BBC One: Christmas Invasion Repeat 17 December 4:25PM

Monday, 4 December 2006 - Reported by Benjamin Elliott
The Radio Times online shows The Christmas Invasion scheduled to air on BBC One (all regions) at 4:25PM GMT on Sunday 17 December. This marks the first time that a Doctor Who episode has been repeated on BBC One since Planet of the Daleks was shown in 1993, and the first ever repeat of a new series episode on the programme's home channel.




FILTER: - Specials - Radio Times - Broadcasting

CBC Canada: Impossible Planet Screening December 4th

Monday, 4 December 2006 - Reported by DWNP Archive
Canada's CBC Television online shows Eps 8 - The Impossible Planet (Part 1) scheduled to air on CBC at 8PM EST tonight (December 4th) across Canada. The CBC is airing all of Series 2 every Monday. cbc.ca/doctorwho




FILTER: - Canada - Series 2/28 - Broadcasting

Spain: TVE Clan Airing Series 1

Saturday, 2 December 2006 - Reported by Benjamin Elliott
Spanish public broadcaster TVE Clan began airing Series 1 of Doctor Who on its kids oriented digital terrestrial channel TVE Clan on 24 November. Episodes are airing weeknights at 8:15PM Central European Time, with repeats on the weekend.




FILTER: - Series 1/27 - Broadcasting

BBC One Christmas trails begin

Saturday, 2 December 2006 - Reported by Anthony Weight
BBC One has broadcast its first generic trailer for its forthcoming Christmas season drama programming, debuting the promotion before Saturday 2nd December's episode of current Doctor Who slot-filler Robin Hood. (Coincidentally, an episode written by Paul Cornell and directed by Graeme Harper).

The trail, which highlights many BBC One drama programmes to be shown over the festive season, includes clips ofDavid Tennant and Catherine Tate from the forthcoming Christmas special The Runaway Bride. Also seen from the episode are several Robot Santas, similar to those featured in last year's The Christmas Invasion, and a brief clip of the TARDIS hovering at speed along a motorway.

The trailer also features some clips of Billie Piper in the forthcoming Philip Pullman adaptation The Ruby in the Smoke.

Update (Chuck Foster):
A second, longer trailer has also been broadcast at various times during the following week;
this extended version also includes a fleeting glimpse of the unmasked Santas in black, plus more of the Bride and the TARDIS-chase along the motorway.




FILTER: - Specials - Broadcasting

TARDIS Report: Early Week Coverage and Press

Wednesday, 28 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Doctor Who Worldwide

In Denmark, the national broadcast TV and radio station DR (Danmarks Radio) started today with Doctor Who at 11.00pm on their main tv station, DR1. There is nothing on DR's web page on the series, only a link to BBC's DW site and two DW books in Danish translation. There is a short description of the first episode and though no title is given, it is the first one, "Rose", that is being shown.

Finland now has a formal date and time for the start of Series 1 in the country on the YLE2 network: 10 September 2006 at 8.05pm.

According to This Week in Doctor Who, the first season of the new series (2005) Mexico and Latin America on the People + Arts channel. "People + Arts claims to be co-owned by the BBC and Discovery Channel. Episode 4 (Aliens Of London) is running this week. The schedule seems to be the same for Mexico and other countries, though they give the option to switch between versions. It is unclear how many countries this channel is available in, and whether it can be seen in South America. The website does not make it clear which time zone it is providing listings for. Based on the website, episodes premiere Fridays at 10PM, repeat Late Friday at 3AM, Saturday at 7AM, Wednesday at 10PM, and Late Wednesday at 3AM. Episodes should air weekly (with repeats) through Friday August 25 (or Wednesday August 23 if the source is right)."

UKTV Australia has added the following to their FAQ page: "Are there any plans to screen Doctor Who? Yes, UKTV will be screening the new series of Doctor Who in October this year." We're assuming for now that they mean the 13 Christopher Eccleston episodes from 2005. This would be the second showing of the episodes in Australia (well, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, maybe more - UKTV likes multiple airings). To date they have aired one time on ABC TV.

People

The tabloids' big story from today: "Billie Piper said today she will not take even 'a penny' from her multi-millionaire husband when they divorce. The Dr Who star said she is not interested in a slice of Chris Evans's 30 million fortune, insisting: 'I'm not taking a penny from him. I think that's disgusting.' Piper, 23, who has just been awarded a six-figure deal for her autobiography, said her greatest regret is not having invited her parents to her wedding to the Radio 2 presenter in Las Vegas in 2001. 'I regret it in retrospect and we didn't speak for a while, although they understand now that at the time I had to be selfish,' Piper tells Radio Times. 'I didn't want them to question it because in my head it was perfect, the first time in years I felt happy. Chris and I found each other when it could have gone badly for both of us and we saved each other from our worlds of madness.' ... Piper will quit Dr Who at the end of this series and said: 'The longer I stayed the more scared I'd be of leaving because it's so comfortable and nice.' Of her autobiography, she said: 'I hope it's an inspiration to young girls who constantly ask how I did it. It will be warts and all.'" Naturally, the papers have all followed this particular part of the story today with news reports at The SunEvening EchoDaily MailBBC NewsThe IndependentThe ScotsmanDaily RecordMirrorSkky ShowbizMetroAnanovaRTE,Entertainment WiseMegastarBelfast TelegraphThe TimesManchester Evening NewsYahoo News,UnisonContact MusicThis Is LondonIrish ExaminerBreaking NewsHello Magazine and other places.

The Mirror on 24 June said that "she's travelled the universe in the Tardis, but Billie Piper says she won't be jetting off to Hollywood any time soon. The Doctor Who actress insists she isn't tempted by the glamour of Tinseltown and would prefer to star in lowkey indie films. She said: 'There are lots of great movies coming out of the US but it's not something I'm ever really interested in.' What, even if a big role came up? She said: "Yes, I'm happy in the UK. I absolutely love it and I've finally got a great group of friends. I've got a lovely little flat and my work's here.'"

The latest BBC's It's Hot magazine (issue 53) mentions that: "Despite her saying otherwise, actress Billie Piper is rumoured to be swapping time travelling for a spot of chart topping. Billie, who plays Rose on Doctor Who, was famous yonks ago for shouty pop songs, but her new stuff is supposed to be a more grown up affair. Oh well, only time will tell." However, in the magazine's interview with her, in response to the queston 'Do you ever wish you were a pop star again?', she replies: "I've realised I shouldn't make music - I should be a fan. I'm the biggest music fan and I love all different types." On being asked if she could time travel in the TARDIS, where would she go and why, Billie comments: "I'd like to see what my 30s look like. Not too far ahead - we're talking about eight years down the line. I'd like to see what's going on in my life then. I think that would be really interesting."

Last week, Bruno Langley was on an internet radio station called 'The Soap Show', and he talked not only about the play he is currently starring in (A Taste of Honey), but about his role on last year's Doctor Who as Adam. Langley said he was too young to remember the original series, and that he felt Doctor Who was an institution. He said he likes fans, some are weird but others are very intelligent, so you get such a mix of people. He also talked of the fathers and sons who he often sees together when they go to meet him at stage doors - which he thought was great. He talked a bit about the actual filming of the episodes, and said that he is still in contact with the producers/writers, and that they text each other occasionally, though he doesn't think Adam will be back. He says they haven't asked him back, and he hasn't asked to be brought back, either. He said if they want him back then they'll ask him....which they haven't! He said he is happy just to sit and watch it now. Langley added that he is about to watch the first boxset DVDs as he missed a couple of eps, and that he'll get the DVDs of series 2 when they come out. He says he has only caught bits of the new seris due to work, but he says that the new series looks really good... as does David Tennant.

Fear Her - Aftermath

The Guardian: "So I'm on a train from Luton to London the other day, and at St Albans a woman in her 30s gets on with her son, who must be about eight or nine. Nice-looking kid. She turns out to be the mother from hell, though. She's yabbering away on her phone to someone, so he goes to get his Game Boy out of her bag. But then she has a right old go at the poor lad for going in her bag without asking. He says he's sorry, she was on the phone and he thought it would be OK. But no, it isn't OK, and now he's being cheeky, so that means another bollocking. The whole thing snowballs out of control: she's hollering at him, telling him what a bad boy he is. Then it's time to pronounce sentence for all his heinous crimes, and guess what his punishment is? No Doctor Who (BBC1, Saturday), that's what, which is about as bad a punishment you can give a child right now. And for a lot of adults, too. He's been dead strong up to this point. But as the full meaning of missing Doctor Who sinks in, his chin wobbles a bit, then his face does that terrible melting thing, and soon he's sobbing, silently and bravely. His mum, meanwhile, is back on the phone, nattering away to her mate. I know I should have told him he could come round mine to watch it, or at least secretly got his address so I could send him the DVD. And certainly I should have alerted social services, so that he could be removed from his evil devil-mother. But of course, pathetically, I did none of those things, onaire husband when they divorceper instead. It turned out to be a great episode, too. ... It's absolutely terrifying: kids must be a lot more robust these days than they were in my day. I'm watching it from behind the sofa and I'm 41. ... Maybe there was another more sinister reason than the Game Boy incident. Surely these events can't be unconnected. Maybe I wasn't on a train to Kings Cross Thameslink at all, but a train into the future (it did seem remarkably spacious). And why have I just picked up a pencil and now find myself involuntarily (but perfectly) drawing evil train woman ... ? [Cue Doctor Who music.]"

The Financial Times says that "Doctor Who continues to be a wondrous thing, Russell T. Davies and his collaborators having managed to retain the playful spirit of the original while creating storylines consistently smarter and even more inventive than previous incarnations of the show. Tonight's episode sees the Doctor and Rose visiting London before the 2012 Olympics. As well as paying homage to The Exorcist, Paperhouse, ET and The Shining, it proves that Huw Edwards's decision to make his living as a newsreader was no loss to acting."

Other Media Items

The official site discusses the BBC Three repeats starting next week, mentioned last week on Outpost Gallifrey (and seen in our calendar on the left side of this news page).

CBBC has Lizo's early review/preview of "Army of Ghosts". "Sadly, the end is in sight for this series of Dr Who. Like last year, it ends with a two part story of which Army of Ghosts is the first. The focus is on Rose from the very start, and there's no doubt that what she has to say will shock many of you. And then things come full circle. In this season's first episode, Rose said good bye with her ruck sack. Now she's back, with the bag full of washing for Jackie. But things are very different on Earth, with people across the planet welcoming back what they believe are the ghosts of their loved ones. Are they really ghosts, and how is the mysterious Torchwood involved? Not to mention a mysterious sphere that doesn't even seem exist. The Doctor and Rose want to get to the bottom of things. But they're facing old enemies who put the whole planet in danger. Phew, things really rattle along in this episode, with Rose's story especially appearing to head for its conclusion. Which, of course, ties in with the news that Billie Piper will be leaving the series after the last two episodes. But with Russell T Davies writing the script there's bucketfuls of humour. Chat show host Trisha and Peggy from EastEnders make hilarious appearances. But the story he's telling is a serious one. There are quite a few deaths before the final credits roll, as well as a beautifully played scene where Rose and Jackie talk about the future. And that's what at this heart of this episode. Will Rose choose to stay with the Doctor forever, and should she? And will that choice be taken away from her? Of course, there's a huge amount of action too as things ramp up for the end of the second series. But be prepared for a quite a few shocks as well! Mention should also be made of composer Murray Gold's musical score, which really excels here. And overall it's a splendid story which leaves us on a great cliff hanger for the last episode Doomsday. Four out of Five."

The Daleks invaded Norfolk as hundreds of fans turned out to see Colin Baker, Terry Molloy, Deborah Watling and to put the marker down in the Guinness Book for the largest gathering of fan built Daleks in the UK. BBC Norfolk was there and features interviews (audio) with Colin, Terry and Deborah as well as new video content. Meanwhile, the Eastern Daily Press covered the event: "Hundreds of fans swarmed to the streets of Holt, which are more used to well-heeled shoppers than raygun-wielding sci-fi space invaders. The event was a fund-raising effort helping raise money for the East Anglian Air Ambulance, and helping to put Holt on the intergalactic map. Scores of daleks turned up, roaming around the streets and courtyards, squawking at firing at wide-eyed children, launching attacks on targets including a tardis police box, and even taking part in a supermarket trolley dash. Amid the mayhem, calmly signing autographs, were stars of the popular television series, currently enjoying a revival. Colin Baker, the sixth doctor from 1983-86, said the success of the show was the way it had updated itself with special effects, and retained the ability to 'scare the living daylights out of children.' Scientific journalist Paul Parsons, included a 'hiding behind the sofa' chapter in his book The Science of Dr Who, admitted he used to be petrified of the daleks and reckoned their 'facelessness' continued to make them scary. .. Early assistant Deborah Watling, said the strength of the storylines were a key factor, while actor Terry Molloy, who played dalek creator Davros, said the success was also down to the doctor's heroic role as an 'intergalactic Biggles.' Visitors included two cybermen and an 'alterntiave ninth doctor' Tristan Stopps from the Fourth Dimension Lords a Dr Who group based at Martham, whose members range from children to middle aged men, welcomed the Holt event which was 'overdue in Norfolk.' Organiser Nigel Pearce said the event, which filled a hole left by the carnival which was not being held this year due to lack of support, had gone well, and there were plans to hold it again next year."

The Sydney Morning Herald from Australia yesterday featured a story about the show in anticipation of the series' return on Saturday, July 8. "Doctor Who, the mysterious stranger who travels through time and space in a battered London police phone box, is a difficult character to define. As one of the most enigmatic characters in popular culture - along with film spy James Bond, sleuth Sherlock Holmes and Shakespeare's Hamlet - he has been played by many actors and interpreted in many ways. David Tennant is a British actor of rising acclaim, whose credits include Casanova and Blackpool. Wearing a dark brown pinstripe suit, brown overcoat and Converse sneakers, he is the 10th actor to portray the Time Lord and admits the Doctor is a hard man to master. 'He's not Hamlet or Benedick because they will always have the words they have,' Tennant says. 'It's not James Bond or Sherlock Holmes because each time somebody comes to one of those characters, the character is still who the character always is - James Bond will always be 'shaken not stirred', Sherlock Holmes will always be 'elementary', deerstalker and pipe.' So, who is Doctor Who? "Each actor gets to rewrite the rule book a little bit," Tennant says, and perhaps that's the beauty of it. ... Tennant says he agreed to take the role because of the pedigree of the creative team behind the revival of the series - notably, writer-producer Russell T. Davies (Queer as Folk) and writers Steven Moffatt (Coupling), Mark Gatiss (The League of Gentlemen) and Toby Whithouse (Hotel Babylon). 'They're the best writers you could possibly want and if the scripts are good, then the battle is half won already,' he says. ... Davies promised this season would be "more emotional" than the last, a departure from the classic structure of Doctor Who - simple morality plays wrapped in the distracting kitsch of period science fiction and peppered with MacGuffins and deus ex machina twists. 'I think one of the great things about the way the show has been reimagined is the relationship between the Doctor and Rose [his companion, played by Billie Piper], which is now a love story more than it was ever allowed to be before,' Tennant says. 'It's still not consummated - that's important because that's not the vibe - but the emotional back and forth is an important part of the show. I think we dip our toes into some new waters in this coming season.'" Doctor Who returns to the ABC on Saturday, July 8, at 7.30pm.

Other news: The Sun has a vaguely spoilerish preview of this weekend's episode; BlogCritics reviews "Fear Her";

(Thanks to Paul Engelberg, Peter Weaver, Paul Hayes, Adam Kirk, Mark Dando, Klaus Gramstrup, George Forth, and Benjamin Elliott)




FILTER: - Press - Radio Times - Broadcasting

Final Three Official BBC Episode Blurbs

Friday, 23 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Official promotion for the end of Series Two has begun, though on a small scale, with the BBC Press Office issuing Programme Information for Week 28 today and the previous two weeks over the past few days. Curiously, there have been no feature articles for the last three episodes, though they have been "highlights for the week" from BBC Television. The following are the three short blurbs for the final three episodes of Series Two.
Doctor Who: Fear Her
When the Tardis lands in 2012, the Doctor plans to show Rose the London Olympics. But on a nearby housing estate, a desperate mother is hiding her daughter's unearthly powers. Can the Doctor defeat the danger nestling at the heart of an ordinary British household? David Tennant plays the Doctor, Billie Piper plays Rose, Edna Doré plays Maeve and Nina Sosanya plays Trish.

Doctor Who: Army of Ghosts
The human race rejoices as the ghosts of loved ones return home in the latest adventure from the nation's favourite time traveller. But as the Doctor, Rose and Jackie investigate the Torchwood Tower, the whole of modern-day Earth threatens to fall to an almighty invasion force. David Tennant plays the Doctor, Billie Piper plays Rose, Camille Coduri plays Jackie Tyler and Tracy Ann Oberman plays Yvonne Hartman.

Doctor Who: Doomsday
It's the end of an epic journey as two mighty armies wage war across the Earth, with the human race caught in the middle. But as an unstoppable terror emerges from beneath Torchwood, the Doctor faces an even greater dilemma – does saving the world mean the death of Rose Tyler? David Tennant plays the Doctor and Billie Piper plays Rose.




FILTER: - Series 2/28 - Press - Broadcasting

Canada Gets Series Two in October

Friday, 16 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

CBC Television announced today that Canada will see series two of Doctor Who this coming October. "New Earth," the first episode of the new season, will premiere on Monday, October 9 at 8:00pm (8:30pm in Newfoundland); further episodes will likely air weekly on Monday nights. (Last season's episodes aired on Tuesdays.) More information about the network's fall schedules can be found here.




FILTER: - Canada - Series 2/28 - Broadcasting

Love & Monsters

Friday, 2 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The BBC Press Office issued Programme Information (link) for 17-23 June on Friday, with an interview with guest starMarc Warren leading the promotion for episode 10, Love & Monsters, to be aired on 17 June. The actor, who plays Elton Pope in Love & Monsters, notes that "Elton is looking for the Doctor, who he last saw when he was four years old when his mother died, and has been searching for him ever since. He meets a group of people who get together every week to talk about their sightings of the Doctor with an aim of trying to find him, and they become great friends." Warren says that he was "gobsmacked" when he first read the script - "it was all this Elton kid... I couldn't really believe it. It must be quite unusual for Doctor Who to have a [guest] part that's so central - but it definitely worked out well for me." Also released by the Press Office is the Programme Copy for the episode (link) which is reproduced below.
Doctor Who: Love & Monsters
Peter Kay, one of Britain's best-loved comedians, guest stars as the cold and powerful Victor Kennedy in the latest time-travelling adventure. An ordinary man called Elton becomes obsessed with the Doctor and Rose and their mysterious blue box. But when Elton's investigations bring him to the attention of the enigmatic Victor Kennedy, his harmless hobby suddenly plunges him into a living nightmare. David Tennant plays the Doctor, Billie Piper plays Rose, Peter Kay plays Victor Kennedy and Marc Warren plays Elton.




FILTER: - Series 2/28 - Broadcasting

TARDIS Report: The Week in Review

Friday, 2 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
Broadcasting

Finland will be the latest country to show Doctor Who. According to an email sent to an Outpost Gallifrey reader by the Head of Programming at YLE2 in Finland, "The first series will take off on YLE TV2 on Sunday 10. September at 20:05. We still have no news as to the second season. I hope we could tell you more sometime in June."

GMTV, the breakfast show on ITV1, has this week reported on Billie Piper's new film, 30 Things to Do..., noting that the actress will, as predicted, be returning to Doctor Who for Series Three, although the number of episodes is not yet known or decided. (A remarkably similar story about Series Two appeared at about the same time last year.) Piper was interviewed by Chris Moyles on BBC Radio 1 on Friday morning; the programme can be accessed on the BBC's Listen Again service (link here), which also has a photo gallery. Also on GMTV, Camille Coduri was a guest on Friday morning, promoting her new series, Pickles.

Billie Piper: The Biography

While the press was recently aflutter about Billie Piper writing her own autobiography at such a young age, there's already one about to hit shelves.Billie Piper - The Biography, written by Neil Simpson, is due out on October 2 in paperback from John Blake Publishing. "A massive star was reborn when Billie Piper took on the role of Rose Tyler in the BBC's smash revival of 'Doctor Who' in 2005. The 22-year-old was applauded as one of Britain's brightest and most popular actresses - collecting award-nominations and multi-million pound contracts along the way. Amazingly, this is the second time Billie has dominated her chosen profession. In 1998, she was the youngest solo artist to have a Number One single in Britain with 'Because We Want To'. She followed that up with two more Number One singles, a platinum-selling album, and as 'Britain's Britney' she was on the brink of conquering America. But Billie Piper has always been full of surprises. At the height of her pop fame she shocked fans by marrying former DJ Chris Evans and enjoying one of the longest - and allegedly booziest - celebrity honeymoons on record. In this, the first biography of the star, Neil Simpson explains why Billie turned her back on pop fame, how stalkers and false rumours nearly destroyed her and why her marriage to Chris ultimately unravelled. He examines how Billie reinvented herself as a newly single woman and one of Britain's hardest-working actresses. She wowed the critics in television adaptations of Chaucer and Shakespeare before winning the 'Doctor Who' job and today, with Hollywood calling and a new man in her life, she has never been happier. This is her amazing, inspiring story." The cover illustration is at right; click on the thumbnail for a larger version.

The Impossible Planet Pre-publicity

Tuesday's Radio Times, covering 3-9 June, has the last of four free sets of stickers, as well as the regular Doctor Who Watch feature, this week focusing on the Ood, which the Editor's letter warns "might put you off eating spaghetti bolognaise ever again". The article itself is a brief behind-the-scenes piece, with comments from Russell T Davies ("I loved inventing the Slitheen and Raxacoricofallapatorius and then I thought 'Why don't I just call something the Ood?' Ha ha ha ha!") and Neill Gorton: There's always a brief description in the script and for this story it was 'bald albino things with tentacles like a sea anemone rather than a mouth." The episode is, once again, one of the magazine's recommendations for the week ("a real behind-the-sofa classic") and for Saturday: "a terrific, pacy episode, reminiscent of Ridley Scott's Alien. If you're not on the edge of your seat (or behind the sofa) throughout, you must have nerves of steel." Next Thursday's Totally Doctor Who will, according to the listings, look at "how a Tardisode is made, plus MyAnna Buring discusses her role as Scooti" in The Impossible Planet. The show also features on the Letters page, this time with someone suggesting that the Doctor shouldn't need glasses because he "has access to technology that ... could correct his vision in a flash" - the reply notes that both the First and the Fifth Doctors occasionally wore glasses.

The official BBC Doctor Who website was updated on Tuesday lunchtime, the homepage featuring an Ood, with sound effects and some phrases from the episode's dialogue: "Don't turn around" and "And the Beast shall rise from the Pit." The episode guide entry for The Impossible Planet includes the usual photo gallery, with ten pictures concentrating on the Doctor, Rose and the guest cast. Last Saturday's site update for The Idiot's Lantern included the 'Next Time' trail and the eighth Tardisode.

Issue 5 of Doctor Who Adventures, officially released on Wednesday, also previews The Impossible Planet and The Satan Pit, with a two-page photo feature. "The Doctor likes impossible," says the article, "He's said it before. So finding himself far out on a space station on a planet that shouldn't exist, suspended in orbit around a Black Hole should keep him happy for a while, shouldn't it?"

Thursday's Totally Doctor Who (repeated Friday, Saturday and Monday on CBBC) as usual previewed this week's episode: the scene shown features Will Thorp as Toby being menaced by Gabriel Woolf's Voice of the Beast.

CBBC Newsround says of the episode, "This is a seriously scary episode featuring a growing menace, there are lots of shocks and it leaves us on a great cliff-hanger. It's probably my second favourite episode of the series so far (only narrowly beaten by Girl in the Fireplace). There's a lot of humour in this one too - Billie's first line of the episode is a classic. And there's a great gag from the Doctor towards the end. Presumably one of the reasons we haven't featured alien planets before is the relatively cheap cost of filming earthbound episodes. This story certainly doesn't seem any cheaper than others, and in fact the effects are some of the best seen so far, especially when The Doctor embarks on a dangerous voyage late in the episode. What will fans enjoy? Well, there's a little bit of info about the origins of the Tardis, but the best thing by far is the tenderness between The Doctor and Rose. This episode shows another dimension to their relationship and demonstrates how close they've become over the past 18 months. Great stuff. Four out of five."

BBC Books Sales Success (Again!)

The first three Tenth Doctor novels are now in upper reaches of the Top 20 Fiction Heatseekers chart compiled by Nielsen Bookscan for The Bookseller for a seventh week, this week going back up the chart. At Number 3 is The Stone Rose by Jacqueline Rayner, with unit sales in the week to 27 May of 2,564 and total sales of 21,237. The Resurrection Casket by Justin Richards is at Number 5, its week's sales standing at 2,530, its total sales at 18,423. Stephen Cole's The Feast of the Drowned is at Number 7 (2,272 week/17,951 total). Also entering the same chart, at Number 11, is Aliens and Enemies. This has sold 2,037 copies in its first week.

People

The Mirror has a feature about Billie Piper's career. "Just two years ago, she spent her time downing pints of lager in the pub, piling on the pounds and looking like she'd just rolled out of bed. But Billie Piper's down and out days are well and truly over. She's ditched the frumpy clothes, restyled the bird's nest of a hairdo, shed the excess weight and even got rid of husband Chris Evans. And the transformation from scruffbag to sex kitten has done wonders for the 23-year-old's career. After playing a huge part in the revival of BBC1's smash hit drama Doctor Who and winning critical acclaim for her portrayal of the Doc's sidekick Rose Tyler, Billie has become one of our hottest young talents. Today, she makes her big screen debut alongside Dougray Scott and Emilia Fox in Simon Shore's Things To Do Before You're 30. The story tells the tale of a group of people trying to live their complicated adult lives in 21st-century London, while desperately clinging on to their youth. Billie plays art student Vicky, the youngest of the gang, and she enjoyed every minute of filming. 'I always wanted to make movies,' she says. 'I feel totally at home in this job.' ... Her performance in The Canterbury Tales won rave reviews and alerted the team behind the new Doctor Who series, written by Russell T Davies. The show pulls in up to 10 million viewers and Billie has won a place in the nation's hearts. Last year, she scooped the National TV Award for Best Actress. 'I was shaking like a leaf,' she admits, 'and had to have a word with myself on the way to the stage because I thought I was going to cry. That would have been too embarrassing. It was a brilliant night, but I spent the whole evening in shock, chewing my nails.' Earlier this year, it was revealed that Billie - born Leanne Paul Piper - had bagged a multi-million pound deal to write her autobiography. The book, which is planned for a Christmas release, will detail her rise to fame as a teenager, the breakdown of her marriage to Chris and her astonishing success as an actress. ... These days, despite her new-found success, she remains level-headed and down to earth. She has displayed incredible maturity in the aftermath of her marriage to Chris and although she is now dating law student Amadu Sowe, she remains on good terms with her ex and the pair regularly meet up for coffee. 'Chris and I are pretty much inseparable and live opposite each other,' Billie says. 'It's an extraordinary situation that I don't expect anyone else to understand.' This summer, she'll be filming a new drama for the Beeb called Ruby In The Smoke with a string of other lucrative projects also lined up. But for now she's looking forward to the premiere of Things To Do Before You're 30. The film's producer Marc Samuelson was hugely impressed with her and wastes no opportunity to sing Billie's praises. 'She was a complete knockout,' he says. 'In the first meeting, she'd read the script, she was completely focused, very serious, very nice. She's perfect for the role. It's nice to discover that we knew exactly what we were doing.' It sounds like the perfect role for Billie. Her character in the film, Vicky, is a free spirit and up for a laugh. A girl with the world at her feet. Not unlike Billie herself." Hello Magazine and Morecambe Today also have brief articles and pictoral about the premiere, as does the Mirror which says "Billie Piper looks more girl next door than movie star as she arrives last night at the premiere of her new film in a simple black jacket, white T-shirt and black trousers. But the 23-year-old Dr Who actress looked happy with her casual outfit at the VIP London screening of her new Brit flick Things To Do Before You're 30. How about marry and divorce a millionaire, have a number one hit song and travel through time, Billie?"

The Daily Express says that "Comedian Peter Kay may be shortly appearing in Doctor Who as a baddie but he fancies his chances as the Timelord himself. Kay is a massive fan of the classic sci-fi show and is keen to take the lead role when David Tennant eventually hands in the keys to the Tardis. The creator and star of Phoenix Nights, a proud Boltonian, says: 'I think the Doctor should come from Bolton next time. He's always been a bit posh for my liking!' But hasn't Kay forgotten Tennant's predecessor, fellow Lancastrian and Salford-born Christopher Eccleston, who played the part in his native Mancunian accent? When sidekick Rose asked him: 'If you're an alien, how come you sound like you come from the North?' Eccleston's Timelord replied laconically: 'Lots of planets have a North. . .'"

The Norfolk Eastern Daily Press says of Doctor Who that "it is the programme known for sending children cowering behind the sofa. From the moment its eerie theme-music starts up on Saturday evening, millions of youngsters - and many mums and dads too - are transfixed by the adventures of the eccentric Timelord, as he faces up to an array of frightening foes. But one 13-year-old from Norwich not only watched Dr Who, she appeared in it - only weeks after her mother declared the series 'too scary' for children. Now aged 51 and a mother of five, Barbara Harper vividly recalls making her acting debut in BBC1's legendary sci-fi, playing one of the children in the five-part story The Mind Robber in 1968. More than 7m viewers were on the edge of their seats as the The Doctor, played by Patrick Troughton, and his assistants Jamie (Fraser Hines) and Zoe (Wendy Padbury), were hurled into The Land of Fiction ruled by evil Master - Emrys Jones - who is desperate to escape. Now as a new generation enjoys watching David Tennant and Billie Piper in the latest series of Dr Who, Mrs Harper is set to relive her TV stardom this summer as a special guest at a Dr Who convention in Norfolk. She contacted the EDP after reading an article about the event at Holt on June 24-25, and has been invited to join the stars. 'They are quite excited to have someone who has never been to a Dr Who event before, and I am getting all nostalgic,' she said. The sixth doctor Colin Baker is due to make an appearance during the weekend which will also showcase other stars of the series, including Terry Molloy, who played the Timelord's arch enemy Davros, the creator of the hated Daleks. Mrs Harper, of Watton, said she still had clear memories of her own appearance in two episodes The Mind Robber, which was screened on BBC1 in September and October 1968. She said: 'I was 13 years old and lived in Norwich but I had just started at stage school in London when I was auditioned for Dr Who. 'It was my first acting job, and it was quite ironic really as my mother had just written to the BBC complaining that a recent episode was too scary for children. I don't remember being scared myself, but in those days children hadn't seen monsters. There were no Star Wars then. I have great memories of working on the programme as I had my birthday while we were rehearsing and they presented me with a birthday cake. I was in a couple of episodes of The Mind Robber, and I was pleased when it came out on DVD recently so that I could convince my children that I had a 'real' part, and wasn't inside a Dalek costume. They said 'Oh look, there's mum!'' She added: 'There were no Daleks or Cybermen in the series I was in. The Doctor landed on this planet and the Master sort of took over people's minds. There were story book characters like Rapunzel and Cyrano de Bergerac, and I was one of the children from Edwardian times.' The children's sequence was largely drawn from E Nesbit's novel The Treasure Seekers, and other colourful characters included Gulliver, and Blackbeard. Mrs Harper continued acting until her early 20s, working in the theatre and winning small roles in Special Branch and the Wednesday Play. 'After 10 years I thought I have outgrown this and did other things, and then I got married and the kids came along. I don't regret acting, I really enjoyed it. I met a lot of people and I had loads of fun, and I think it gives you a lot of confidence,' she added."

Other Press Reports

Today's Mirror insists that a subtle change in the show's credits - but one noticed by many a Doctor Who fan - was entirely due to its lead actor. "Doctor Who supernerd David Tennant demanded that BBC bosses change his character's credits in the sci-fi show, claiming he doesn't actually play Doctor Who... It turns out he just wants to be known as The Doctor. The geek sighs: 'As a kid, it always bothered me - obviously it's the name of the show but he's not called Doctor Who.' Get him." Also noted at Yahoo News.

The Western Mail says, "For decades we have loved the 'OOOOeeeeeOOOO' sound of the start of Doctor Who on Saturday evenings. For a generation of thirty and fortysomethings, the Doctor Who musical intro probably evokes more childhood memories than any other. Even now, I remember hiding behind the sofa as a kid, sneaking the occasional look at the horrible maggots episode and squirming when the slimy innards of bizarre creatures were revealed by the Doctor. And now another generation of children are into the Time Lord and the Tardis, talking about the latest scary episodes with their friends. Daleks were the 'slightly less cuddly but easier to understand' Teletubbies of the Sixties, in an era when time-travel and sci-fi had gained popularity on television, following a surge of cult B movies in the 1950s. Created by Terry Nation, who had written for comedian Tony Hancock, the Daleks virtually doubled Doctor Who's audience overnight and spawned the BBC's first merchandising boom. Nation had seen a performance by the Georgian State Dancers and had been inspired by the gliding motion of long-skirted ballerinas. At the height of Daleks success, two feature films were made, starring Peter Cushing as the Doctor. Having been forced to watch Hammer Horror films (back behind the sofa) as a kid by my older brother, (who wanted to stay up and watch them - but not alone), I thought Peter Cushion was more of a Dracula killer than a Dalek enemy. But Daleks are still the Doctor's greatest nemesis with their no-nonsense cry, 'Exterminate!'. They have their own entry in the Oxford English Dictionary and made it onto a stamp as one of the enduring icons of the 20th century. Not bad for a race that famously struggles to get up stairs."

Other items: more on the ratings issue at icWalesNow Playing Mag and TV Squad review "The Idiot's Lantern".

(Thanks to Paul Engelberg, Greg Dunn, Paul Greaves, Paul Hayes)




FILTER: - People - Russell T Davies - Press - Radio Times - Broadcasting

Australia Series Two Date

Thursday, 1 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Fans in Australia finally have a debut date for series two of Doctor Who, according to an email sent to a fan by the Audience & Consumer Affairs department of ABC Television reported at the Doctor Who Club of Australia site. According to the note, ABC has recently completed negotiations for rights to show the second series, which will begin on Saturday 8 July at 7.30pm, presumably with "The Christmas Invasion" followed by the thirteen episodes of series two. The ABC website will hopefully soon have details about further scheduling. (Thanks to Adam Kirk and the DWCA)




FILTER: - Series 2/28 - Broadcasting - Australia