"Have you ever thought what it's like to be wanderers in the fourth dimension? To be exiles?" - An Unearhly Child
Fifty
 years ago, at the IM Foreman* junkyard on Totter’s Lane, London, a blue
 box wheezed into existence. Inside that box, a crotchety, white-haired 
old man** was waiting to whisk us away on a world of adventure.
And
 now, that white haired old man has become a gangly geek in a bow tie 
whose thirst for adventure is seemingly unquenchable. He’s been played 
by at least 11 different actors*** but he remains a man with a sense of 
justice, a man who abhors hate and prejudice, who delights in the myriad
 wonders of the universe; at once a man weighted by the horrors of what 
he has seen and still able to look at things with the wide-eyed wonder 
of a child.
The
 Doctor has become a British institution. Even during his years of exile
 (the show was unofficially cancelled in 1989 after a long, slow attempt
 to slip it off the schedules quietly by the then-BBC bosses) he 
remained a cultural force. Virgin Publishing continued the series in 
novels. Fan made films cropped up on home video from independent 
producers (with varying degrees of quality and success) and of course no
 one stopped talking about the mysterious Time Lord from Gallifrey.
But
 why is the doctor such a success? Why, when he returned to the BBC in 
2005, did he manage to once more capture the imagination of a nation?
Why does The Doctor endure?
Part
 of it is that both The Doctor and the show have changed over the years.
 Certain elements remain - the TARDIS more and more conscpicuously 
“disguised” as a 1960’s police box, the sense of chaotic adventure, the 
viewer’s stand-ins who accompany the doctor on his adventures - and yet 
the attitude changes with the decades. In the 70s, political and social 
concerns became a factor as the Doctor tackled ecological problems as 
often as he did aliens (see The Green Death as a particularly hamfisted 
example), in the 80s, there was an attempt to darken the show a little, 
in the 90s, Virgin’s novels attempted to tell more complex and adult 
stories and in 2000s, the show became an adventure series marked by its 
fast pace and occasionally anarchic moods.
But the core has always been this (something the Matt Smith era captured perfectly, even coining the very phrase I'm about to use)
There
 is a madman who travels through and time space in a box. He is always on the
 side of justice. He is always standing up for the oppressed. And while 
he makes mistakes, he will always try to be the best person in the room.
 Because that’s all he knows how to be.
"It is a fact, Jamie, that I do tend to get involved with things." - The War Games
When
 I first met The Doctor, he was short and he was Scottish. He was, when I
 first tuned in, tackling his old enemies, The Daleks. Now, I knew the 
Doctor a little through the old Target novelisations I had picked up in 
charity bookshops, but seeing him in the flesh gave me a chill. I knew 
that he changed faces and sometimes personalities, so I did not know 
this Doctor, but he was instantly recognisable as that madman with a 
box. In the first twenty five minutes I spent with him, I was taken back
 to the 1950s where two warring factions of Dalek were about to meet on 
Eartth. The doctor was trying to protect something he called The Hand of
 Omega, which was being sought by both Dalek factions. The Daleks could 
kill people easily with one blast from their weapons. And, as I 
discovered at the end of that 25 minutes, despite their cumbersome 
appearance, they could float up stairs.****
I was hooked. I remained hooked for another two years.
And then The Doctor vanished.
He was gone.
No fanfare, no long farewell. He simply never returned.
I was gutted.
Home
 videos helped me catch up on the doctor’s past adventures. It was a 
treat for me, to get an old adventure on VHS and watch it all in one go.
 I discovered what I had missed, then: the lunatic joys of Tom Baker’s 
tenure in the TARDIS, the occasionally patronising adventurer that was 
Jon Pertwee, the wide eyed wonder and occasional anger that Peter 
Davison, the anarchic glee of Patrick Troughton and the severity of 
William Hartnell (who would soften towards the end of his run, as the 
BBC realised that what kids warmed to most was the kindly grandfather 
figure he could represent). Heck, I even enjoyed the Colin Baker years 
although even as a kid I realised he could got some appalling scripts.
"In
 all my travelling throughout the universe I have battled against evil, 
against power mad conspirators. I should have stayed here.” - The Ultimate Foe
As
 a teenager, I devoured the Virgin New Adventures novels, admiring them 
because they dared to take the doctor to places he could never go in the
 TV show. Some of them were bad, but most were brilliant, and I the 
first novel I ever submitted was to this line right as they lost the 
rights to the character (but they sent me a nice rejection). It was, 
looking back on it, an appalling book. But then I was sixteen, and still
 learning how to write. I’d still like to have another crack at the 
doctor to this day. He represents the kind of sci-fi I love; sci-fi that
 engages with its own sense of the absurd. Literally anything can happen
 on Who, not least because unlike most modern franchises, its “bible” is
 not set in stone. It was made up on the hoof by writers over the years,
 many of them working from what they could remember about the show’s 
past, and some not even worrying about fitting into an established 
continuity. I think Atlantis is destroyed in at least three different 
ways throughout the show’s history. But since the 90s, attempts have 
been made to create some kind of continuity, and this is especially true
 on the rebooted show. But all the same there’s enough freedom that the 
stories don’t start to blend into each other. The Star Trek franchise 
showed some of its limitations in the show Voyager, which tried to break
 new ground and ended up too often retreading where other shows had been
 before. With Doctor Who, you can have a fantasy story followed by a 
historical followed by an epic space opera.
“Change. You. Me. Everything.” - Dimensions in Time.
Still, at 32 (I started watching when I was 8) I count myself a Whovian.
 I love the show. I still tune in when its back on air, although I know 
that its no longer the show I once loved. But that’s great because its 
become the show that a new generation will love. After all, the whole 
point of the show is change. The actors change. The crew change. The 
times change.
Looking
 at the modern show, its easy to see - under Russell T Davis, the show 
was all about family, about recurring characters, about a sense of being
 part of something so much more than you were. It was about epic space 
opera, and big bad guys who wanted to destroy the universe. When Moffat 
came on board, the show started to look at what it is to grow up, to 
face change and uncertainty. It took on a more fairy tale quality than 
it ever had before. But both approaches are valid.
Looking
 back in time, even during one Doctor’s tenure, the tone could shift 
markedly. Tom Baker went through a long run of horror stories (The Brain
 of Morbius, the Pyramids of Mars, the Seeds of Doom) and came out the 
other side into more SF stories, often with a sly sense of humour, such 
as The Sun Makers, The Pirate Planet and so forth. 
I
 always had a love of the more horror-themed stories in Baker’s run. And
 indeed I loved the more horror themed stories in general. Although they
 also scared me, too. On its first run, I couldn’t watch the final 
episode of The Curse of Fenric, I was so terrified by the blood sucking 
heamovores. But then, that was the point. And as an adult, its become 
one of my favourite stories.
“You were my doctor!” - Timecrash
And
 that’s the appeal of the show. It is many things to many people. 
Everyone has “their” doctor. Everyone has a memory of the show, be it 
the horror of Daleks, the comfort of the doctor, their love (or lust) of
 a companion, there’s something in that show that will stick in near 
everyone’s memory, even if its just a memory of Saturday teatimes 
watching adventures in time and space.
The
 best of Who is rip-roaring adventure fiction with a suitably eccentric 
twist. Its also smarter than one might think on first viewing. Whether 
its trying to fulfill its original remit of historically educating a 
“modern” audience, or trying to grapple with issues of the day through 
looking to the future (the much maligned Happiness Patrol is in fact one
 of the most political Doctor Who stories ever... and I bloody loved the
 Kandyman, so there!) or even trying to show us that often things are 
more complex than simple good vs evil (anything with the Ice Warriors, 
who were decidedly neutral as a race, and indeed the Silurians as well),
 Who is always belying its roots as “children’s television”. It was 
never that. It was a family show, something that you could enjoy if you 
were young, old or in the middle. Its one of the reasons that I think 
the current run is continuing that trend. While the rise of the fanboy 
has meant the show has a new kind of audience to appeal to (the kind 
that remembers details and intensely debates the tiniest of moments in 
any given episode even when its clear that the moment is of no great 
importance) at its heart, the show retains the spirit that has enabled 
it to last so long. Yes, its not always perfect, but then the show never
 was. It has always had ups and downs, good bits and bad bits, low 
periods and periods of amazing, intense creativity. But through it all, 
the show has never pandered to one audience over another or marched to 
any beat other than the one it hears in its own head.
The Doctor is over 900 years old. The show is turning 50. And believe me, there’s plenty of life in both of them.
Russel’s picks:
12 Doctors. One Story each. Not necessarily the classics.
1st
 Doctor (William Hartnell): I haven’t seen much Hartnell, but The Daleks
 remains a classic. It changed the show forever and introduced the 
Doctor’s most famous foe.
2nd
 Doctor (Patrick Troughton): I love a lot of Troughton’s stories, if 
only for his performance, but standout for me is The War Games which a) 
solidifies some of the mythology of the show and b)is amazingly, 
astoundingly epic, taking place over 10 episodes and c) is quite 
affecting at the climax when you see what the Doctor sacrifices. If I 
didn’t choose this one, though, I would choose The Mind Robber which is 
brilliantly trippy.
3rd
 Doctor (Jon Pertwee): The Silurians may have a rubbish T-Rex, but its a
 great example of why Pertwee’s early stories were great SF - serious, 
thoughtful, smart and trying to deal with real issues. Its a pity 
Caroline John’s Liz Shaw was shown the door sharpish for being too 
strong a character; she really challenged Pertwee’s doc.
4th
 Doctor (Tom Baker): Bit of a left fielder, perhaps, my choice here. But
 I will always, always have a soft spot for The Seeds of Doom, largely 
due in part to the Target novelisation of the story, which formed my 
earliest impressions of it. When I finally saw the story, I was 
massively impressed by just how exciting it was, especially for an epic 
six part story. Sure, at times it seems like the writer had only a 
passing knowledge of Who and was in fact writing for The Avengers, but 
the chemistry between Tom Baker’s Doctor and Elisabeth Sladen’s Sarah 
Jane Smith is amazing, and the Krynoid is one of the most terrifying 
aliens ever, even if it is realised as a bunch of rubbery tentacles by 
the end of the story (and even if they foolishly choose to give it a 
voice for one terrible scene).
5th
 Doctor (Peter Davison) I was never that big on Davidson’s era. It 
always seemed to take itself too seriously. But Enlightenment is a gem 
of a story. Big ideas (the immortals), a fairy-tale structure and an 
almost insane ambition combine to make a story that no other sci-fi show
 could have told. If you watch only one Davidson, it should be this one.
6th
 Doctor: (Colin Baker) Poor Colin Baker. They tried, they really tried 
to do something different. And then they got hit by budget cuts. And 
then the writing staff forgot how to craft stories. He got shafted, he 
really did. But still he had one or two ambitious gems in his run, and 
his take on the Doctor as a vainglorious megalomaniac whose heart was 
still in the right place was actually very good indeed. Revelation of 
the Daleks is a continuity heavy story that still remains absolutely 
excellent, even if it has one of the most rubbish cliffhangers in the 
show’s history (look, there’s a polystyrene gravestone filled with Karo 
syrup and... oh, its just too stupid to explain) but it makes the Daleks
 scary again, has a great line in double acts and Colin Baker and Nicola
 Bryant remind everyone why they worked so well together. Its a little 
more violent than earlier eras, but perhaps that’s kind of the point.
7th
 Doctor (Sylvester McCoy) Since McCoy was my Doctor, I have more 
fondness for him than some, although I do agree that his first season or
 so was very bad indeed. However, towards the end he began to develop a 
take on the Doctor that was very intriguing indeed. I have to go here 
with The Curse of Fenric, which was the story that terrified me on first
 viewing and which I later came to realise was a more grown up story 
about choice and fate. It also featured Nicholas Parsons in what seemed 
to be celebrity stunt casting but turned out to be a very affecting 
little turn from the presenter of Just a Minute. 
8th
 Doctor (Paul McGann) Well, he only appeared on TV once in the American 
TV movie in 1998. The TV movie was meant to be a backdoor pilot, and is 
something of a muddled mess but Paul McGann’s performance as a slightly 
Byronic time lord is brilliant. Just ignore the plot and enjoy McGann’s 
infectious sense of fun.
9th
 Doctor (Christopher Ecclestone) From a shaky start to a brilliant end, 
the 9th Doctor was around for one season  but made one hell of an 
impact. Ecclestone committed to a role that he clearly wasn’t too 
comfortable with and gives the show an edge thast feels very 
contemporary. And nowhere is this more evident than in Dalek, where the 
Doctor finally confronts the beings that killed the Time Lords (or maybe
 they didn’t; Russell T Davis seems to go back and forth on this a lot).
 A single Dalek. An angry Doctor. It gives you chills.
10th
 Doctor (David Tennant) David Tennant took a more traditional approach 
to the role and his laid back Doctor was, depending on the show, either 
beautifully eccentric or painfully over the top. But his finest hour 
came in The Impossible Planet, when he confronts some of the most 
terrifying scenes in New Who. Seriously, this episode and its follow on,
 The Satan Pit, are absolutely brilliant moments of television.
11th
 Doctor (Matt Smith)I really, really like Matt Smith’s take on the 
character. But for me, it all comes together in The Big Bang, the season
 5 closer. Its a brilliant script that ties up a lot of loose ends, and 
plays about with all the wibbly-wobbly-timey-wimey stuff in a very 
clever fashion. Plus the Doctor wears a Fez. 
*its been spelt at least two different ways on the show
**This is one of the standard descriptions of the first Doctor as used in the old Target novelisations of the TV series
***Not counting Peter Cushing’s turn in two theatrcially released movies or the countless fan made films out there
****
 This was of course the second episode of Remembrance of The Daleks, 
and is one of those stories that puts paid to all the talk of Doctor Who
 being rubbish in the late eighties; its a brilliant story, even now.
3 comments:
My intro to the series was David Tenant on SyFy, but they went back and showed the Eccelston eps after that.
Eccleston always seemed like a kid locked in a toy store. Well, if, as an American, I suddenly found myself playing Captain Kirk... Yeah. I'd be a big kid, too.
I only saw the first couple of episodes of Matt Smith, but I thought he established himself nicely. Tenant, though, was an excellent first Doctor for me. I loved his first line after regenerating. "I wanted to be ginger!"
Tenant did a great job of blending playfulness and ruthlessness in the character.
Curse Of Fenric is a defining memory for me too. Gave me nightmares at the time, and images that lasted for over twenty years until I watched it again as an adult.
The forst Doctor I remember was Peter Davidson. The first one that I really followed was McCoy, so he'll always be one of my Doctors. Depending on my mood I pick either Matt Smith or Tom Baker, with Ecclestone and Troughton close behind.
Baker remains a favorite of mine.
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