TARDIS Report: Debut Day Coverage, Part Two

Friday, 17 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

More media coverage from this evening of the US premiere of the series today:

Zap2It, in an article being printed Sunday in the Los Angeles Times, notes that "Once upon a time, there was a BBC science-fiction series called "Doctor Who" whose special effects were of the bubble-gum-and-rubber-band variety and whose basic premise sounded as cheesy as the show looked: A wanderer from the distant future fights intergalactic evildoers while traveling through space and time in a machine that is camouflaged as a London police box. Uh, right. Yet somewhere along the line, 'Doctor Who' became the longest-running sci-fi series in TV history (26 years), spawned several movie spinoffs, a mini-publishing empire, audiotapes, memorabilia, conventions, you name it. Now, after being off the air for 17 years, a new 'Doctor Who' series, first seen on the BBC last year, comes to the Sci Fi Channel on Friday (March 17). And therein lies a tale. When 'Doctor Who' first appeared on the BBC in 1963, it was a show for older children that aired late on Saturday afternoons. But quicker than you can say 'Daleks' -- the race of robots who became the title character's chief nemeses -- the program became a national sensation. The reasons were soon evident. The doctor's ability to go backward and forward in time meant that story lines were highly flexible. Although obviously a kids' program, 'Doctor Who' also had a wink-wink sense of humor that appealed to adults. Then there were the seven actors who played the doctor, who tended toward the warmly avuncular. And because Doctor Who takes on traveling companions from the places he visits who then join him on his adventures, the show could bounce its protagonist off against an ever-changing roster of foils. Plus, 'Doctor Who's' cheesy look actually worked in its favor. 'It was shameless about its shortcomings,' says Russell T. Davies, executive producer and head writer of the new series. 'They did intergalactic wars and invasions of the Earth with $2. Somewhere, by accident, they captured something very true about the world, that the future is very clumsy and nailed together. There is something beautifully normal about the 'Doctor Who' universe.' Los Angeles resident Shaun Lyon, who wrote 'Back to the Vortex,' a book about the new series, and whose Outpost Gallifrey (gallifreyone.com) is the premier 'Doctor Who' website in this country, echoes this 'It's the story line, stupid' sentiment by noting that America's most popular science-fiction program also had similarly cheesy production values. 'If you look back at the original 'Star Trek,' you'll see the same thing -- bad special effects,' Lyon says. 'The appeal is in the storytelling, even if there are no $10 million visual effects budgets. It's the stories, the characters, the actors themselves.' Although the series has been seen on PBS over the years, 'Doctor Who' never really developed a massive fan base in this country. Competition from shows like 'Star Trek' certainly held it back, and its chintzy foreign flavor didn't always translate well. But it did acquire a rabid cult following that now sponsors several 'Who'-oriented conventions (last month's L.A.-based Gallifrey One conclave was the 17th annual). But as with 'Star Trek,' 'Doctor Who's' 1989 demise did not end the appetite for it. So when veteran British TV writer Davies ('Queer as Folk') pitched the BBC a new version of the venerable doctor, the network went for it. 'I knew it could work again,' says Davies, 'that there was a new generation that could enjoy it. But I wasn't certain what the BBC wanted, whether they wanted an ironic version late at night. What they wanted was 7 o'clock prime time on a Saturday, which was how I wanted to bring it back. There hadn't been a sci-fi show on prime time in Britain for over 20 years, since 'V.' ' Davies understood that the fan community would want to have a say in the series' new direction, but he completely ignored the sci-fi message boards, claiming, 'It's the most stupid thing you can do, and people are seduced into believing that the most creative thing you can do is engage with your online fandom.' He also instinctively realized that the 21st century version of the doctor would have to be hipper, smarter and sexier than any previous incarnation. 'I decided to write it like anything else I'd write,' he says. 'I write character, I write funny, I write dramatic, and there's no way science fiction can't be the same thing. You just have to not steep it in nostalgia and not write techno-babble either.' Gussied up with state-of-the-art special effects and the kind of self-referential story lines that both kids and adults appreciate, the new 'Doctor Who' debuted on the BBC in March 2005 and proved an immediate smash hit (the series is in production on its second season). When he was developing the show, says Davies, 'I was thinking of 'Toy Story.' We were specifically aimed at getting a family audience, which people said didn't exist anymore. It was simply following the pattern of the old 'Doctor Who,' which was quietly witty while appealing to kids at the same time. The Pixar art of aiming at adults and kids is really difficult, but that's the path I tried to follow.'"

About.com: "After being a smash on English TV, the latest incarnation of Dr. Who comes to America on SCI FI Channel tonight at 9 PM ET. For those who don't know, Dr. Who (so named because his real name is just too weird for us puny humans to pronounce) is a Time Lord, traveling around time and space with a human companion at his side. Rose works in a shop and is bored out of her mind when along comes a Time Lord with his promises of great adventure (after working with Rose to save the Earth). He delivers. This time around, The Doctor is being played by Christopher Eccleston, who brings a TARDIS-load of energy and humor to the role. Billie Piper brings, thank goodness, a lot more than 'spunk' to Rose. She's fun and funny in her own right."

The North Adams Transcript: "The two-hour American premiere of the revived "Doctor Who" (Friday, March 17, at 9 p.m. on the Science Fiction Channel) may be first honest opportunity this long-running British series has really had to appeal to Americans -- that is, beyond the usual oddball cultists. In its current incarnation, the show is accessible and fun, with just enough darkness to add to the tension and intrigue. ... As helmed by the versatile Russell P. Davies, creator of "Queer As Folk," this 2005 version has the Doctor appearing out of nowhere in a department store basement in order to save Earth from a bunch of killer mannequins. ... The series captures, with a great degree of sincerity, the same rollicking male/female adventure dynamic that films like "Austin Powers" lampoon -- if the Doctor and Rose aren't the John Steed and Emma Peel of our time, then I don't know who are -- and it's this dynamic that makes the series shine. The Doctor, a displaced alien whose only remaining calling in life is to show off his knowledge of the universe, and Rose, a bored teenager desperately looking for a better way to live, not only need each other, but love each other's company. It's an infectious relationship that rarely succumbs to the typical romantic television cliches. This is a tale of equals with different strengths. Davies has transformed the old children's show into a fairly sophisticated drama that manages to hold different levels of interest for all ages. The show is also high on satire and, throughout its 13-episode run, examines political and social issues -- nationalism, isolationism, consumer culture, war, class, sexuality, and justice -- with great humor. There are also echoes of 9/11, the war in Iraq, and the corporate-controlled media, as well as natural human complacency in regard to the big picture. 'Doctor Who' is clearly one of the smartest TV shows around, but it doesn't decrease its enjoyment level through heavy-handedness. There are still plenty of aliens and monsters and space ships -- and, in the Doctor, we oddballs still have a hero we can believe in."

The Kansas City Star: "The British cult classic sci-fi series that periodically used a new actor to play the good doctor begins a 13-episode run with Christopher Eccleston as the traveling time lord in some 2005 episodes. The previous Dr. Who, of course, was the guy who played Screech on “Saved by the Bell.” (Well, we might be misremembering that particular piece of trivia, but with Daleks menacing everybody, what’s the difference?)"

SyFy Portal says that "New 'Doctor Who' Is Not So Niche-y" in an article that features interview clips from various Russell T Davies comments over the past year.

North Jersey Media Group notes that "Christopher Eccleston becomes one of the many actors to play the droll time traveler on the small screen in this remake of the long-running sci-fi series. Eccleston's Doctor finds his ideal traveling companion in shopgirl Rose Tyler (pop star-turned-actress Billie Piper)."

Now Playing magazine is reprinting reviews by Arnold Blumberg from last year in conjunction with the broadcast of the show.

Doctor Who is one of the three Daily Picks on the TiVo video recording network.

(Thanks to Paul Engelberg, John Mitchell, Scott Alan Woodard and Lewis Beale)




FILTER: - USA - Russell T Davies - Series 1/27 - Press

TARDIS Report: End of Week UK Coverage

Friday, 17 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Some of the press clips from the past few days from the UK are below (the bulk of the coverage this week has been in America):

Eclipse Magazine featured an exclusive interview this week with John Barrowman, last year's second Doctor Who companion and now star of the forthcoming "Torchwood" spinoff. "'It was like a childhood dream, because I'd grown up watching the show,' he says with obvious excitement. 'I've loved the show even from when I lived in Glasgow. My first actual episode that I recall was about the Autons, the shop dummies which were in the first episode of the new series. ... I think those fans who are my age and older will come immediately to 'Doctor Who' and I think they'll have a great love for it, as the 'Whovian' fans in the UK have. It has every element that speaks to the kids and also speaks to the adults. The kind of subliminal stuff goes over the kids' heads and hits the adults in the face - that's the only way I can describe it and that's why the series works so brilliantly.' ... What about the British humour? Barrowman is unconcerned about the specifically British references. It doesn't matter if the American audience doesn't get them, he says. 'But,' he continues firmly, 'I absolutely think they will get them because shows like 'Absolutely Fabulous' and 'The Office' have been great successes in America. So they do understand British humour, and that's why Americans love the Brits so much - it's something quirky and different from what they are used to.' The TV viewers aren't the only fans of the show; Barrowman says that the entire cast and crew have grown up with the various incarnations of 'Doctor Who' and have loved the show since they were children. And, it seems, everyone is trying to get in on this successful act. 'Special effects people are fighting to be involved,' Barrowman says. 'They are banging down the door. I have got people who write to me and send me treatment scripts to pass on to Russell [T Davies, writer] because they want to be involved with this show. It's a huge, huge, huge, huge, big deal!' ... Even though Jack has been brought back from the dead, he won't feature in the second season of the new 'Doctor Who'. The character made such an impression on both the audience and the producers that he will be heading up a spin-off show, 'Torchwood', due to start filming in April. The show will feature three other regular characters, including Gwen Cooper, played by Eve Myles, as Jack's female counterpart. Barrowman is thrilled about this project too. 'I am just totally so excited about it,' he says. 'The script is really good.' Described as a darker, sexier, more adult science fiction show, 'Torchwood' focuses on a renegade team investigating human and alien crime, and extraterrestrial technology that has fallen to Earth. After filming the spin-off, Barrowman will be returning to 'Doctor Who' for the third season, with David Tennant continuing to play The Doctor. The two met while Barrowman was appearing in the pantomime 'Cinderella' during the winter

Something we at Outpost Gallifrey missed last week... Bonnie Langfordwas voted out of ITV's "Dancing on Ice" shortly before its conclusion. Says the ITV site, "Whatever people say about Bonnie, one thing is for sure: she has provided us with some of the most spectacular performances we've seen on the ice. But tonight, those spectacular routines were brought to an unceremonious end when you decided that Gaynor and Stefan should go forward to dance Bolero. But despite coming up short so close to the finishing line, the judges favourite refused to be downheartened. 'I'm disappointed for Matt because we had a fabulous routine,' an upbeat Bonnie babbled after Phil delivered the bad news. 'It would have been beautiful and I would have done him proud.' But bendy Bonnie rightly refused to be downbeat about coming third in the competition. 'This has been so life changing for me,' she went on. 'I've touched so many people, which has been brilliant. 'And now I'm going to play Roxy Hart in Chicago!'" Langford was one of two Doctor Who actors (the other being John Barrowman) on the program this year.

The April issue of BBC Focus Magazine, the monthly magazine by the BBC on science and technology, has a large section devoted to the science of Dr. Who. From the blurb: "The Science of Doctor Who: As a new Doctor and a new series hit our screens, BBC Focus asks the questions that really matter: could we regenerate, have cybernetic implants, or get a robot dog?"

Yesterday's LegalWeek seems to have discovered the Cybus Corporation fan site that has made the rounds in Doctor Who fandom. "Regular readers will know all about the utilitarian paradise that is the staff canteen at SJ Berwin, as well as the firm's recent move to flash new digs on the muddy banks of the Thames, where an increasing share of the City's most expensive suits -- sorry, finest minds -- have recently been gathering. Indeed, last week The Diary received an anonymous e-mail, titled ‘Reasons not to visit SJ Berwin's new office', drawing attention to the City firm's latest neighbours -- the shadowy Cybus Corporation, whose website appears to show the company's offices located pretty much next door. The Diary shuddered deep inside its anorak, however, when a closer look revealed Cybus to be home of the fearsome Cybermen, whose ruthless robot army lumbered across screens in the 1980s to bring their unique brand of unconvincing terror to Doctor Who viewers everywhere. It seems fans of the sci-fi classic put the website together ahead of the imminent new series -- which features updated Cybermen (albeit with the same silver-painted cricketer's batting gloves for hands) -- and settled on SJ Berwin as the ideal neighbour for the headquarters of the fictional business. The Diary realises that making an easy jibe about law firms converting people into mindless robots intent on world domination would be somewhat akin to shooting suicidal fish in a particularly restrictive barrel -- and will therefore resist, especially seeing as SJ Berwin is not even a magic circle firm at all."

Yesterday's Metro, the London free newspaper, has a short piece on Bob Baker, writer of the Wallace and Gromit films and co-creator, with Dave Martin, of K9 in 1977. According to the article, Baker "now plans to write a TV drama about K-9 -- the robot dog from Dr Who".

(Thanks to Paul Engelberg, Chuck Foster, Steve Tribe, Tony Bellows, and Carole Gordon)




FILTER: - People - Russell T Davies - Press

TARDIS Report: Debut Day Coverage in America

Friday, 17 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The American press went into overdrive late this week with coverage of today's long-awaited debut of Doctor Who on the Sci-Fi Channel. Here's a recap of the press items from Thursday and Friday. Note that many local newspapers feature articles from wire services such as Reuters, Scripps-Howard, etc. These local papers haven't been mentioned simply because they reprint articles sent by these wire services; the article content of original articles or feeds is as follows:

TV Guide Online features a banner advert (at right) on its front page. On today's Hot List: "Forget the slow pacing and the not-so-special effects of the previous versions -- this is not your father's Doctor Who! Christopher Eccleston breathes new life into the genre's favorite time lord in tonight's manic opener, which touches on the character's past and introduces Rose (Billie Piper), a human who's all too interested in the doctor's operations. A follow-up visit, er, second episode follows." And in Matt Roush's twice-weekly Roush Review: "Why to watch: To get that Friday-night cult fix. The lowdown: In earlier versions, I never clicked with this Brit import about the time-tripping, alien-fighting mystery doc (a chipper yet intense Christopher Eccleston). But this remake achieves an Avengers-like balance of cheeky wit amid the cheesiness. As Who's shopgirl sidekick, Billie Piper is a delight. A keeper? Who'd say no? My score: 7"

USA Today: "Doctor Who (Friday, 9 ET/PT) is back with new adventures and a new Doctor: Christopher Eccleston. The show makes its U.S. debut on Sci Fi with a two-hour special, immediately after which Who fans will begin debating Eccleston's merits and his place in the Time Lord pantheon."

The New York Times (second article this week): "The original 'Doctor Who,' a British sci-fi series, was on for so long, from 1963 to 1989, that it became an institution, like 'Coronation Street.' It even caught on for a while in this country, after being picked up by some PBS stations, and both here and in Britain it spawned a 'Star Trek'-like cult. Those fans obsessed over the wanderings of the title character, a human-looking extraterrestrial who travels the universe in a time machine disguised as a police telephone booth, and of his various enemies -- the Sontarians, Krynoids, Zygons and, most feared of all, the Daleks, who looked like giant salt shakers. The show eventually burned through eight actors in the title role, explaining each time that the Doctor had been 'regenerated,' and by the time the BBC finally canceled it, the plots had grown mossy and the special effects, always low-budget, had become antiquated and embarrassing. The resuscitated 'Doctor Who,' which has its premiere tonight at 9 on the Sci Fi Channel, with two episodes back to back, was written and produced by Russell T. Davies, best known as the creator of the original version of 'Queer as Folk.' Mr. Davies is himself a cultie, who has even written a novel based on 'Doctor Who,' and his remake is both affectionate and a little ironic, leaving intact some of the show's essential silliness. Like so much British science fiction, especially Douglas Adams's 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy' series, this 'Doctor Who' has a goofy, homemade quality; it's less interested in gizmos than in characters. ... The familiar blue police box doesn't seem much revamped, either; it appears to run on pneumatic tubes, and there is no sign of a computer on board. The Doctor, on the other hand, almost quivers with energy. In previous regenerations, depending on the actor playing him, this character has variously been crotchety, spacey, avuncular and even a little glamorous. Christopher Eccleston brings a kind of manic blokishness to the part, giving the Doctor a sardonic grin and a working-class Manchester accent. (When another character says, 'If you're an alien, how come you sound like you're from the North?' he replies, 'Lots of planets have a North.') ... Sadly, it can't last. In Britain, where 'Doctor Who' is now in its second season, Mr. Eccleston has already been regenerated. He quit the show last year after announcing that he didn't want to become a celebrity. So what we're watching here is what the sci-fi types would call an avatar. This time-travel business is very complicated."

The Hollywood Reporter and Reuters News Service: "Redesigned, repeated and constantly regurgitated to viewers since its inception in the 1960s, this latest revamp of the by-now infamous 'Dr. Who' is silly, sophomoric stuff that is sure to please its television audience, and in fact has been for several seasons now. With a title character who's been around longer that those watching the tube he's on, this doctor is contemporary-talking (well, maybe a little bumbling as well), sort of sexy and just right for those who like sci-fi but don't want to have to think or work too hard to get it. A good formula all around. ... Executive producer (and lead writer) Russell T. Davies has a good thing going here, even if it does seem absurd at times for monsters and other such horrific creatures and events to spring out of nowhere, or at least to spring from a mood completely discordant with the weirdness that suddenly descends. But all the mismatched tones do give the series a kind of postmodern feel that contemporary audiences will have little trouble handling. All the writers, including Stephen Moffat, Mark Gatiss, Paul Cornell and Rob Shearman, are to be congratulated for infusing a lively sense of the absurd into the stories. To the series' good credit, stars Eccleston and Piper are energetic and good-natured enough to carry the proceedings to their always unpredictable ends. Feature players Noel Clarke (as Rose's boyfriend) and Camille Coduri (as Rose's mother) add energy as well."

The Knight Ridder Newspaper Service: "As his devoted fans know, Doctor Who always has been capable of a pretty good disappearing act. But the last one he pulled -- back on Dec. 6, 1989 -- went on a bit longer than expected. On Friday, when the good Doctor starts reappearing in new episodes on the Sci Fi channel (at 9 p.m.), it will have been 16 years since the last episode of the original Doctor Who, perhaps the most curious cult classic in the history of television, was produced. Over its first 26 years, the series about an enigmatic time-and-space traveler featured eight very different actors in the lead role, along with wonderfully loopy, 1960s-hip dialogue and some of the worst special effects ever, including aliens made of inflated condoms. A huge hit in Great Britain, Doctor Who didn't surface in this country until the late 1970s, when it became a staple of Saturday-night programming on many PBS stations. But despite the pleas of the faithful, there were no new episodes anywhere until last year, when Russell T. Davies, the powerhouse British writer-producer of such shows as the original Queer as Folk, finally persuaded the BBC to let him take a shot at reviving the franchise with some modern twists. Much to the surprise of the BBC, Davies' take on Doctor Who became one of the most-watched series on British TV. (More than 10 million viewers -- 40 percent of the audience in Britain -- watched the debut, and a second season already has started there.) And now the show comes to America with the 13 episodes that made up Davies' first season on the BBC. The good news for longtime fans is that he hasn't mucked around with the quirky essence of Doctor Who that much, while giving it a more polished look. The Doctor, as he always is referred to in the series, still is the last surviving member of a race wiped out in a time war (don't even ask) and still is going through various dimensions with a goofy grin and a passion for trying to right wrongs. He doesn't always get it right -- in earlier episodes, he was partially responsible for Nero's burning of Rome, the Great Fire of London and the appearance of the Loch Ness monster -- but he tries. ... Best of all, the new episodes (or at least the two that Sci Fi sent out for review) retain the fun of the original Doctor Who. If you're looking for allegorical, intriguing science fiction, this isn't it. If you're OK with rapid-fire, lighthearted dialogue with an occasional dig at politics and culture, this Doctor Who is your cup of tea. Don't get too used to Eccleston as the Doctor, though. The actor bowed out after one year and already has been replaced by David Tennant (Viva Blackpoo and Barty Crouch Jr. in the most recent Harry Potter film). But even that is in keeping with the show's tradition. Good to see that things are back to what stands for normal in the world of TARDIS, Daleks and Doctor Who."

Sci Fi Wire (Sci-Fi Channel, another feature article): "Russell T. Davies, executive producer and lead writer of the new Doctor Who, attributed much of the show's initial success to the winning chemistry between Christopher Eccleston, who plays the eccentric Time Lord, and Billie Piper, who plays his companion, Rose Tyler. As Davies recalled, Eccleston was an early candidate for the role, but it was assumed that he wouldn't be interested. 'Mal Young, one of the other executive producers who had been campaigning at the BBC for a long time to bring Doctor Who back, had mentioned him, and having worked with Chris and having known him for years, I just gave a little wry smile to myself and thought, 'We should be so lucky!'' Davies said. Davies added: 'Out of the blue, Chris e-mailed me, and even as a huge top-line actor in Britain, he was still modest enough to say, 'Would you consider me for the part?' Anybody else would have said, 'I want that part! Give it to me!' From that point on, we did see other people as well, but it was a very simple decision, because the program's memory had become a bit of a joke, in the way that I watch American programs, and they refer to Gilligan's Island. It was a bit like that over here, because Gilligan's Island was a bit daft and funny and fondly remembered, but not a serious program at all. And casting Chris seemed to have single-handedly changed that overnight, particularly within the industry. Suddenly, a lot of people sat upright and said, 'Oh, my God, they're taking this seriously!' It was the biggest change we could effect upon the memory of the program.' Equally important was the casting of Piper, who was much more of an equal than many of the show's original companions, who were usually relegated to the role of damsel in distress. 'Much as I love the old show, there wasn't much work involved in that decision, because you could not write a female lead in this day and age that was subservient and in the Doctor's shadow, who didn't have a background and a history and a personality,' Davies said. 'I think with any drama, you'd just get laughed off the screen if you tried to get away from that, so it wasn't as much a great idea of mine as just the only way to write something in 2006.' Davies said that he brought his reputation as a drama writer to Doctor Who. 'So that's the sort of thing they wanted from me,' he said. 'I've always written strong women, so there was just no choice in it, although if you studied the history of the program, it's quite a bit of a reinvention. I can't help thinking if Doctor Who had run continuously; it would be like this now anyway. If it had gone from 1989 to 2006 in a straight line, the companion would now be like this, because that's what television is like today.' As it turned out, Eccleston would only stay on long enough to launch the first season, with actor David Tennant taking over the role for season two, which is currently in production in the United Kingdom. 'We would never have replaced Chris with a lesser actor,' Davies insisted. 'And we're very lucky to have got David.'"

The Los Angeles Daily News: "Christopher Eccleston (who bears a resemblance to 'Everybody Loves Raymond' creator Phil Rosenthal) plays the ninth incarnation of the classic British sci-fi character whose series initially ran from 1963 to 1989 (when a star departed, each subsequent actor took the character in totally different directions; this series now boasts a greater longevity than 'Star Trek'). Tonight, The Doctor, a Time Lord with a tragic past, rescues working-class girl Rose Tyler (former British pop singer Billie Piper) from, initially, murderous mannequins sprung to life and, later, her tedious existence. He traverses time and the universe in a blue police phone box. His presence, one bit player warns Rose, means 'One thing's for certain - we're all in danger.' The Doctor, with a gleam in his eye, reframes the debate: 'Now we're in trouble,' he deadpans, surrounded by conflagration. Pros: Eccleston and Piper enjoy a witty, flirty chemistry: 'The entire world revolves around you,' she accusatorily scolds him; he replies, 'Sort of, yeah.' There's a visual inventiveness not always supported by the series' budget: In tonight's second episode, The Doctor and Rose visit the world 5 billion years in the future to witness the sun's apocalyptic expansion, only to encounter someone who wants to slip a few murders in before Earth's destruction. They attend along with all manner of aliens, including some named The Appearance of the Repeated Meme. The Last Human is merely skin with something of a face stretched across a metal frame; Rose dismisses her as 'a bitchy trampoline.' Cons: Rose is a little dim, failing to notice a disturbing change in her boyfriend. Fortunately, she's a quick learner, and helps save the Earth in no time. And, as was notoriously true with previous series, the special effects can be dodgy, though the series' outsize ambitions obviously called for a budget no TV network could've sprung for, let alone the BBC and an American cable outfit. In a nutshell: Blowing up the planet in episode two? How do you top that? But here's betting you'll be dying to find out: You needn't know anything of past series to become quickly addicted to this series' seemingly endless quirky charms."

Seattle Times: "Christopher Eccleston is the new Doctor in the BBC's latest incarnation of 'Doctor Who.' But don't get too attached to him. He won't be back next year. The superb 'Doctor Who' achieves something difficult for American shows: It makes TV look easy by demonstrating that intelligence and escapism are not mortal enemies. But then, 'Doctor Who' has experience. The world's longest ongoing sci-fi series has kicked around the time-space continuum since 1963. Over 40 Earth years, the time travels of the mysterious Doctor and his sidekicks have grown from a British children's show to a legend. The latest incarnation hits U.S. airwaves at 9 tonight via Sci Fi Channel. Co-starring Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper, it's Season 1 of a revival launched in 2005 by BBC Wales and the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. Those not already privy to past splendors needn't fear. While most space sagas drag a comet-tail's worth of back story behind them, 'Doctor Who' is instantly accessible. Maybe that's because the series at heart is an old-fashioned romance in the dashing, 19th-century sense. The mechanics of being transported 5 billion years in a moment or using Anti-Plastic to melt an enemy are tossed off with deadpan insouciance; what counts is the distance closed or opened among people and other forms of life. The focus for this epic jaunt is the relationship between the Doctor and his traveling companion, who in the new version is a pretty blonde named Rose Tyler. Rose resembles the Bridget Jones type of Englishwoman, albeit a few pegs down the socioeconomic scale. She labors in a bland department store, dates a bland boyfriend named Mickey (Noel Clarke) and tolerates her antic, overbearing mum (Camille Coduri). ... On paper, this formula puts 'Doctor Who' in the same territory as 'Star Trek.' Both reflect the optimism of the 1960s, along with the Western World's first self-conscious steps toward global thinking. But the approaches were dissimilar. The one-hour 'Star Trek' was indisputably American in its sober and open moralizing. 'Doctor Who' took a lighter, ironic point of view and each half-hour installment concluded with a cliffhanger. Even the treatment of technology was different. The Trekkian transporter room looked cheesy and behaved flawlessly; the Doctor's machine TARDIS (Time And Relative Distance In Space) was, and is, quirkily flawed. ... Mainly, though, the series resonates with its message to examine as well as relish life. Today's audience has moved beyond flip cynicism, and if the replacement isn't quite sincerity, 'Doctor Who' allows room for both."

The Village Voice: "In the U.K., this series about a time-traveling sleuth is as much of a stone-cold classic as The Twilight Zone is here. It's also equally period-bound, bringing to mind the black-and-white series of the late '60s and early '70s, with those fakey sets and sinister electronic background music. The famous futuristic theme tune—an invitation to a generation of children to prepare themselves for a weekly dose of palpitating terror—has survived, but it's been gussied up with unnecessary orchestration, setting the tone for this attempt to update Doctor Who in the age of CGI. ... There are plenty of other good gags to prove this entertaining series doesn't take itself too seriously. When Rose goes into culture shock, she ruefully notes, "They're just so alien . . . the aliens." The Doctor has generally been played as a relentlessly cheery type, with a Peter Pan quality of prepubescent sexlessness—a geek whose brain beats brawn in every corner of the universe. Although this remake attempts to add tragic depth to the Doctor, it lacks true darkness. The early series overcame skimpy budgets to conjure the uncanny; this was cosmic horror as H.P. Lovecraft would have understood it. The real disappointment of the new Who isn't its use of (slightly) slick special effects, though. It's a structural problem: Instead of stretching a storyline across a whole season, each adventure is resolved within a single episode, making this closer to your average detective series. The thrill-filled cliffhangers of yore are gone, taking with them with the child's urge to watch TV from behind the sofa, breath bated."

Detroit Free Press: "The British cult favorite is about a mysterious time traveler who bops across the spectrum of time, battling aliens and monsters while piloting a spaceship shaped like a London phone booth. It is reborn in a spiffy new version that first aired in North America on CBC in 2005. This time Christopher Eccleston ('28 Days') is the intrepid scientific adventurer. The Doctor is joined by his companion and instant soul mate Rose (Billie Piper), brought together by cockeyed fate as their 13-episode odyssey blasts off with witty good spirits. "

Chicago Tribune: "Despite a few missteps, there's much to recommend this fast-paced edition of 'Doctor Who,' the first brand-new TV season of Britain's long-running 'Who' franchise in many years. As the Doctor, a space traveler who pops all over the universe having adventures and fighting bad guys, Christopher Eccleston has a cheeky, spiky charm and more than a dash of sex appeal. As the Doctor's companion, Rose Tyler, English pop star-turned-actress Billie Piper brings a winning combination of dogged sincerity and working-class irreverence to her role. Having said that, it's a good thing that Sci Fi is running two episodes of this updated 'Doctor Who' on Friday: The first episode starts out with promising chills, but the resolution of the paper-thin plot is far too predictable. And though the story in the second episode isn't terribly complex, the dialogue and pop-culture satire throughout is entertaining (who would have thought Britney Spears' 'Toxic' would ever appear on a 'Doctor Who' soundtrack?). All in all, new head 'Who' writer Russell T. Davies has done the Doctor a service by making him a multilayered, sometimes sarcastic, sometimes troubled hero who's comfortable in modern-day, multicultural London -- and in the rest of the galaxy too, where evil never sleeps

Gannett News Service (via Cincinnati Enquirer): "Look out, America: The Doctor is ready to make house calls again. No, this isn't some new wrinkle in your HMO coverage. This is THE Doctor, legendary Time Lord hero of the British science-fiction television series 'Doctor Who.' The program, which ran from 1963 to 1989, was revived last year by the British Broadcasting Corp. and became a huge ratings success in Great Britain. Now Americans can see why, as the Sci Fi Channel begins broadcasting the first 13-episode season today. You may think you know the original 'Doctor Who' - an eccentric curly-haired alien in a floppy hat and overlong scarf, an undertone of campiness, and production values on a par with the original 'Star Trek.' Well, you can forget all that. The new 'Doctor Who' brings the series into the new millennium, which means top-notch special effects and mature writing. The core of the story remains the same: The Doctor is a cosmic wanderer who travels through time and space in the TARDIS, a bigger-on-the-inside spaceship disguised as a blue British police box. Along the way, he becomes embroiled in alien invasions and other nefarious goings-on. He relies on his wits, not muscle or guns. The strength of 'Doctor Who' has always been its limitless formula: Stories can be set in the past, present or future, on any planet. One of the show's genius ideas is 'regeneration': When near death, a Time Lord can renew his entire body. The concept has allowed several actors to play the role (including Tom Baker, wild-eyed wearer of the 14-foot scarf, who held the role the longest). The new 'Doctor Who' stars British actor Christopher Eccleston - best known to American audiences for films such as '28 Days Later' and 'The Others.' Gone are the pseudo-Edwardian attitudes and dress. This Doctor can be dark and brooding, a working-class bloke in a leather jacket bearing the psychological scars of a great Time War."

Scripps-Howard News Service: "His time-travel ship _ it only looks like a police call box _ remains bigger on the inside than it is on the outside. He's still very funny and wise and has a kid-like fascination with the universe. He's an immortal who knows everything about everything but fumbles in his relationships. Just in time, the Doctor is back. And 'Doctor Who' fans will discover much hasn't changed about the long-running BBC series. The latest version makes its U.S. broadcast premiere at 9 p.m. Friday on the Sci-Fi network. (The 13-episode season premiered in 2005 in the United Kingdom, and a new season is now in production there.) Some things have been updated for the 21st-century version. A nice touch is when Rose (Billie Piper), the newest companion for the Doctor (Chris Eccleston), asks about that police call box. This fancy phone booth with a door is no longer a common sight in this age of cell phones. But it's the things that haven't changed that makes this version work. Eccleston approaches his incarnation of the Doctor with the maverick approach of Tom Baker, the spirit of Sylvester McCoy and the wide-eyed enthusiasm of Peter Davison. Those are some of the stars who played the Doctor way back in the 20th century. ... The Daleks have been around since the 1960s on 'Doctor Who.' The difference is the latest episode makes you feel compassion for a Dalek. Even a tin man has a heart. That's not too surprising. Everything's always bigger on the inside than it is on the outside on 'Doctor Who.'"

The Arkansas Democrat Gazette: "Who? Doctor Who, that's who. There are a couple of generations who have enjoyed the adventures of Doctor Who. The BBC science fiction show that began in 1963 has been updated with 13 new episodes. They kick off on Sci-Fi Channel with a twohour premiere at 8 p. m. Friday. Who, played this round by Christopher Eccleston, is a mysterious time-traveler known only as 'the Doctor.' His comely traveling companion is Rose Tyler, played by the comely Billie Piper. The Doctor and Rose travel about risking life and limb, battling aliens and monsters and generally saving mankind and life as we know it. Eccleston plays the Doctor as 'wise, funny and brave -- an adventurer in time and space.' He's the man to call on when there's danger about, but he's a klutz at human relationships. That's where Rose comes in. Rose is a shop girl from the present day who is trapped in a drab, boring existence. Naturally, the Doctor's life of adventures across the universe is appealing to her and the pair hit it off. How do they pull off all this zipping about ? With a TARDIS, of course. It's sort of like a phone booth, but it stands for a Time and Relative Dimensions In Space machine. And it's the last one in the universe. Let the new adventures begin."

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: "If 'Doctor Who' sparks a bit of recognition, you're probably recalling a cheesy British sci-fi series that ran on PBS stations in the 1960s. Travel through time to present day, and 'Doctor Who' is back -- and not just because this alien Time Lord, the last of his race, has the power to regenerate. BBC execs thought they could update the series, take a giant leap in production values and regenerate ratings, and they were right. Now in the second season of its latest incarnation -- and already with a change in lead actors, from Christopher Eccleston in Season 1 to David Tennant in Season 2 -- it's a smashing success in England. Starting Friday, Eccleston & Co. arrive on Sci-Fi Channel Fridays at 9 p.m. while the two 'Stargate' series and 'Battlestar Galactica' are in reruns. ... This Doctor laughs at danger a little too readily for a guy who has experienced the end of his world, although the fact that he started life as a grandfatherly fellow in 1963 and he's fit and still flitting about in 2006 could be the reason. Some of the pop-culture humor and creatures owe a nod to 'Farscape,' but the camp level is high and can be mighty funny (take, for example, a huge dis of Michael Jackson, referenced as a creature that's just skin, eyes and mouth)."

Alibi.com: "The Sci-Fi Channel scores some street cred (on, you know, nerdy streets) by importing the latest season of the BBC's looooong-running series."

Daily Free Press, Boston University: "It seems there's always some new British invasion to follow on the heels of the last new British invasion: The Beatles, the Rolling Stones, punk-rock, '80s electronica pop, the Spice Girls and platform shoes, emo European mullet-wearing bands, etc. But the real new new British invasion has nothing to do with music, and everything to do with the boob tube the Brits call telly. The BBC has had a remarkable last couple of years, and now the programming is finally hitting stateside. On March 17th, Little Britain and Doctor Who, two hot British properties, will vie for your attention with their season premieres, and no matter which one you choose, you'll laugh, you'll cry and you'll wonder how you ever lived without them. ... More than other sci-fi shows of its kind, the new Doctor Who provides a cutting social commentary on everything from plastic surgery to sexuality, politics to media sensationalism. Airing on the Sci-Fi network may box the dramedy series in and keep away a more broad audience, but with NBC Universal behind the franchise stateside, the series is certain to enjoy ample promotion and popularity when it comes out on DVD this summer."

IF Magazine: "Fans of the various other incarnations of DOCTOR WHO will not be disappointed by the latest version of the hit series coming to the States courtesy of the BBC and the Sci Fi Channel. This time around Christopher Eccleston (28 DAYS LATER) fills the shoes of that wacky time and space traveling Dr., and Billie Piper joins him as his female sidekick Rose. The first U.S. aired episode of this series premieres tomorrow at 9pm PST on the Sci Fi Channel. The series has already completed it's first season run in the UK to tremendous reviews, so we have to play a bit of catch up with it here in the US. This version of WHO maintains several classic elements of the series that fans have known and loved for decades. The Tardis is still the good Doctor's form of transportation, though the inside has seen a bit of an overhaul from the last version. The Doctor himself is still a unique quirky individual who is not quite a ‘normal' human and doesn't quite blend in with the population around him. The perspective with which this series is shown is from the point of view of Rose, who through a series of misadventures joins the Doctor in this first episode. Rose is attractive, plucky, intelligent, and has a great sense of humor in the face of extraordinary circumstances. ... Once again Sci Fi Channel, as with their other series BATTLESTAR GALACTICA, has brought a worthwhile character driven science fiction series to television. The characters make the series worth watching, and seeing how they react to everything and everyone around them only makes it more entertaining. If all episodes of the upcoming season are as well done as the first, we have a great ride ahead for Americans that haven't yet found a way to see this series. There are few science fiction series worth watching on TV, but the Sci Fi Channel seems to have a corner on the market of the best ones out there."

Time Out New York: "A classic Hollywood joke tells of the aspiring actress so dumb that she slept with the writer. It's not a joke often heard in the world of British television, where networks pursue top creative talents with the same fervor as NBA teams courting free agents. Case in point: Russell T. Davies, the man behind the original Queer as Folk and other groundbreaking gay-themed programs, who the BBC has long sought to poach from his home at rival network ITV. 'They used to come to me and say, ‘Do you want to adapt Dickens? Write a detective show?'' Davies says, speaking from his home in Manchester. 'I said, ‘No, I want to bring back Doctor Who--that's the only program I want to write for the BBC.'' ... After years of haggling, Davies fulfilled his dream with a reinterpretation of the series that premiered in the U.K. a year ago and makes its American debut Friday 17 on Sci Fi. Despite Doctor Who's iconic status in British pop culture, Davies was worried that people would have trouble taking a revival seriously. 'In the 16 years it had been offscreen, [Doctor Who's] reputation had become a bit of a joke,' Davies explains. 'I told them, in this day and age, given how beautiful Battlestar Galactica and Farscape are, you can't bring it back on a cheap budget--this has got to look as good as all the best American stuff. Thank God [the BBC was] behind that right from the start.' ... Above all, Davies says he wanted to treat the Doctor as a figure who has entered the realm of British folklore--like Robin Hood or Sherlock Holmes--and not as part of a mere franchise. 'Whatever shape television takes in the future, I just hope there will be someone saying. ‘Oh, I loved this 40 years ago, I want to bring it back,'' he says. 'That would be the best reward of the lot, I think.'"

Tampa Tribune: "Doctor Who hits the ground running tonight. ... 'Doctor Who,' the long-running BBC series, is back and updated for modern consumption. Thirteen episodes made last year in Britain will air on the Sci-Fi Channel on Fridays beginning at 9 tonight. The new incarnation of this classic character captures the charm of the original. The series has decent special effects while maintaining the campy, slightly cheesy appeal that made the original a hit in the 1960s and '70s. ... He is the ninth incarnation of the TV Doctor. Those familiar with the series may find Eccleston an unsettling choice at first. He's a tall, lanky fellow with big ears and a thin, sort of geeky face. But viewers will soon warm to this cheeky, cheerful blue-collar bloke dressed in leather jacket and jeans. Actress Billie Piper, who plays his new traveling companion, Rose, is a scene stealer and tougher than previous helpers who had to be rescued by the Doctor. This time around, she has to rescue him."

The St Louis Post Dispatch: "The mysterious time traveler known only as the Doctor turns up in his latest incarnation (played by Christopher Eccleston) in a 13-part British series making its U.S. debut. With companion Rose Tyler (Billie Piper), this Doctor, as did his predecessors, travels space and time, risking death and dangers, battling aliens and monsters."

Deseret News, Utah: "Doctor Who is the newest old show on TV. Or the oldest new show. This British import is the latest incarnation of the good doctor, who has appeared in various forms played by various actors since 1963. This time 'round Christopher Eccleston steps into the role of the mysterious time-and-space traveler who's both mysterious and humorous, in a quirky kind of way. This 13-episode series is not so much a continuation as a new beginning. (Even if you've never seen a single episode of any of the previous incarnations, you won't feel like you've missed anything.) In the first of two episodes airing tonight on Sci Fi (7 and 8 p.m., repeated at 9 and 10 p.m.), the Doctor meets Rose Tyler (Billie Piper), who has an unfortunate encounter with mannequins that's part of a plot to invade and conquer Earth. In the second hour, they go 5 billion years in the future, and there's trouble there, too. This isn't 'Star Trek' or 'Battlestar Galactica.' It's a decidedly British sensibility that mixes some state-of-the-art effects with stuff that looks, well, decidedly cheesy. And it's an odd combination of action, adventure and wackiness -- an odd combination that somehow works. 'Doctor Who' fans will want to see this new version. And it will make fans out of people who are new to the franchise."

Film Fodder: "While 'Battlestar Galactica,' 'Stargate SG-1' and 'Stargate Atlantis' are on break, the SciFi Channel is betting on 'Doctor Who' to keep viewers watching. Tonight the cable channel will air the two-hour premiere of the BBC series. It's been throwing little bits of info about the show and its stars at us all week to peek our interest. ... According to the SciFi Channel, Russell T. Davies, executive producer and lead writer of the new 'Doctor Who,' attributed much of the show's initial success to the winning chemistry between Christopher Eccleston ('28 Days Later'), who plays the eccentric Time Lord, and Billie Piper ('Spirit Trap'), who plays his companion, Rose Tyler. Eccleston didn't stick around for the second season, though. David Tennant has taken up the task as the tenth incarnation of the good Doctor. Production of the second season is underway in the UK with a rumored air date of April 15th on the BBC. I've never been a huge 'Who' fan. I didn't find Tom Baker (the fourth Doctor) and that horrid scarf of his very appealing. Since it was all that seemed to air when I was a kid (very young - I was very young at the time! and they were reruns!), I just didn't get in to the show. When the fifth Doctor came around, the whole thing didn't make a lot of sense to me so I just stuck to reruns of the original 'Battlestar Galactica' (when Richard Hatch was Apollo) and 'Buck Rogers.' Perhaps now - six Doctors later - I might give 'Who' another try. With my beloved 'Battlestar' on break until October (ack!) and 'SG-1' and 'Atlantis' gone until July, I'll set my TiVo for 'Who' to fill the void. I doubt I'll watch it live, though. Heck, it's Saint Patty's Day! I'm not supposed to be sitting home anyway - or something. 'Doctor Who' airs tonight on SciFi at 9pm ET/10pm CT after a re-run of 'SG-1.' If you're recording it, note that the 'two-hour premiere' is listed as two episodes ('Rose' and 'The End of the World') so be sure to get them both."

(Thanks to Paul Engelberg)




FILTER: - USA - Russell T Davies - Series 1/27 - Press

TARDIS Report: Wednesday (US Debut Roundup)

Thursday, 16 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

This evening's summation, coverage of the new series' debut in the US:

The Sci-Fi Channel's Schedulebot (the broadcast schedule printed online) has changed slightly, now calling the March 17 9pm premiere "Rose & The End Of The World (2-hr Prem)". The repeats from 11:30PM to 1:30AM on the 19th, 10AM to Noon on the 20th, and Midnight to 2AM late Thursday the 23rd show them as 2 separate episodes, but the debut is listed as a two-hour broadcast.

The channel's Sci Fi Wire has featured two articles today about the new series. The first: "Russell T. Davies, producer of the new Doctor Who, told SCI FI Wire that one of his priorities was to create a series that would be taken seriously as a mainstream drama. The original incarnation, which was canceled by the BBC in the late '80s after 26 seasons, was regarded by some executives as a bit of a joke in later years. 'That's very true,' Davies said in an interview. 'But all of those people are now gone, so I have to say the opposite is now true. Frankly, I have to say, the terrifying thing about this time last year was that we had just spent all that money on it. Doctor Who has a good budget; it's not the biggest budget in the world, but for the BBC to make 13 episodes of something with this sized budget is very rare. I literally can't think of another example, so an awful lot of faith and trust had been put into it. We were also put in the prime-time slot, so expectations were actually massive, and this time last year was truly scary.' Doctor Who premiered in the United Kingdom last year and became a huge hit. 'The interesting thing about when the BBC approached me, I was amazed that they wanted the same thing that I did, which was that they also wanted the series to be on in prime time. You could have done a 9 o'clock, post-watershed version of Doctor Who on BBC2, which is one of our smaller channels, a more niche or elite channel, and that would have created a much more adult Doctor Who, much more like the new Battlestar Galactica, or they could have commissioned something with a much smaller budget for, say, BBC3, which is a wild youth-based channel, in which case, Doctor Who would have been possibly a [bit] Monty Python: very wild and extreme and even a bit radical and much more comedy-based. But I was delighted that they put it on for the primary channel, which is BBC1, on Saturday night.' As it turned out, the vision that Davies had for the series—about an eccentric Time Lord (played by Christopher Eccleston) traveling through time and space, accompanied by companion Rose Tyler (Billie Piper) in a ship disguised as a police call box—struck an immediate chord when it debuted in its Saturday-night timeslot. 'I know it isn't the same in the States, but in Britain, Saturday night is the ratings war night, in which we play Pop Idol [similar to the U.S. American Idol] and all the big entertainment shows, the Dance Fever shows. It's the biggest battleground of all, so the fact the BBC was investing in it so much by putting it in that prime-time slot very much determined what it should be, which is very much the sort of Doctor Who that I wanted to make anyway, which was a very inclusive version, which would include all sorts of viewers, not just niche science-fiction viewers, but was a great big, bold, wild family drama. So I was lucky that the constellations were in the right shape.' Doctor Who begins its first-season U.S. run on SCI FI Channel starting at 9 p.m. ET/PT on March 17."

The second Sci Fi Wire article, called "Star Was Who Virgin," published this evening: "Christopher Eccleston admitted that he wasn't a big fan of Doctor Who before signing on for the role. 'As a child, I felt that the Doctor was a bit too authoritarian for my taste,' said the actor, whose episodes begin airing on SCI FI Channel at 9 p.m. ET/PT on March 17. 'Because I didn't have a camp sensibility, the wobbly-sets thing made me think, 'Oh, I just don't believe in that!' And [I] ended up watching Star Trek instead. But now I look at the old DVDs, and I've become a massive fan. I think it's a fantastic series, and I'm proud to be part of it.' Eccleston spoke at a news conference last year, before the first season of Doctor Who aired in the United Kingdom. Eccleston is the ninth actor to officially play the Doctor, following in the tradition of William Hartnell, Patrick Troughton, Jon Pertwee, Tom Baker, Peter Davison, Colin Baker, Sylvester McCoy and Paul McGann. After hearing that producer Russell T. Davies was reviving Doctor Who for the BBC, Eccleston quickly got in touch and asked to be considered for the role. 'I'm a fan of Russell's writing and worked with him on The Second Coming, so I e-mailed him and said, 'When you draw up your audition list, put my name on it.' In a way, it was a crazy thing to do, but I really wanted to work with Russell again.' Eccleston soon discovered that playing the Doctor was a demanding job. 'I think I got away pretty injury-free, but it is a very physical role, and I enjoyed that,' he said. 'Billie Piper [who plays the Doctor's companion, Rose Tyler,] has a lot of the more complicated performance stuff to do in terms of reacting to this extraordinary creature that is the Doctor, but I'm kind of the mental and physical energy. If we rehearsed a scene, often we'd have to find out where he was going to go, which wall he was going to bounce off, and then everybody else would feed off that energy, either undercutting it or topping it. That's why it's such a tiring role, because of that constant balls-of-your-feet acting.' The first 13-episode season of Doctor Who was a ratings success when it first aired in the United Kingdom last year. American viewers will be able to decide for themselves when it begins its SCI FI Channel run. The second season of Doctor Who is currently wrapping up production in the U.K. and will begin airing there in April on BBC1, with David Tennant replacing Eccleston, who left the series at the end of season one."

The San Jose Mercury News has a feature on the new series (which has also been reprinted widely across the country in other newspapers): "As his devoted fans know, Doctor Who always has been capable of a pretty good disappearing act. But the last one he pulled - back on Dec. 6, 1989 - went on a bit longer than expected. On Friday, when the good Doctor starts reappearing in new episodes on the Sci Fi channel (at 10 p.m. EST), it will have been 16 years since the last episode of the original 'Doctor Who,' perhaps the most curious cult classic in the history of television, was produced. Over its first 26 years, the series about an enigmatic time-and-space traveler featured eight very different actors in the lead role, along with wonderfully loopy, 1960s-hip dialogue and some of the worst special effects ever, including aliens made of inflated condoms. A huge hit in Great Britain, 'Doctor Who' didn't surface in this country until the late 1970s, when it became a staple of Saturday night programming on many PBS stations. But despite the pleas of the faithful, there were no new episodes anywhere until last year, when Russell T. Davies, the powerhouse British writer-producer of such shows as the original 'Queer as Folk,' finally persuaded the BBC to let him take a shot at reviving the franchise with some modern twists. Much to the surprise of the BBC, Davies' take on 'Doctor Who' became one of the most-watched series on British TV. (More than 10 million viewers - 40 percent of the audience in Britain - watched the debut, and a second season already has started there.) And now the show returns to America with the 13 episodes that made up Davies' first season on the BBC. The good news for longtime fans is that he hasn't mucked around with the quirky essence of 'Doctor Who' that much, while giving it a more polished look. The Doctor, as he always is referred to in the series, still is the last surviving member of a race wiped out in a time war (don't even ask) and still is going through various dimensions with a goofy grin and a passion for trying to right wrongs. He doesn't always get it right - in earlier episodes, he was partially responsible for Nero's burning of Rome, the Great Fire of London and the appearance of the Loch Ness monster - but he tries. He also still travels with a comely assistant in the TARDIS (Time and Relative Dimension in Space), a space-time craft that's large and comfy inside even if it looks like a 1950s British phone booth on the outside. And his opponents - including Daleks, his longest-running foes - are still the funniest, least-threatening group of bad guys in science fiction history. What has changed is that this Doctor, as played in the first season by Christopher Eccleston from 'Elizabeth' and '28 Days Later,' is more robust and active than his predecessors. His latest assistant, a London shopgirl named Rose Tyler (pop singer Billie Piper), is as much the hero as the Doctor, coming off as Buffy the Vampire Slayer with a British accent. The special effects are computer-generated and state-of-the-art - although part of that art is paying homage to the cheese-ball originals by not making the effects look too good. In Friday's episode, for example, the Doctor battles amusingly robotic department store mannequins and a big blob of pulsating plastic. Best of all, the new episodes (or at least the two that Sci Fi sent out for review) retain the fun of the original 'Doctor Who.' If you're looking for allegorical, intriguing science fiction, this isn't it. If you're OK with rapid-fire, light-hearted dialogue with an occasional dig at politics and culture, this 'Doctor Who' is your cup of tea. Don't get too used to Eccleston as the Doctor, though. The actor bowed out after one year and already has been replaced by David Tennant ('Viva Blackpool' and Barty Crouch Jr. in the most recent 'Harry Potter' film). But even that is in keeping with the show's tradition. Good to see that things are back to what stands for normal in the world of TARDIS, Daleks and Doctor Who."

(Thanks to Paul Engelberg and Benjamin Elliott)




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Series 1/27 - Press

More On Sci-Fi Channel

Tuesday, 14 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The US-based Sci Fi Channel, in anticipation of the series' debut this Friday, March 17, has run several additionaltrailers for the series, two of which debuted during the channel's season finale night last Friday. One of the trailers notes that the Doctor is "not here to save the universe... He's just enjoying it while it lasts". So far, at least four different trailer spots have been discovered on the channel, but at the moment, only the original is online on the website.

The channel's website has also released a quick, web-only behind-the-scenes video featuring brief interview clips with executive producers Russell T Davies and Julie Gardner and producer Phil Collinson, some of which is shot in the TARDIS control room set. The video plays in Flash animation from the front page of the website.

Sci Fi Wire, the channel's online news service, ran a feature article today calling the timing "right" for the series to return. "Russell T. Davies, executive producer of the hit British SF series Doctor Who, told SCI FI Wire that his revival of the long-running BBC series came about after years of waiting for the right opportunity. 'I think the BBC had their eye on it as a very good property that could be resurrected,' Davies said in an interview. 'And the drama department as well as the controller of BBC1, wanted to work with me, which sounds very arrogant, but it's the truth. They'd been asking me to write all sorts of things; every year, they'd phone up and say, 'Do you want to want to adapt A Tale of Two Cities? or 'do you want to write another series about gay men?' [Davies was best known for his series Queer as Folk.] Or something like that, and every year I quite confidently (and cheekily) sat there and said, 'No, I just want to do Doctor Who!' The original Doctor Who was canceled in 1989 after 26 seasons, but continued to live on in novels, radio plays, audio dramas and a 1996 TV movie starring Paul McGann in the lead role. A number of producers had approached the BBC with their own ideas for a possible revival, but Davies insisted that he didn't have a direction in mind until after he came on board. 'Once they asked me to do it and commissioned me, I came up with my take on it, and the miracle from my point of view was that I was given a clean slate,' he said. Davies added: 'My only wariness in going to work for the BBC, especially on an in-house production, is that the BBC is a labyrinthine organization. I was very wary of the red tape, the committees, focus groups and all the systems that were in place. But, to my astonishment, I discovered that the opposite was true. When I did my treatment, I didn't have to go through 27 different committees, so I was given an enormous amount of freedom, and then they followed that up by backing it with a budget, which again was my worry. I didn't want to do a cheap version of Doctor Who, but the heads of various departments and the heads of certain channels all wanted the same thing, so everyone was in the right place, and I was lucky enough to be the one they wanted.' The first season of Doctor Who will debut on SCI FI Channel with episodes one ('Rose') and two ('The End of the World') airing back to back, starting at 9 p.m. ET/PT on March 17. 'We actually asked for that in this country [Great Britain],' Davies said. 'Mind you, we only asked for it, like, two weeks before transmission, when everything was fixed in stone, so they laughed us out of the building. But I think it's a brilliant idea!' As Doctor Who begins airing on SCI FI Channel, the show is currently wrapping production on its second season in South Wales and will air in the United Kingdom soon."

Finally... could a second-season airing be in the cards this year instead of next? Sci Fi recently confirmed that its flagship original series "Battlestar Galactica" would not be returning for its third season until October 2006, though its Friday night partner series, "Stargate SG-1" and "Stargate Atlantis" will in fact be back for their next seasons in July (as Sci Fi usually splits each season in two and runs the first half in the summer.) This has led to speculation that "Doctor Who" might, if its popularity warrants, be back for more episodes as early as this summer. As always, we must stress that nothing has been confirmed on this.




FILTER: - USA - Russell T Davies - Broadcasting

TARDIS Report: The Last Week/Weekend Catch-Up

Tuesday, 14 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Doctor Who Comes To US Television

The floodgates have opened on coverage of the long-awaited debut of Doctor Who in America:

TV Guide Magazine, a large-circulation TV periodical in the US, includes Doctor Who in the weekly feature "Hot List: 21 Shows You've Gotta See!" in its March 13-19 edition now on newsstands. Noting it as a Season Premiere and featuring a photo of the Doctor and Rose crouching on the pavement in "Father's Day", the blurb reads: "The culty classic gets a slick update for theBattlestar generation when Christopher Eccleston checks in as the ninth Doc to do the time warp". On page 80, under Highlights for Friday 3/17, there is a box titled "Who's Who" featuring a large central photo of Tom Baker surrounded by smaller photos of, from left to right, Eccleston, Hartnell, Troughton, Pertwee, Davison, and McCoy. The text reads: "The Doctor is in. For the first time since a 1996 TV-movie, American viewers can see fresh DOCTOR WHO (SCI FI, 9/8c, 10/9c) adventures. Christopher Eccleston stars in the title role as an eccentric alien scientist (called a "Time Lord") who tools around space and time in a vessel shaped like a British phone booth -- the TARDIS. (It may look cramped, but it's actually much bigger on the inside.) In the opener, the Doctor and his feisty new sidekick Rose (Billie Piper) clash with a megalomaniacal blob that turns plastic items like mannequins into killers. But unlike the old Who serials, which were shot largely on videotape and hamstrung by cheap F/X, this version of the venerable series (the BBC began it in 1963) consists of self-contained installments produced entirely on film. Nevertheless, these 2005 stories -- the first regular episodes since 1989 -- remain as engaging as those of Eccleston's predecessors: William Hartnell, Patrick Troughton, Jon Pertwee, Tom Baker (he of the long scarf -- perhaps the most famous Doctor), Peter Davison, Colin Baker, Sylvester McCoy, and Paul McGann (the 1996 TV-movie only). How can so many actors play the same role? Whenever the Doctor's life is imperiled, he undergoes a "regeneration" that alters his appearance and personality. (How's that for a re-casting enabler?) Eccleston's Doctor will experience it at the end of the season -- David Tennant took over the role last November in England. -- G J Donnelly"

Entertainment Weekly, another widely-circulated periodical, notes that "When Doctor Who makes its triumphant return to the United States on the Sci Fi Channel March 17, the average American's reaction will likely be: It was here before? A science-fiction staple of British TV for over 40 years, Who achieved only cult status in the U.S. when the show was imported to PBS in the late '70s. The newly revamped version, shot for the BBC, stars Christopher Eccleston (28 Days Later) as the Doctor and British pop star Billie Piper as his time- travel partner, Rose Tyler. 'The show can be very dark, very gritty,' says exec producer Russell T. Davies (the man behind the original Queer as Folk). 'But there's also a great deal of fun.' Whether you're an old fan or a curious newcomer, here's everything you need to know about the new Who. WHO IS HE? The Doctor is an alien with a lot of heart--two of them, to be exact. He zips through space and time in the TARDIS (Time And Relative Dimension In Space), a ship that's huge inside, but looks like a phone booth on the outside. He's an exile who stumbles into trouble with a goofy grin, and occasionally escapes scrapes by transforming into another person. (Literally: Eccleston will be replaced by David Tennant in season 2.) The Doc's an odd, happy guy--unlike the typical guns-blazing U.S. sci-fi military hero. Davies says that's precisely the show's appeal: 'One of the joys of the Doctor is that it's not his job to wander the universe-- he does it because he loves it.' WHERE DOES HE GO? The original is revered for its quirkiness (foes included salt-shaker-shaped aliens the Daleks) and its witty scripts (by writers like Douglas Adams). Similarly, the new Doctor Who has no formula--one week, he meets Charles Dickens; the next, he watches Earth's destruction billions of years in the future. While it's airing on Sci Fi's Friday lineup, don't expect things to be nearly as grim as, say, Battlestar Galactica--especially when the good Doctor hangs out in a futuristic Big Brother house. WHAT'S NEW WITH THIS 'WHO'? It has production values, for one. Local weathermen had better computer graphics than the original, which often featured guys in rubber monster suits. 'In the old days they worked twice as hard as I do,' says Davies, 'and they never had enough money.' And fans have never seen a companion quite like shopgirl Rose, who is as much the hero as the Doc himself. 'We share these adventures through the eyes of a completely normal 21st- century girl,' Davies says. 'The most important thing about her is that she works in a shop.' All that remains to be seen is if American audiences will be buying." The magazine also has a brief "history" of Doctor Who.

Monsters and Critics calls the series #5 on its list of "top ten reasons to watch in 2006". "The Sci Fi Channel brings back to the US one of the most successful franchises in television history when it begins airing the new, reimagined Doctor Who series on March 17. Christopher Eccleston (Elizabeth, The Others, 28 Days Later) is the ninth actor to play the Doctor, the last remaining Timelord who uses a mysterious machine called the TARDIS to mess around with the past and future of the universe. Eccleston combines an impish sense of mischief with a ruthless dark side that always keeps you guessing as to how he’ll react. The first few episodes are enjoyable, but you can still feel the writers finding the voice of the series. But when an old enemy returns in episode five, a fascinatingly dark sensibility takes over, the plots gain new urgency, and things get personal for the Doctor. A must for science fiction fans."

Eclipse Magazine says of the show, "It’s the longest-running science fiction show on TV, appealing to all ages. The children who watched through their fingers from behind the sofa are now parents and grandparents of new generations of fans and, uniquely, the show has so far survived ten different actors in the title role. ... And work it does. The sets no longer wobble; the SFX, while perhaps not as stellar as those of US science fiction shows, aren’t exactly shabby; the writing is witty and intelligent; the stories full of fun and menace with a delicious British eccentricity. With all that going for it, 'Doctor Who' returned to the BBC with a bang, went straight to the top of the ratings -- and stayed there. While US imports such as 'Lost', 'Desperate Housewives', and the 'CSI' franchise continue to do well in the UK, it was 'Doctor Who' that instantly caught the audience’s imagination, winning major awards including Most Popular Drama at the 2005 National Television Awards, and bringing The Doctor to yet another generation cowering behind the sofa. ... Meanwhile, the second season of the new 'Doctor Who' is currently in the works, with a third also given the green light. And now the US audience can find out what all the fuss is about! The new 'Doctor Who' series has been picked up by the Sci-Fi Channel and is set to debut on Friday, March 17 at 9.00pm. Don’t miss it -- the Daleks know where to find you!"

The Long Island Press says that "Unless you're one of the two million nerds Googling the online version of this article, you've probably not had much exposure to the classic British science-fiction series Doctor Who. ... Little has changed since the show's last official season in 1989, aside from the marked improvement in wardrobe, hairdos and dental work (the actors' teeth were so bad in some of the old episodes that they could be shown as instructional videos in dental schools across the UK). The new series stars Christopher Eccleston as the ninth Doctor, who joins up with his lovely blonde chick named Rose to fight familiar foes like the Daleks and Autons. While they're at it, they might as well jump to the year 5 billion A.D. then back to 1869 to team up with Charles Dickens to put a hurtin' on some aliens. All in a day's work. Even though the show has failed numerous times to capture an American audience, I think the new series has the best shot by far of becoming a minor hit. With their amazing resurrection of Battlestar Galactica, a plethora of original B-horror flicks and endless reruns of Quantum Leap, the Sci-Fi Channel has solidly cornered the nerd market, and Doctor Who is a perfect fit. So get out your Star Wars Underoos, graphing calculator and silly Tom Baker (the fourth Doctor) scarf and strap in for the new Who. As long as you don't bring it up around the office hottie at the water cooler, you might just become a full-fledged Who-head, because it's actually a really good show. Nerd!"

The San Antonio Express News features an article: "I didn't have the most positive introduction to 'Doctor Who.' After meeting an interesting guy back in late 2000 and learning he was a huge fan of the old series of the '60s, '70s and '80s, I shared this info with a few of my TV colleagues. Throwing each other a look, one laughed and said: ' 'Doctor Who,' huh? That should give you sufficient warning about the guy.' It didn't. Five years later, Ross and I are together still. Needless to say, over those years, we've taken in quite a few installments of the old 'Doctor Who' on DVD. To be honest, the series with cheesy special effects and fairly cardboard characters never quite became my cup of British tea. Then the remake arrived and my opinion radically changed. This 21st century version of 'Doctor Who' is terrific, a sci-fi show that everyone, fan or not of the genre, can enjoy. It's fast-moving, meaty and funny, with three-dimensional characters who tug at your heart and tear ducts. It premieres with two back-to-back episodes from 8 to 10 p.m. Friday on the Sci Fi Channel. In case you're unfamiliar with the Doctor, he's part of an alien race called the Time Lords; travels in his time/space machine, the TARDIS; and takes plenty of risks as he rights the wrongs. Another defining trait is he always travels with a companion, usually human and female. ... Another plus: The special effects have been amped up 1,000 percent. But as mentioned before, it's the characters, coupled with the clever and beautiful writing by executive producer Russell T. Davies, that makes it an unqualified winner. So grab the kids -- 'Who' is as family-friendly as 'Harry Potter' -- and take a two-hour TV trip Friday that should keep you anxiously returning for more. P.S. Because I'm involved with a fanatic, I've managed to see the whole 13-episode series. (It debuted last year in England and is a huge hit). With each episode, the show got better and better, and at times, deeply emotional, with visits to the London Blitz, reality shows of the future, Victorian England and -- for die-hard 'Who' fans -- the return of the doc's notorious foes, the Daleks."

The Des Moines Register notes that "Both 'Star Wars' and 'Star Trek' took a shot and failed. Now another sci-fi franchise is trying to reinvent itself for today's adults. Admit it: George Lucas jumped the shark with Jar-Jar Binks, when he decided to tailor his latest 'Star Wars' trilogy to the kiddies and infuse the movies with more special effects than soul. ... Enter 'Doctor Who,' a uniquely British sci-fi TV series that premiered the day after Kennedy's assassination in 1963, before Denny Crane -- I mean James T. Kirk -- began boldly going anywhere. Before Lucas got a grip on the Force. ... 'Per capita, it's the equivalent of 'Friends' over here,' said Lars Pearson, who should know. The Des Moines-based sci-fi publisher (Mad Norwegian Press) has eight 'Who' reference guides in print and more on the way. ... 'You can kind of see the influences of 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer' in there,' Pearson said. 'There's all these people with a huge interest in the new show that basically wouldn't touch the old one with a 10-foot pole.' 'It's kind of become England's hottest property again,' agreed Steve Martin -- not the famous comedian, but a 27-year-old in Des Moines who embarked on his first post-college vacation last November to Wales just to attend a 'Who' convention. 'I think in a way it kind of transcends geekdom,' he said. 'You take 'Star Trek' fans, 'Star Wars' fans, they're very niche. But a lot of 'Doctor Who' fans kind of like everything. We're the neutral party in sci-fi fandom. We're not gonna beat you over the head. . . . You have to let someone discover it in their own way.'" Read the full article at the site.

People

The Daily Mirror today reports that John Barrowman will be co-presenting ITV1's This Morning mid-morning magazine show over Easter, standing in for one of the regular presenters. Beginning on Monday 10 April, Barrowman will, according to the programme's executive producer, "bring his own unique brand of humour and fun to This Morning." Barrowman says that he is "so looking forward to being a part of daytime television and especially This Morning." The report also mentions that Captain Jack Harkness will return to Doctor Who in its third series and that Barrowman is "currently filming" Torchwood, although production is actually not slated to begin until April. Also reported in the Daily Record,

Zoe Wanamaker, who returns in series two as Cassandra after her turn last year in "The End of the World," is interviewed by the UK Press Association's Graham Kibble-White, and she discusses her role. "Last year Zoe notched up something of an honour by portraying the first new monster to menace Doctor Who following the series' triumphant return to BBC One. The good news is, her character, Cassandra, will be back for a rematch when the show returns to our screens in the spring. 'It's fabulous!' she enthuses, when asked what it's like to be a 'Who baddy. 'It's such fun! It's such a credit to Russell T Davies and the producers. I think what they've achieved is brilliant. I think Cassandra's a naughty, naughty girl. That's what's such fun about her. She's cheeky. She's not evil, she's just naughty.' Alas, she's sworn to secrecy when it comes to talking about just what the vain 'last human alive' gets up to this time around, but she is prepared to reflect upon what the role means to her. 'It's like being a baddy in a Bond film,' she muses. 'It's that sort of television equivalent, I think. I desperately wanted her to come back. It's a character you can bring something to, twist it around and make something funny. She reminded me of Joan Rivers and that extraordinary woman who changed her face a million times to look like some sort of tiger. And it was extremely witty to do. After so many plastic surgeons, liposuction and all that she's ended up just a flat piece of parchment. I think that's fabulous. A fantastic invention. That's the best thing about science fiction, it's really basically fairy stories come to life, but they're great fun.'" Wanamaker is also currently back on the BBC in series six of the sitcom "My Family", in which she co-stars as tour guide and mother Susan Harper.

As we reported last week was about to happen, Christopher Ecclestoncould briefly be seen giving his muppety opinions on ITV's Best Ever Muppet Moments last night, where he divulged that his favourite character on the show was and mad-scientist Bunsen Honeydew.

BBC Radio 3's composer of the week for week commencing Monday, March 27 is Richard Rodney Bennett, composer of the incidental music for the 1964 story "The Aztecs". Says Radio 3: "Sir Richard Rodney Bennett, who turns 70 on Wednesday 29 March, studied serialism with Pierre Boulez, yet is as comfortable at the piano playing jazz and singing cabaret as he is with any 12-tone row. He is famous for his television and film music -- early Doctor Who, Murder On The Orient Express and Four Weddings And A Funeral, among others -- but considers such work to be musical 'journalism' and thinks more highly of his music for the opera house and concert hall." Pieces of his work will crop up across the schedule during the week, available via the "Listen Again" function.

icWales says that "Ioan Gruffudd has been voted one of the country's hottest men by a women's glossy magazine. ...Gruffudd, along with Doctor Who actor David Tennant and singer Will Young, were selected by staff at the magazine to take part in the anniversary celebrations. ... A spokeswoman for Glamour said ...'We were thinking which men we would like to attend a party with and we chose Ioan, Will and David because they all look good, have great personalities and plenty of charm,' she said. 'It was a bit of fun and, from what we gather, they all had a great time.'"

Also, Tennant and Billie Piper are on the cover of the April issue of SFX Magazine; the issue is timed for the expected April launch of series two on BBC television.

Says March 9's Daily Star, "Doctor Who actor David Tennant finally came face-to-face with a Dalek for the first time yesterday. But thankfully this one was in the shape of a cake. The 34-year-old star, who has taken over the Timelord role from Christopher Eccleston, 42, was busy filming scenes for the new series in Cardiff. And one fan gave the cast and crew a treat by bringing them a plateful of cakes to scoff, including one in the shape of the Doc's greatest foes. His sidekick Billie Piper, 23, also grabbed a chocolate Dalek. She said: 'It looks cute. I'll have it later. I can't breathe in this costume, let alone eat.'"

"A Taste of Honey" starring Bruno Langley (Adam from "Dalek" and "The Long Game") has new dates; it's now playing 16-20 May at the Sheffield Crucible, according to Sheffield Today.

Miscellaneous

According to The Sun, "Readers can cast their vote for their favourite show from a shortlist celebrating the top telly of last year...the much-anticipated return of Dr Who, the teatime sci-fi adventure starring Billie Piper and Christopher Eccleston, peaked with 10.5million viewers for the first episode and has gone on to win a string of awards. ... To cast your vote for the one you want to see celebrating, log on to this site and make your choice. The winner will be revealed at the star-studded BAFTA TV Awards ceremony on May 7, which will be shown on ITV1 the following evening at 9pm.'"

The official Doctor Who website reports that "Totally Doctor Who are extending the age limit for Companion Academy entries. New CBBC show Totally Doctor Who have noticed that quite a few thirteen and fourteen year-olds want to become Companion Academy Cadets. So they've done the decent thing, and upped the age limit to fourteen. To enter for Companion Academy, send a video of yourself explaining why you'd make a great Cadet, no more than a minute long, to Totally Doctor Who, PO Box 5158, CF5 9BD. Make sure your parent or guardian gives their permission in a letter. Send it along with the tape."

Mine All Mine, the Russell T Davies-created comedy-drama, will be released on DVD in the UK in May 2006, according to SendIt; Davies has recorded commentaries on three episodes.

ITV's network drama controller has told the new issue of Broadcastmagazine that he has recently commisioned "The History of Mr Polly starring David Tennant and adapted by Adrian Hodges. It's the a story of a little man who rebels against his humdrum life. It's a great literary classic and with David in it it will be stunning."

The Pet Shop Boys feature on the cover of, and are interviewed by Andrew Harrison in, the latest edition (April 2006) of culture magazine The Word, which mentions Doctor Who; talking about legendary TV host & DJ, Simon Dee, Neil Tennant recalls, "He was great, Simon Dee. Every Saturday night on BBC1 we had Doctor Who followed by Dee Time and then The Monkees. Or maybe in a different order." Says Chris Lowe, "I'm a huge fan of Doctor Who. I watched all the new one." Harrison: "Are you glad there's a new Tennant in the TARDIS at last?" Tennant: "Not only that, but he's named after me. His real name is something else (David MacDonald) but for his Equity name he chose Tennant because of the Pet Shop Boys." Lowe: "It's a very big honour." Tennant: "I could see me being Doctor Who." Lowe: "Have you seen Neil act? (Ironic!)" Tennant: "I'd attend a meeting definitely about playing Doctor Who. Definitely. But I haven't watched it since approximately 1969. For me Doctor Who is basically William Hartnell or forget about it." This isn't the first time the PSB's have referred to Doctor Who.

The Sunderland Echo says that "Devoted Dr Who fan Neil Perryman believes the show has always pushed the TV envelope and he will outline his thoughts on how Dr Who did -- and still does -- dictate the future of the medium, at a lecture on Monday night. ... 'Dr Who has been both a critical and a commercial success, but more than that, it has effectively changed the way in which television drama will be produced, distributed, and consumed in the future,' said Neil. 'Dr Who was the first online serialised webcast drama, it had the first podcasted episode commentary, the first BBC release on DVD, PSP and mobile phone, and the first interactive drama on BBCi.' Neil, who lectures in media production at Sunderland, is holding a free talk at 6pm on Monday at the Media Centre, St Peter's Campus. The lecture, Dr Who and Media Convergence is open to all."

Wikipedia, the large online 'encyclopedia' constructed primarily by readers, featured an article about the TARDIS as its "Featured Article" on March 8.

Additional reports about the casting of Peter Kay can be found at The SunUPIYahoo NewsDaily Record,Brand RepublicRTE,MegastarHollywood NewsDaily SnackThe Register. Also, an additional article about the Broadcasting Press Guild Awards is aticWales while another review of the Noel Clarke-written film "Kidulthood" is at FilmFocus.

(Thanks to Steve Tribe, Paul Engelberg, Steven Anderson, Simon Guerrier, Peter Weaver, Christian Burris, Corey Charette, Felicity Kusinitz, Chuck Foster, Matt Kimpton, Phil Creighton, Phil M Newman, Daniel Hall, Martin Hoscik/UNIT News, Neil Marsh and david-tennant.com)




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Press - Radio Times

Peter Kay in Series Two

Wednesday, 8 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

A BBC press release today announces that comedian Peter Kay will appear in the tenth episode of Series Two, playing "the cold and powerful Victor Kennedy". Russell T Davies notes that "this is not a comedy turn" and points to Kay's experience as "a versatile actor" in Paul Abbott's Butterfly Collectors and The Secret Life of Michael Fry. Kay's casting was prompted by a letter he wrote to Davies in praise of Series One.

The story is reported by BBC News, which also lists Kay's appearances in Phoenix Nights and Coronation Street, and by the official Doctor Whowebsite, as well as The SunU.TVThe TelegraphEvening Echo,Manchester OnlineBrand RepublicITV,Addic3d,EntertainmentWiseChannel 4ITNN-E-LifeParamount ComedyEvening TimesIreland Online,ChortleDaily Snack. (Thanks to Steve Tribe, Paul Engelberg, Shaun Lyon Hearn, Tim Colman, George Watson, Chuck Foster, Peter Weaver)




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Production - Series 2/28 - Press

TARDIS Report: Weekend

Tuesday, 7 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Broadcasting

According to a BBC Press Office Programme Information release (link - note, PDF document), "The Chatterley Affair" will be broadcast on BBC Four on Monday 20 March, from 9pm to 10.30pm. David Tennant appears as journalist Richard Hoggart, and the dramatisation of the Lady Chatterley trial is directed by James Hawes ('The Empty Child', 'The Christmas Invasion').

Iowa Public Television, one of only two stations in America who still syndicate the classic series, is now accepting pledges to keep the show on the air for the next calendar year. "With the Christopher Eccleston series about to broadcast on The Sci-Fi Channel, Mad Norwegian Press is asking WHO fans -- even those who don't live in Iowa -- to make a small pledge and aid the cause by keeping one of the last remaining bastions of classic WHO on the American airwaves," says Lars Pearson of Mad Norwegian Press. "Simply put, IPTV is a non-profit organization, and the show cannot remain on the air without freely-given funding. The IPTV broadcasts benefit those inside Iowa and some surrounding areas... With the Eccleston series' debut, we're hoping there'll be a lot more people curious about the old run. Anyone wishing to donate to IPTV to keep WHO on the air can do so through the IPTV website by going here. Those who make a pledge should scroll down and vote for their favorite Doctor -- IPTV will begin running the winner's stories on April 8." There will also be a live pledge drive on Saturday, March 11 at 11 pm... the special edition of "The Five Doctors" will be shown at this time.

People

According to the What's On Stage website, Sylvester McCoy will star in the world premiere of "The Pocket Orchestra - The Unlikely Lives of the Great Composers" at the West End’s Trafalgar Studio 2 next month. "The new play by Graeme Garden and Callum McLeod runs from 26 April 2006 (preview 25 April) for a limited four-week season to 20 May 2006. The comedy takes an “irreverent, satirical and shamelessly anecdotal” look at the history of classical music and the often bizarre and anarchic lives of the great composers."

Former companion Caroline John will be appearing as one of the leads on Radio Four in the afternoon play on Wednesday March 15th at 14.30 (British time). The play is a ghost story called 'The Midnight House' and centres around an episode in world war two whereby pictures from the London Art Galleries were evacuated to a remote slate mine in North Wales. The play will be available to listen to for up to a week online at the Radio Four website.

This week's Radio Times has a two-page article (in their behind-the-scenes section) on Adam Garcia (Alex in "The Christmas Invasion"), who plays the Russian ballet star in "the BBC's lavish Riot at the Rite, the story of Nijinsky's infamous version of Stravinsky's 'The Right of Spring' ballet. 'Very few people can do justice of Nijinsky, so what chance do I have?' laughs Adam. 'Aussie-born Garcia had a little help from ballet double Ivan Putrov'. BBC2 Saturday 11 March at 9pm."

Christopher Eccleston made a surprise appearance on the final of Junior Mastermind on BBC One on 26 February, his first public appearance in connection with Doctor Who since the new series publicity in March last year. Eccleston appeared in a pre-filmed insert, chatting to Sam, the young contestant who had chosen "Doctor Who 2005" as his specialist subject. Describing himself as an "unemployed Time Lord", Eccleston said that the best thing about being in Doctor Who was "the response from children". When asked what he had brought to the role, he indicated his ears; he also suggested that he would do "terribly" in a Mastermind round on Doctor Who, and declared that the Doctor "absolutely" fancied Rose. He seemed relaxed, and pleased and impressed with Sam's enthusiasm for the show. Not helped by a convoluted question about 'Father's Day', Sam went on to achieve a good score of 16, though this was not enough to win the contest.

Eccleston will also participate in a special called "The Best Ever Muppet Moments!" on Saturday, March 11 at 7pm on ITV. Says the Mirror, "Hosted by Kermit The Frog - as all shows should be - the programme will celebrate our favourite bits from The Muppet Show, complete with tributes from fans including Robson Green, Christopher Eccleston, Davina McCall, Angus Deayton and Michael Parkinson."

Jo Joyner, who played perky Lynda Moss in the final two episodes of last season's Doctor Who series, told this past weekend's Sunday Mercury, "If I do nothing else in my life, I can always say I was exterminated! ... It was so cool to be part of Doctor Who. Filming my death was a real buzz. I had a large plate of sugar glass in front of me which shattered, and three huge sub-woofers behind me, blowing air out like giant hairdryers to whip my hair back in the blast. I'm a huge fan of Big Brother but I'd hate to go on it. As I say, I like people-watching, not having people watch me!"

Camille Coduri will be featured in a segment on My Spirit Radio after March 21, hosted by Esoteric Entertainments, a paranormal site. "In this exclusive interview [Coduri] talks about Doctor Who, her outlook and life and as an Aries woman what she looks for in a lover! The interview will be available as an mp3 download as well."

Justin Richards, Creative Director of the Doctor Who books, is interviewed at CBBC: "I suppose my absolute favourite though was Doctor Who In An Exciting Adventure With The Daleks - which is quite a title! It came out again later as just plain: Doctor Who and the Daleks. The book was written by David Whitaker from the original scripts of the very first Dalek story on Doctor Who, which was by Terry Nation. Both hugely talented writers who knew all about adventure and thrills!"

Robert Hands, who played Algy in "The Empty Child" and "The Doctor Dances", is to star with Tim Curry in the forthcoming West End version of "Spamalot."

Additional Press Items

The New York Times discusses the launch of the series in America along with Russell T Davies and the controversy surrounding the series being produced by an openly gay producer. "'There's very classically and traditionally a strong gay fan base for 'Doctor Who,' said Mr. Davies, 42, in a telephone interview from his home in Manchester, England. 'He is a loner and a wanderer. He doesn't represent the authority -- he is a man, unlike any other, doing his own thing. I think you can see the emotional connection.' ... So when the BBC approached Mr. Davies in late 2003 to update 'Doctor Who' for the 21st century, he was already teeming with ideas. 'It's a genuine love of mine,' he said, 'and loving a program means you're not blind to its faults.' ... 'It was very important to Russell that the Doctor not be posh,' said Mark Gatiss, a co-star and co-creator of the quirky ensemble television comedy 'The League of Gentlemen,' who was recruited onto Mr. Davies's writing staff. 'It's all about the Doctor being a kind of burning, firework personality that is incredibly attractive, but also slightly dangerous to be around.' ... In the days leading up to the premiere of the new 'Doctor Who' in March 2005, the British tabloid press did its best to insinuate that Mr. Davies -- who is openly gay, and proud that his 'Queer as Folk' series included, in his words, 'more sex than any other program ever' -- might somehow be an unfit candidate to re-establish a beloved cultural icon. The faithful, however, declined to take the bait. 'The vast amount of fans out there were just elated that the show was coming back,' said Shaun Lyon, editor of the 'Doctor Who' fan Web site Outpost Gallifrey (www.gallifreyone.com). 'Pointing out that Russell's gay, let's be honest, you can no longer get a story out of that. Gay is officially boring now.' ... But controversy eventually caught up with the series: four days after the premiere, the BBC published a news release in which Mr. Eccleston revealed that he would not be returning for a second season — an awkward situation made more so when he protested that the BBC had falsely attributed quotes to him and had broken an agreement to withhold the announcement until after the show's first season had ended. 'I'm sure it could have been handled better,' Mr. Davies said. (Mr. Eccleston declined to comment for this story.)" Read the full article at the website.

More coverage of Noel Clarke's film "Kidulthood" which arrived over the weekend can be found in the Independent, the Daily RecordFuture MoviesBloomberg News, the Sunday Times,http://www.itn.co.uk/news/entertainment_206280.html">ITN, the Guardian. There have also been a ton of in-print articles written but not available online. Meanwhile, Clarke was on BBC Radio 5 Live's weekly film review on 4 March with Simon Mayo and Mark Kermode; Doctor Who interest is sparse, other than, at the end of the interview, a bit of badgering him about how long Billie will be in it for (and of course, he doesn't give them anything.)

Other items: Television Without Pity, a large television website, has opened up a new Doctor Who section to cover the show's broadcast on Sci-Fi. CBBC News mentions the debut of "Totally Doctor Who" and has the same information as on the official site, which we reported over the weekend. Also, there's more news about the Broadcasting Press Guild Awards at C21 Media.

(Thanks to Steve Tribe, Paul Engelberg, Andrew Harvey, Peter Weaver, Neil Marsh, Jonathan Hall and Lars Pearson)




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Press - Radio Times

K9 and Sarah Jane Spinoff?

Saturday, 4 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The Sun today reports that K9 and Sarah Jane Smith will appear in their own spin-off series, following their appearance in Series Two next month. The only additional information in the Sun story is a comment from a BBC spokeswoman refusing to comment ('We are not confirming any developments at this moment'), although Russell T Davies has commented in interviews that there are ideas for a second spin-off series after Torchwood.

Says the Sun article, "Doctor Who's robot dog K9 and ex-sidekick Sarah Jane Smith are to get their own spin-off show, TV Biz can reveal. We told how BBC bosses are bringing back K9 for an episode in the Timelord's new series. Now it has emerged that the pooch and Sarah Jane, played by Elizabeth Sladen, will also star together in their own children's series. An insider said: 'It would have been a shame to put K9 back in his kennel, so we've come up with an idea for another drama. It's early days but K9 and Elizabeth Sladen are inseparable characters. There are loads of things we can do with Doctor Who. It's one of the most popular shows on TV and viewers can't seem to get enough of it.' It will be the second spin-off from the sci-fi hit. BBC bosses are also making Torchwood, a racy drama for BBC3. That show stars former Doctor Who actor John Barrowman as Captain Jack Harkness. ... A BBC spokeswoman said last night: 'We are not confirming any developments at this moment.'" Of course, this would be the second K9/Sarah Jane spinoff for the series, the first having been the short-lived (one episode) "K9 and Company" from 1980.




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Sarah Jane - Press - K9

Broadcasting Press Nomination

Thursday, 2 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The nominations for this year's Broadcasting Press Guild Programme Awards 2006 were published this morning, and Doctor Who is nominated five times in four categories. The shortlist for Best drama series contains just two shows, Doctor Who and Bleak House, while Russell T Davies is shortlisted for the Writer's award for Doctor Who and Casanova, against the writing team for The Thick of It Andrew Davies for Bleak House. Billie Piper is one of five nominees for the Best actress award, alongside Anna Maxwell Martin, who guest-starred in 'The Long Game' and is listed for her lead role in Bleak House. The shortlist for Best actor includes both of 2005's Doctors, with Christopher Eccleston nominated for Doctor Who and David Tennant for Doctor Who, Casanova and Secret Smile. The Awards will be presented on Friday 31 March; more details will be available at the Guild's website. This morning's (Thursday 2 March) Media Guardian carries registration-only reports on the nominations in "Timelords tussle for TV award" (story) and "Broadcasting Press Guild Programme Awards 2006" (story), and the announcement has also been picked up by the UK comedy guide, Chortle (link). (Thanks to Steve Tribe, Cliff Chapman)




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Awards/Nominations - Series 1/27