
Veteran director 
Christopher Barry has died at the age of 88. 
Christopher Barry was responsible for some of the most admired stories from the classic series of 
Doctor Who, where he was the longest serving director, responsible for 43 episodes spanning the years 1963-1979. He directed all of the first four Doctors - one of only three directors to do so.
He joined the 
Doctor Who team in the late summer of 1963, when he was assigned to direct the second story, 
The Daleks, replacing 
Rex Tucker who had left after artistic differences with producer 
Verity Lambert. The script he would bring to life would see the introduction of the Daleks and ensure the success of the fledgling series. Barry would end up directing episodes 1,2,4 and 5 of the story, creating the 'sink-plunger' cliff hanger at the end of episode 1 which would see the nation on the edge of their seats until the full revelation of the Dalek machine in episode 2. He was in the studio directing episode 2 when the news of President Kennedy's assassination broke.
Barry returned to the series a year later, directing 
The Rescue, the story which saw the introduction of the first new companion since the series start, Vicki, played by 
Maureen O'Brien. He stayed on to direct the next story 
The Romans, a historical romp which saw much more humour introduced to the series. Having introduced a companion, his next 
Doctor Who assignment was to see the departure of another, as his final story with 
William Hartnell, 
The Savages, was to be the last story to feature Steven Taylor, as played by 
Peter Purves. 
In 1966, Barry masterminded the introduction of a new Doctor, when he directed 
Patrick Troughton's first story, 
The Power of the Daleks. The story, long missing from the archives, had the difficult job of introducing a new lead actor to the series and cementing the long term success of the series.
His next outing was with the third Doctor, 
Jon Pertwee, when he directed the 1971 story 
The Dæmons. Long regarded as a classic, the story is often cited as a favourite by members of the cast and production team. Barry returned the following year to direct the six part story 
The Mutants.
Having overseen the debut of one Doctor in 1966, Barry was able to do so once again when, at the end of 1974, he directed 
Robot, introducing the world to the man who would become the longest-serving (continuous) on-screen Doctor - and arguably the most famous in the public eye from the 'classic' era - 
Tom Baker. The story was one of the first with all location work recorded direct onto video tape using a BBC OB unit. The following year he directed another classic, 
The Brain of Morbius, which saw the fourth Doctor encounter the eccentric surgeon Solon and his Time Lord secret. It was in this story Barry featured on screen alongside other production team members as one of the faces projected onto the screen during the Doctor's mind battle with Morbius.
Barry's final story for classic Doctor Who came in 1979 when he directed the four part story 
The Creature from the Pit, with the DVD release of that story containing a retrospective of his work. While the series was off air he also directed the 1995 story 
Downtime, a direct-to-video story produced by the independent production company Reeltime Pictures. 
He began his film and TV career in the movies, working as an assistant director on star vehicles including 
Meet Mr. Lucifer (1953),
 The Love Lottery (1954) and 
The Ship That Died of Shame (1955). By 1958 he was directing,  working on the BBC’s 
Starr and Company, the crime drama 
Private Investigator and the long-running soap opera 
Compact. He directed episodes of 
Paul Temple, 
Moonbase 3, 
Poldark, 
Angels, 
Nicholas Nickleby, 
The Onedin Line, 
Z Cars, 
All Creatures Great and Small, 
Nanny and 
Juliet Bravo. He also directed eleven episodes of the TV adaptation of 
John Christopher's 
The Tripods.
UPDATE - 16th FEBRUARY:  It has emerged that Barry died on 
Friday 7th February after falling down an escalator at a shopping centre in Banbury, near his home in Oxfordshire, earlier that day. He was taken to hospital but while there he suddenly stopped breathing and doctors could not revive him. An inquest into his death will be held on 
Thursday 5th June.