SPACE confirm An Adventure in Space and Time for 22nd November

Tuesday, 5 November 2013 - Reported by Chuck Foster
SPACECanadian broadcaster SPACE have now confirmed that they too will be broadcasting An Adventure in Space and Time on Friday 22nd November at 9:00pm ET, the time slot reported for BBC America yesterday.

The press release re-iterated that the channel would also simulcast The Day of the Doctor the following day, though the time has yet to be confirmed.





FILTER: - Canada - Specials - WHO50

Puffin Books: Nothing O'Clock, by Neil Gaiman

Tuesday, 5 November 2013 - Reported by Chuck Foster
Nothing O'Clock, by Neil Gaiman (Credit: Puffin Books)Puffin Books have announced the author of the final of their e-books celebrating fifty years of Doctor Who as the author Neil Gaiman.

Nothing O'Clock
Written by Neil Gaiman
Published 21st November 2013

Thousands of years ago, Time Lords built a Prison for the Kin. They made it utterly impregnable and unreachable. As long as Time Lords existed, the Kin would be trapped forever and the universe would be safe. They had planned for everything… everything, that is, other than the Time War and the fall of Gallifrey. Now the Kin are free again and there’s only one Time Lord left in the universe who can stop them!

A long-term fan, Gaiman is of course best known in Doctor Who circles for his two scripts broadcast on television, the award-winning The Doctor's Wife and Nightmare in Silver. However, his extensive writing career has encompassed novels for adults and children including Neverwhere, Stardust, American Gods, Anansi Boys, Coraline and The Graveyard Book, and the highly successful Sandman series of graphic novels. Literary honours include the Locus and Hugo Awards and the Newbery and Carnegie Medals.

On his latest contribution to Doctor Who, Gaiman said:
Nothing O’Clock stars the Eleventh Doctor, the Matt Smith Doctor, with Amy Pond as his companion. I set it somewhere during the first season of Matt Smith, mostly on Earth, in our time now and in 1984, but also somewhere else, a very, very long time ago. I had never created an original monster for Doctor Who and really enjoyed getting to create a creepy Doctor Who monster of the kind that we haven’t quite seen before... I hope that the Kin will get out there and occasionally give people nightmares. And that you will be worried if a man in a rabbit mask comes to your door and tries to buy your house.

The e-book is due to be released on 21st November 2013, with BBC Worldwide to upload a brief interview with the writer the the Doctor Who YouTube channel later this month.

Doctor Who: 11 Doctors, 11 Stories - 50th Anniversary Collection

Doctor Who: 11 Doctors, 11 Stories (Credit: Puffin Books)All eleven stories in this series will also be released together as am anthology as both a paperback and as an audiobook for download, with the latter to feature the following readers:
  1. A Big Hand for the Doctor by Eoin Colfer – read by Nicholas Briggs
  2. The Nameless City by Michael Scott – read by Frazer Hines
  3. The Spear of Destiny by Marcus Sedgwick – read by Marcus Sedgwick
  4. The Roots of Evil by Philip Reeve – read by Sophie Aldred
  5. Tip of the Tongue by Patrick Ness – read by Nicholas Pegg
  6. Something Borrowed by Richelle Mead – read by Sophie Aldred
  7. The Ripple Effect by Malorie Blackman – read by Malorie Blackman
  8. Spore by Alex Scarrow – read by Nicholas Pegg
  9. The Beast of Babylon by Charlie Higson – read by Charlie Higson
  10. The Mystery of the Haunted Cottage by Derek Landy – read by Ian Hanmore
  11. Nothing O’Clock by Neil Gaiman – read by Peter Kenny
Both are to be released on 21st November.

Competition

The Essential Guide to 50 Years of Doctor Who (Credit: Puffin)We have a copy of both the above anthology and The Essential Guide to 50 Years of Doctor Who available as a prize for readers to win, courtesy of Puffin Books. To be in with a chance to win please answer the following question:
Name a televised story of Doctor Who that was (definitively) set in 1984.
Send your answer to comp-anthology@doctorwhonews.net with the subject line "That Essential Moment", including your name, address, and where you read about the competition.

This competition is only open to UK residents, and the closing date is Sunday 24th November 2013.


The Essential Guide to 50 Years of Doctor Who
Written by Justin Richards

This essential guide to fifty years of Doctor Who includes all eleven incarnations of the Doctor and fascinating facts on his adventures in space and time, as well as his helpful companions and fearsome foes. Find out all about the Doctor's TARDIS, his regenerations, and much, much more!





FILTER: - Merchandise - Books - Eleventh Doctor - WHO50

An Unearthly Series - The Origins of a TV Legend

Tuesday, 5 November 2013 - Reported by Anthony Weight
An Absolute Knock-Out
The twenty-eighth episode in our series telling the story of the creation of Doctor Who, from conception to broadcast.

By early November, the production of Doctor Who was well under way. The programme's début was locked in for Saturday 23rd November, and most of the first serial was now complete - the third episode, "The Forest of Fear", had been recorded on Friday the 1st, and the fourth and final epsiode was now being rehearsed ahead of its recording on Friday the 8th. Pre-production had begun for the second serial, by Terry Nation, with some pre-filming for the story already having taken place at Ealing. With the lengthy and at times troubled gestation period for the show coming to an end, thoughts could at last turn towards giving Doctor Who the strongest possible launch in terms of press and publicity.

One of the best ways for the BBC to promote its programmes in the 1960s was through its own weekly listings magazine, the Radio Times. The magazine was almost as old as the BBC itself, having been launched in 1923, just one year after the BBC began transmissions. In 1963 it turned forty, and was already something of a national institution. Until the deregulation of the TV and radio listings industry in the early 1990s, it was the only place where readers could find detailed information about all of the BBC's programmes for the full week ahead. It was therefore one of the UK's best-selling magazines, most of the population had at least a passing familiarity with it, and it was both a valuable source of revenue for the corporation (unlike on television or radio, the BBC could sell advertising in the pages of the Radio Times) and a tremendous source of publicity, of immense value in promoting programmes.

Gaining a Radio Times cover feature was a particularly prestigious event for any programme, and it was very much hoped by the Doctor Who production team that the new show would be on the front cover for the edition covering 23-29 November, which would hit newsstands on Thursday 21st. Indeed, the Radio Times had for a while actively planned to mark the first episode of Doctor Who with a front cover feature, but by early November these plans had changed. One of the reasons for this was that Douglas Williams, the magazine's editor at the time, believed that the man ultimately in charge of all BBC Television, Kenneth Adam, had a lack of faith in the show's prospects for success.

On Tuesday 5 November 1963, exactly fifty years ago today, word of the Radio Times's change of heart regarding a cover feature for Doctor Who had reached one of those most closely involved in the creation of the series - the drama department's Head of Serials, Donald Wilson. Wilson had been one of the staunchest supporters of Doctor Who all through its development, and had been intimately involved in the creation of the series right from the beginning - it was in his previous capacity as Head of the Script Department that he had been asked, back in the spring of 1962, for a report into the possibility of the BBC producing a new science-fiction series, a report to which the very start of what would become Doctor Who can be traced.

Wilson had defended the still-to-be-broadcast show against attacks and criticism from various levels and departments of the BBC, and exactly fifty years ago today he wrote a memo to Williams at the Radio Times, telling him in no uncertain terms that he was wrong to perceive a lack of faith in Doctor Who, and that in his opinion something rather special was about to be unleashed upon the audience. Wilson's words to the editor contained great prescience:

I was unhappy to hear to-day that the proposal to give Dr. Who the front page of the Radio Times had now been abandoned. It was particularly distressing to hear that one reason given was lack of confidence in the programme at Controller [Kenneth Adam's] level. I assure you that this does not exist and if you have a word with [Adam] I know he will express enthusiasm.

I myself believe that we have an absolute knock-out in this show and that there will be no question but that it will run and run.

I would be most grateful, if it is not too late, for the decision against it to be reversed, and that will help me to get this show off to a good start.

Unfortunately however, Williams would not be swayed, and Doctor Who did not eventually feature as the cover story of the 23-29 November edition of the Radio Times. As the name of the magazine implies, when it was originally launched it carried only radio listings, and even by 1963 it was still not at all uncommon for the magazine to feature a popular radio programme on the cover in preference to a TV show. In this case, the magazine chose to focus on the return of the popular radio comedy series Beyond Our Ken on the BBC Light Programme (now BBC Radio 2) on Sunday 24th November, with a cover photograph of the show's star, the comedian Kenneth Horne.

However, Doctor Who did not entirely miss out. The previous week's edition, covering 16-22 November, would contain a tease ahead to Doctor Who, and the 23-29 November edition did at least mention the series on the cover, with a feature on the new programme inside. It would not be until the start of Marco Polo in February 1964, though, that Doctor Who gained its first cover feature on the magazine - and even this caused some controversy, as it only featured William Hartnell and some of the guest cast, rather than all four of the series regulars.

The Radio Times would go on to be a strong supporter of Doctor Who, featuring the show regularly on the cover over the following fifty years and also producing special editions dedicated to the programme and, latterly, a section of its own website devoted to the show. In July 2013, the magazine at last made amends for the decision taken back in 1963, by producing a specially mocked-up version of what a Doctor Who-focused cover of the 23-29 November 1963 edition might have looked like, with Hartnell on the front page.

As for Donald Wilson, Doctor Who remained in his charge as Head of Serials until 1965, when he stood down from the role to concentrate on a long-held ambition to adapt The Forsyte Saga for television - an adaptation that was to garner both him and the BBC huge acclaim. He lived until 2002, not seeing the return of Doctor Who to prominence, but more than long enough to have known that he had been entirely justified in his words of fifty years ago today - the show was an absolute knock-out, and it had been destined to run and run.

Next Episode
SOURCES: The Handbook: The First Doctor – The William Hartnell Years: 1963-1966, David J Howe, Mark Stammers, Stephen James Walker (Doctor Who Books, 1994); Radio Times - Why did the very first Doctor Who miss making the front cover of Radio Times?
Compiled by:
Paul Hayes





FILTER: - The Story of Doctor Who

An Adventure in Space and Time: BBC America confirms 22nd November for US premie

Monday, 4 November 2013 - Reported by Chuck Foster
BBC America have now confirmed that the 50th Anniversary drama An Adventure in Space and Time will be broadcast in the United States on Friday 22nd November at 9:00pm ET.

An Adventure in Space and Time - BBC America Poster (Credit: BBC America)
DOCTOR WHO’S FIRST DOCTOR REGENERATED IN BBC AMERICA’S AN ADVENTURE IN SPACE AND TIME PREMIERING NOVEMBER 22

The story of how it all began stars David Bradley, Jessica Raine and Brian Cox

What do you get when you mix C.S. Lewis with H.G. Wells, and sprinkle in a bit of Father Christmas? An alien Time Lord exploring space and time in a Police Box spaceship called the “TARDIS” (Time And Relative Dimension in Space). On November 23, 1963, a television legend began when the very first episode of Doctor Who was broadcast on BBC One. Fifty years later, the genesis story is retold in a new BBC AMERICA co-production film celebrating the 50th anniversary of the franchise, An Adventure in Space and Time, premiering Friday, November 22, 9:00pm ET/PT on BBC AMERICA.

Travel back to witness the genius that was the first Doctor, William Hartnell (David Bradley, Game of Thrones, Broadchurch) and the unlikely production team behind the series, Verity Lambert (Jessica Raine, Call the Midwife), Waris Hussein (Sacha Dhawan, After Earth) and Sydney Newman (Brian Cox, The Bourne Identity, X2: X-Men United). From writer and executive producer Mark Gatiss (Sherlock, Doctor Who), executive producers Steven Moffat (Doctor Who, Sherlock) and Caroline Skinner (Doctor Who, The Fades) and director Terry McDonough (Breaking Bad, The Street), the stylish drama reveals the struggles and ultimate triumph of the British series created to “keep the sports fans and kids hooked.”

"An Adventure in Space and Time is principally a human interest story you can enjoy even if you know nothing about Doctor Who," says writer and executive producer, Mark Gatiss. "You’ll see the story of some amazing people who come together under extraordinary circumstances to create this wonderful thing that is still with us today."

An unlikely trio of misfits set out to create a genre series that all ages would love. A 55-year-old actor conceivably at the end of a frustrating career, a former production assistant fighting to make her mark in television, and a foreign born, novice director were tasked with bringing a vision for an exciting new science fiction story to life. William 'Bill' Hartnell, displeased with his career, was presented with a chance to break out of the hard-man roles he’d become known for. And with the instincts of first time producer, Verity Lambert and first time director, Waris Hussein, The Doctor was born. As the success of the show grew, William went from unhappy curmudgeon to beloved television star who relished his career resurgence and found a new lease on life. But all good things come to an end. How will Bill face leaving behind the part that has made him a hero to millions of children? And can the show survive without him? Journey back fifty years through space and time to witness the exciting beginning and untimely end of the First Doctor in this touching drama.

William Hartnell (David Bradley)

THE DOCTOR – “We can’t have Doctor Who without Doctor Who, can we?” – William Hartnell
Aged 55, William Hartnell was already a well established character actor primarily known for playing gruff, military parts. Unhappy with being typecast, Hartnell was approached about playing the lead in a new children’s drama. Initially reluctant, he accepted the role which would change his life and make him a beloved household name. Serving the series from 1963-1966, Hartnell’s Doctor was a doting yet difficult father figure and fierce opponent. But behind the character, Hartnell, committed to his role, saw his world changing rapidly and his health taking a turn for the worse. As those he’d come to rely on moved onward and upward, he was left alone to carry the show they’d built together on his shoulders. A feat that ultimately proved too difficult for him to complete.

Mark Gatiss on David Bradley: "I’d had David Bradley in mind for the part of William Hartnell for some time and I probably asked him before I should have!” says Gatiss. “I was watching the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee regatta from the National Theatre, and asked David then and there and he responded ‘I’ve just done one!’ [David Bradley had appeared as Solomon the trader in Doctor Who’s “Dinosaurs on a Spaceship”]. I explained that this was a chance to play William Hartnell in a very different story and he was thrilled. He’s absolutely magnificent in the film. He plays Bill Hartnell’s journey from a grumpy old man to a pied piper figure with touching brilliance.

Verity Lambert (Jessica Raine)

THE PRODUCER – “If feathers don’t ruffle, nothing flies…” – Verity Lambert
Newman needed a producer for his new show and was determined that, having worked with her before, Verity Lambert was the right woman for the job. At the time, there were no female executives at the BBC so this appointment was groundbreaking. He described her as “bright, gutsy and full of piss and vinegar.” Lambert enjoyed great success producing Doctor Who until 1965 and was later behind huge hits including The Naked Civil Servant, A Cry in the Dark and Jonathan Creek. She was awarded an OBE (Order of the British Empire) for her services to film and television production in 2002 and passed away in 2007. The Doctor Who Christmas special from that year Voyage of the Damned is dedicated to her memory.

Waris Hussein (Sacha Dhawan)

THE DIRECTOR – “It’ll never work…when do we start? – Waris Hussein
British-Indian television director, Waris Hussein, was a surprise choice to direct the very first episode of Doctor Who. At 24, he was young and relatively new to the BBC, having joined only three years previously as a trainee. He returned to the series to direct the seven part 1964 adventure Marco Polo, the entirety of which is currently missing.

Sydney Newman (Brian Cox)

THE EXECUTIVE – “No bug-eyed monsters!” – Sydney Newman
The Daleks – the mangled and mutated remains of the Kaled people, placed in metal war machines by the Kaled’s chief scientist, first appeared in the series in 1963, earning the show 10 million viewers.

"So what do I know about anything..." – Sydney Newman
As Head of Drama for the BBC, and a life-long science fiction fan, Canadian film and television producer, Sydney Newman, was responsible for the idea and the development of this new sci-fi series. With successful credits including The Avengers and The Forsyte Saga, Newman wanted to find a producer who had “piss and vinegar in their veins.” Making history with his vision, Newman brought on BBC’s first female producer to bring his creation to life.

Mark Gatiss on the film's importance: "This is a story that I’ve always wanted to tell. In fact I pitched it for the 40th anniversary ten years ago and now it’s finally happening! I wanted to write it because I grew up with Doctor Who and even though Jon Pertwee was my Doctor, the legend of how the show began has always been there for me, in my blood. From how the show started small, then along came the Daleks, and ultimately, how the part changed William Hartnell’s life – this is a story that had to be told."

William Russell (Jamie Glover)

William Russell was cast as school teacher, Ian Chesterton, in the very first story of Doctor Who and continued to play the role until the 1965 adventure The Chase. Since then he has performed in numerous theatre and television productions and has been an avid supporter of Doctor Who, lending his voice to numerous audiobooks and commentaries. He also appears in An Adventure in Space and Time.

Jacqueline Hill (Jemma Powell)

An established stage actress, Jacqueline Hill, played the role of history teacher Barbara Wright and became one of the first people to travel through space and time in the TARDIS. Hill’s character left in the same episode as William Russell’s Ian Chesterton. Shortly afterwards she gave up acting to raise a family but returned to the series in 1980 to play high priestess Lexa in Meglos alongside Fourth Doctor, Tom Baker. Hill passed away in 1993.

Carole Ann Ford (Claudia Grant)

Young actress Carole Ann Ford won the role of the Doctor’s granddaughter, Susan Foreman after an initial appearance in Z-Cars. She played the character until 1964 when she became the first companion to leave the TARDIS when Susan stayed on a future Earth to rebuild it after a Dalek invasion. Ford stayed in acting until 1997 and reprised her role as Susan for the 1983 episode The Five Doctors. She also appears in An Adventure in Space and Time.


CAST AND PRODUCTION CREDITS:

William Hartnell       David Bradley 
Sydney Newman Brian Cox
Verity Lambert Jessica Raine
Waris Hussein Sacha Dhawan
William Russell Jamie Glover
Jacqueline Hill Jemma Powell
Carole Ann Ford Claudia Grant
Heather Hartnell Lesley Manville
Judith Cara Jenkins
Delia Derbyshire Sarah Winter
Meryvn Pinfield Jeff Rawle
Rex Tucker Andrew Woodall
Richard Martin Ian Hallard
Peter Brachacki David Annen
Douglas Camfield Sam Hoare
Donald Baverstock Mark Eden
Patrick Troughton Reece Shearsmith
Peter Hawkins Nicholas Briggs

Written by Mark Gatiss
Executive Producers Mark Gatiss, Steven Moffat, Caroline Skinner
Director Terry McDonough

An Adventure in Space and Time is a co-production between BBC Cymru Wales and BBC AMERICA.




FILTER: - Specials - USA - WHO50

Children in Need 2013

Monday, 4 November 2013 - Reported by Chuck Foster
This year's Children in Need will take place on Friday 15th November from 7:30pm.

The Doctor on Children in Need, 15 Nov 2013

Donate here!




FILTER: - Charities

The Radiophonic Workshop is reactivated

Monday, 4 November 2013 - Reported by John Bowman
Members of the BBC's Radiophonic Workshop will be performing live at the weekend to mark Doctor Who's 50th anniversary.

Fresh from their recent appearance at Portmeirion's Festival No 6, Dick Mills, Paddy Kingsland, Peter Howell, Roger Limb, and Mark Ayres will be performing a 75-minute set at the London Electronic Arts Festival in Shoreditch on Saturday 9th November at 2pm.

The Radiophonic Workshop's most famous piece of work was undoubtedly the Doctor Who theme, realised by Delia Derbyshire from a composition by Ron Grainer, and the Workshop also created countless special sounds for the series during its classic era.

The concert, at the Shoreditch Electric Light Station in Coronet Street, will not only include music ranging from Doctor Who to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, it will also feature archive video from Doctor Who and many other programmes for which the Workshop provided sound design and music. It will be a 5.1 surround sound show and will feature The Doctor Who Suite - part of which will bring Derbyshire's original 1963 theme together with Howell's 1980 reimagining of it in one 15-minute presentation.

It coincides with the start of a comprehensive reissue programme of the entire Radiophonic Workshop back catalogue. These will initially be on 180g audiophile vinyl in restored original artwork and audio remastered from original tapes by Ayres, and will be issued on the Music On Vinyl label, to be followed by digital and CD releases and a new compilation of Radiophonic material from the vaults.

BBC Radiophonic Music and BBC Radiophonic Workshop will be rereleased on Monday 25th November, with the former available to pre-order here and the latter here. BBC Radiophonic Music - originally put out in 1968 as a specialist demonstration library disc for BBC drama producers - was released commercially in 1971. BBC Radiophonic Workshop was originally released in 1975 and was a compilation of the Workshop's output to date. Both showcase the dawning of processed sound, treated sounds, and sound design.

They will be followed in the new year by the albums 4th Dimension and Through A Glass Darkly.

In addition, Kingsland, Limb, Mills, Howell, and Ayres are working with White Noise's David Vorhaus on a new album of Radiophonic material set for release next year on a major label. This will feature collaborations with a number of key figures in contemporary electronica, all of whom have been influenced by the Workshop down the years.

The Workshop will also be putting out very limited issues of rare and unreleased tracks from the archives, including some rare Doctor Who moments and a remixed and reimagined version of the original Doctor Who theme realised by Derbyshire. This has been produced from her original tapes and will be the first stereo version of the track to appear.

A 2,500-word Workshop retrospective by Joe Muggs is due to be published in The Observer on Sunday 24th November.

The Radiophonic Workshop was formed in 1958 and was based in BBC studios at Maida Vale in London. It closed in 1998 but during its lifetime had an inestimable influence on musicians and sound engineers, and was described by electronic dance music publication Mixmag in 1997 as "the unsung heroes of electronica". On 17th May 2009, Radiophonic Workshop musicians played live for the first time when they gave a concert at the Camden Roundhouse as part of the Short Circuit festival.




FILTER: - Music - Special Events - UK - WHO50

An Adventure In Space And Time confirmed for 21st November

Monday, 4 November 2013 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The BBC have now confirmed the date and time of the 50th Anniversary drama An Adventure in Space and Time. The announcement was made via the BBC Two Twitter feed this afternoon:

The ninety-minute drama starring David Bradley joins other programming that has already been confirmed for the anniversary:
Also expected are The Story of Trock on BBC Radio 1 (unconfirmed for 18 Nov at 9:00pm), The Culture Show special Me, You And Doctor Who on BBC Two (unconfirmed for 22 Nov at 9:30pm), 12 Again: Doctor Who Special on CBBC (in the week leading up to the Anniversary), Who Made Who? on BBC Radio 4 Extra, and The Ultimate Guide on BBC Three. Times for these programmes are expected to be confirmed shortly.

Other programmes include Colin Baker and Peter Purves in a Celebrity Antiques Road Trip this coming Friday (8th Nov) on BBC Two at 7:00pm, and Steven Moffat becoming a castaway on Desert Island Discs on BBC Radio 4 at 11:15am on 17th November. Plus, digital channel Watch continues its own celebration of Doctor Who with episode repeats and The Doctors Revisited throughout the month.

Note: at the time of writing, the rights issues relating to the original announcement of An Unearthly Child being broadcast on BBC Four have as yet been unresolved.

See This Week In Doctor Who for further schedules and updates.


UPDATE - 7.05pm GMT, 7th November: The Radio 1 documentary The Story of Trock has now been scheduled to air on Monday 25th November at 9pm.




FILTER: - Specials - WHO50 - BBC

Pop-up shop in Melbourne

Monday, 4 November 2013 - Reported by Marcus
BBC Worldwide Australia & New Zealand have announced that a Doctor Who pop-up shop is coming to Richmond in Melbourne, with doors opening next Saturday 9th November.

Following the overwhelming popularity of the Sydney and Brisbane Doctor Who pop-up shops, where fans queued for more than two hours to get into the store, this special one-off Melbourne pop-up will feature some exclusive merchandise not currently available in Australian stores. On offer is the Who Home range boasting a selection of homewares, such as teapots and mugs, plus notebooks, tea towels and more.

A limited number of the special edition Tenth Doctor in tuxedo Titan figurines will also be on sale, along with the coveted silver collectible coin from the New Zealand Mint. The highly- anticipated Tenth Doctor's sonic screwdriver remote control will also be available in store, as will the popular range of toys, gifts, DVDs and books that Australian fans love. And as a special treat, fans can get up close to a TARDIS and a K-9.

The event takes place at Shop 2, 177 Bridge Road, Richmond, with doors opening at 9am. Fans are invited to dress up as their favourite Doctor Who character with a small gift given to the first 20 fans to arrive in costume. There will also be special celebrations in store on the weekend of the 50th anniversary - details on the official Doctor Who website.

Rachael Hammond, BBC Worldwide ANZ's Retail Manager, said:
The popularity of the Sydney and Brisbane stores have reinforced just how passionate Doctor Who fans are about the brand, and with the 50th anniversary fast approaching, we are delighted to offer Melbourne fans the opportunity to interact and take home their very own piece of Doctor Who, especially in the anniversary month.
Also following sold-out shows in 2012, the Doctor Who Symphonic Spectacular will return to Melbourne on 31st January and 1st February 2014 at the Plenary Hall, Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre.

The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra will perform Murray Gold's music from the series, accompanied by a big screen featuring specially-edited sequences of Matt Smith's performance as the Eleventh Doctor. A host of monsters, including the Silence, the Daleks and the Cybermen, will add to the electric atmosphere.

Tickets are now available.




FILTER: - Music - Merchandise - Special Events - Australia

AudioGO in administration

Sunday, 3 November 2013 - Reported by Marcus
Audiobook publisher AudioGO, the company licensed by the BBC to produce Doctor Who audiobooks, has been placed into administration, suspending all operations.

AudioGO was formed in July 2010, when a team of private investors bought out the Bath-based BBC Audiobooks, with BBC Worldwide still owning a minority stake. The company produced a number of audio products based on BBC programmes, including a large number of Doctor Who-related discs, such as readings of classic novelisations and productions such as the Destiny of the Doctor series. (This series continues to be available from co-producers Big Finish.)

The company suspended operations on 22nd October, following the discovery of financial irregularities and the suspension of the managing director and departure of the financial director. It was hoped that a buyer for the business could be found which would enable the company to continue trading. However, on Friday AudioGO was formally put into administration, with 57 employees losing their jobs.

Mark Shaw, of the administrators BDO, said
Significant accounting issues and the consequent working capital requirements at AudioGO led to it being insolvent. Unfortunately, there was no other option at this stage but to place the remaining UK business into administration, as no suitable buyer could be found. The administrators are taking all necessary steps to mitigate losses to customers and to maximise recoveries for the benefit of creditors.
Before administration, the company sold its US arm Blackstone Audio back to Blackstone's founder, which operates the US Downpour.com download site. AudioGo had acquired Blackstone 10 months ago.
Compiled by:
Marcus and Anthony Weight




FILTER: - Audio

Celebration guests announced but possible disappointment over Day of the Doctor

Friday, 1 November 2013 - Reported by John Bowman
A host of guests for the BBC's Doctor Who Celebration was announced today - but fans going to the event on the anniversary itself face missing the special episode.

Fifth Doctor Peter Davison will be at the convention at ExCeL in London for all its three days - 22nd to 24th November inclusive - and joining him there on the actual anniversary day, Saturday 23rd November, will be William Russell and Carole Ann Ford who, as Ian Chesterton and Susan Foreman, were companions to the First Doctor and were in the first episode of Doctor Who when it was originally broadcast exactly 50 years earlier. In addition, Waris Hussein, who directed the first story, will also be there on the Saturday.

Arrangements have been made for a free 2D showing of the simulcast of The Day of the Doctor that day, but not everybody going to the event on 23rd November will be able to get into it.

BBC Worldwide said:
The Doctor Who 50th Celebration's opening hours will also be extended on Saturday evening so visitors can enjoy a free 2D simulcast screening of The Day of the Doctor together. Saturday attendees will be emailed shortly with details about how they can reserve a seat. Visitors should note that the screening will have limited availability and tickets will be allocated on a first-come first-served basis.
Saturday attendees who miss out on tickets to the screening and who want to see the episode as it is broadcast will therefore have to make alternative plans to watch it as it goes out - if they can.

Also appearing on all three days will be special sounds wizard Dick Mills and visual effects supremos Mike Tucker and Mat Irvine. The rest of the additional guest line-up and their appearance days is as follows:
    Friday 22nd November
  • Anneke Wills (Polly)
  • Richard Franklin (Capt Mike Yates)
  • Matthew Waterhouse (Adric)
  • Sarah Sutton (Nyssa)
  • Terry Molloy (Davros)
  • Kate O'Mara (The Rani)
  • Gabriel Woolf (Sutekh)
  • Fiona Walker (Kala/Lady Peinforte)
  • Barry Newbery (designer)
  • Michael Ferguson (director)
  • Fiona Cumming (director)
  • Ian Fraser (production manager)
    Saturday 23rd November
  • Frazer Hines (Jamie)
  • Deborah Watling (Victoria)
  • Katy Manning (Jo)
  • Louise Jameson (Leela)
  • Janet Fielding (Tegan)
  • Nicola Bryant (Peri)
  • Sophie Aldred (Ace)
  • Daphne Ashbrook (Grace)
  • Yee Jee Tso (Chang Lee)
  • Geoffrey Beevers (The Master)
  • David Collings (Poul/Vorus/Mawdryn)
  • Terrance Dicks (script editor/writer)
  • June Hudson (costume designer)
    Sunday 24th November
  • Maureen O'Brien (Vicki)
  • Peter Purves (Steven)
  • Wendy Padbury (Zoe)
  • John Leeson (voice of K-9)
  • Lalla Ward (Romana II)
  • Mark Strickson (Turlough)
  • Bonnie Langford (Mel)
  • Michael Kilgarriff (Cyber Controller)
  • Julian Glover (Richard I/Scaroth)
  • Stephen Thorne (Omega/Azal/Kastrian Eldrad)
  • David Graham (Dalek voices/Kerensky)
  • Donald Tosh (script editor/writer)
  • Anthony Read (script editor/writer)
  • Andrew Cartmel (script editor/writer)
  • Andrew Morgan (director)
As previously reported, current Doctor Matt Smith, Sixth Doctor Colin Baker, and Seventh Doctor Sylvester McCoy will also be there on all three days, while Fourth Doctor Tom Baker will be there on just the Saturday.




FILTER: - Special Events - UK - Conventions - BBC Worldwide - WHO50 - Peter Davison