the dead are interred and the near-dead placed in suspended animation until such time as their conditions can be cured.

You can pre-order Revelation of the Daleks here.


Doctor Who: The TV Movie

Doctor Who Target collection

The Eighth Doctor confronts the Master in modern-day San Francisco.

You can pre-order Doctor Who: The TV Movie here.


Dalek

Doctor Who Target collection

The Ninth Doctor and Rose discover an unexpected survivor of The Time War.

You can pre-order Dalek here.


The Crimson Horror

Doctor Who Target collection

The Eleventh Doctor and Clara investigate something ghastly afoot in Victorian Yorkshire.

You can pre-order The Crimson Horror here.


The Witchfinders

Doctor Who Target collection

The Thirteenth Doctor and friends battle an evil presence in 17th century Lincolnshire.

You can pre-order The Witchfinders here.

You can pre-order all these Target novelisations now ahead of their release on 11th March 2021.

Dame Dianna Rigg: 1938-2020

Dame Dianna Rigg: 1938-2020

Dame Diana Rigg enjoyed a long and distinguished acting career on stage, in film and on television. The range of her roles was enormous, from serious drama to high camp.

She was the only Bond girl to get 007 to the altar. But for those of a certain generation, she will always be the desirable Emma Peel in The Avengers TV series.

Enid Diana Elizabeth Rigg was born near Doncaster on 20 July 1938. While still a toddler, she travelled to India, where her father worked as a railway engineer for the Maharaja of Bikaner.

By the time she returned to England after the war, she spoke Hindi as a second language. She was sent to a Yorkshire boarding school run by the Moravian church. “I felt like a fish out of water,” she said – although she later credited the experience with helping form her character.

On leaving school in 1955, she trained as an actress at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. She made her professional debut in a production of Bertolt Brecht’s The Caucasian Chalk Circle as part of the 1957 York Festival.

She joined the Royal Shakespeare Company, where she played a number of roles, receiving much praise for her portrayal of Cordelia in a touring production of King Lear.

In 1965, she screen-tested for the part of John Steed’s female companion in the TV series The Avengers after the departure of Honor Blackman to play Pussy Galore in Goldfinger.

Diana Rigg as Emma Peel in “The Avengers”

In fact, the role had already been given to another actress, Elizabeth Shepherd. But Brian Clemens, the programme’s producer, was not happy with her performance.

“She’s not a bad actress,” he later recalled. “But she just didn’t have a sense of humour at all – that was essential in The Avengers. So we scrapped what we’d shot and got rid of her and then tested, and out of the tests came Diana Rigg, who was head and shoulders above everybody else.”

Her performance as the cat-suited Emma Peel brought her international fame. The surreal psychedelia of The Avengers made it as much a symbol of the Swinging 60s as the Mini and the Beatles.

Sexy, resourceful and self-assured – with a deadly knowledge of self-defence – Rigg’s character became an icon for the growing feminist movement. Her action-girl allure, coupled with her husky voice – the result of a 20-a-day cigarette habit – also brought her plenty of male admirers.

“We had no idea it would be defining,” she later said. “It was nose to the grindstone – working all hours that God gave.”

She also showed she was capable of taking on the establishment. During the first series, she discovered she was earning less than the cameramen and insisted on more money before making another episode.

But Rigg found the sudden fame as a TV star difficult to cope with. She recalled having to hide in a lavatory to avoid the attention of the crowds. It was partly her resentment at the invasion of her privacy that persuaded her that she would spend only two years with The Avengers.

She was also keen to keep her stage career alive. “Some weeks I’d spend four days on the set of The Avengers and then head up to Stratford to be Regan to Olivier’s Lear,” she said.

Dianna Rigg in “On Her Majesty’s Secret Service”

Like Blackman, Rigg moved from the Avengers to 007, starring in Her Majesty’s Secret Service opposite George Lazenby. Rigg became the only Bond girl to get the secret agent to the altar, although the marriage was abruptly cut short when her character was shot dead soon after the wedding.

Her relationship with Lazenby was difficult, although she denied deliberately eating garlic before their love scenes.

She starred as Vincent Price’s daughter in the camp horror film, Theatre of Blood, but soon returned to the stage – nominated for a Tony Award for her performance in Abelard and Heloise.

In New York, her portrayal of Heloise was criticised by acerbic US critic John Simon, who described her in a nude scene as “built like a brick basilica with insufficient flying buttresses”. She later admitted she never felt comfortable removing her clothes on stage.

“I come from Yorkshire, and no-one from Yorkshire takes their clothes off except on a Friday night,” she said. The episode led her to later publish a collection of scathing theatrical reviews titled No Turn Unstoned.

She took a number of leading roles with the National Theatre Company at the Old Vic and gained a second Tony nomination for her performance as Celimene in The Misanthrope.

In 1990, she won a Bafta for the role of an obsessive mother in the BBC drama Mother Love. Four years later she won a Tony for best actress in one of her most acclaimed roles, that of Medea.

In the same year, Rigg was created a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire.

She appeared in a number of TV costume dramas, winning an Emmy for her role as Mrs Danvers in a Carlton TV production of Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca.

Her work in the theatre continued, including well-received performances in The Cherry Orchard, Pygmalion and Tennessee Williams’ Suddenly Last Summer.

Dame Dianna Rigg as Mrs Gillyflower in Doctor Who: The Crimson Horror.

In 2013, she appeared in a Doctor Who episode, The Crimson Horror, which was specially written for her by Mark Gatiss.

Her role as the evil Mrs Gillyflower was played alongside her daughter, Rachael Stirling. She was also required to use her native Yorkshire accent.

In her 70s, Dame Diana joined a long list of distinguished British actors who appeared in the HBO fantasy epic Game of Thrones, gaining an Emmy nomination. And she continued working until shortly before her death, appearing in the new remake of All Creatures Great And Small.

She was married twice, first to Israeli artist Menachem Gueffen, from 1973 to 1976, and then to Archie Stirling. The couple divorced in 1990 after Stirling’s affair with actress Joely Richardson.

In 2017, the 20-a-day smoker found herself seriously ill and undergoing a heart operation. During surgery, Rigg’s heart stopped and her life hung by a thread. “The good Lord must have said, ‘Send the old bag down again’,” the devout Christian later told a journalist. “I’m not having her yet.”

Although it was the role of Peel that brought her to public attention, Dame Diana was successful in casting off the character and carving out a distinguished career as a classical actress.

She never felt the need to return to the cat suit, steadfastly refusing to sign Avengers photographs that continued to be sent to her. Rigg excelled at playing sharp-witted female characters who carried steel fists in velvet gloves.

New Target novel collection in July 2020

New Target novel collection in July 2020

Doctor Who Target Novelisations for 2020

The Doctor Who Target range will be expanding with five new titles coming out in Summer 2020. Doctor Who fans will finally be able to expand their Target collections with beautiful paperback editions of five new novels, plus two novels previously only available in hardback.

BBC Books will publish all seven Target novels on 23rd July 2020.

Following the release of two new Target novelisations this year, Resurrection of the Daleks and Revelation of the Daleks, both by Eric Saward, five new Target editions are coming next summer.

Seven Doctor Who titles are being released:

  • The Pirate Planet by James Goss, the first time this Douglas Adams story has been published in the Target range
  • Resurrection of the Daleks by Eric Saward
  • Revelation of the Daleks by Eric Saward
  • The TV Movie novelisation by Gary Russell
  • Dalek by Robert Shearman
  • The Crimson Horror by Mark Gatiss
  • The Witchfinders by Joy Wilkinson, the first Thirteenth Doctor adventure to be published on the Target list

For Doctor Who fans, the range of novelisations published by Target Books in the 1970s and 1980s holds a special place in their hearts. There was a novel published for almost every Doctor Who serial between 1963 and 1989, and BBC Books has been successfully reissuing a number of these classic paperbacks since 2012.

In 2017, BBC Books expanded the range by publishing the first all-new batch of Target novels alongside new-era novelisations from Russell T Davies, Steven Moffat, Paul Cornell, James Goss and Jenny T Colgan – all five of them instant classics.

On becoming the first Thirteenth Doctor adventure author to be published on the Target list, Joy Wilkinson said:

“I’m thrilled to become part of the illustrious tradition of Target novels. It was so much fun dipping my toe back into prose with the Target Storybook so I’m now relishing the chance to return to the world of The Witchfinders and get fully immersed. It’s a great chance to spend more time with the Doctor and fam, hang with King James, and find out more about the mysteries of Bilehurst Cragg and the mighty, muddy Morax.”

Robert Shearman added:

“I’m still pinching myself that I was asked to write the first Dalek story of the new series – and that was fifteen years ago! I didn’t dare dream that the show would become such a big hit, and that it would still be on air now, as big and as exciting as ever – there have been so many adventures since, and so many new Doctors, and, of course, so many more Daleks. It feels like a real honour now to go back in time and relive my script… and maybe reveal a few surprises that never made it to the screen…”

Mark Gatiss said:

“Novelisations of the ‘new’ series are the final piece of this whole wonderful puzzle for me and to become a Target author after all these years is a complete delight! It’s been lovely to revisit one of my favourite scripts and flesh out the lurid residents of Sweetville in all their crimson finery.”

These books will be available in paperback, each with newly commissioned cover artwork by Anthony Dry. Also coming later in the year will be audiobook versions, available for pre-order as well.

BBC Books will publish all seven Targets on 23rd July 2020. You can pre-order them here: