Radio Times Covers

Wednesday, 10 May 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon


The latest issue of Radio Times in the UK features a new Doctor Who cover, that of a new Cyberman model from the forthcoming two-parter "Rise of the Cybermen" and "The Age of Steel" starting this weekend. Click on the thumbnail below left for a larger version of the cover. The issue is out as of yesterday. We've also received the cover of a special Radio Times sticker promotion which they will be featuring within the magazine; says the promo piece, "there will be a free Merlin Doctor Who sticker album which includes an exclusive 12-sticker poster and a sheet of stickers. Three subsequent issues of the magazine will include sticker packets - sufficient to complete the poster and to start any Doctor Who fans' own sticker collection." Click on the thumbnail below right for a larger version of the sticker album.




FILTER: - Magazines - Series 2/28 - Radio Times

US Ratings Report: "The Empty Child"

Wednesday, 10 May 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Ratings for the ninth episode of the first season of the new series, The Empty Child, on US television on the Sci Fi Channel, have come in: the telecast had a household rating of 1.04 with an average of 1.2 million viewers, a drop of a tenth of a million viewers and the lowest broadcast of the new season to date. (The broadcast took place on Cinco de Mayo, however, with viewing levels possibly affected in the evening; ratings on the broadcast networks were also noticeably down that night.) Season-to-date, Sci Fi reports that Doctor Who is currently averaging a 1.29 household rating and an average audience of 1.5 million viewers for the season.




FILTER: - USA - Ratings - Series 1/27

Doctor Who Triumphs at 2006 BAFTA Awards

Sunday, 7 May 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
Doctor Who was the main winner at tonight's prestigious industry awards, the BAFTA Awards (or British Academy of Film and Television Arts Awards), taking all three of the awards for which it was nominated.Billie Piper and a Dalek accepted the award for Best Drama Series, as well as the Pioneer Audience Award for best television programme of 2005. Russell T Davies won the Dennis Potter Award for outstanding writing for television, which was presented to him by a kilted David Tennant. Davies is reported as saying, "We were told that bringing it back would be impossible, that we would never capture this generation of children. But we did it."

The BAFTA Awards ceremony will be televised from 9pm on Monday on ITV.


The show's success, alongside a number of other BBC successes, dominates much of the early coverage of the awards ceremony, with a two-minute report appearing on BBC News 24 and BBC One's evening news (also available online at BBC News); this report includes a brief clip of the Dalek arriving for the ceremony and David Tennant speaking to reporters on the programme's "cross-nation appeal". The Guardianappears to be making Doctor Who's awards front-page news, with "Doctor Who finally materialises on red carpet as TV series scoops drama prize" concentrating on the supposed previous lack of industry awards for the series, discussed by Russell T Davies in a recent Guardian podcast. (In fact, the series has won several industry awards, as previously reported by Outpost Gallifrey, although it missed out at the Royal Television Society Awards in March.)

In related news, actress Anna Maxwell Martin, who played ill-begotten employee Suki Macrae Cantrell in last season's The Long Game, won the Best Actress award for her role in BBC One's Bleak House, which also won the award for Best Drama Serial.

The results have also been reported in a second story by the Guardian, as well as The IndependentThe ScotsmanThe TimesTimes EntertainmentThe SunThe TelegraphThis Is LondonGMTV,icNetwork,NewsWireIreland OnlineBreaking NewsIrish ExaminerEvening EchoAnanovaNewsquest.

ITV.comITN and Channel 4 News also cover the story but leads with the ITV network's only success of the evening, The X Factor.

TV, Radio Coverage: Tonight's evening news bulletin on BBC One at 10.30pm had a short report on the BAFTA winners towards the end of the fifteen-minute programme. There were no clips from the actual ceremony, only from the winning shows and behind-the-scenes and red carpet moments, the main event doubtless embargoed until the ITV1 broadcast tomorrow, but it was still a nice little report. Presented by reporter David Sillitoe, he opened by saying that Doctor Who was "the big winner" of the night, over a clip of the TARDIS crash-landing from The Christmas Invasion. There was a clip of David Tennant saying to the gathered press that the show had "a cross-nation appeal... unlike anything else I've ever been involved with." There was then coverage of some of the other winners, before Sillitoe finished by comparing the two main winners of the night, Doctor Who and Bleak House, describing them as "two dramas there were a gamble, but both proved that they could strike a chord with the public and the academy." The evening's triumphs for Doctor Who were also covered tonight on the BBC's news and sport talk station, Radio 5 Live, on The Weekend News programme, hosted by Lesley Ashmall and John Pienaar. The report, just after the 9.30pm news and sport bulletin at about 9.37pm. The report was from their man on the spot Colin Paterson, who opened by announcing Doctor Who as the big winner of the night. He happened to have Little Britain's Matt Lucas with him, who he asked about the show's success, although Lucas was somewhat bemused, not having been in the show as Paterson seemed to have thought he was, Paterson having assumed the comic was in it as he'd been in the premiere last year. Nonetheless, Lucas said he was glad that Doctor Who had won. Paterson mentioned that Russell T Davies had won the Dennis Potter Award for Outstanding Writing for Television, before moving onto rounding up the other winners.

About the BAFTAs: The BAFTA Website has a page dedicated to the award recipients. The BAFTA Awards are among the Western world's most prestigious film and television award ceremonies. The Dennis Potter Award is "presented to an individual for outstanding writing for television. ... Suggested recipients of the Gift of Council awards for outstanding contribution [of which the Dennis Potter Award is one] are put forward by the Academy's Television committee for consideration by the Academy's Council. ... There are no nominations for these awards, nor are they voted for by the Academy membership. The number of Gift of Council awards presented each year is at the discretion of the Academy." Drama series standards include "A drama of more than one episode where stand-alone story lines conclude within each episode, but in which the main characters and context continue throughout the series. Only one episode of a series may be entered. ... The TV voting constituency of the Academy casts its votes online, for all those programmes entered according to the criteria above. Those programmes and performances which have attracted the most votes from the Academy membership are then put up for further scrutiny by category juries specially selected by the Academy Television committee." The Pioneer Award section notes that "This year, the Pioneer Award has changed. After much discussion, we decided it should reflect all that is great and exciting about television. The Pioneer Audience Award for Best Programme of 2005 aims to honour the show that has helped define television in 2005, receiving critical acclaim through its original approach and capturing the public's imagination. The award is unique as it's the only accolade that has been decided by the public vote and looks set to become one of the most coveted in the industry."
(With thanks to Paul Engelberg, Paul Hayes, Peter Anghelides, and all our correspondents who wrote in about the good news!)




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

The Girl in the Fireplace Overnight Ratings - Updated

Saturday, 6 May 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Early news of overnight viewing figures for Saturday's new Doctor Who episode The Girl in the Fireplace on BBC1 are in: an average of 7.4 million viewers watched the episode, with an average 36.6% audience share, down only 0.2 million from the previous week's "School Reunion". According to the ViewingFigures report on 15-minute intervals the episode peaked in the final segment (7.30-7.45) to 7.8 million viewers, while the five-minute statistics show a peak up to 8.10 million viewers between 7.35 and 7.40pm right before the end of the episode. The huge climb of viewership between the start of the episode in the five-minute intervals (6.26 million at 7.00pm, to 7.39 million at 7.15pm, over a million extra viewers) suggest that UK audiences were unprepared for the move of the series to the 7.00pm time slot this week, as it had begun at 7.15pm the previous three weeks.

"Doctor Who" was again the #1 rated show on UK television on Saturday both by viewers as well as by audience share.

Meanwhile, the broadcast of the fourth episode of Doctor Who Confidential on BBC3 immediately afterward attracted 724,400 viewers, with a 4.7% audience share. Doctor Who Confidential was #1 for Saturday broadcast on the non-terrestrial channels. (Thanks to 'Shaun Lyon', Andy Parish)




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 2/28

Age of Steel Press Information, plus Time Change

Saturday, 6 May 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Program information for Week 21 released this afternoon by the BBC Press Office shows that this year's Eurovision Song Contest has had a similar effect to last year, with The Age of Steel moving from Doctor Who's re-established 7pm slot to a 6.40pm start on Saturday 20 May. (There is no word yet of a start time for Doctor Who Confidential on BBC Three that evening.) Last year, "The Doctor Dances" was moved back due to the contest (with a notable drop in viewing figures observed because of the time shift).

Meanwhile, the episode merits a three-page article in the week's highlights(note: PDF file), this week concentrating on the roles of Noel Clarke as Mickey Smith and guest star Andrew Hayden-Smith. 'I think that the Doctor and Mickey do forge a new friendship but it's based on respect,' says Clarke. 'Mickey earns his respect in the Christmas episode and they get to know each other a bit more after that. Mickey's changed as much as the Doctor in terms of becoming a new person but still being [essentially] the same.' He thinks Mickey finally comes into his own this season, becoming braver and more confident than he's seemed before. 'Mickey has to step up to the plate and become a man, so some of the challenges he faces aren't just the monsters that he comes across but also his own fear, really,' Noel explains. 'I think a lot of things that he's involved in [with the Doctor and Rose] help him come to terms with his own uncertainties and really change him. 'He's being tested the whole time, maybe because the Doctor knew that the potential was in him to change.' And what of the relationship between Rose and Mickey? 'Your guess is as good as mine!' laughs Noel.'I think they're in the same sort of on/off situation they always seem to be in; it's never really resolved and you never really figure out what's going on!' He says that 'When you work with someone like [lead writer] Russell [T Davies] and the writers that have worked on Doctor Who, you can only learn from them. Even if your material is different in its content, the tricks and the skills you pick up from them are things that, hopefully, I can put across in whatever I do.' Actor Andrew Hayden-Smith, who guest stars in the next two episodes, syas that he 'suggested that my agent get in touch with the production because I really enjoyed the last series. Funnily enough, they had been watching me on CBBC the night before I put the call in. I went in for an audition, read one of the scenes, and got a call to say I'd got the part a couple of days later.' Of his character, he notes that 'Jake is in a gang fighting against a company called Cybus Industries, which is turning humans into Cybermen,' explains Andrew. 'I didn't see the original Cybermen, but my sister told me that she was terrified of them -- so she is pretty excited that I am involved in fighting them.' Playing an action hero was a new, but exciting, for him. 'It was great!' Andrew enthuses.'There was a lot of running about on the moors in Cardiff, so I had to get quite fit.' The first day of filming was exhilarating, but very demanding, not least because of the fact that the scenes are filmed completely out of sequence. 'It was very scary because it's Doctor Who!' exclaims Andrew with a laugh. 'It was just really exciting. My first day on set was in London, on the South Bank. It was pretty strange because I was filming my last scene [The Age Of Steel], so I had to imagine that I had done all the action scenes which was pretty strange. It was OK, though, as everyone was lovely.' So how does Andrew think his fans will react to his new role? 'I don't know – I'm a bit nervous about it!' he confesses.'The kids who watch me now probably don't remember me from Byker Grove, and won't realise that I've acted before, so I'm a bit nervous about how I come across in it. I hope it's all right!' And would Andrew have liked the opportunity to play a Cyberman himself? 'No, I'm quite happy fighting them, I think,' he says with a laugh. 'I definitely prefer to be a goodie than a baddie!'

There are also further episode details in the Saturday document (also a PDF), as noted below.
Doctor Who: The Age Of Steel
The Cybermen take control of London and start converting the populace, in the conclusion of this gripping two-part episode. While Jackie falls under Lumic’s control, the Doctor, Rose and Mickey are reduced to fugitives in a world of terror. A last, desperate attack on the Cyberfactory is their only chance -- but will they all survive? David Tennant plays the Doctor, Billie Piper plays Rose, Noel Clarke plays Mickey, Camille Coduri plays Jackie Tyler, Shaun Dingwall plays Pete Tyler, Roger Lloyd Pack plays John Lumic and Andrew Hayden-Smith plays Jake Simmonds.




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Series 2/28 - Broadcasting

TARDIS Report: Thursday Clips

Thursday, 4 May 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

People

Yahoo News reports that "Hollyoaks star Rochelle Gadd is preparing to swap text books for time travel when she appears in two episodes of Doctor Who. The actress, who plays student and part-time waitress Olivia Johnson in the soap, will feature in the final instalments of the current sci-fi series. She will take the role of Sally in the two-parter, which is rumoured to involve the Cybermen and, according to writer Russell T Davies, will end with a huge cliffhanger. Gadd was first seen on our screens in Grange Hill, where she played schoolgirl Delia 'Dill' Lodge for six terms. During that time, she could be seen in another CBBC programme, Out of Tune, and has also had small parts in Holby City, The Bill and The Robinsons, which she featured in alongside The Office's Martin Freeman. Other familiar faces guest starring with the Time Lord will include psychic medium Derek Acorah, Cash in the Attic presenter Alistair Appleton and chat show host Trisha Goddard. EastEnders' Barbara Windsor and Tracey-Ann Oberman are also lined up for cameos. Despite the Walford connection, BBC producers have categorically ruled out the Tardis will landing in Albert Square."

The official Doctor Who website reports that "Helen Raynor - Doctor Who script editor and one of the writers for series three - has a new 15-minute TV play on BBC One next week. Cake stars Mali Harries and Andrew Dunn, and is the first in the Brief Encounters series of short plays by writers new to television. You can catch Helen's play on Monday 8 May at 2.35pm, inbetween episodes of Doctors and Homes Under The Hammer."

The Paisley Daily Express reports that "Stunned regulars at a town centre pub couldn't believe their eyes when Doctor Who strolled in for a surprise visit. David Tennant, who plays the Time Lord in the hugely popular BBC TV series, turned heads when he walked through the doors of the Bull Inn, in New Street, Paisley sporting a hairy new look. The 35-year-old actor was back in his home town to film a documentary series about Paisley and his connection with it. But bar staff, let alone customers, at the historic Bull had no idea David was turning up until half an hour before he put in an appearance. Pub boss, Iain MacKinnon, 28, said: 'We knew there was going to be filming but didn't know who was taking part. Then one of the people involved told us it would be David. When he arrived you could see people turning to look at him. He sat in the corner while the filming was happening.' Iain revealed the former Paisley Grammar School pupil was extremely friendly. 'He posed for a picture and we are going to put it on our Bull Inn Mug Shots board which we have here,' Iain added. And there was a treat in store for Iain's niece Robyn, 13. 'She is a massive Doctor Who fan, and I managed to get David Tennant's autograph for her,' he revealed. David, son of the Very Rev Dr Sandy McDonald and his wife Helen, who live in the Dykebar area, caused quite a stir with his flying trip in and out of town. Excited female staff at the nearby Castelvecchi fish and chip shop had spotted the famous Buddie popping into the pub. And they were desperate to know if the bachelor boy was back in town for good. One fan, 32-year-old Jenny Wright, said: 'I didn't realise it was him at first glance because of the new look, which by the way I liked. It was a bit of a shock when I realised I was only feet away from Dr Who himself. It made my day and I'll have something to tell my friends for decades to come. He is pretty handsome.'"

Thursday's The Sun says that Tennant "has been named the sexiest Doctor Who ever by one of his co-stars. Camille Coduri, 41, who plays Billie Piper's screen mum Jackie Tyler, said: 'I think David the sexiest Doctor I have ever seen. 'I didn't think he was so sexy until I saw him at a screening of the show then I realised that he's gorgeous. He is 110% sexier in real life and he's great to work with.'"

The Mirror says that "Only Fools and Horses star Roger Lloyd-Packbased his evil genius role in Doctor Who on US defence chief Donald Rumsfeld. The actor best known as Del Boy's friend Trigger in the BBC sitcom plays power-crazy John Lumic - creator of robot monsters the Cybermen. Roger, 62, said: 'I thought, 'Who is a power-hungry mad person who believes he is completely right and has a lot of control?' Donald Rumsfeld came to mind. He's as bad a man as I see around now.' Lumic battles the Doctor and Rose, played by David Tennant and Billie Piper, as they try to stop his plan... The two-episode story - Rise of the Cybermen and The Age of Steel, on May 13 and May 20 - is the most eagerly awaited of the current series. ... Rumsfeld is not the only famous face to have inspired a Dr Who character. Writer Russell T Davis based the villain Lady Cassandra - a thin piece of skin with a brain - on film star Nicole Kidman. Russell revealed the idea came as he watched her at the Oscars. He said: 'It was horrific seeing those beautiful women reduced to sticks. Nicole Kidman struck me in particular.'"

AfterElton features an interview with John Barrowman: "Viewers who have never heard of Doctor Who, even those who think they don't like sci-fi, might want to consider tuning in to Episode Nine of the new series when it shows tomorrow night at 9pm on the Sci Fi Channel. The cult British show about a time-travelling Doctor and his companions--which has been on and off screens since 1963--has recently been given a 21st century makeover, courtesy of UK Queer As Folk creator Russell T. Davies. And one of the results of Davies's helmsmanship is that the Doctor has a new companion, making his debut appearance tonight: bisexual intergalactic con man Captain Jack Harkness, played by Scottish-American actor John Barrowman. ... He says that he still had one unrealised ambition: 'I grew up in the UK as a kid, I was born and raised in Scotland, and so, having the knowledge of [the show], it was kind of a fantasy of mine to be involved in Doctor Who, though I never thought it would happen.' That fantasy became a reality when his agent called him in for a part that was 'right up your alley'. And Russell T. Davies, seeing the dashing matinee-idol quality that he was looking for in Captain Jack, proceeded to write the character around Barrowman. Barrowman acknowledges that part of his character's energy and optimism may have come from him: 'Anybody who you might talk to who knows me, knows that I love life, I love to have fun, I'm very open, I don't mince my words, I say what I feel, and--you know, that's just the way I am. I put a lot of my own personality into Jack. ... First off, when he was introduced, people didn't like him. And that's what I wanted, I didn't want him to be likeable [straight away]. Because then towards the end of Episode Ten, there's a complete turnaround of his character, and he becomes passionate,. He loves these two other people, the Doctor and [the Doctor's companion] Rose, and so he fights and sacrifices things for them. Basically, I think people see a lot of themselves in him. Because a lot of people would love to say the things that Jack says, and do the things that he does, and make those kind of commitments to people--but some people are just afraid to. And Jack does it, on camera.'" On the subject of Torchwood: "Barrowman says, 'It's a team of five people including Jack, and we have a place called the Hub, which is near the Opera House in Cardiff [in Wales, in the UK]. It's underground, this fictitious place. We are an organization that fights alien crime, and tries to figure out alien happenings on earth. A lot of the things that have happened with Doctor Who [in the second series, currently showing on UK television], the Torchwood team have been responsible for--you know, fixing or annihilating after the Doctor does his bit.' Although Barrowman has been contractually sworn to secrecy on the content of the episodes, he says that his character will still be bisexual: 'Oh yeah, he's still gonna be the same Captain Jack. A little...maybe a little bit more mysterious. Because, remember, he's come back to the present-day. He doesn't even want his team to know a lot about where he's come from and what he's done. But you'll find out a lot about Jack, in this series, and some of the stuff, some of the...[laughs] oh, I can't even say it, but some of the alien things that happen are so great [laughs].' As well as writing Torchwood, Russell T. Davies will continue to work on Doctor Who (where Captain Jack is scheduled to appear in Series Three, although not Series Two). Of Davies's writing, and the lack of public fuss about Jack's bisexuality on a family show, Barrowman says: 'the fact that Russell has done this...the British public have accepted it with open arms, because it's done with the right type of humour, the right type of realism. It's not salacious, it's not done in a rude or crude manner. 'Russell takes a look at characters, particularly--and this is kind of going off Doctor Who a little--he takes a look at characters and people, and whether they be gay, straight, bisexual, or, you know, red, green, black, whatever they may be, or what they're into, he treats it as a norm. And that's why I think it's so acceptable amongst so many people.'"

Today's Daily Express says that "Bonnie Langford, who played Dr Who's assistant Melanie in the Eighties, has given her blessing to her successor Billie Piper and latest Timelord David Tennant. Like Billie, the former child star (left) was assistant to two Doctors – in her case Sylvester McCoy and Colin Baker – and she told us after the show at the Cambridge Theatre: 'I love the new series. I think both David and Billie are marvellous.' Is she thankful that, unlike Billie, who locked lips with Tennant on a recent show, she was never required to pucker up with the somewhat less – ahem – attractive McCoy? 'It's not something I ever considered, ' she says diplomatically. 'I was just relieved I never had to snog one of the monsters!'"

Other Press Items

BBC News has a brief picture essay of the Cybermen, from their origins to their appearance in "Rise of the Cybermen" one week from Saturday. CBBC Newsround also does the same.

Both Manchester Online and the Mirror give away spoilers on the forthcoming episodes "Rise of the Cybermen" and "The Age of Steel" (we won't be spoiling it, however!) You can read the full articles, but here's the non-spoiler material: "Doctor Who's old enemy the Cybermen are about to crash the party in terrifying style - 40 years after they first appeared on screen. The next level of mankind, with all emotion removed, aim to give humans the ultimate upgrade, to be metal men just like them." (That's it; you'll have to read the articles for the rest!)

Sci Fi Wire from the US Sci Fi Channel says today that "Steven Moffat, who wrote the Doctor Who first-season episodes 'The Empty Child' and 'The Doctor Dances,' told SCI FI Wire that he was surprised by the overwhelmingly positive response to the two-parter, which makes its U.S. debut on SCI FI Channel May 5 and May 12 at 9 p.m. ET/PT. 'I have to be modest and say they did go over exceptionally well,' Moffat said in an interview. The episodes were recently nominated for a coveted Hugo Award for best dramatic presentation, short form. 'But you never really know,' he added. 'You end up doing interviews in which you explain how brilliant you are and how you thought of all these great ideas, but it's not like that at all. You really have no idea if it's going to be the biggest slop or the biggest success. I didn't know the story was going to be as powerful as it was, and I certainly had no idea there would be kids saying, 'Are you my Mummy?' So that was all very exciting.' In 'The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances,' the Doctor (Christopher Eccleston) and Rose (Billie Piper) travel back to World War II London during the Blitz, where they encounter an army of gas-mask-covered zombies, as well as Captain Jack Harkness (John Barrowman), a 53rd-century adventurer of somewhat ambiguous sexuality. 'People always think of television as a series of very clever decisions you make, but sometimes it just happens,' Moffat said. 'If it's set during the London Blitz, you can more or less assume it's not going to be a musical. It's also 'Doctor Who-does-the-Blitz,' so if you're going to tell that kind of story, it's almost impossible not to be 'Who Noir,' as we called it: '40s clothing, night time and bombs. So you've got 'The Empty Child' right there!' The two-parter also features one of the show's early catch-phrases, with the eponymous gas-masked child chillingly asking, 'Are you my Mummy?' 'You have to remember that Doctor Who is at its heart a children's program,' Moffat said. 'So it''s very important to remember children and the specific niche for Doctor Who, which is a kind of domestically scaled menace. You try and take ordinary things and give them one little twist to make them suddenly weird, so a little boy asking for his mummy is something you hear all the time. It's easily imitated, which is very important for Doctor Who monsters, because children have to be able to imitate them in playgrounds.' Moffat has also written an episode for the new second season of Doctor Who, which is currently airing on BBC1 in the United Kingdom. Moffat's episode, 'The Girl in the Fireplace,' debuts on BBC1 May 6. 'I really enjoyed this one,' he said. In the episode, the new Doctor (David Tennant) encounters French noblewoman Madame du Pompadour (Sophia Myles) in the 18th-century court of Louis XV. 'Without the slight nervousness of the first one and the unfamiliarity of working on someone else's show, it was extremely enjoyable, and I think Sophia Myles looks stunning in the episode.'"

Newsquest Media Group reviews the DVD release of Series Two, Volume One: "Rejoice... and then suffer a nagging feeling that the two instalments on this DVD - The Christmas Invasion and New Earth - somehow managed to slip through quality control. The special effects are polished and there are loopy leaps of imagination but the scripts lack character development and taut plotting. ... It's frothy almost to the point of being nothing but hot air; hopefully not a sign of things to come. As with the first series, Doctor Who will be released as five separate DVDs throughout the year, culminating in a complete DVD box set on November 20, which will comprise all 13 episodes, The Christmas Invasion and myriad extras in special packaging. Never let it be said that the BBC doesn't know how to milk Doctor Who fans dry."

Also: IGN lists its top 50 TV themes, with "35. Dr. Who: Yeah, we're talking about the Tom Baker-era theme, here… not that other drivel. Perfectly matched to the interstellar odyssey, the spacey, haunting theme song is an instant mood-setter, and one of the great, iconic pieces of sci-fi music ever recorded"; Now Playing reviews "School Reunion".

(Thanks to Paul Engelberg, John Bowman, Paul Greaves, Peter Weaver, Tony Longworth)




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

US Ratings Report: "Father's Day"

Wednesday, 3 May 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
General TV Series NewsMay 3, 2006 • Posted By Shaun Lyon
Ratings for the eighth episode of the first season of the new series, Father's Day, on US television on the Sci Fi Channel, are in. The numbers varied from those as reported the previous week; while the average household rating was slightly down, to 1.14, the average viewing audience held at 1.4 million viewers. (We don't know what the exact relationship is between the rating and the viewership figures, apart from the fact that the viewer numbers held this week.) Season-to-date, Sci Fi reports that Doctor Who is currently averaging a 1.32 household rating and an average audience of 1.5 million viewers for the season.




FILTER: - USA - Ratings - Series 1/27

TARDIS Report: The Past Week in the Press

Wednesday, 3 May 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Here's a catch-up TARDIS report to fill you in on all the press coverage over the past few days...

BBC Updates

The BBC's official Doctor Who website had its regular Wednesday update at midday, with an episode four-themed homepage and a ten-strong picture gallery. Also added is the pre-transmission 'Fear Factor', the four children giving The Girl in the Fireplace a score of 3 - Very Scary. The site also now features the TARDISode for episode 4, as well as commentaries for all three previously transmitted episodes this season; besides the "New Earth" commentary which we reported on (featuring executive producer Russell T Davies, star David Tennant and producer Phil Collinson), there are commentaries for "Tooth and Claw" with Tennant, guest star Derek Riddell and script editor Simon Winstone, and for "School Reunion" with Collinson, guest star Eugene Washington and script editor Helen Raynor.

The episode commentaries available on the site have also been available as digital extras with the BBC Three repeats ... to some extent. In fact, and despite the continuity announcements and the official site publicity, the commentaries were initially available only to digital satellite and cable viewers. For Freeview users, neither repeat of 'New Earth' had a red-button commentary, and Sunday's 'Tooth and Claw' was similarly lacking; this seems to be due to extensive live coverage of a snooker championship taking up all the BBCi channels. With effect from the Friday repeat of 'Tooth and Claw', however, the commentary is now also available on Freeview and can be accessed from a few minutes before the episode's transmission. Unfortunately, it seems likely that future sports events may prove similarly disruptive.

Meanwhile, the BBC South East Wales Doctor Who website has been updated this weekend to include a Locations Guide to "School Reunion".

UK Gold Broadcast Update

UKGold will soon be ending their weekly Doctor Who repeats. Says an email from a UKGold programming agent, "I can confirm that we will be stopping our classic Doctor Who repeats following the end of the Jon Pertwee episodes. This is because we have decided to give the series a rest for a period in order to show some alternative programming. The classic Doctor Who eps will return to Gold in the future though I can not provide a specific date at this time."

Doctor Who Books

The latest Tenth Doctor novels from BBC Books continue to sell well, rising in the Top 20 Fiction Heatseekers chart in this week's Bookseller to take three places in the top ten. Last week's number 11, The Resurrection Casket, has risen to number eight, having sold another 2,513 copies; The Feast of the Drowned stays at number ten with 2,358 unit sales; and The Stone Rose goes up from number six to number three with 3,213 unit sales. Like last week, these sales figures are significantly up on 2005's second-week sales for the first three Ninth Doctor novels.

The Girl in the Fireplace Press

Although the new issue has no cover mention of the series (for the first time in six weeks), there's still plenty of coverage of Doctor Who in this week'sRadio Times, led by a two-page Doctor Who Watch feature on The Girl in the Fireplace (pp. 11-12). The article is dominated by a large photo of Rose and Mickey being menaced by clockwork robots, as well as several behind-the-scenes shots, and interviews writer Steven Moffat, who is asked whether this week's episode will be as scary as last year's The Empty Child: 'I wouldn't say this episode is as sinister, but there's an opening sequence that might frighten children.' Moffat discusses the 'Are you my mummy?' catchphrase, research for his new episode ('I'm damned if I'm doing it again'), the myth of the Doctor's asexuality, and the balance between fear and humour in family television. Moffat has warned on the OG Forum that the new Radio Times contains 'story-killing' spoilers, and he may be referring both to the behind-the-scenes photos and to the preview in Saturday's Choices (p.60), which selects the episode, once again, as Drama of the Week - 'This is one for the ladies,' writes Alison Graham. 'If you're not in a little puddle of weeping goo by the end, well, you don't have a heart.' The Girl in the Fireplace is also among 'The week's best television' selections on page 4: 'A whiff of romance for the Doctor as he meets Madame de Pompadour in 18th-century France. Terrific family entertainment.' More clockwork robots head the BBC One listing for Saturday evening ('Is this a wind-up? ... Can the Doctor throw a spanner in the works?'), while the listing itself reads: 'Madame de Pompadour finds the court of Versailles under attack from sinister clockwork killers. Her only hope of salvation lies with a mysterious stranger known simply as the Doctor' (p.62). On Doctor Who Confidential this week, 'The path of the collaborative process, from the words on the page to the images on the screen' is narrated by Mark Gatiss. Sunday's listing confirms a cut down Confidential for 7pm, ahead of the first repeat of episode 4 at 7.15pm; the same cut down version will follow the Friday 9pm repeat, while the full-length Confidential is on Sunday night/Monday morning at 3.25am. Camille Coduri (Jackie Tyler) is announced as the studio guest on Totally Doctor Who on Thursday 11 May. There is also a full-page promotion for the Doctor Who sticker collection and poster free with next week's Radio Times (p.23), which appears to show both School Reunion and The Christmas Invasion as taking place in 2006, despite all the on-screen evidence to the contrary.

Series One's BAFTA nomination as best Drama Series also merits several mentions through the magazine - an article on the awards (to be televised on Monday 8) tips Doctor Who as the winner in the drama category: 'It's got to be Doctor Who, worthy though the others are. Russell T Davies's joy, enthusiasm and vision suffused every episode of a series that revitalised Saturday family viewing and introduced a new generation to one of TV's most enduring heroes' (p.14). Series Two is the subject of two letters this week, the first 'disappointed' by New Earth but pleased with Tooth and Claw's 'edge-of-the-seat stuff', yet more interested in 'what the Queen made of' the episode; the second letter is more concerned with correcting at some length Mike Tucker's apparent implication that the Doctor built K-9: 'I have to point out that K-9 was built not by the Doctor, but by an Earth scientist called, etc., etc.' Happily, this is not the last mention of the show in Radio Times this week: 'Next week in RT ... The Cybermen cometh', complete with inset photo of a silver giant from Telos. Or Mondas.

Heat gives the Girl In the Fireplace five stars and reviewer Boyd Hilton writes 'Some viewers have suggested that David tennant might be a bit too cheeky, comical and flippant to be the Doctor. He certainly hasn't been as intense as Christopher Eccoleston's previous incarnation. Until now. This week's episode, as well as being funny, ambitious, mysterious and as scary as we've come to expect, also functions as a superb showcase for Tennant. He switches brilliantly from action scenes to comedy and, most importantly, to intense romance in this intriguing story in which sinister forces invade the world of 19th century Madame de Pompadour in the court of Versailles. It turns out that the Doctor has somehow become the love of the Madame's life, and his slow-burn realisation of this, coupled with Billie's immediate jealousy, turns the episode into one of the most affecting and romantic ever. The Madame is played by the wonderful Sophia Myles, whose turn as lady Penelope stoe the Thunderbirds movie, but this is Tennant's episode all the way.'
Heat also places this episode at number 4 in their week's Best TV Shows, commenting 'David Tennant is fantastic in this wonderfully romantic episode.' (Last week's Tooth and Claw made number 3 in their viewing ratings for the week ending 23 April - soaps Eastenders and Coronation Street were at nos 1 and 2 respectively).

Closer has this episode as their main choice for Saturday TV - 'Sit back and enjoy quite possibly the most surreal Doctor Who yet. While Rose takes a back seat, the Timelord lands his Tardis in 15th-century France, where he winds up battling scary clockwork clowns who are stalking the King's mistress. Madame De Pompadour. In between flying through ballrooms on horseback and trying to outwit the monsters, the Doc finds time to enjoy a cheeky snog with Madame (played by David tennant's real-life girlfriend Sophia Myles) - and ends up falling in love. Mon dieu!'

New magazine writes: 'Steven Moffat, who wrote Coupling, guest writes this episode and treats The Doctor to some romance! He and Rose arrive at King Louis XV's Palace of Versailles, the King's attractive mistress, madame De Pompadour (Sophia Myles) needs help fighting off clockwork killers. The Doctor is happy to help...'

Reveal rates this episode as their Must See - Pick of the Day, and gives it their maximum 5 stars. 'Since David Tennant took over in the titular role at the end of the last series, there have probably been many people who have dreamt about Doctor Who and his cheeky grin. However, madame de Ponpadour, the official mistress of King Louis XV, has been haunted by recurring visions of the Time Lord for a lot longer than that - her memories of the mysterious stranger stretch back to childhood. When the King's palace at Versailles comes under attack from sinister clockwork robots, she attempts to summon the Gallifreyan in an effort to protect its inhabitants from the mechanical killers. Can a broken clock attract his attention? Sophia Myles guest stars as the Gallic monarch's illicit lover, alongside Billie Piper, Noel Clarke, Ben Turner and Jessica Atkins.'

Star magazine writes: 'The court at Versailles is under attack from a group of clockwork killers and Madame Du Pompadour realises ehr only hope for salvation is the man who has haunted her dreams since childhood. A man known only as the Doctor. Now who could that be?' Star has this episode as one of their Picks of the Day and gives it 3 out of 5 stars.

People

Billie Piper has signed a six-figure deal to write her autobiography, according to media reports. "The 23-year-old will tell all about her marriage to Chris Evans and her journey from teen pop singer to award-winning actress. The book will be published this autumn by Hodder & Stoughton. 'It may sound ridiculous being just 23 but I've a few good stories I'd like to share,' Piper said. 'I'm hoping the book will be honest, funny, insightful and, above all, life-affirming. This is a chance for me to talk openly about other areas of my life. Things that people won't know. Things that I'm hoping lots of people can relate to and maybe even be inspired by.' The book promises an 'astonishingly candid insight' into Piper's life. Hodder editorial director Nick Davies said: 'Billie has done more in her 23 years than most of us will do in a lifetime and she is ready to talk about it with honesty and humour. I have no doubt that we have a bestseller on our hands.' Swindon-born Piper was discovered in a Smash Hits TV advert at the age of 15 and signed up by record bosses." The report features in the Daily Mail and is also widely reported including at BBC NewsCBBCYahoo NewsThe SunThe IndependentThe MirrorDaily RecordITV, and other locations.

Camille Coduri told The Sun that "This series is certainly scarier and darker than the first one and I know there have been concerns. But I don't think they should have a warning beforehand or anything like that." Coduri admitted that her son Sonny, 10, has been scared by some scenes in the show. "For the episode with the Auton shop dummies he started off in front of the TV and slowly progressed to sitting on my husband's lap clinging onto his neck feeling terrified. It's fine to scare kids a little - it's a tradition to hide behind the sofa watching it. It's up to parents to decide whether to let their kids watch as it is a PG show really."

John Barrowman has been lined up to headline this year's New Theatre pantomime "Jack and the Beanstalk" which opens on 16 December in Cardiff. Tickets for the show, however, go on sale on Tuesday 9 May. Barrowman plays the role of Jack Trot. "Taking to the New Theatre stage for 71 performances over a six week period he will climb the beanstalk, do battle with the giant and save the day 71 times!" says the press release. "In this he will be joined by Welsh comedy favourite Andy Jones as Muddles and Capital Gold's Tony Wright as his mother, Dame Trot."

The latest It's Hot magazine (BBC, Issue 51) has an interview with Andrew Hayden-Smith. Some Q&As: "Tell us about your character in Doctor Who. 'He's called Jake Simmonds. The Doctor and Rose go to a parallel world, and everyone has a double, so Rose's boyfriend Mickey has a double and we're in a gang. We're fighting against this industry that's creating Cybermen. They were quite scary, but then when you see the guys sweating as they take their helmets off they're not so bad!' Were you nervous before filming started? 'Yeah, 'cause it's a big thing! I really wanted to do a good job. I'm pleased with what I've done. Everything about Doctor Who is great, the stories, the actors, the effects - the whole team behind it are great too. There's nothing else like it on TV.' On David Tennant: 'He's a nice bloke. It was great working with him, 'cause I'd seen him in other TV shows. We had a laugh, but he's got so much to remember he kinda stays in character and was quite quiet on set. Noel Clarke and I had a lot of scenes together, so we used to hang out every night.' So your character doesn't get to snog Billie then? 'No, he's a bit tough and he's not really interested, but it was so much fun playing him. It was just crazy running around Cardiff at four in the morning shooting Cybermen!' Are your mates jealous? 'A couple of mates are massive Doctor Who fans... to the point of being scary! They can't wait for it to come out, but I doubt they're jealous.' Also, Andrew reckons Johnny Depp would make a good Doctor: 'He can be pretty quirky and crazy. I think he'd be pretty good.'" Also, the new issue of the UK gay magazine Attitudefeatures an interview with Hayden-Smith where he talks about his role in the Cybermen adventure and the pleasures of working with Tennant and Piper, and an article by former DWM editor Gary Gillatt, arguing in a tongue-in-cheek style why every gay man needs to have a Doctor Who fan as a boyfriend.

The Western Daily Press says that "As the lovely reliable Giles in Buffy and the sweet romantic in the Nescafe Gold Blend coffee adverts, Anthony Head has long been the epitome of the charming good guy. But this weekend it will be no more Mr Nice Guy as the West actor shows his dark side to play a sinister teacher in this week's Doctor Who. With terrifying staring eyes and slicked back hair, Mr Head looks every inch the baddy for his role in the long-running BBC1 series. 'I've been in lots of things but this seems to be the one that is causing lots of ballyhoo.' And when he sits down with his family at their home in Timsbury, near Bath, this weekend, and the famous opening credits role, the veteran actor says he will feel a twinge of nerves. 'I will be nervous, it's completely bizarre, ' said Mr Head, who lives with his partner and two teenage daughters. 'Other stuff I've done has been written about of course, but this is so eagerly awaited, ' But his arrival in the show is no surprise, having already been suggested to play the main man himself, the timetravelling doctor, on two occasions over the past decade. Despite talks with producers in both the early 90s, and more recently, following Christopher Eccleston's departure after only one series, the part never came Mr Head's way. 'So me and Doctor Who seem to have been inextricably linked somewhere along the line, ' the 52-year-old said. 'It's not a huge leap because I am so associated with science fiction because of Buffy, and kind of accept that, so when they sent me the script and asked if I would be interested, my initial reaction was I don't know, I'm not sure. And then when the role was a teacher, and because Giles was involved with the whole school thing, I thought it's got be really good. But it was really good, and the writing is really good, which is the main thing. And the headmaster is nothing like Giles.' In this Saturday's programme David Tennant's Doctor Who will wind up at a reunion at a school presided over the by the scary Mr Finch. As a fan of the series as a child, particularly when it first started, Mr Head didn't need much persuading to take on the Mr Finch part."

CBBC News also mentions Head, saying that "Doctor Who villain Anthony Head has said that he thinks that children don't find him very scary. ... He said: 'There's been a good reaction to the episode but I met one little girl and asked if I scared her and she said no. I thought I was quite scary.' The actor spoke to Newsround at a big event called Collectormania, where fans get to meet their TV and film idols."

Waveguide says that "One of the best-known faces in British television appears in the Doctor Who two-parter Rise Of The Cybermen/The Age Of Steel on May 13 and 20. Roger Lloyd Pack has appeared in a number of popular and acclaimed programmes such as Dalziel And Pascoe,The Vicar Of Dibley, The Naked Civil Servant and Only Fools And Horses. Rise Of The Cybermen and The Age Of Steel sees the Doctor, Rose and Mickey trapped on a parallel Earth, and Roger takes on the role of the menacing John Lumic -- a man on an unrelenting mission to take over the world. 'I play a kind of evil genius who is creating an army of Cybermen in order to make himself immortal,' said Lloyd Pack. 'He's trying to get governments and people to go along with his plans, and Doctor Who tries to stop him.' When the actor was offered the role he read the script and immediately accepted the part, but a week later, fate intervened -- with a twist… 'It was a curious affair, because about a week after I agreed to do the part I broke my ankle,' Roger Lloyd Pack said. 'I couldn't walk without a stick, and was in plaster for a while, but it didn't interfere with the part because the role was in a wheelchair! I think God must have been saying ‘I'm going to give you a nice job, but I'm going to break your ankle as well!' I was taking research a little bit further than I usually do!' he said." Also, BBC News says that "As Del-boy's mate Trigger in only Fools and Horses, he perhaps wasn't the sharpest knife in the box. And, as a farmer in the Vicar of Dibley, he was never going to trouble the question-setters of Mastermind. But, for his latest role, actor Roger Lloyd Pack is playing an evil genius. So evil, in fact, that he's put himself in charge of a pack of Cybermen, who are out to change the face of London. What else could we be talking about but the latest series of Doctor Who? Roger's bagged himself a starring role in the Doctor's latest two-part adventure, which starts on Saturday. He came in to the Breakfast studio on Tuesday to tell us all about it - and to re-live some of his finest moments in Only Fools and Horses 'The Cybermen are definitely more scary than they were,' says Roger, who admits to having been a fan of Doctor Who since his first incarnation, played by William Hartnell. 'I am limited about what I can tell you. But I can say that I'm a baddy and I have a factory in which I capture people from London and upgrade their brains to cyberman status.' Roger Lloyd Pack will be in episodes 5 and 6 of the current Doctor Who series, on BBC One on Saturday evenings." It also includes a link to watch the entire interview on a Real Player frame. The interview is eight minutes long, with only the first two or three minutes covering Doctor Who.

The Telegraph interviews Simon Callow (from last year's "The Unquiet Dead"), saying that he "tells Tom Leonard about his affinity for Orson Welles, his intellectual promiscuity - and why he's best known for stripping off."

The Scotsman says, "Former Dr Who Sylvester McCoy will be among the stars appearing in the hit musical Me and My Girl when it comes to the Capital in the autumn. The popular musical is coming to the city's Festival Theatre in late October as part of a UK-wide eight-month tour. Also appearing will be former Steps star Faye Tozer and Trevor Bannister, who played Mr Lucas in Are You Being Served. Sylvester McCoy was in Edinburgh in 2004 when he performed alongside former TV star John Leslie in a stage adaptation of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice at the Playhouse. Me and My Girl was originally performed in London in 1937 and has since travelled the world to critical acclaim."

Worldscreen notes that Billie Piper was part of an award presented for her work on "The Friday Night Project" at the international entertainment television Rose d'Or festival which took place at Lake Lucerne, Switzerland, from April 25 to April 30, 2006.

Digital Spy notes that "ITV has commissioned a new half hour comedy series starring Josie Lawrence and Peter Davison. Now in production, Easy Peasy follows George Huntley (Davison), a professor of child psychology who is forced to put his theory into practice and look after his 7-year-old son Jamie (Noah Hedges) when his wife Phoebe (Lawrence) takes a job based in Paris. Finding a strong primetime comedy series has long been a problem for ITV; many series in recent years have either flopped or been aired in a post-primetime slot. Easy Peasy is likely to be given a shot at prime, however. 'I am delighted that Peter Davison and Josie Lawrence have been cast in this new comedy,' said Paul Jackson, ITV's director of entertainment and comedy. 'Easy Peasy strengthens ITV's portfolio and will appeal to a family audience.'"

School Reunion Coverage

As was done for 'New Earth' a couple of weeks ago, BBC One promoted 'School Reunion' as 'The One to Watch Tonight' with a ten-second trailer running between programmes throughout the day. The trailer uses the scene where the Doctor uncovers and introduces 'K9!'

Anthony Head, Mr Finch in 'School Reunion', is interviewed in the Daily Mirror. "'The script is great and I liked the idea of being able to do a character part, rather than a romantic role,' he says. 'Billie is absolutely adorable, a genuinely lovely person. She's cute as hell, but I don't find her sexy. She's half my age. I wouldn't go there. It's like when I was on Buffy and people used to say, 'Wahey, you're working with Sarah Michelle Gellar'. I'm not holier than thou, I just can't think of them in that way - I'm 52!'"

In The Guardian, Charlie Brooker announces that "Following a minor setback with this year's series opener, my love affair with Doctor Who ... is firmly back on: tonight's episode, in which K9 and Sarah-Jane return, brought tears to my eyes. Perhaps I'm losing my mind, or perhaps I'm just a sucker for a bit of bittersweet nostalgia, especially when it involves a ludicrous robot dog. Since my burgeoning Whomania knows no bounds, I'm prepared to go to any lengths - or sink to any depths - to indulge it. And if that means covering a crappy pornographic spoof called Dr Screw... then so be it." The Guardian also chooses the episode as one of Saturday's TV highlights: 'As the Doctor investigates reports of strange creatures haunting a London school, he encounters an old friend -- and her faithful robotic companion. Rose learns a few harsh truths about travelling with a Time Lord from her predecessor. Anthony Head guest stars, and Elisabeth Sladen, who accompanied Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker's Doctors in the 1970s, reprises her role as journalist Sarah Jane Smith.'

Monday's Leicester Mercury says, "Leeds Castle, Kent, sometime in the late 1970s and a sulk-inducingly dull family day out is unexpectedly enlivened by my dad spotting a camera crew in the stately home's gardens. It's a shoot for a Doctor Who episode, it turns out, and ooh look it's K-9 and ... and ... oh he's being pulled along on a piece of string by a beardy man hiding in the bushes. I think that was the moment I lost my telly innocence. TV had lied, and I felt cheated. Don't get me wrong, I didn't think K-9 was real or anything; I just thought at the very least he'd have a motor. Looking back, I can't see how I hadn't guessed. K-9 wasn't exactly hi-tech, was he? And that was a point pleasingly drawn-out in a playfully self-referential episode of Doctor Who on Saturday. 'Forget the shooty tin dog thing,' shouted Anthony Head's pupil-scoffing headmaster, as K-9-related chaos erupted in a school taken over by creepy monster bats. This was an episode designed for kids and adults alike. For the children, there was the happy notion that their teachers may be winged aliens, hellbent on evil. For the grown-ups, there was a full-on nostalgia trip, with the reappearance of K-9 and the majestic return of Elisabeth Sladen as the Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker-era assistant Sarah Jane Smith. It was a hoot."

The Western Mail says that "Perhaps the most unfair category in this year's Bafta Cymru awards was Best Make-up. As long as the Tardis spirals through time and space, it's sewn up. Why bother entering if you're up against Doctor Who? However subtle your blusher tones for Con Passionate they're going to be no match for the Face of Bo or the gargoyled complexion of a Slitheen. But those of us who remember the series when the effects weren't quite so special, were excited by the retro touches of Saturday's episode, entitled School Reunion. The show saw Cardiff's Fitzalan High and Dyffryn Comprehensive in Newport transformed into an alien academy run by a marvellously deranged Anthony Head. In a particularly ingenious touch of post-modern irony, the pupils were turned into superintelligent alien hybrids by eating chips. Stick that in your smoothie maker, Jamie Oliver. And there was a blast from the past for the Doctor. One of the more mature hacks at the Cardiff Blues game had the video running. 'Can't wait to get home to see Sarah Jane tonight,' he beamed with an evident frisson of nostalgic lust. Sarah Jane, of course, was Elisabeth Sladen - assistant to Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker. Reunited with the regenerated Doctor, there was genuine pathos as she described the pain of falling in love with a Timelord who never returned her calls. But at least she got custody of the dog - just a shame it was K9, a robot so tiresome he made Metal Mickey seem scintillating company. Yet BBC Wales's resurrection of the android mutt lacked the fastidious attention to details so handsomely rewarded by Bafta Cymru. Surely K9's voice was far more irritating first time round? Affirmative."

The Bristol Evening Post said that "Tonight's episode of Dr Who will see the return of K-9, the robotic dog created by a celebrated Bristol writer. The iconic sidekick was the brainchild of Bafta-winner Bob Baker, of Oldbury-on-Severn, and David Martin. The pair came up with the idea during the original run of the popular cult series in the 1970s. They brought him in to help the doctor in his Tom Baker incarnation. K-9... returns tonight in the current series of the classic show, which now sees David Tennant in the role of Dr Who. K-9 was not originally intended to be a companion, but producer Graham Williams liked the concept so much that he decided he must stay. His original name was 'FIDO' which was apparently derived from 'Phenomenal Indication Data Observation' unit. Mr Baker, aged 67, is the storyteller behind the animated Aardman movies that have taken the world by storm. He wrote Wallace and Gromit The Curse of the Were Rabbit, an idea he apparently hatched over a pint with animator Nick Park. He also penned The Wrong Trousers and A Close Shave for Mr Park. Mr Baker began writing cartoons and short film scripts in the early 60s and won critical acclaim in the 70s for several hit TV shows including Bergerac and Z Cars. When he is not writing, he lectures on script-writing and film at Filton College's South West Academy of Dramatic Arts. He has nine grown-up children and works out of a shed that he built at the end of his garden as a summer-house. Despite earning a fortune from the scripts, Bob refuses to move from his humble three-bed semi, where he creates all his works on his laptop."

The Scotsman says that "Relationships continued to come under the microscope on Saturday in Doctor Who. David Tennant seems to have settled into the Time Lord's shoes and is starting to have fun with the role. Not quite as much fun as Tom Baker had, perhaps, but then it'd take a lot to convince me that the first Baker wasn't the best doctor ever. The real meat in this episode was the return of Sarah Jane Smith, a former assistant of the Doctor from many moons ago. The appearance of Sarah created some pangs of regret for the Doc, and some fine scenes of jealous rivalry for his new lady friend, Rose. 'How many of us have there been?' she pouted, nose put firmly out of joint. The return of K9 must have created another ripple of excitement for the die-hard fans - when everyone's favourite tin dog said 'affirmative' in that metallic voice, it sent me right back to Saturday night teatime circa 1980-something. Just like the TARDIS, Doctor Who manages to be more than it first appears. It caters to kids, their parents, the science fiction fans and whoever else happens to be watching. As Saturday night viewing goes, it's right up there with Ant and Dec's Saturday show, finally filling a void that's existed in the viewing schedules for years. With this sort of good old-fashioned entertainment on offer, it's almost worth staying in."

The Lancashire Evening Telegraph says, "Sarah Jane back with the Doctor; K-9 firing his red laser and wagging his metal tail suddenly I became an eight-year-old all over again. I don't know about Doctor Who being a time traveller, I suspect that actress Elisabeth Sladen must know something about defying the years as she didn't look any different from when she first appeared in the series back in the Seventies. After a shaky start, the second series of the new' Doctor Who is getting back on track. After last week's scary werewolves, this week we had bat-like creatures from another planet disguising themselves as teachers and using pupils to try and take over the universe as you would. The great joy about this week's episode was the way the script cleverly brought together old and new with Sarah Jane and the Doctor's latest travelling companion Rose Tyler. Billie Piper has certainly come a long way from the pop teen sensation who pranced about shouting Because We Want To', and now displays some great comic timing. But it was the forever youthful Ms Sladen who stole the show, providing a really poignant moment as she was reunited and then said goodbye to the love of her life. I'm still not totally convinced by David Tennant as the Doctor though. He's all wide-eyed stares and lacks that real charisma you'd expect the saviour of the galaxy to have. But you can't knock really knock a series that he made Saturday night TV worth watching again."

The Herald noted that "Doctor Who struck a far more acerbic comedy note -- at least, it did when it wasn't coming over all grief-stricken for the transient nature of humanity. Heavy stuff for a Saturday tea-time, and all the more engrossing for it. Alongside the doc's cuddly old robotic sidekick, K9, angry political satire was on show if you cared to spot it too -- not least in the name of the inner-city comprehensive where the regenerated sci-fi warhorse's action took place: Deepfry Vale. Doctor Who's current custodian, Russell T Davies, advanced a premise that allowed him to take numerous potshots at the policy of feeding schoolchildren burgers, chips and fizzy pop. The doc's foes this week were the Krilitanes: sinister bat-like creatures from some malignant corner of the cosmos, bidding to exploit our schoolkids by feeding them greasy foodstuffs fried in mind-expanding, soul-destroying Krilitanian outer-space chip-fat (you'll know the stuff: you also get it in certain city takeaways on a Saturday night). The lizardly Anthony Head was chief Krilitane, oiling easily between persuasive sophistry and world-enslaving viciousness. From time to time you couldn't help doubting whether Doctor Who would defeat this latest enemy -- surely the mark of a quality adventure. Win through he did, though, en-route meeting one of the many female assistants he's loved and left over the centuries: Sarah-Jane Smith (played by the actress who originally portrayed her, Elisabeth Sladen). Explaining why he scarpered in the Tardis, leaving Sarah-Jane stranded, David Tennant's charismatic Doctor unfolded his terrible dilemma as an undying entity: 'I'm the Doctor... you can spend the rest of your life with me, but I can't spend the rest of my life with you. It's the curse of timelords.' No wonder the doctor's current partner, Rose (Billie Piper), looked glum as she realised how, in choosing to pay the price of love, she'd eventually wind up being abandoned too. Profoundly good, Doctor Who is."

Blogcritics said that "It must be fun to travel time and space with a man so interested in everything. The problem is, The Doctor can never die -- his companions however, do. That is the underlying tension that Sarah Jane Smith (Elizabeth Sladen) brought to 'School Reunion,' the third episode of Series 2. Once again, an episode that is a mixed bag. The reunion between Sarah Jane Smith and the Doctor was a nice touch, sans the whole 'Why did you leave me?' stuff. He was right about one thing: No matter the length a person spends with a Timelord, he will never grow old nor will he die. I couldn't help feeling that a Christopher Eccelston performance would have exploited that loneliness better. In fact, the whole underlying theme of loss made me think of Christopher Eccelston's Doctor rather than David Tennant's. Character development, however, is hard to achieve in science fiction. As in the previous two episodes, the creature of the week was the main focus -- this time, it's bat people. This race had incorporated themselves into human bodies to carry out a dastardly plan -- they want to unlock the universe in order to make more of themselves. That's at least what I think they were trying to do. It feels like the dangers of the Doctor and Rose have been so passive and blah. I have the sneaky feeling that when another old enemy comes into play later this season, the writing will finally get a boost in quality. Noel Clarke's Mickey Smith still came off as the black Adric, annoying and seemingly in the way. This time I think the writers have learned to tone that aspect of his character down, in favor of a more practical approach -- make him do the grunt work. From pulling wires to smashing doors down, Mickey is good as a character to cut through the bullshit. This being the case, I think his return would have been better left out until later in the season. It's really hard to pay attention to him and the main plot and the return of Sarah Jane Smith without feeling confused. Since Sarah Jane hasn't been in the program for years, I would have stuck to that more. John Lesson's K9 also returned for 'School Reunion.' The last time anyone saw him was in 'The Five Doctors' in 1983, and he was relegated to a cameo. For all the technology that has come since the days of Tom Baker's era, you would think that he wouldn't be as stationary as he was this time around. The few moments K9 got to move seem like meters. I can understand the little time he was given as he wasn't the favorite of the Doctor Who production team in the early days. I'd like to see more of him in a Sarah Jane spin-off, but that was already attempted and failed to produce interest. Rose has been on the sidelines lately -- an answer to my prayers since Series 1. Billie Piper's new day companion character seemed to take over the series last year -- it very nearly could have been named Doctor Rose. Paired up against Sladen's Sarah Jane, the chemistry felt forced and was creating tension just to do so. I swear I wanted Anthony Stewart Head to be the Master -- He had the creepiness down to a science and demonstrated a good set of acting chops as the Headmaster of the school. The character seemed to have a Nazi theme about him that was rather funny -- always walking and turning like he was stiff. I hope the producers use him more for future episodes as he was one of the stronger actors to guest star on the show. Overall, this was a good reunion of an old guest star to the show. In terms of the quality of the episode, it was only fair. Perhaps when the Cybermen come along later this season, the writers will finally use their full abilities to make a classic episode. That's one of the conditions in being a fan of a show: You stick with it even in the dark times."

The Times says, "Every Saturday, one wonders 'Can Doctor Who get any better? Surely it couldn't, without in some way hurting us?' And yet, every week, it does get better. This week's episode makes the word 'humdinger' look positively humdrum: the Doctor goes to investigate a school at the centre of some UFO sightings, and discovers that it has been taken over by Giles from Buffy the Vampire Slayer, who is harbouring, as one always suspected he did, some quite serious plans for becoming ruler of the universe. Of course, the big news of the episode was the reunion between the Doctor and Sarah Jane, which could have been any one of the following: a) crass, b) mawkish c) camp d) full of a great deal of tedious extrapolation ('So then I moved to Middlesbrough for three years, which is where I met my first husband, Steve.') -- but was, instead, clever, moving and sharp as a steak knife. Sarah Jane was quite put out to discover that the Doctor had never mentioned her to his new assistant, Rose. Rose, meanwhile, was jealous of Sarah Jane's history with the Doctor. This resulted, for the first 15 minutes at least, in Doctor Who's first inaugural Diva Assistants' Bitching Fest, with the ladies like Joan Crawford and Bette Davis squabbling over the last false eyelash in the box. From there, the episode developed into a passionate, considered exploration of what happens to the Doctor's assistants when the big man drops them off in Dumpsville, population: one ex-sidekick. 'Did I do something wrong?' Sarah Jane suddenly asks, at one point, looking pained and bewildered. 'I thought you were coming back, but you never came back. I waited. You never said goodbye.' ... I was one year old when Sarah Jane originally left Doctor Who, so I didn't have a danny who she was, really, but even I was blubbing by the end. I can't believe something this good is a kid's show. Children raised on this stuff are going to be light years ahead of the rest of us. We'll probably be their chimp-gimps by 2012."

Other Press Items

TV Guide said of last week's US broadcast of "Father's Day," "'I did it again! Another stupid ape!' roars the Doctor. 'I offer to show you the universe and you ask what the universe can do for you!' In other words, Rose screwed up. But if you ask this ape, it was the Doctor's fault for bringing Rose within touching distance (twice!) of her late father. Did he really expect her NOT to make some kind of effort to save Peter Tyler's life? OK, so he was probably kicking himself when he shouted at our Rose, but to be fair he was pretty stressed out. Time Pterodactyls were besieging a church like white blood cells trying to combat an infection. (And just before a wedding too.) For Rose had indeed created a wound in time by changing the past and saving her Dad's life. Even the Doctor was eaten by one of the creatures until Peter took it upon himself to be run over by that car, thus healing the temporal fissure. This was another gem in the new Who canon. An obvious premise was developed into something exciting, hilarious and moving. Even though we knew how it was going to end, it was a helluva lot of fun getting there. Like all the Who episodes so far, there were a 1001 great little moments. The Doctor tells off a certain yapper. 'Jackie Tyler----I've been waiting a long time to say this---do as I say, go and check the doors!' Then there's Rose's 'Why does everybody think we're a couple?' quip after her spat with the Doc. Actually, I was nurturing a theory (I was! Right at the top of the show and everything!) that the Doctor was really her dad---a theory that was promptly dispelled. Rose's mum had nurtured her daughter's image of her late father as a near-saint. In fact, he was something of a sweet ne'er do well, who quarrelled often and loudly with Jackie. (Love her 80s perm BTW!) There was also a nod to 'Mawdryn Undead' in the 'paradox' of Rose encountering her infant self. Anybody remember when the two Brigadiers did the same thing? Jackie's friends, the would-be married couple---though amazed by the Doctor's prodigous intellegence and talent---had their blessings put in perspective by the man himself. 'Two in the morning, get a cab here...I'll never do that,' says our overworked universe-and-time trotter. Being the last of the Time Lords means very little vacation. Or benders. (I know how he feels.)" Additional reviews of the broadcast of "Father's Day" in the US at TV Squad.

icWales notes that "Eastenders is eternally linked with London, Morse epitomised Oxford, and Bergerac is synonymous with Jersey. Now Cardiff has its very own TV series that is attracting thousands of tourists. Not only has Doctor Who been filmed across the city's streets, in churches, department stores and theatres, the Doctor and his assistant Rose have even been seen at famous Cardiff landmarks, including the Millennium Stadium and the Temple of Peace. Now one city centre hotel is offering a special Doctor Who package, especially for visitors who want to experience the locations where the time lord battled with the Cybermen and defeated the Daleks. The Park Plaza Hotel is charging... for visitors to stay in the centre of the action and, with the help of their guide book and a blow-up Dalek, you can take a walk around the film set for series one. Marketing director for the Greyfriars Road hotel, Caroline Sims, said: 'I think this is just the tip of the iceberg. The Doctor Who following is phenomenal. Everybody recognises the Tardis and Daleks and now they recognise it as a part of Cardiff. We're now seen as a sexy city to visit. We're catching up with the likes of Edinburgh - Doctor Who is just another draw for visitors.' Caroline said that if the package, the first of its kind in Cardiff, is in demand the hotel will expand into Doctor Who weekends with dedicated talks and tours."

A writer for Leeds Today says, "I've been something of a fan of the classic sci fi series since childhood and it's never posed a problem until this year when a new actor was selected to become the timelord's tenth incarnation. The trouble is the man who got the job, David Tennant, is the spit of me. No really, the spit. It never occurred to me at first. Even when he first appeared in the late night drama Blackpool in 2004 I didn't spot the similarity. It was first brought to my attention by a fan of the show, a female colleague who, almost on a daily basis, now has to constantly suppress her fawning adoration for me. It's getting embarrassing now. ... And that's the problem -- David Tennant is very much the man of the moment which, by default, means that I'm getting a lot of attention too."

A writer in the Sunday Times said that "I quite fancy going along to the auction in Edinburgh next month, where a Doctor Who script signed by David Tennant will be sold off to benefit Christian Aid, at the church where his father, Sandy, was once a minister. Not through any appreciation of Doctor Who, I hasten to add -- since Jon Pertwee did away with his yellow Edwardian motor, Bessie, and the brigadier went to the great speech and drama class in the sky, the show has been little more than a husk to me. But a simple calculation shows that dweebishness multiplies exponentially as one moves towards the American continent, with the supplementary fact that disposable income increases proportionally with dweebishness. This means the script will have the Edinburgh natives digging in their pockets for loose change and will subsequently command a king's ransom from the Elmers and Elmerettes of Wisconsin, thanks to the wonders of eBay. It's not strictly ethical, of course, but the good doctor specialises in playing fast and loose with the moral codes of the space-time continuum. Somewhere in the constellation of Gallifray, it's what his two hearts would want."

Doctor Who again features in the British satirical magazine Private Eye, this time in a joke article (by 'our political staff, Lunchtime O'Sleaze') regarding the 'cash for peerages' scandal. The article reads: 'The Prime Minister has been accused of further corruption as the honours-for-cronies row deepens. It was claimed last night that Dr Who was only created a Time Lord after making a loan to the Labour Party. Said one disgruntled Dalek, 'Dr Who lent the Prime Minister his Tardis so that Tony could go back in time and regenerate himself by turning into Mrs Thatcher.' A spokesman for the Time Lord said, 'I really can't remember the circumstances of the loan. It was a long time in the future.'' The article also prints a small picture of Billie Piper - with the caption 'excuse to put in picture of
Billie Piper.'

The Express and Echo Express and Echo says that "Hollie Richards is celebrating after her design skills were recognised in a local competition. The 10-year-old, from Kenton, took part in a plate painting competition run by Earth, Paint & Fire at Powderham, near Exeter. Children were invited to submit designs based around the new Dr Who TV series. For her efforts, Hollie, from Kenton, received a sonic screwdriver. The second prize, a book on monsters went to Ellie Wrigley, from Cockwood, while joint third prize, an Easter egg, went to Finn Rawlings, from Kenton, and Niamh Stephenson, from Tiverton. 'We had some fantastic entries,' said Earth, Paint & Fire's owner Sue Maw. 'It was very difficult to pick the winners, we had lots of the tardis, some Daleks, and a very impressive Rose.'"

The Hackney Gazette notes that "From the moment Billie Piper as a possessed Rose Tyler looked at herself in the mirror and exclaimed: 'Oh my God, I'm a chav,' you just knew that Saturday night TV had at last moved out of the mundane, at least for 45 minutes, with the return of Dr Who. And with the night's top viewing figures of more than eight million it seems others agree with me that it's good to have the Doctor back, even if it is a new model. Russell T. Davies's dialogue and sub-plots building towards an overall link to the whole series give a spark to what would otherwise, let's face it, be all a bit daft. But with Dr Who now working on so many different levels it's compulsive viewing of a quality normally reserved for big boy's telly such as Messiah and Cracker."

The Daily Star said last week that "We fear that David Tennant got bitten by the werewolf in the last episode of Doctor Who. How else can the telly totty, 35, explain the beast-like fur covering the lower part of his mush, the deadly fangs and the cold, dead eyes of a killer? No wonder pal Kim Medcalf, 31, covered her neck after the opening night of her play Hay Fever at London's Theatre Royal Haymarket. Our man with the silver bullets said: 'He'd better shave. Rose won't get into the Tardis if he keeps this serial killer look.'"

What's On Stage says that "It's hard keeping up with the all the star-studded goings on at the Royal Court of late with the various activities surrounding its year-long 50th anniversary celebrations (See News, 11 Oct 2005). The latest announcement sees David Tennant, Helen McCrory and Ann-Marie Duff starring in the one night only tribute to Look Back in Anger on Monday 8 May 2006, 50 years to the day after John Osborne's classic had its world premiere at a then two-month-old Court under the English Stage Company. ... Tennant is Jimmy Porter, a part he played last year in Edinburgh and Bath. Duff (Days of Wine and Roses, The Daughter in Law, Collected Stories, TV's Shameless) is Alison and McCrory (As You Like It in the West End, Old Times, Five Gold Rings, Platonov) is her best friend Helena. Further casting has not yet been confirmed."

Newbury Today says that "A young Doctor Who fan proved he is the top 'Doc' when he appeared on a BBC TV programme about the series last night (Thursday). Sam Storey, aged 10, went head to head with the show's star 'Mickey', played by Noel Clarke, to see who knew the most about The Doctor. The children's show - Totally Doctor Who - saw Sam come up with the most difficult Doctor Who questions he could for 'Mickey', while the series' star hit back with a tough test of his own. But Sam won on the day and walked away with a whole host of Doctor Who goodies. Had the hours of watching the show, which is seen by around nine million viewers each week, and reading the books not paid off for the Brockhurst school pupil, Sam would have been forced to part with his prized possession - a Reading football shirt. The show was filmed at BBC Wales, in Cardiff, and Sam and mum Emily Storey enjoyed a studio tour and the chance to meet celebrities like Noel, as well as children's TV presenter Barney and Liz, who used to present Blue Peter."

Also: the Sci Fi Channel home page featured a video interview last week with Christopher Eccleston; Ananova says that "Time-travelling temptress Billie Piper has revealed she wouldn't say no to a spot of lady lovin"; theCBBC site has instructions for designing a Tardis t-shirt, with a printout-out guide;

(Thanks to Steve Tribe, Paul Engelberg, John Bowman, Peter Weaver, Chuck Foster, Stephen Brand, Richard Little, Andy Parish, Keith Armstrong, Cameron Yarde Jr, Ed Martin)




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Online - DWM - Series 2/28 - Press - Radio Times

UK Ratings and AI Report

Wednesday, 3 May 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Saturday's episode, School Reunion, achieved the joint highest AI (measuring audience appreciation) of the bank holiday weekend, with both the episode of Doctor Who and Five's CSI: New York both scoring 85. This is the same score as New Earth secured a couple of weeks ago, making these Series Two episodes two of the five most popular instalments since the return of the series (see OG news, 18 April).

Sunday evening's BBC Three repeat of School Reunion attracted an average of 599,400 viewers (4.1%), 57,200 up on the previous Sunday's Tooth and Claw repeat, and about 60,000 up on the Sunday repeat of Dalek on the same Sunday in 2005. School Reunion was BBC Three's second-placed programme on Sunday, behind the sitcom Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps, and was fifth in the multichannel top ten, behind two editions of The Simpsons, the Two Pints episode, and a Sky Sports programme.

We also have a detailed breakdown demonstrating the series' popularity among children in the UK: of School Reunion's 7.6m overnight average, 1.2m were under 16, an audience share of 55%. Doctor Who is by far the most-watched television programme among children, its nearest rival being BBC One's EastEnders (0.9m, 36.7%). The ITV1 competition on Saturday, the Hulk movie, reached only 0.3m under-16s (18.3%). Interestingly, the same chart shows that, while Totally Doctor Who's audience of 0.8m is equivalent to the figures for Blue Peter, only 0.3m (up to 19%) of the viewers for each children's show are actually children.

Meanwhile, the BARB consolidated ratings for the BBC One transmission ofTooth and Claw on Saturday 22 April are now available. With timeshifted viewings taken into account, the episode was watched by an average of 9.24m viewers, the tenth most watched programme of the week (behind five episodes of Coronation Street and four episodes of EastEnders) and the third highest television show. This is an increase of 0.62m on the previous week's episode and is 1.26m higher than the 7.98m achieved by World War Three on the same Saturday in 2005.

The second edition of Doctor Who Confidential, Fear Factor on Saturday 22 April, was BBC Three's top-rated show of the week, with 0.65m viewers, reaching number 16 in the week's multichannel chart. The Sunday evening repeat of Tooth and Claw charts at number eight for the channel with 0.56m.

Finally, ratings analysis in this week's edition of Broadcast concentrates on Doctor Who's performance on 22 April: 'The second episode of Doctor Who on BBC1 on Saturday at 7.15pm improved by almost a million to 8.8 million, a 42% share. This was thanks in part to a strong lead-in from the big FA Cup semi-final between Chelsea and Liverpool from 4.50pm which attracted 6.5 million, a 43% share. The previous week's opening episode was hamstrung by Strictly Dance Fever's poor 3.8 million/22% and by ITV1's decision to offer a strong holiday movie, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, which took 4.9 million, enough to hit the Doctor's share. This week, by contrast, ITV1 pretty much conceded the night by starting with a repeat of Midsomer Murders from 6pm which had just 3.3 million/18% share.' (Thanks to 'Shaun Lyon', Steve Tribe)




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 2/28

School Reunion Overnight Ratings - Updated

Sunday, 30 April 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Early news of overnight viewing figures for Saturday's new Doctor Who episode School Reunion on BBC1 are in: an average of 7.6 million viewers watched the episode, with an average 39.8% audience share (peaking very briefly as high as 8.88 million viewers in the final five minutes according to the interval breakdowns.) While this is down over a million viewers from the overnights for the previous episode ("Tooth and Claw"), all of UK television experienced a downturn in ratings due to this weekend's bank holiday; Doctor Who was, in fact, in first place in Saturday's program schedule on all networks by both audience numbers and by share.

Meanwhile, the third episode of Doctor Who Confidential on BBC3 was viewed by an average of 565,800 viewers, with a 3.8% audience share, ranking #2 on the total Saturday night viewership on the non-terrestrial channels (behind a sporting event.) Many viewers noted that the BBC3 broadcast started approximately one minute prior to the end of the episode on BBC1, though this likely did not affect the ratings. More details soon. (Thanks to 'Shaun Lyon')




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 2/28