Tuesday Set ReportBookmark and Share

Wednesday, 16 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The following is a set report from an Outpost Gallifrey fan correspondent, Melanie Hill, from filming done yesterday, 15 November, on episodes 5 and 6 which are being filmed now. Click on the spoiler tag to read it. (With thanks to Melanie Hill and the TIMELESS group...)
Went down there today and saw some interesting stuff! The set was under a railway bridge and involved a burnt out car, which they are setting alight when it gets dark, some soldiers in modern (I think, but I am no expert!) cammo, sand bags and a barrier, some old looking street lights and Mickey!

The dialogue was as follows...

Army truck with gun turret moves along the road and is ushered under the barrier, which closes behind it. Camera moves to Mickey who is moving up the road, following the path of the truck.
Mickey: " sorry mate" (or words to that effects, couldn't quite catch it)
Soldier: "no problem mate, curfew doesn't start till ten"
Mickey: "Curfew? There's a curfew?"
Soldier: "yeah, where have you been living? Up with the toffs? 
Mickey: "I wish". 

I overheard that the bridge above and the backdrop will be CGI'd to show the "toffs" part of the city. On the fence next to the burnt out car is a sign saying "Cybus Industries", and underneath it says "commercial properties to let". The sign has a logo for Cybus on it, it is a stylised "C", in grey, with a circle around it. On the bottom left hand corner is another very small circle attached to the larger circle, a bit like a chain link (looked like you could make the logo into a necklace and link it to a chain with this circle, although it would be hanging upside down and askew if you did. This is for descriptive purposes only!)

I recognised the "C" on the logo as being the same "C" as displayed on the chest of the Cybermen, so I am pretty sure they are filming the Cybermen episode! Very exciting!

On the set I was lucky enough to have a good chat with Julian Luxton, who directed 8 episodes of the first season [as assistant director], and is apparently doing ten this season! He had a lot to say for himself. He has confirmed that David Tennant will NOT have a Scottish accent! He will sound as he did when we saw the regeneration. Julian said "it is possible to tell he is from Scotland, but he is not using his speaking voice. Sometimes you can tell where he is from, but it is only occasionally." This is essentially what RTD has been saying, but Julian confirmed absolutely that it is not a Scottish accent, more of a slight lilt.

So that was my afternoon! I spoke to Noel, met some lovely people in the way of set designers etc, and had a great time chatting to Julian, who was incredibly nice and I even got me a bit of the set! I am now the proud owner of a genuine Doctor Who prop, from the set of the new series, in the form of a piece of fake barbed wire! Not exactly spectacular but I will treasure it all the same.




FILTER: - Production - Series 2/28

Weekend Press ClipsBookmark and Share

Tuesday, 15 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The official Doctor Who website today has mentioned the Doctor Who: Regeneration documentary on BBC Radio 2, which Outpost Gallifrey reported on October 28 (see our news archives). As a reminder from our report: "The new documentary from the radio channel, which earlier this year presented the two-part documentary 'Project: WHO', examines how this year's adventures of the Time Lord became the most talked about television event of 2005. Just how significant was the departure of Christopher Eccleston to the programme and its production team? Has the success of 'Doctor Who' changed the battleground of Saturday night television? And is the TARDIS safe in David Tennant's hands?" It airs on BBC Radio 2 on Tuesday 20 December at 8:33pm.

The Daily Star reported Saturday that Doctor Who fans in England "want to exterminate show bosses over the Timelord's new Scottish twang. English websites have been bombarded with complaints over claims the new Doctor, Scots-born David Tennant, 34, speaks in his native accent in the next episodes. Tennant sounded English during his only appearance in the show so far at the end of the last series. Insiders have let slip he will have a Scottish accent when the show returns at Christmas. One fan wrote: 'Doctor Who can't keep changing his accent.'"

Christopher Eccleston is the narrator for BBC Two's "Dubai Dreams", as listed at the BBC2 website. The program is on Monday nights.

Peter Davison Peter Davison is recording a third series of his Radio 4 comedy "Rigor Mortis". His co-star from season one of this series, Tracey Anne-Oberman, is guest starring in the forthcoming series of Doctor Who.

On Monday, Terry Wogan contributed to the forthcoming "Children in Need" charity by offering a prize of " a once in lifetime experience for two lucky whovians to visit the set of the new series in March 2006 to meet the cast, David Tennant in particular and watch the filming," according to our correspondent. The prize was won on Monday morning for over five thousand pounds. Also taking place this weekend during the "Children in Need" appeal: Terry Molloy will join the Hyde Fundraisers to present a cheque which includes the contribution from the recent Trial of Davrosshow held last July. (Hyde Fundraisers tells us that this may be purely a regional opt-out or may even be part of the national opt-in for Manchester.)

The latest issue of Ultimate DVD magazine contains a feature on the Doctor Who Series One Boxed Set commentary, profiling the taping of the commentary for "The Long Game". "I have a tendency to finish watghing a good film and go straight on to the Director's Commentary," says Christine Adams (Cathica), "which I'm actually starting to realize is not always the best idea." Bruno Langley, who says he gets four letters a day about Doctor Who, discusses the increased security getting into the building and says his character is "a bit of a wimp". Director Brian Grant says that "Shooting's easy. Storytelling, it's always about how good or bad the script is, and then you're dealing with logistics... how much money you've got, how much time you've got. Never enough time." Also interviewed is Paul Vanezis, one of the team who put the release together, about the extras including the 'Confidential' documentaries. "I don't think it has to be definitive; what it has to be is really, really informative and it's got to be entertaining. So you've got the entertainment element from the Confidential material, and the gritty behind the scenes footage and then you've got slightly more considered features like behind-the-scenes of the destruction of Big Ben..." The article also notes that there are writing features and video diaries, including an 'on set with Billie Piper' diary. John Barrowman is also interviewed in a feature that mentions that he's excited about the forthcoming "Torchwood": "I've said to Russell tha there's so many things we can play with - Jack has lost part of his memory, and we haven't found out why he lost it. It's a big part of his character."

MSN News asks, "Have we seen the last of Rachel Stevens' pop career? The former S Club star lost out to Billie Piper when she went for the role of Rose Tyler, the Time Lord's sidekick in the recent series of Doctor Who, but she may yet do a spot of time traveling. Rachel has auditioned for Torchwood, the spin-off of the hit BBC sci-fi series and she's keen to leave music behind." Interestingly, the article quotes Stevens as saying, "I've been called back for a meeting about a permanent role in 'Torchwood' [a 'Doctor Who' spin-off]," according to an interview with the singer in New! magazine. "I so hope I get it as I'm sick of being attacked for my music."

icWales reports that the TARDIS has been spotted in South Wales filming for the new show. "David Tennant - who takes over from Christopher Eccleston - and Billie Piper, who plays the Doctor's sidekick Rose Tyler, spent Tuesday filming scenes near The Riverfront arts centre, in Newport, on the banks of the River Usk. A BBC spokeswoman said: 'We wanted a location that looked like a stretch of the Thames in London. It's the first of a two-part storyline. The new series will be shown next spring.'"

The Northern Echo on 14 November covered the Dimensions 2005 convention last weekend in Stockton. "About 400 people attended the two-day convention at the Swallow Hotel from as far afield as the US and, while some chose to keep their adoration of the show low key, others went all out to express their devotion. Wearing copies of their favourite Dr Who costumes, fans paraded in long coats, stripy scarves, floppy hats and even a PVC suit. But Thelma Loane, from Newcastle, stole the show with her home-made replica of Peter Davison's Dr Who outfit, comprising red stripe trousers, cricket jumper, long cream coat and hat. Some of the famous faces making an appearance at the weekend included Davison, Annette Badland, John Schwab and Bonnie Langford. Lindsay Johnson, 21, a student at University of York, and her boyfriend Gil Williams, 20, from Wales, met a year ago after making contact on a Dr Who website. At the weekend, they wore costumes she had made. She wore a black and cerise pink PVC short skirt and jacket to recreate the 1960s character Zoe, and he wore a black velvet cape and dinner jacket in honour of his favourite doctor, John Pertwee. Mr Williams, said: "This is my first time at a convention, but Lindsay has travelled to quite a few of them. We both love Dr Who and it is so nice to come here and be around other people who feel the same." Miss Johnson said she believed Dr Who still had such a huge following because it was a lighthearted show that provided escapism and had not become dated. "I'm a huge fan, but Dr Who fans are not necessarily strange or anything, " she said. "In everyday life, no one would guess I was a Dr Who fan. There is no aura around me and I'm not geeky. I did just get some strange looks, however, when I nipped out to get some money from the cash machine." The Evening Gazette also mentioned the event, including briefly speaking to David Gooderson, who played one of the incarnations of Davros. "It's amazing. Some of these people know more about what work we did nearly 40 years ago than we do."

Newsquest Media Group interviews two fans who have exterminated their "humble garden shed - and replaced by something more out of this world. Dr Who fans Jennifer and Miles Wilkinson have had a garden shed made to look like the Tardis from the long-running science fiction show. As any Doctor Who fan knows, it is impossible to specify the internal dimensions of the time machine - which is in the shape of a blue British police box. But the couple, from Redcar, are confident there should be enough room for their patio furniture. 'We wanted a little shed to put bits and pieces in, and we thought about this when the last series of Dr Who was on,' said Mrs Wilkinson. 'We are old enough to have watched the first series when it was out in black and white, and have been fans ever since. Our seven-year-old granddaughter lives away, so she hasn't seen the shed yet. We are not telling her so it will be a surprise when she visits. She is a fan of the series as well, except the frightening parts of course.'"

The same paper on 14 November noted that "Doctor Who's most dangerous foe, a Dalek, has made a big entrance in Swindon this week. But, rather than exterminating, it was here to educate, as part of a talk about computer-generated special effects at the British Computer Society headquarters in the town. The visit was part of the society's continuing work to demonstrate the benefits of computing and information technology. Gone are the days when visual effects relied on unrealistic Styrofoam explosions, clumsy animation or old egg boxes.Today, computer animation is widely used. The continuing advancements in technology are evident in the latest Doctor Who series, especially when viewed alongside the dated episodes of the 1970s and '80s. Dave Throssell, of Mill TV, which does special effects work include those seen in the new series of Doctor Who, said: 'Effects that were ground-breaking when Doctor Who first aired won't cut it with today's audience and that is where we came in. By providing state-of-the-art effects Doctor Who was given a new lease of life for a modern audience.'"

The Guardian on 14 November said that "the trouble with television is that it can't stop shoving liberal values down our throats." As noted in the article, "This teaching of moral values is spreading across the TV drama spectrum. The wards of Holby City now live by the same principles, as do the cops at Sun Hill. Even Billie and the Doctor had to learn this time around, in a way that Tom Baker would never have done, that 'Daleks have feelings too', and 'you can travel in time but you mustn't forget your family'. It seems there's nowhere in time or space, or the TV schedule, that can fully escape what they call in American sitcom script meetings 'hugs and learning'."

The New Statesman on Monday discussed Billie Piper's Shakespeare foray in BBC1's "Much Ado About Nothing". "I have been thinking about Billie Piper, and not in that way either. Five years ago, she was an ex-teenybopper, most famous for being the one attractive symptom of Chris Evans's post-adolescence crisis. But against expectations, credibility began to consolidate around her. When the BBC began its series of Canterbury Tales updates, it led off with The Miller's Tale, in which Piper brilliantly played the Miller's wife. When it regenerated Dr Who, its star turned out to be not the here-today-and-regenerated-tomorrow Christopher Ecclestone, but his earthly, earthy sidekick, Rose. Now Piper has become the star turn in the first instalment of the BBC's new Shakespeare project... This is not to say that she is the only good thing in the agreeable Much Ado About Nothing. Piper plays Hero, daughter of Leonard (Martin Jarvis), the show's producer, who has nepotistically appointed her as weather girl. Hero may not be the brightest isobar on the chart, but she has a heart quite big enough to be trampled on. Piper plays her with fetching non-virginal innocence and then, having been given a rather stronger fifth act than the one Shakespeare gave his boy-actresses, turns on her two suitors. This Hero is a truly modern heroine, whose happy ending is to refuse to go up the aisle with anyone."

The Alien Online interviews Telos publisher David Howe about the new "Back to the Vortex" book: "We knew we wanted to publish a guide to the new series of Doctor Who almost as soon as the new series was announced. Telos has a long history of doing several unofficial guide books to various series in the past including Doctor Who itself. So as soon as we heard the new series was coming along we thought we'd do a guide." The full interview is available at the website (and, in full disclosure, the book is written by this site's editor.)

In Australia, Sunday's grand finale of ABC-TV's "Einstein Factor" quiz was won by a contestant, David Campbell, with his specialty topic, "The television series Doctor Who 1963 to 1989". As well as answering 15 questions on his topic (15 out of 15), he out-answered his opponents on the general knowledge questions, according to ABC.net. Doctor Who has also been getting a bit of attention on other ABC programs: last week's episode of Collectors spoke to Mark Damon about his collection of Doctor Who memorabilia and visited a meeting of his local Doctor Who fan club, and earlier in the year "How the Quest Was Won" visited a meeting of a different local club and included a police box prop and Daleks.

Some various news bits in the media: there's more coverage of Tom Baker's BBC1 narration on Thursday night at Digital SpyManchester Online; while the Independent covers the BBC7 radio broadcast of the Big Finish/BBCi audio "Shada" (see our November 11 news item); Bruno Langley has a new role according to his agent's site, as Jason Parker in BBC's Dalziel and Pascoe (the site is located here); Wednesday's Guardian mentions that a Dalek from the 1970s will be auctioned off at Bonhams in Kensington.

(Thanks to Paul Engelberg, Steve Tribe, John Bowman, Aadil Bashir, Paul Kennedy, Ben Rawson-Jones, Peter Weaver, Paul Hayes, Kat Williams, Kevin Taylor, and Faiz Rehman)




FILTER: - Online - Press

Mad Norwegian UpdateBookmark and Share

Tuesday, 15 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Mad Norwegian Press has posted details of two forthcoming books due out soon. AHistory: An Unauthorized History of Doctor Who is Lance Parkin's update of his original Doctor Who history book, formally stated as covering the whole of the "Doctor Who" TV series up through the 2005 season starring Christopher Eccleston; the Virgin and BBC Books up through "The Gallifrey Chronicles"; all of the Telos novellas; the Big Finish "Doctor Who" audio range up through "Terror Firma." About Time: Volume 1 by Tat Wood and Lawrence Miles covers seasons 1 to 3 of the series, "focusing on the William Hartnell era of 'Doctor Who' in mind-bending detail. In addition to the usual concerns such as the TV show’s continuity (alien races, the Doctor’s abilities, etc.) and lore (anecdotal, "Did You Know?"-style material), authors Lawrence Miles and Tat Wood will examine each Hartnell story in the context of the year/historical period it was produced, determining just how topical the stories were." The cover illustrations for each are below; click on each thumbnail for a larger version.




FILTER: - Books

Big Finish UpdateBookmark and Share

Tuesday, 15 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Big Finish has some news about recent developments. The Gallifreyseries, announced in Doctor Who Magazine, "will pick-up the story [from the end of Season Two] a few weeks later. As civil war rages across the planet, the Capitol lies in ruins and the dark plans of Pandora, the original Imperiatrix, edge closer towards fruition." It corrects a few notes from DWM including mentioning that Justin Richards' story is called Mindbomb (not "Minbomb") and Paul Sutton's has been retitled Appropriation. The series will be produced and directed by Gary Russell, with covers by Lee Binding and post-production and music by David Darlington. The site posts the cover of the fourth chapter of the Cyberman miniseries,Telos (which is also on the Outpost's Releases page); the cast list of the first part, Scorpius is posted at the site as well (it was deliberately left out of the CD release). There is also new cast information on both The Settling and Night Thoughts, releases due early next year (also on the Releases page here).




FILTER: - Audio - DWM

More on Piper's FutureBookmark and Share

Tuesday, 15 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

There is more confusion regarding Billie Piper's future on Doctor Who beyond the end of the series. As we previously reported, the Mirror stated over this past weekend that she would be leaving the series at the end of this coming season; the BBC issued a simple statement of "No comment" in reply.
Now, in an 'exclusive' in this past Sunday's Daily Star, the paper reports that Piper has "laughed off" reports that she is quitting the show, quoting her as saying she would never let Davies or the show down as she is so grateful to both. They also claim, via an alleged friend of Piper, that she has already signed a contract to do a third series. The article quotes a 'friend' as stating that Piper is already under contract for a third series, even though it has been stated elsewhere that this is not the case. ITN has also picked up the story, directly quoting Piper as calling the rumours "rubbish," though not offering clues about where this comment comes from. Yet ITV says that Billie "squashes Dr Who rumours" but intimates that it actually comes from a reporter asking Piper as she left a restaurant Saturday night.
Meanwhile, in a comment posted on an Internet forum at AllSpark, an unnamed source who identifies themselves as working on the series describes the situation thus: "As of me leaving work on Friday night, she's probably not going. She's not signed a contract for season 3, but then she only signed her contract for season 2 about two months after they started filming, so don't read too much into that. We're hopeful we'll get her, but she does have a lot of tempting offers on the table. I think she will be in season 3, but if she's there for the whole thing or just some of it is something way from being decided. The bit about us already holding auditions for a replacement is bollocks though. We have enough work on without auditioning people eight months before we'd actually want them."
The story has also been reported at BBC NewsYahoo NewsRTE; meanwhile the Daily Star reported that this week's OK! Celebrity Chart has Billie Piper at #8, noting "Billie slams rumours she's set to quit her role as Doctor Who sidekick Rose Tyler".




FILTER: - People

BBC on Billie Piper Report: No CommentBookmark and Share

Saturday, 12 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

BBC News reports that the BBC has "declined to comment" on reports that Billie Piper will be leaving the series at the end of this forthcoming second season. Says a BBC spokesperson, "We are not commenting on the third series - we are still working on the second series. Rose has a whole new journey and a fantastic set of adventures to go on with the brand new Doctor, starting in the special on Christmas Day. Viewers will then see them return in a host of scary and exciting stories in a new series next year." Careful-eyed readers will note that this does not constitute a denial about the story, which first appeared overnight in the Mirror newspaper.
Meanwhile, at right is the cover of the Mirror this morning, with the story about Billie Piper prominently figuring on the lower half of the front page.
Today's Daily Record also covers the news item, with more comments from a BBC "source" in their article. "The BBC are auditioning other girls to take over because they want the next actress lined up when they announce Billie's departure," this source tells the Record. "The casting people have been conducting secret auditions with a very small number of actresses and keeping it very, very quiet. They are calling girls in for screen tests one at a time and making sure they never bump into any of the other candidates. They've told all of them that if any names leak they'll be struck off the list."
Update: Additional news sources now reporting this include CBBC News,South Wales EchoUnited Press InternationalPittsburgh Tribune-Review,WebIndiaDigital Spy (second story here),NowPlayingMagScifi.comDark HorizonsMonsters and Critics,New Kerala India. We'll keep you updated with further developments (with thanks as always to Steve Tribe and Paul Engelberg for updated reports)




FILTER: - People - Press

Tom Baker, Continuity AnnouncerBookmark and Share

Saturday, 12 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Tom Baker will make his debut as a continuity announcer on BBC1 this coming Thursday evening, 17 November, according to a report by the UK Press Association. As a one-off to mark the return of comedy series "Little Britain" that night, of which he is the narrator, Baker will introduce shows between 7pm and 9.30pm to viewers, using off-the-wall announcements penned by "Little Britain" creators Matt Lucas and David Walliams, rather than the more formal introductions usually favoured by the BBC. Says a BBC spokesperson, "We've gone for a change with Tom Baker because it's such a special line-up." It is believed to be the first time a celebrity has been used as a continuity announcer by the BBC, and Baker will presumably be making the programme introductions off-screen as do the usual announcers. According to the Press Association report, he will start by introducing "The Great Big Bid" as part of the lead-up to the following evening's "Children In Need" (which of course has a Doctor Who component). Among his introductions will be such sayings as "but first it's time for the Great Big Bid. Oh mah sweet potatoes!" and "let's see what the poor people are up to in the first of two visits this evening to the EastEnder".
Update: Also covered in the press at BBC NewsThe Observer. (Thanks to John Bowman)




FILTER: - Tom Baker

Brief Press UpdateBookmark and Share

Friday, 11 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

A couple of press outlets have reported the names of episodes 5 and 6 as being "Nine Lives" and "School's Out". This is actually a confusion based on the fact that the writer, Tom MacRae, has written these series in the past; they are not episodes of this show, but television series in their own right.

The South Wales Echo reports on filming for episodes 5 and 6, taking place along the banks of the River Usk near the Riverfronts Arts Centre. A BBC spokeswoman said: "We wanted a location that looked like a stretch of the Thames in London."

There's been a ton of press coverage over the past day regarding the revelation of the designs of the Cybermen, most of which has been directly from the BBC press release. News coverage online includes the Daily RecordCBBC NewsThe Register4RFVWaveGuideHerts Essex NewsEntertainmentwiseAnanovaSky Showbiz,This is London,RTEDigital SpyThe MirrorThe Daily Mail. Says the Times about the return: "Viewers, while terrified, could not help noticing in the past that the low tech Cybermen appeared to be 70 per cent Bacofoil with a car lamp stuck on their helmets. They have been redesigned by the same experts who reinvented the Daleks and previously worked on films including Hellraiser II."

The Scottish TV/Scotland Today site has an interview with Stephen Fry, who's writing an episode of the series this year. "I've done a strange thing," he tells the site, "I've never done anything quite like it, I've written an episode of Dr Who. We are bound by all kinds of secrecy, I can tell you that it deals with a well-known British legend which has alien origins rather than just folklore origins. And that one of the most exciting moments of my life was starting the first page and writing 'Exterior - The Tardis. The Tardis materialises on the surface of a strange planet.' You write that and you think 'I can't believe I have just written that.' As one of the absolutely original Dr Who generation - I can remember the very first episode - and being hooked from that moment on."

According to Media Guardian today, 'Little Britain star David Walliams wants to ditch his "laydee" clothes and step into the Tardis once David Tennant has finished his tenure. "I'd like to take over as Doctor Who. I promise not to make it camp," he promises. Daily Express P19'.

Says the week's Metro Green Room, p9: "New Dr Who star David Tennant is hoping to have the same love god status as his predecessor Christopher Eccleston. He said: 'I hear he had a huge gay following. It had better happen to me too.'" Meanwhile on page 13, they report on the Cybermen return...

According to BBC News, Sophie Okonedo (who played Alison in "The Scream of the Shalka") has been named best female performer at the Screen Nation Film and Television Awards. The 36-year-old star received the award at the ceremony in London honouring Black British artists for her Oscar nominated role in Hotel Rwanda.

(Thanks to Paul Engelberg, Steve Tribe, Chuck Foster, John Bowman, Peter Weaver, John Kilbride)




FILTER: - Production - Series 2/28 - Press

McGann's War of the WorldsBookmark and Share

Friday, 11 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Paul McGann narrates "War Of The Worlds - The Real Story" on the UK National Geographic Channel, Sunday 13th November at 22.00, Monday 14th November at 21.00 and Friday 18th November 16.00. "Paul McGann (the eighth Doctor) is to narrate the history of what happened when Orson Welles broadcast a spoof alien invasion programme on US radio. On October 30, 1938, Orson Welles put on a dramatic, very well acted radio play that put the nation into a perilous frenzy. And so began the biggest controversy of the decade as millions of Americans shrieked in terror as to what they thought was the World coming to an end! It changed how we approached radio and television forever. An industry was also born including movies (Tom Cruise), books and Jeff Wayne’s seminal album (narrated by Richard Burton). In this one-hour long special, Jeff Wayne talks about the phenomenon that terrified a nation and that inspired his recording. Also popular commentator, Mark Webster delivers his revealing insights into the radio production that shocked the world. This programme examines the frailty of the World in 1938, its real horrors, and the fallout of Welles popularity in which he never recovered. The real horror of the 1930’s only escalated with this broadcast. The World was about to enter into a new phase of terror in which the War Of The Worlds Mercury Theatre broadcast was simply the metaphor of what was to come – World War II and the rise of the Third Reich. This programme explains much of the hysteria caused by this broadcast, the scandal that followed, and the question of whether it could ever happened again." (Thanks to Marc Ollington)




FILTER: - People

Quick Reads Dr Who BookBookmark and Share

Friday, 11 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Friday's edition of The Bookseller reports on the 'Quick Reads initiative', a campaign sponsored by the Department for Education and Skills and others and intended to encourage reading among adults with low reading ages and people with little time to read. The books will retail at £2.99, are written by high-profile authors and will be published in two waves in March (for World Book Day) and in May (for Adult Learner's Week). Among the May releases will be "a title based on Dr Who"; it seems likely that this new novel will feature the Tenth Doctor and be written by one of the new series novel or television authors. More information will soon be available at Quick Reads, the Literacy Trust and World Book Day.
Meanwhile, as reported in The Bookseller, the Doctor Who Annual 2006has moved into the top ten in children's books charts, with a further rise in sales. The Panini publication is now at number ten (up from 14 last week) in the list, having sold 4,272 copies in the seven days to 29 October (up from 3,432 in the seven days to 22 October). This week's chart is dominated by the Beano Annual and Lemony Snicket, each with sales of around 12,000 units.




FILTER: - Books