Sarah Jane Ratings - Friday

Saturday, 17 October 2009 - Reported by Marcus

Episode Two of Prisoner of the Judoon was watched by 0.7 million viewers on BBC One yesterday, according to unofficial overnight figures. The audience share was 7.2%, an increase over the share for part one.

Ratings increased during the programme with a slight drop off after it finished. The programme got more than double that achieved in the same slot the previous week when Hotel Trubble gained 0.3 million.

Final figures will include those who record the programme and watch it within seven days, and will be released by BARB in two weeks time.




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Sarah Jane

Sarah Jane Ratings

Friday, 16 October 2009 - Reported by Marcus

Unofficial overnight figures show that episode one of Prisoner of the Judoon was watched by 0.6 million viewers. The audience share was 5.9%. An extra 40,000 people watched in high definition on the BBC HD channel.

The rating is similar to that which The Sarah Jane Adventures received in the same slot last year. It is around 50% higher than the average for the timeslot on BBC One. Last week's edition of SMart achieved 0.4 million.

Final figures will include those who record the programme and watch it within seven days, and will be released by BARB in two weeks time.




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Sarah Jane

Doctor Who Adventures 137

Friday, 16 October 2009 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The new issue of Doctor Who Adventures celebrates the return of The Sarah Jane Adventures to television with an exclusive 12 page pull-out guide to the new series, with details on monsters, facts, and interviews with the cast.

The magazine also includes features on time travel and the sonic screwdriver, plus a template for those entering the Blue Peter Doctor Who console competition; free gifts this issue are a Master's pen and notepad set, and two free packs of trading cards.




FILTER: - Magazines - DWA

Hamlet for Christmas

Friday, 16 October 2009 - Reported by Chuck Foster
As reported back in May, the Royal Shakespeare Company have produced a television version of the popular version of Hamlet starring David Tennant and Patrick Stewart. In an article from the Oxford Times, artistic director of the RSC Michael Boyd has announced that the special programme will be broadcast (on BBC2) on Christmas Day.

The play will be available on DVD from 4th January 2010.
(with thanks to Helen Paling)




FILTER: - David Tennant

Tom Baker reads Barry Letts obituary

Friday, 16 October 2009 - Reported by Chuck Foster
Tom Baker - cast as the Doctor by Barry Letts - will be reading the obituary of the producer/director on BBC Radio Four's The Last Word from 4:00pm this afternoon; it should then be available on the BBC's iplayer service for the next seven days.
(with thanks to Simon Watkins)




FILTER: - Obituary - Online - Radio

Blackpool Exhibition to close

Tuesday, 13 October 2009 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The Doctor Who Museum in Blackpool is to close on the 8th November; there has been a permanent exhibition based at the seaside resort for some five years. The museum will remain open for visitors between 10:30am and 8:00pm every day until the 8th.

The large collection of props, monsters and costumes will be distributed to other exhibitions around the country.

For more information visit the Doctor Who Exhibitions website.




FILTER: - Exhibitions

SJA Series Three Trailer

Monday, 12 October 2009 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The BBC have published a trailer for the forthcoming Series Three of the Sarah Jane Adventures. The 2m37s video preview features many of the cast and monsters due to be seen during the next six weeks on BBC1/BBCHD.

Note: video may not play outside of the United Kingdom.




FILTER: - Sarah Jane - Press

Farewell Great Macedon

Monday, 12 October 2009 - Reported by Chuck Foster
Nothing at the End of the Lane have just published Farewell Great Macedon, a 258-page, A4-sized, perfect bound softcover book, available for order exclusively via themselves. Details below:
In early 1964, when Doctor Who was only a few months old, actor and scriptwriter Moris Farhi, under the guidance of script-editor David Whitaker, wrote a six-part historical adventure entitled Farewell Great Macedon, detailing the Doctor’s encounter with Alexander the Great in the ancient city of Babylon.

Nothing at the End of the Lane is proud to present, for the first time ever, the complete script of this unproduced Doctor Who story in one special-edition volume. Covering over 250-pages, Farewell Great Macedon not only reproduces the original script pages for all six episodes, but also features:

»Foreword by Moris Farhi.
»The history and development of the Farewell Great Macedon script and Moris Farhi’s association with Doctor Who between 1964 and 1977.
»Reviews of the story by Jeremy Bentham, Paul Scoones and Philip MacDonald.
»A special edition of DWM’s Time Team.
»A historical examination of Alexander the Great’s life and death compared with that seen in Farewell Great Macedon.
»Stunning new artwork by Jason Fletcher and Adrian Salmon.


This special edition also contains the one-episode tester script, The Fragile Yellow Arc of Fragrance, written by Farhi for David Whitaker at a time when the Doctor was still halfway though fighting his first on-screen battle with the Daleks.




FILTER: - Merchandise - Books

Peladon Boxset for January

Sunday, 11 October 2009 - Reported by Marcus

The two Peladon stories, The Curse of Peladon and The Monster of Peladon, will be released on DVD in January 2010.

The news was revealed by Dan Hall, commissioning editor for DVD company 2 entertain, at the Time and Again convention in London. The release replaces the King's Demons/Planet of Fire boxset which has been delayed due to clearance problems.

The Curse of Peladon was originally shown in 1972. In four parts, it stars Jon Pertwee as the Third Doctor along with Katy Manning and David Troughton.

The Monster of Peladon was Pertwee's penultimate story, shown over six parts in 1974. It features Elisabeth Sladen and Donald Gee.

Hall also indicated that a further Third Doctor story, The Time Monster, will be released in 2010 and that a "re-visitation" boxset, featuring new versions of early DVD releases, is in production.




FILTER: - Jon Pertwee - Classic Series - Blu-ray/DVD

Barry Letts (1925-2009)

Friday, 9 October 2009 - Reported by Anthony Weight

Barry Letts, producer of Doctor Who through one of its most fondly-remembered periods with Jon Pertwee as the Third Doctor from 1970 to 1974, has died at the age of eighty-four.

Previously an actor, Letts moved behind the camera in the 1960s, finding work as a director on several programmes for BBC television. He first worked on Doctor Who as director of the 1968 Patrick Troughton serial Enemy of the World, before accepting the job of producer during production Jon Pertwee's first season, in 1969. Working closely in association with script editor Terrance Dicks, Letts oversaw the creative direction and production of the programme for the following five seasons.

In addition to his producing role, Letts also directed several serials during his time in charge of the programme - Terror of the Autons, Carnival of Monsters and Planet of the Spiders. He also handled much of the direction for Inferno after Douglas Camfield was taken ill, and after leaving the series as producer he directed The Android Invasion for his successor, Philip Hinchcliffe. He also co-wrote The Daemons with Robert Sloman (under the pseudonym 'Guy Leopold') and worked closely with Sloman on the writer's other scripts for the programme.

Letts' legacy to the programme included the creation of the character Sarah Jane Smith, played by Elisabeth Sladen on the BBC to this day, and the decision to cast Tom Baker as the Fourth Doctor. The latter was a decision for which Tom Baker was always ready to express immense gratitude, as when Letts appeared on his episode of "This is Your Life" in the year 2000.

Letts remained fond of and connected with the series right up until his death. When producer Graham Williams broke his leg during production of season 16 in 1978 Letts helped to keep an eye on the series, and more officially he served as Executive Producer in 1980, overseeing the inexperienced John Nathan-Turner's first season in charge of the programme. For many years thereafter Letts also penned novels, novelisations and radio serials connected to the programme. He also appeared on DVD commentaries and in various documentaries.

He also gained extensive credits outside of Doctor Who, most notably as producer of the BBC's "Classic Serial" strand during the late 1970s and early 1980s. In this role he produced many acclaimed and award-winning adaptations of classic novels, including "Great Expectations", "Alice in Wonderland" and "Jane Eyre". Later, he directed episodes for the soap opera "EastEnders".

Click here to read a 2004 interview with Letts on the BBC Doctor Who website.

Updated 13th October

The Guardian has published an obituary, describing Barry Letts' varied career and impact on Doctor Who.




FILTER: - People - Obituary - Classic Series