Changes at Big Finish

Thursday, 5 January 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The latest issue of Doctor Who Magazine announces several changes at Big Finish, publishers of the official Doctor Who audio series. Alan Barnes("Neverland") will become the Doctor Who range's new story editor, both in the audios as well as the company's short fiction collections; Gary Russell will continue as producer, but with Ian Farrington (who has edited several of the company's anthologies) serving as assistant producer. Producer/directorNigel Fairs has also taken over several of the company's other ranges, including their "Sapphire and Steel" and "The Tomorrow People" series. Big Finish is currently licensed to continue their Doctor Who output until 2008 at the earliest.




FILTER: - Audio

Series Two Update

Thursday, 5 January 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Issue #365 of Doctor Who Magazine has more news of Series Two, including official confirmation that the episode being written by Stephen Fry and formerly scheduled as Episode 11 will now appear in Series Three; the writer of its replacement is confirmed as Matthew Graham, co-creator of "Life on Mars", which is about to begin transmission on BBC One. Graham's participation was first noted in a BBC press release in December which mentioned him as one of Series Two's writers. Russell T Davies explains to DWM that Fry's episode has been rescheduled because it fits better with his overall season outline and "to allow extra time to plan some of the FX and prosthetics". As with Series One, the eleventh episode was "left blank" in Davies' outline, and Graham's script was actually commissioned at the same time as Fry's, always with the possibility that it would appear in Series Two not Three, and its first draft was delivered on 20 September. The episode will be made as part of production block four, directed by Euros Lyn, with Mark Gatiss' ‘The Idiot's Lantern' (Episode 7).

Also, as well as confirming Nicholas Briggs return to the series for voicing of the Cybermen (which was previously announced here), DWM reveals that the Cybermen two-parter (Episodes 5 and 6, the first of which we've reported bears the title "Rise of the Cybermen") will feature Mona Hammond as Rita-Anne and Raji James as Dr Singh. Both actors are known to UK audiences for regular roles in EastEnders. Block Three -- Episodes 5 and 6 and/or two other episodes, which Outpost Gallifrey believes is the final two-parter, "Army of Ghosts" and "Doomsday" -- will also featureHadley Fraser as Gareth, Oliver Mellor as Matt, Rachel Webster as Eileen, and Takako Akashi, Hajaz Akram, Maddi Cryer, Anthony Debaeck, Paul Fields, Kyoko Morita and Andrew Ufondu in unspecified roles.

Additionally, joining the cast of Block Three episodes is David Warwick, playing the Police Commissioner. Warwick is the latest actor from the classic Doctor Who series to return to the series in its new incarnation; Warwick played Kimus in Douglas Adams' 1978 serial "The Pirate Planet" starring Tom Baker, and later appeared in two audios for Big Finish, "The Harvest" starring Sylvester McCoy and "Gallifrey: A Blind Eye" featuring Lalla Ward and Warwick's real-life wife, former Doctor Who companion Louise Jameson (Leela). (Warwick will also appear, as Outpost Gallifrey readers will note, at next month's Gallifrey 2006 convention in Los Angeles alongside Jameson.)

For more details on these and other stories, pick up issue 365 of Doctor Who Magazine, now available on newsstands (and see the blurb about and cover of the issue in this news column below, dated January 3).




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

The Beginning DVD North American Cover

Thursday, 5 January 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Warner Home Video has released the full cover illustration for the forthcoming North American release of The Beginning, the boxed set comprising the classic Doctor Who series' first three stories, "An Unearthly Child," "The Daleks" and "The Edge of Destruction". Click on the thumbnail for a larger version of the cover. "The Beginning" is due out in the US and Canada on March 28, 2006 (and is available for pre-order at Amazon through the Outpost's affiliation if you'd like to help the site; see banner above.)




FILTER: - USA - Classic Series - Blu-ray/DVD

TARDIS Report: Mid-Week Items

Wednesday, 4 January 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

According to BBC News, both John Barrowman (Captain Jack from last season) and Bonnie Langford (Mel Bush from seasons 23 and 24) will be featured as contestants on "Dancing On Ice" which debuts on ITV1 on Saturday 14 January. Among the other contestants are former ice skating pair Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean, Stefan Booth of "The Bill," television presenter and executive Andi Peters, Coronation Street's Sean Wilson and GMTV's Andrea McLean.

The TV biz section of yesterday's The Sun leads on ITV launching a sci-fi offensive against Doctor Who, reporting that Patrick Stewart will star in the drama "Eleventh Hour" as a trouble-shooting professor defending the country. The story also mentions that the channel is to show Primaeval, which, according to The Sun, will see a scientist sent through time. Outpost Gallifrey has previously reported on Primaeval as ITV's response to Doctor Who. The new BBC3 series Torchwood, starring John Barrowman as Captain Jack Harkness (incorrectly called "Harness" in the piece), is also mentioned. The Sun says it will start in the summer and states that Doctor Who returns in the spring.

Today's Manchester Online says that TV medium Derek Acorah has been cast in the new series. "Whether you believe in spiritualism or not, there is no doubting that Derek's programmes, including Most Haunted, The Antiques Ghost Show, The Three Mediums and, most recently, Derek Acorah's Ghost Towns, have brought great viewing success for satellite channel Living TV, attracting more than two million viewers a show. And, far from taking himself too seriously, Derek can laugh along with the best of them - he is scouse, after all. 'I've just filmed Dr Who,' he reveals. 'It's a bit of a mickey-take. The Doctor finds that spirits and ghosts have invaded the whole of the galaxy, so he gets me along to see what we can do about it. It's only a small part, but there's a bit of fun to it. I'm there saying, `I might as well go now, they're all out there and I can't do anything about them. I'm redundant!''"

icWales interviews artist Mike Collins, who "has been sharpening his pencils and starting from scratch to capture the face of the new doctor, David Tennant" in the pages of Doctor Who Magazine. "Fans of Doctor Who saw the first episode featuring the new Timelord on Christmas Day and this week the monthly Doctor Who Magazine features its first adventure using the face of Tennant. He replaces Christopher Eccleston, who lasted just one series, and who Mr Collins admits he was just getting used to capturing in cartoon form. 'I had just got to the stage when I could draw Christopher Eccleston quite comfortably,' said the Cardiff-based artist, who has three daughters. Mr Collins said he thought that Tennant made a great doctor, and thoroughly enjoyed his debut appearance on Christmas Day. 'It made for wonderful TV. I had got out of the habit of watching telly over Christmas but this time the whole family sat down. It was great, whether you were a sci-fi fan or not.' He promises more adventures for fans of Doctor Who in the new strip that features in the magazine. 'It is his first big adventure set on an alien world, and it follows on from the Christmas special.' But hinting at the adventures to come, Mr Collins added, 'There are no Daleks this time. We have managed to bring the new doctor to one of the older villains - from the Jon Pertwee era. That's all I am going to say. But drawing this villain for the first time has been an absolute joy for me. I am a big sci-fi fan so it is great to get paid for something I love doing. But David Tennant has a great face, and I had to get it right as he is a big fan and is going to read it.'"

According to the Doctor Who Appreciation Society, a 'one-off' performance of "A Dog's Life" in the studio Theatre of Epsom Playhouse will take place on March 25th at 7.45. Effectively 'an evening with' former Doctor Who actorJohn Leeson, who played the voice of K9 during the original series and in Big Finish and BBV's audio series, and has recently returned for the "School Reunion" episode of the forthcoming second season, the event will feature Leeson talking about his varied and often amusing career as an actor and, of course, his days behind the scenes on Doctor Who. More details on the Epsom Playhouse website.

Today's Daily Record featured some 'astrological predictions' for various celebrities, mentioning Billie Piper: "We all know she isn't going to be the Doctor's assistant for much longer, so what will this Virgo princess be up to in 2006? She may return to music or a project she shelved to take up the role of Rose in Doctor Who. But one thing is sure. She will have to give her choices some thought as illusion is all around her working life, especially early on in the year when promises made may not be promises kept. Love is best in February and could get serious very quickly - something she may be used to."

Today's Guardian notes that "Doctor Who" has come in first place in their poll of favourite television series of 2005. Other series on the list include "Lost" at #2, "Extras" at #3, "Spooks" at #5, "Battlestar Galactica" at #12 and David Tennant's "Casanova" at #18.

The BBC's official Doctor Who website has a few updates. The "Fear Forecasters" commentary for "The Christmas Invasion" has been updated; there's also a new 30-second snippet of Murray Gold's updated theme (for those who couldn't hear it over the announcer's voice during transmission!).

Yesterday's South Wales Evening Post mentioned the press screening of "The Christmas Invasion" back in December in a story about the holidays: "One major piece of pre-Christmas excitement for me, though, was going up to London to see the press screening of the Doctor Who Christmas special. Before this the highlight of my social calendar had been an afternoon at the Llandyfaelog agricultural show. So this was a pretty big deal for me. All the stars were there - David Tennant, Billie Piper and the legendary Russell T Davies. I sat and watched, amused as all those arty types hugged, kissed and called each other dahling - and that was just the fellas. When I got into the screening room I clocked the lovely, totally down-to-earth Edward Thomas from Swansea. He is the production designer for Doctor Who, and I had recently interviewed him for the paper. He invited me to go and sit with him which was a bit of a result as he was sitting one row back from the front. All the stars sat in the front row. I ended up sitting right behind Billie Piper - how exciting. Even more exciting, I had a quick chat with Russell T Davies after the screening. He was surrounded by people wanting to talk to him but said: 'I've always got time to speak to the Evening Post.' What a nice man and what a credit to Swansea."

The current issue (December 31 - "The Most Intriguing People of 2005") of Australia's WHO Magazine contains lists of the best and the worst TV, films, fashion etc for 2005. In the TV section the top ten best includes Doctor Who at number 8 and says "Having impressed in The Second Coming, Christopher Ecclestone [sic] gained more fans as the Doc-ster."

The Christmas edition of Time Out London (a weekly arts and entertainment magazine, although this one covered two weeks) featured artwork of David Tennant on the front cover and a spoof article inside by Russell T Davies. The 2 page article, titled "The Timelord [sic] is our shepherd" features the Doctor, Rose and Captain Jack discussing some of the programmes on British TV over the Christmas break. There are 2 further pages of digital images of the 3 lead characters courtesy of David Angel.

Other items: Mirror insists that Billie Piper "hid inside her favourite parka near her North London home (or was she just doing her impression of South Park's Kenny?)" in a story about actors who have been sighted wearing furs, contrary to movement against the fur industry; the Mirror and theIndependent note Christopher Eccleston's turn in "The School of Night" (see earlier stories); RTE mentions the new ITV bid to unseat Doctor Who courtesy Ant and Dec (aka "the guys who lost out big time to Doctor Who already last year"); DigitalSpy mentions John Barrowman's forthcoming civil partnership.

(Thanks to Paul Engelberg, Steve Tribe, Peter Weaver, John Bowman, Peter Anghelides, Neil Matthews, Nick Seidler, Cameron Yarde Jr, Murray Harper)




FILTER: - People - Russell T Davies - Press

Australia, Canada Broadcasting - Updated

Wednesday, 4 January 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Australia is about to lose the classic series. As Outpost Gallifrey has learned, the show will complete its run on Australia's ABC TV in a few weeks. The broadcasts on ABC started with "An Unearthly Child" (September 2003) and conclude with "Survival" (February 2006). We should have more about this story in the next few days.

Meanwhile, Canada has a second Doctor Who outlet: the first season of the new series (or at least, "Rose") has appeared on Quebec's Z-Tele network, according to their website. It's unclear if it's been dubbed or is merely subtitled.

Update: According to Ztele's website, the episodes are dubbed and they're showing at least the first three, "Rose," "The End of the World (La Fin Du Monde)" and "The Unquiet Dead (Des Morts Inassouvis)" during several airings each in January. The French language trailer is located here.

(Thanks to Craig Wellington, Sean McGuire, Benjamin Elliott, Doug A Scott)




FILTER: - Classic Series - Broadcasting - Australia

Sci-Fi and Fantasy Modeller

Wednesday, 4 January 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The publishers of the 1990's magazine "Sci-Fi and Fantasy Models" return this month with a new book, Sci-Fi and Fantasy Modeller, a new 100-page colour softcover book dealing with sci-fi and fantasy themed modelling techniques, from commercially available kits to 'garage' subjects, scratchbuilt models to studio-scale replicas. Mike Tucker, whose model and effects work includes the final years of the classic series and both seasons of the new show, has written a detailed account of the making and filming of the miniature FX for the first season of the new Doctor Who series (accompanied by many rare colour photographs); there's also a look at the history of the Dalek props on television including details of how they were made and modified during the original series' run. The book is published on January 21 and is available through comic stores served by Diamond Distributors in the UK and US as well as on their website. (Thanks to Michael Reccia)




FILTER: - Books

Joseph Furst - Updated

Wednesday, 4 January 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Actor Joseph Furst passed away at the end of November, according to news from the Doctor Who Restoration Team today. Furst was born in 1910 and had a widely varied career that included both television and film, including appearances on "The Saint," "The Champions," "Doomwatch" and "The Persuaders," but is best known to Doctor Who fans as the mad Professor Zaroff, the villain of the Patrick Troughton serial "The Underwater Menace".

Update: the Sydney Morning Herald recently ran a death notice for Mr. Furst, noting that he'd recently resided in Bateau Bay, Australia, and that services were held on Friday 2 December.

(Thanks to Steve Roberts & Greg Miller)




FILTER: - Obituary - Classic Series

Christmas Ratings/AI Report

Wednesday, 4 January 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The final BARB ratings (Broadcasters Audience Research Board) have been released for the Children in Need special that aired last November. The ratings show that the quarter-hour that featured the Children in Need mini-episode gained 10.8m viewers, the highest Doctor Who-related audience since the first broadcast of "Rose" in March. The previous fifteen-minute segment of CiN had 10.1m viewers and the subsequent fifteen minutes saw a drop back down to 10.0m. Note that, as with the overnight ratings previously reported on Outpost Gallifrey, it remains difficult to be exact, since viewers in Scotland saw the special a few minutes later than the rest of the country.

Meanwhile, according to overnight ratings provided by ViewingFigures, 501,700 viewers (2.7% audience share) tuned in for BBC3's repeat of The Christmas Invasion on New Years Day. Though it wasn't in the top ten for the week on the non-terrestrial channels (beaten by episodes of The Simpsons and Little Britain among others), it ranks at or slightly below average from the second-run BBC3 repeats from series one... the difference being that it achieved this score on a holiday. BARB ratings are due very shortly for the original Christmas Day broadcast of "The Christmas Invasion".

Finally, the initial Audience Appreciation Index (AI) figure for "The Christmas Invasion" has now been reported at 84. The figure will likely change for the 'final' version (the final figure usually released two months or so after broadcast, after all figures are taken into account) but the initial version was the second-highest AI ranking on Christmas Day, beaten only by ITV's broadcast of "Creature Comforts". (Thanks to Steve Tribe, Keith Topping)




FILTER: - Specials - Ratings - UK

The Top Shows of 2005

Wednesday, 4 January 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

This week's edition of Broadcast, the trade magazine, carries details of the top-performing UK television shows of the past twelve months, saying that "reality shows may have dominated the schedules but the big ratings stories were to be found in drama, with the triumphant return of Doctor Who, and in comedy, as Little Britain took the nation by storm." The paper notes, "To make an impact in primetime, where one in five viewers now watches multichannel TV, terrestrial TV has had to fight harder than ever for its audience. According to Ofcom, almost 70% of UK households have multichannel." In the Drama category, Doctor Who still tops the table for the year with the 10.81m (44.84%) audience for 'Rose' on 26 March, and Broadcast argues that this success "opened the door for more drama in primetime Saturday night". In fact, these end-of-year charts confirm that Doctor Who remained in its prime spot throughout the year, the programmes and figures at the top of the charts remaining essentially unchanged since March. The magazine has also compiled a chart of the Top 100 shows of 2005, the first ten of which (and two other items of interest) are:

1. Coronation Street / 14.35m / 57.39% / ITV1 (19.30, Monday 21 February)
2. EastEnders / 14.34m / 57.85% / BBC1 (20.00, Friday 18 February)
3. The Vicar of Dibley / 11.57m / 42.70% / BBC1 (21.00, Saturday 1 January)
4. Emmerdale / 11.18m / 48.80% / ITV1 (19.00, Monday 21 February)
5. Comic Relief: Red Nose Night Live / 10.93m / 45.09% / BBC1 (19.00, Friday 11 March)
6. Doctor Who / 10.81m / 44.84% / BBC1 (19.00 Saturday 26 March)
7. I'm a Celebrity... Get Me out of Here! / 10.54m / 44.02% / ITV1 (21.00, Monday 28 November)
8. Strictly Come Dancing / 10.4m / 41.50% / BBC1 (18.30, Saturday 17 December)
9. A Touch of Frost / 10.28m / 40.24% / ITV1 (20.25, Sunday 25 September)
10. Little Britain / 10.17m / 40.68% / BBC1 (21.00, Thursday 17 November)
...
19. Casualty / 9.24m / 36.43% / BBC1 (20.10, Saturday 1 January)
29. Ant and Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway / 8.84m / 40.3% / ITV1 (19.00, Saturday 12 March)

Not bad for a television series that the BBC retired in 1989 and took 15 years to bring back to weekly television (in a time slot dominated by the #29 entry on the list.) Full details are available (to registered members) at theBroadcastNowwebsite. (Thanks to Steve Tribe)




FILTER: - Magazines - Press

Doctor Who Magazine 365

Tuesday, 3 January 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Issue #365 of Doctor Who Magazine is due out this week, on Thursday 5 January. The press blurb and cover illustration is below; click on the thumbnail for a larger version. (With thanks to Tom Spilsbury at DWM)
You've seen The Christmas Invasion - now find out how it was made, in the new issue of Doctor Who Magazine!

"You turn up every day and you get on with it," says David Tennant, the new Doctor Who. "But every now and again, standing in these caves in my pyjamas,with a broadsword, I look around and there's Sean dressed up as a huge alien, and down the other end of the cave is the TARDIS, and I do have a moment of going 'This is just unreal! This is impossible!'"

Find out more about The Christmas Invasion in a massive 28-page feature,including interviews with David Tennant, Billie Piper, Camille Coduri, Noel Clarke, Russell T Davies, James Hawes, Penelope Wilton and many more!

Plus! The Tenth Doctor makes his comic strip debut - find our which old enemies are waiting for him on the icy planet Serac...

Meanwhile, Gallifrey Guardian includes some exclusive casting news, while Steven Moffat gives DWM a report from the 2005 TV Moments ceremony. Russell T Davies looks back on the last year in Production Notes, there's an extensive preview of The Beginning DVD box set, The Time Team battle Daleks and the Jagaroth - plus all your usual favourites!




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Magazines - DWM