The Week's Press Clips

Thursday, 1 December 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Is Stephen Fry's episode (currently slotted as #11) going to be delayed until next year? According to the weekend's Sunday Times, there is "more intrigue at Dr Who, where Stephen Fry's episode may be delayed. My mole in the Tardis assures me it is 'good' and 'very Stephen Fry', but that it needs so many special effects, it could prove to be too expensive, at least for the next run." The paper continues: "At least Fry got the chance to contribute. Shopping and F***ing playwright Mark Ravenhill was so annoyed about not being asked to contribute an episode, he almost considered buying up the rights to the less celebrated children's sci-fi drama from the 1970s, The Tomorrow People, as revenge."

SFX Magazine will soon be running a feature in a future issue regarding readers' "behind the sofa" memories of Doctor Who. "What's the moment of the original series that's still burned into your memory decades later? Did the Daleks give you a pant-wetting accident? Did you suffer nightmares for weeks afterwards? Were you terrified of plastic toys after seeing the Autons? Did your mum ban you from watching the show? We want to hear your stories - the more personal, the better. And if you've got photos of you dressed up as Doctor Who, or monster drawings from your childhood exercise books, send us copies of them too! Drop us a line by emailingsfx@futurenet.co.uk - please title your email DOCTOR WHO MEMORIES - or write to us at SFX, 30 Monmouth Street, Bath, BA1 2BW."

The new Radio Times (last one before the Christmas special), covering 10-16 December, interviews David Tennant, who considers himself "the dullest actor ever to have played the Time Lord." Says Tennant, who insists he leads a boring life, "I've no hobbies or pursuits. I live in north London and drive a Skoda. I'm afraid that's as interesting as it gets." Tennant also notes that he is avidly anti-Conservative and cannot believe anyone in showbiz would ever vote for the Tories: "When I started working in theatre in England, I would meet people and they would say, 'Oh, I voted for Margaret Thatcher'. The first time I heard someone saying that, I honestly thought they were joking. I'd be thinking, 'I have never met anyone from your world. What's it like? Do you roast children over open fires?' I still find it impossible to believe that anyone in the arts votes Conservative." The actor describes himself as a "skinny streak of nothing" but admits to having the odd moment of vanity. "I've been known to wear moisturiser, which may mean I'll be stopped on the Paisley boundary next time I go home." Tennant notes that before filming Casanova, he decided to work on his six-pack: "I thought I'd feel more confident in the role if I was feeling more confident physically, so I worked out every single day for five weeks. And then I didn't get to take my shirt off until week 10 of filming, by which time it had all gone to pot." The son of Presbyterian ministers, Tennant added his Christian faith helps him to cope with fame - but he claims to avoid any "preachy tendency". "It's a question of humanity with that element of not necessarily putting oneself first." The story has also been picked up and run in the MirroricWales,This is LondonWaveGuideDaily RecordITN.

Also in the new Radio Times, E. Jane Dickson speaks to Tennant about his new ITV drama "Secret Smile", his career and background and of course taking on the role of the Doctor. There's also a small preview of "The Christmas Invasion" in a sidebar on the second page of the interview, and a picture of the TARDIS with a caption telling the reader to turn to that page for more information in an earlier section previewing the top programmes to watch this Christmas. Finally, the next issue preview at the back makes mention of the forthcoming Dalek competition and the 10-page Doctor Who special included with the Christmas edition.

icWales is reporting that protestors staging a demo at the Cardiff Royal Infirmary brought a replica TARDIS with them as they campaigned for the re-opening of the facility, with one of their protest slogans being "CRI Wants Real Doctors Not Doctor Who".

CBBC News is running a competition: "Meet Doctor Who! - Have you ever wanted to travel through time?? You could fast forward through time and see the Christmas episode of Doctor Who before anybody else does! We're looking for one Press Packer to report for Newsround from the premiere screening of the Christmas episode, The Christmas Invasion. David Tennant is the 10th Doctor Who and appears for the first time on Christmas Day in a one-hour show, where he finds himself under attack from a band of rogue Santas. Your mission will be to interview The Doctor and Rose and ask them all the questions you're dying to know. And, you will get the chance to see the Christmas episode before anybody else!! You'll need to be free for all of the day on Monday, 12 December so make sure you speak to your parent or guardian before entering this competition. To be in with the chance of winning this out of the world prize, all you have to do is tell us which point in history (or the future!) you would like to travel to in your Tardis. You might choose to do battle with the dinosaurs or fast forward to when we can live on the moon! Only your imagination is the limit - oh, and 50 words! The competition closes on Wednesday, 7 December 2005 at midday." Of course, this is only open to children...

The Sunday Mail ran a piece in which David Tennant predicted he would play the TV time traveller... in a school essay written 20 years ago. "The 14-year-old sci-fi nut was so obsessed with the show he got his gran to knit him a long, multi-coloured scarf - just like his favourite Doctor, Tom Baker. The scarf featured regularly in his essays until English teacher Moira Robertson warned him to 'exterminate' the references or he could end up failing his exams. Moira, who taught David at Paisley Grammar School, was so impressed with him that she kept a copy of his story 'Intergalactic Overdose'. It reads 'I had a habit. It was as bad as it could get. I needed help to stop, but I didn't care. I wanted more and more. You see, I was a junkie, a Doctor Who junkie. When I was old enough, I was convinced that I was going to play the part of the Doctor on TV.' Moira said: 'He must have been calling on his powers as a Timelord because he was so utterly convinced that he would be Doctor Who. I was unaware that the bright wee boy I was teaching had the amazing power to shift time and predict the future... but he certainly did.' Moira revealed David first showed his acting talent while at the school, adding: 'Although he was very talented, he certainly didn't act 'I'm the greatest.' But if there was one boy who had star quality... he was it.' Tennant, 34, who will star in a two-hour Dr Who special on Christmas Day, last night paid tribute to his old teacher. 'She made me first realise the possibilities of great literature - J.D. Salinger, Harper Lee, Orwell and Arthur Miller. And it was Moira who first guided me towards a dim understanding of what Shakespeare could be about.'"

The SF Crows Nest site has run an interview with science fiction writer Robert J. Sawyer, who notes that he thought the new season of Doctor Who was "absolutely terrific. I've got a total crush on Billie Piper, who I gather is a pop star in the UK. I'd never encountered her before the new series started airing. And I'm really sorry that Christopher Eccleston has left; I thought he was great. Episodes like Dalek and Father's Day absolutely blew me away. I'm looking forward to the next season. As you know if you read the ending credits, the new Doctor Who is a co-production with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and I got to do a lot of commentary for the CBC's documentary The Planet Of The Doctor, which was tremendous fun. By the way, since people are always curious, my favourite classic Doctor was Jon Pertwee." Sawyer was interviewed by CBC for their six-part web documentary "Planet of the Doctor" that was released earlier this year in conjunction with their airing of the show.

(Thanks to Paul Engelberg, Paul Hayes, Steve Tribe, Peter Weaver)




FILTER: - Press - Radio Times

2005 Drama Award Vote

Thursday, 1 December 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The BBC has just launched the 2005 Drama Awards where viewers can vote online for their favourite dramas of the year, according to the official Doctor Who website. "With categories including Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Villain and Most Desirable Star we're hopeful that Doctor Who might be up for a couple of awards. Voting closes on Friday 6th January 2006, with results revealed on Monday 16th January 2006. There's also an end-of-year quiz, with a selection of goodies to be won, so why not head over now and let them know what you think." You can vote at the Best of 2005 Site.




FILTER: - Awards/Nominations - Series 1/27

Sci-Fi: Who Is Coming

Thursday, 1 December 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

According to a report today on the Sci-Fi Channel website Sci-Fi Wire, "the BBC made the unusual decision to release the DVD in the United States before the show had found a broadcast outlet there. But he added that the show will find its way onto American TV, one way or another. 'It will be going on television,' Cromer said in an interview. 'There're lots of discussions going on, and I can't really talk about that. This is a unique situation, really, because there are so many fans of Doctor Who ... already out there, and we were just finding [that] people were getting ... second-hand copies or copies from the U.K. ... We really wanted fans to get the best, most complete version in the United States as [soon as] we possibly could. So we made the decision, and it is unique, to go ahead of the TV broadcast with the DVD and to release the gift set of the DVD basically within two and a half to three months [after] the U.K. [version].'"
The article goes on to note that "U.S. fans have been clamoring for a way to see the series legally stateside. There's no downside to a U.S. DVD release, even if the show has yet to be seen on American TV, Cromer added. 'The good news for us is that we already have that loyal fan base, but then when the show does broadcast in the U.S., we'll have a whole new fan base, because it's just a new Doctor Who: very exciting, but still the great stories and as great as the old Doctor Who,' he said."
It is important to note, however, that the article does not state that there has been any progress recently about getting the series on television in America, simply that the BBC still wishes to find a broadcaster here and that they have concluded that a DVD sale would not impact this. We'll keep you posted on further developments soon.




FILTER: - USA - Blu-ray/DVD - Broadcasting

Big Finish 2006 Update

Thursday, 1 December 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Big Finish has released new details about several of their forthcoming 2006 Doctor Who audio plays:
Elisabeth Sladen has returned to reprise the role of Sarah Jane Smithin a new four-part serial that sequelizes the five-release earlier run in 2002 of the same name. Also returning from that series are actors Sadie Miller(Sladen's daughter) as Nat and Jeremy James as Josh. The series will also feature guest appearances by Tom Chadbon (who played Duggan in "City of Death"), Jacqueline Pearce ("Blake's 7," plus Chessene in "The Two Doctors"), David Gooderson (Davros in "Destiny of the Daleks"),Stephen Greif ("Blake's 7"), Ivor Danvers ("Nekromanteia," "A Storm of Angels") and BBC newsreader Shaun Ley as well as Daniel Barzotti (Luca), Jon Weinberg and Patricia Leventon. The four-part serial is written by David Bishop and directed by John Ainsworth and will be released from January to April in four volumes: Buried Secrets, Snow Blind, Fatal Consequencesand Dreamland.
Author Rob Shearman ("Dalek") is penning the script for a four-part serial to be released by Big Finish in 2006, a pure historical saga that focuses on the time period of the Borgias of Italy in the late 15th century. There is no word about what links this will have to Doctor Who.
March's Time Works by Steve Lyons is directed by Ed Salt and stars "Born and Bred" actress Tracey Childs as the Figurehead, as well as actorRonald Pickup, who was the Physician in the first Doctor Who season episode "The Reign of Terror" in 1964, as Kestorian. The play also stars Paul McGann (the Doctor), India Fisher (Charley), Conrad Westmaas (C'rizz), Beth Vyse (Vannet), Adrian Schiller (Zanith), Philip Edgerley (Collis) and Merryn Owen (Revnon).
April's The Kingmaker by Nev Fountain guest stars Jon Culshaw of "Dead Ringers" fame (but not as the fourth Doctor, a popular voice of Culshaw's; he plays Earl Rivers) as well as comedian/actor Michael Fenton-Stevens (as Mr Seyton). The story also stars Peter Davison (the Doctor), Nicola Bryant (Peri), Caroline Morris (Erimem), Arthur Smith (Clarrie), Stephen Beckett (Richard, Duke of Gloucester), Shaun Lyon Hutton (Henry, Duke of Buckingham), Chris Neill (Sir James Tyrell), Katie Wimpenny (Susan) and Linzi Matthews (Judith). The story deals with the famed tale of the Princes in the Tower, from the time of Richard III (a story that was also briefly touched on in a BBC novel by Justin Richards, but is unconnected to this story).
The June release, formerly "The Cube," has now been retitled Something Inside. Written by Trevor Baxendale, it stars Paul McGann (the Doctor), India Fisher (Charley), Conrad Westmaas (C'rizz), Steven Elder (Rawden), Ian Brooker (Twyst), Liz Crowther (Tessa), John Killoran (Latch) and Louise Collins (Jane).
Also, at a recent convention appearance in Chicago, producer Gary Russell revealed that a follow-up book to their Big Finish: The Inside Story will likely be released in late 2006; writer Benjamin Cook, who wrote the first volume, will be working with a co-writer on the second. Russell also noted that the Bernice Summerfield line will be 'relaunched' in 2006, with a new branding (it will be moved into the "New Worlds" brand Big Finish currently uses), but will continue with several new audios. There will also be progress on the "Inside Story" book for this range as well, with a likely publication date of late 2006.




FILTER: - Audio

Series One DVDs in US

Wednesday, 30 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

In a reversal from an earlier announcement that the Region 1 DVDs of series one of the new Doctor Who series would be available only in Canada, BBC Video announced today to the news service of the Sci-Fi Channel, Sci-Fi Wire, that on February 14, 2006, the series would also be made available in the US on DVD. This is in direct contrast to earlier reports that the series would only be available on DVD after a broadcaster had transmitted the series in America. Outpost Gallifrey has learned that, with the failure of the BBC to find a broadcaster in the US, this prior requirement was bypassed and the decision was made to release the series on DVD after all.
The North American release, in both Canada and the US, will be the exact same items as were on the UK discs, as BBC Video no longer allows the US/Canada releases to differ from their UK counterparts. As stated in the Sci-Fi Wire article, the DVD set will carry a suggested retail price of $99.98.
Also reported today at the official Doctor Who website as well as TV Shows on DVD as well as Now Playing,BroadcastNowSyfyPortal.




FILTER: - USA - Series 1/27 - Blu-ray/DVD

Shada Trailer

Tuesday, 29 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

BBC7 has now posted a trailer (note: MP3 format) for the forthcoming broadcast of Shada starring Paul McGann, Susannah Harker, James Fox, Sean Biggerstaff and Andrew Sachs. The story is broadcast on Saturday, December 10.




FILTER: - Online

The Beginning Box Cover

Tuesday, 29 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Tenth Planet has sent us the cover illustration for the exterior packaging of the forthcoming UK DVD release of The Beginning, due out in January. As previously reported, this boxed set will contain "An Unearthly Child," "The Daleks" and "The Edge of Destruction". Click on the thumbnail for a larger version of the cover. (Thanks to Paul at Tenth Planet)




FILTER: - Classic Series - Blu-ray/DVD

Radio Times Cover

Tuesday, 29 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Radio Times will feature the year's third Doctor Who cover this year with the issue that goes on sale on 3 December. This follows the earlier covers this year, both at the start of the series as well as the Dalek cover that was released with the airing of the episode "Dalek". Click on the thumbnail for a larger version. Meanwhile, the press release for the Radio Times cover is below. (Thanks to the BBC Press Office; special thanks to Martin Hoscik at UNIT News who helped out when the release went missing!)
Radio Times is running its boldest ever Christmas promotion this year with a free audio CD-ROM in each issue, a once in a lifetime opportunity to win a TV star, and a cross media nationwide above the line campaign.

The free Chronicles of Narnia CD, which is produced in association with AOL, Buena Vista International and BBC Audiobooks, includes the first part of the Prince Caspian audiobook and behind the scenes footage from the new film, plus a preview demo of the new Narnia game that can be played online by AOL members. Parts two and three of the book will be available with issues of Radio Times on sale on 23 December and 3 January. And as part of the AOL partnership, RT readers can take advantage of a special free one-month AOL Broadband trial.

The free CD is being supported by a nationwide TV campaign, which launches on 6 December - the same day as the worldwide premiere of The Chronicles of Narnia -The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe at London's Royal Albert Hall.

Readers will also have the opportunity to win a real six foot Dalek from the 2005 series as part of a Doctor Who special feature which ties in with the Christmas Day programme.

In addition, there will be a nationwide branding campaign, where prominently positioned six-sheet posters will be displayed outside selected supermarkets in the run up to the big "Christmas shop".

Radio Times publisher Kathy Day said: "I am incredibly proud of Radio Times' biggest ever Christmas issue promotion and have every confidence the UK public will continue to buy the indispensable guide to Christmas TV, radio and film in their millions.

"We have, without doubt, the best Christmas magazine package available and the investment in above and below the line advertising is guaranteed to delight readers and advertisers alike. Gill Hudson and her team have produced an unbeatable editorial package and the free CD featuring audio and extras from the biggest film property of the year is the icing on the cake."

Radio Times editor Gill Hudson says: "Radio Times readers are in for an even bigger treat than ever this year. As well as pages of exclusive features and photographs, plus the best and most comprehensive coverage of all the programmes on this Christmas, we've got not just one but TWO fantastic exclusive offers. This will be the biggest-ever Christmas issue of Radio Times, and it's going to be a real cracker. Christmas simply won't be Christmas without it."




FILTER: - Magazines - Radio Times

Christmas Invasion: UK, Canada Broadcasts

Tuesday, 29 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The official Doctor Who website has confirmed that The Christmas Invasion will be broadcast in the UK on BBC1 at 7pm on Sunday, December 25, as Outpost Gallifrey previously noted was the likely timeslot. (Other websites have suggested an earlier timeslot, which is incorrect.)
Additionally, the CBC network in Canada has confirmed they will air "The Christmas Invasion" on Monday, December 26 at 8pm, according to the network's program guide.




FILTER: - Specials - Broadcasting

Tennant: TV's Top Talent

Thursday, 24 November 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The new Doctor Who, David Tennant, has topped a list of Britain's best TV talent. The actor, who takes over from Christopher Eccleston, beat the likes of Jamie Oliver and Ant and Dec. Tennant heads Broadcast magazine's Hot 100, chosen by a panel of industry experts, according to a variety of press reports today. Before he was unveiled as the new Doctor Who, the 34-year-old made his breakthrough in BBC drama Casanova. "Landing the role of one of TV's most iconic characters has propelled Tennant into the big time," Broadcast said. "As yet we've had only the briefest glimpse of him as the Doctor, but if you missed his exuberant, charismatic, detailed performance as the eponymous hero in Casanova - where were you?" Also reported at BBC NewsYahoo NewsBroadcast Now.




FILTER: - David Tennant