List of Doctor Who serials
Doctor Who is a British science fiction television programme produced by the BBC. As of 25 December 2015,[update] 826 episodes of Doctor Who have aired, concluding the ninth series. This includes one television movie, and encompasses 263 stories over 35 seasons. Additionally, four charity specials and two animated serials have also been aired. The show's high episode count resulted in Doctor Who holding the world record for the highest number of episodes for a science-fiction programme.[1]
Doctor Who ceased airing in 1989 and began again in 2005. Each story in the original series (1963–89) is a multi-episode serial, with two exceptions: the 1965 cutaway episode "Mission to the Unknown" and the 20th anniversary story The Five Doctors. The characters in the column after the serial titles indicate the code used by the production team to designate the serial, where applicable, and are followed either by the titles of the individual episodes where given or by the number of episodes otherwise. During the early seasons of the programme most serials were linked together and one would usually lead directly into the next. Starting with the 2005 revival, the production team abandoned the traditional serial format for a largely self-contained episodic format with occasional multi-part stories and loose story arcs.
Due to the BBC's 1970s junking policy, 97 episodes from the 1960s are missing, with the result that 26 serials are incomplete, although all of these still exist as audio recordings, and some have been reconstructed. In the first two seasons and most of the third, each episode of a serial had an individual title; no serial had an overall on-screen title until The Savages. The serial titles given below are the most common title for the serials as a whole, used in sources such as the Doctor Who Reference Guide and the BBC's classic episode guide, and are generally those used for commercial release. The practice of individually titled episodes resurfaced with the show's 2005 revival, when Doctor Who's serial nature was abandoned in favour of an episodic format.
The three-digit story numbers are not official designations but are merely to serve as a guide to where the story stands in the overall context of the programme. There is some dispute about, for example, whether to count Season 23's The Trial of a Time Lord as one or four serials,[2] and whether the uncompleted Shada should be included.[3] The numbering scheme used here reflects the current internal practice of describing "Planet of the Dead" (2009) as the 200th story, used in the official magazine's 407th issue.[4] Other sources, such as the Region 1 DVDs of classic Doctor Who serials, use different numbering schemes which diverge after the 108th story, The Horns of Nimon (1979/80).
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Series overview
The following table dictates the season or series in question; singular specials are not included in episode counts or viewer totals.
Season/Series | Doctor(s) | Serials | Episodes | Originally aired | Viewers (millions) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | Premiere | Finale | ||||||
Season 1 | First Doctor | 8 | 42 | 23 November 1963 | 12 September 1964 | 4.4 | 6.4 | ||
Season 2 | 9 | 39 | 31 October 1964 | 24 July 1965 | 8.4 | 8.3 | |||
Season 3 | 10 | 45 | 11 September 1965 | 16 July 1966 | 9.0 | 5.5 | |||
Season 4 (c) | First/Second Doctor | 9 | 43 | 10 September 1966 | 1 July 1967 | 4.3 | 6.1 | ||
Season 5 | Second Doctor | 7 | 40 | 2 September 1967 | 1 June 1968 | 6.0 | 6.5 | ||
Season 6 | 7 | 44 | 10 August 1968 | 21 June 1969 | 6.1 | 5.0 | |||
Season 7 | Third Doctor | 4 | 25 | 3 January 1970 | 20 June 1970 | 8.4 | 5.5 | ||
Season 8 | 5 | 25 | 2 January 1971 | 19 June 1971 | 7.3 | 8.3 | |||
Season 9 | 5 | 26 | 1 January 1972 | 24 June 1972 | 9.8 | 7.6 | |||
Season 10 | 5 | 26 | 30 December 1972 | 23 June 1973 | 9.6 | 7.0 | |||
Season 11 | 5 | 26 | 15 December 1973 | 8 June 1974 | 8.7 | 8.9 | |||
Season 12 | Fourth Doctor | 5 | 20 | 28 December 1974 | 10 May 1975 | 10.1 | 9.0 | ||
Season 13 | 6 | 26 | 30 August 1975 | 6 March 1976 | 7.5 | 10.9 | |||
Season 14 | 6 | 26 | 4 September 1976 | 2 April 1977 | 9.5 | 10.4 | |||
Season 15 | 6 | 26 | 3 September 1977 | 11 March 1978 | 8.4 | 10.5 | |||
Season 16[note 1] | 6 | 26 | 2 September 1978 | 24 February 1979 | 8.1 | 8.5 | |||
Season 17 | 5[note 2] | 20 | 1 September 1979 | 12 January 1980 | 13.5 | 8.8 | |||
Season 18 | 7 | 28 | 30 August 1980 | 21 March 1981 | 5.1 | 6.7 | |||
Season 19 | Fifth Doctor | 7 | 26 | 4 January 1982 | 30 March 1982 | 9.6 | 8.9 | ||
Season 20 | 6 | 22 | 4 January 1983 | 16 March 1983 | 7.2 | 7.55 | |||
Season 21 (c) | Fifth/Sixth Doctor | 7 | 24 | 5 January 1984 | 30 March 1984 | 7.25 | 7.1 | ||
Season 22 | Sixth Doctor | 6 | 13 | 5 January 1985 | 30 March 1985 | 8.05 | 7.55 | ||
Season 23[note 3] | 4 | 14 | 6 September 1986 | 6 December 1986 | 4.35 | 5.0 | |||
Season 24 | Seventh Doctor | 4 | 14 | 7 September 1987 | 7 December 1987 | 4.63 | 5.07 | ||
Season 25 | 4 | 14 | 5 October 1988 | 4 January 1989 | 5.35 | 5.45 | |||
Season 26 | 4 | 14 | 6 September 1989 | 6 December 1989 | 3.65 | 4.9 | |||
TV movie | Eighth Doctor | 1 | 1 | 12 May 1996 | N/A | 9.08 | 9.08 | ||
Series 1 | Ninth Doctor | 10 | 13 | 26 March 2005 | 18 June 2005 | 10.81 | 6.91 | ||
Series 2 | Tenth Doctor | 10 | 13 | 15 April 2006 | 8 July 2006 | 8.62 | 8.22 | ||
Series 3 | 9 | 13 | 31 March 2007 | 30 June 2007 | 8.71 | 8.61 | |||
Series 4 | 10 | 13 | 5 April 2008 | 5 July 2008 | 9.14 | 10.57 | |||
Specials | 4 | 5 | 25 December 2008 | 1 January 2010 | 13.10 | 12.27 | |||
Series 5 | Eleventh Doctor | 10 | 13 | 3 April 2010 | 26 June 2010 | 10.09 | 6.70 | ||
Series 6 | 11 | 13 | 23 April 2011 | 1 October 2011 | 8.86 | 7.67 | |||
Series 7 | 13 | 13 | 1 September 2012 | 18 May 2013 | 8.33 | 7.45 | |||
Specials | 2 | 2 | 23 November 2013 | 25 December 2013 | 12.80 | 11.14 | |||
Series 8 | Twelfth Doctor | 11 | 12 | 23 August 2014 | 8 November 2014 | 9.17 | 7.60 | ||
Series 9 | 9 | 12 | 19 September 2015 | 5 December 2015 | 6.54 | 6.17 |
First Doctor
The first incarnation of the Doctor was portrayed by William Hartnell. During Hartnell's tenure, the episodes were a mixture of stories set on earth of the future with extraterrestrial influence, on alien planets and in historical events without extraterrestrial influence, such as Marco Polo, one of the lost serials. In his last story, The Tenth Planet, the Doctor gradually grew weaker to the point of collapsing at the end of the fourth episode, leading to his regeneration.
Season 1 (1963–64)
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Verity Lambert was producer with David Whitaker serving as script editor.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | An Unearthly Child "An Unearthly Child" "The Cave of Skulls" "The Forest of Fear" "The Firemaker" |
Waris Hussein | Anthony Coburn | 23 November 1963 30 November 1963 7 December 1963 14 December 1963 |
A | 4.4 5.9 6.9 6.4 |
63 59 56 55 |
2 | 2 | The Daleks "The Dead Planet" "The Survivors" "The Escape" "The Ambush" "The Expedition" "The Ordeal" "The Rescue" |
Richard Martin and Christopher Barry | Terry Nation | 21 December 1963 28 December 1963 4 January 1964 11 January 1964 18 January 1964 25 January 1964 1 February 1964 |
B | 6.9 6.4 8.9 9.9 9.9 10.4 10.4 |
59 58 63 63 63 63 65 |
3 | 3 | The Edge of Destruction "The Edge of Destruction" "The Brink of Disaster" |
Richard Martin and Frank Cox |
David Whitaker | 8 February 1964 15 February 1964 |
C | 10.4 9.9 |
61 60 |
4 | 4 | Marco Polo "The Roof of the World"† "The Singing Sands"† "Five Hundred Eyes"† "The Wall of Lies"† "Rider from Shang-Tu"† "Mighty Kublai Khan"† "Assassin at Peking"† |
Waris Hussein and John Crockett | John Lucarotti | 22 February 1964 29 February 1964 7 March 1964 14 March 1964 21 March 1964 28 March 1964 4 April 1964 |
D | 9.4 9.4 9.4 9.9 9.4 8.4 10.4 |
63 62 62 60 59 59 59 |
5 | 5 | The Keys of Marinus "The Sea of Death" "The Velvet Web" "The Screaming Jungle" "The Snows of Terror" "Sentence of Death" "The Keys of Marinus" |
John Gorrie | Terry Nation | 11 April 1964 18 April 1964 25 April 1964 2 May 1964 9 May 1964 16 May 1964 |
E | 9.9 9.4 9.9 10.4 7.9 6.9 |
62 60 61 60 61 63 |
6 | 6 | The Aztecs "The Temple of Evil" "The Warriors of Death" "The Bride of Sacrifice" "The Day of Darkness" |
John Crockett | John Lucarotti | 23 May 1964 30 May 1964 6 June 1964 13 June 1964 |
F | 7.4 7.4 7.9 7.4 |
62 62 57 58 |
7 | 7 | The Sensorites "Strangers in Space" "The Unwilling Warriors" "Hidden Danger" "A Race Against Death" "Kidnap" "A Desperate Venture" |
Mervyn Pinfield and Frank Cox | Peter R. Newman | 20 June 1964 27 June 1964 11 July 1964 18 July 1964 25 July 1964 1 August 1964 |
G | 7.9 6.9 7.4 5.5 6.9 6.9 |
59 59 56 60 57 57 |
8 | 8 | The Reign of Terror "A Land of Fear" "Guests of Madame Guillotine" "A Change of Identity" "The Tyrant of France"† "A Bargain of Necessity"† "Prisoners of Conciergerie" |
Henric Hirsch and John Gorrie | Dennis Spooner | 8 August 1964 15 August 1964 22 August 1964 29 August 1964 5 September 1964 12 September 1964 |
H | 6.9 6.9 6.9 6.4 6.9 6.4 |
58 54 55 53 53 55 |
Season 2 (1964–65)
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Dennis Spooner replaced David Whitaker as script editor after The Dalek Invasion of Earth, and edited the remainder of the season apart from The Time Meddler, which was edited by Donald Tosh.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
9 | 1 | Planet of Giants "Planet of Giants" "Dangerous Journey" "Crisis" |
Mervyn Pinfield and Douglas Camfield | Louis Marks | 31 October 1964 7 November 1964 14 November 1964 |
J | 8.4 8.4 8.9 |
57 58 59 |
10 | 2 | The Dalek Invasion of Earth "World's End" "The Daleks" "Day of Reckoning" "The End of Tomorrow" "The Waking Ally" "Flashpoint" |
Richard Martin | Terry Nation | 21 November 1964 28 November 1964 5 December 1964 12 December 1964 19 December 1964 26 December 1964 |
K | 11.4 12.4 11.9 11.9 11.4 12.4 |
63 59 59 59 58 63 |
11 | 3 | The Rescue "The Powerful Enemy" "Desperate Measures" |
Christopher Barry | David Whitaker | 2 January 1965 9 January 1965 |
L | 12.0 13.0 |
57 59 |
12 | 4 | The Romans "The Slave Traders" "All Roads Lead to Rome" "Conspiracy" "Inferno" |
Christopher Barry | Dennis Spooner | 16 January 1965 23 January 1965 30 January 1965 6 February 1965 |
M | 13.0 11.5 10.0 12.0 |
53 51 50 50 |
13 | 5 | The Web Planet "The Web Planet" "The Zarbi" "Escape to Danger" "Crater of Needles" "Invasion" "The Centre" |
Richard Martin | Bill Strutton | 13 February 1965 20 February 1965 27 February 1965 6 March 1965 13 March 1965 20 March 1965 |
N | 13.5 12.5 12.5 13.0 12.0 11.5 |
56 53 53 49 48 42 |
14 | 6 | The Crusade "The Lion" "The Knight of Jaffa"† "The Wheel of Fortune" "The Warlords"† |
Douglas Camfield | David Whitaker | 27 March 1965 3 April 1965 10 April 1965 17 April 1965 |
P | 10.5 8.5 9.0 9.5 |
51 50 49 48 |
15 | 7 | The Space Museum "The Space Museum" "The Dimensions of Time" "The Search" "The Final Phase" |
Mervyn Pinfield | Glyn Jones | 24 April 1965 1 May 1965 8 May 1965 15 May 1965 |
Q | 10.5 9.2 8.5 8.5 |
61 53 56 49 |
16 | 8 | The Chase "The Executioners" "The Death of Time" "Flight Through Eternity" "Journey into Terror" "The Death of Doctor Who" "The Planet of Decision" |
Richard Martin and Douglas Camfield | Terry Nation | 22 May 1965 29 May 1965 5 June 1965 12 June 1965 19 June 1965 26 June 1965 |
R | 10.0 9.5 9.0 9.5 9.0 9.5 |
57 56 55 54 56 57 |
17 | 9 | The Time Meddler "The Watcher" "The Meddling Monk" "A Battle of Wits" "Checkmate" |
Douglas Camfield | Dennis Spooner | 3 July 1965 10 July 1965 17 July 1965 24 July 1965 |
S | 8.9 8.8 7.7 8.3 |
57 49 53 54 |
Season 3 (1965–66)
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John Wiles replaced Verity Lambert as producer after Mission to the Unknown. Innes Lloyd, in turn, replaced Wiles after The Ark. Donald Tosh continued as script editor until The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve, which was also script-edited by his replacement, Gerry Davis. The practice of giving each individual episode a different title was abandoned after The Gunfighters, near the end of the season.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
18 | 1 | Galaxy 4 "Four Hundred Dawns"† "Trap of Steel"† "Air Lock" "The Exploding Planet"† |
Derek Martinus and Mervyn Pinfield | William Emms | 11 September 1965 18 September 1965 25 September 1965 2 October 1965 |
T | 9.0 9.5 11.3 9.9 |
56 55 54 53 |
19 | 2 | "Mission to the Unknown"† | Derek Martinus | Terry Nation | 9 October 1965 | T/A | 8.3 | 54 |
20 | 3 | The Myth Makers "Temple of Secrets"† "Small Prophet, Quick Return"† "Death of a Spy"† "Horse of Destruction"† |
Michael Leeston-Smith | Donald Cotton | 16 October 1965 23 October 1965 30 October 1965 6 November 1965 |
U | 8.3 8.1 8.7 8.3 |
48 51 49 52 |
21 | 4 | The Daleks' Master Plan "The Nightmare Begins"† "Day of Armageddon" "Devil's Planet"† "The Traitors"† "Counter Plot" "Coronas of the Sun"† "The Feast of Steven"† "Volcano"† "Golden Death"† "Escape Switch" "The Abandoned Planet"† "Destruction of Time"† |
Douglas Camfield | Terry Nation and Dennis Spooner | 13 November 1965 20 November 1965 27 November 1965 4 December 1965 11 December 1965 18 December 1965 25 December 1965 1 January 1966 8 January 1966 15 January 1966 22 January 1966 29 January 1966 |
V | 9.1 9.8 10.3 9.5 9.9 9.1 7.9 9.6 9.2 9.5 9.8 8.6 |
54 52 52 51 53 56 39 49 52 50 49 57 |
22 | 5 | The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve "War of God"† "The Sea Beggar"† "Priest of Death"† "Bell of Doom"† |
Paddy Russell | John Lucarotti and Donald Tosh | 5 February 1966 12 February 1966 19 February 1966 26 February 1966 |
W | 8.0 6.0 5.9 5.8 |
52 52 49 53 |
23 | 6 | The Ark "The Steel Sky" "The Plague" "The Return" "The Bomb" |
Michael Imison | Paul Erickson and Lesley Scott | 5 March 1966 12 March 1966 19 March 1966 26 March 1966 |
X | 5.5 6.9 6.2 7.3 |
55 56 51 50 |
24 | 7 | The Celestial Toymaker "The Celestial Toyroom"† "The Hall of Dolls"† "The Dancing Floor"† "The Final Test" |
Bill Sellars | Brian Hayles and Donald Tosh | 2 April 1966 9 April 1966 16 April 1966 23 April 1966 |
Y | 8.0 8.0 9.4 7.8 |
48 49 44 43 |
25 | 8 | The Gunfighters "A Holiday for the Doctor" "Don't Shoot the Pianist" "Johnny Ringo" "The OK Corral" |
Rex Tucker | Donald Cotton | 30 April 1966 7 May 1966 14 May 1966 21 May 1966 |
Z | 6.5 6.6 6.2 5.7 |
45 39 36 30 |
26 | 9 | The Savages (all episodes missing) |
Christopher Barry | Ian Stuart Black | 28 May 1966 4 June 1966 11 June 1966 18 June 1966 |
AA | 4.8 5.6 5.0 4.5 |
48 49 48 48 |
27 | 10 | The War Machines | Michael Ferguson | Ian Stuart Black and Kit Pedler | 25 June 1966 2 July 1966 9 July 1966 16 July 1966 |
BB | 5.4 4.7 5.3 5.5 |
49 45 44 39 |
Season 4 (1966–67)
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The Smugglers and The Tenth Planet were the last serials to star the First Doctor, his regeneration to the Second occurring in the latter. Peter Bryant joined as associate producer for The Faceless Ones, and replaced Gerry Davis as script editor for the last four episodes of The Evil of the Daleks.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (million) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
28 | 1 | The Smugglers (all episodes missing) |
Julia Smith | Brian Hayles | 10 September 1966 17 September 1966 24 September 1966 1 October 1966 |
CC | 4.3 4.9 4.2 4.5 |
47 45 43 43 |
29 | 2 | The Tenth Planet (episode 4 missing) |
Derek Martinus | Kit Pedler and Gerry Davis | 8 October 1966 15 October 1966 22 October 1966 29 October 1966 |
DD | 5.5 6.4 7.6 7.5 |
50 48 48 47 |
Second Doctor
The Second Doctor was portrayed by Patrick Troughton, whose serials were more action-oriented than those of his predecessor. Additionally, after The Highlanders, stories moved away from the purely historical ones that featured during William Hartnell's tenure; instead, any historical tales also included a science fiction element. Patrick Troughton retained the role until the last episode of The War Games when members of the Doctor's race, the Time Lords, put him on trial for breaking the laws of time and forced him to regenerate.
Season 4 (1966–67) continued
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (million) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 | 3 | The Power of the Daleks (all episodes missing) |
Christopher Barry | David Whitaker and Dennis Spooner | 5 November 1966 12 November 1966 19 November 1966 26 November 1966 3 December 1966 10 December 1966 |
EE | 7.9 7.8 7.5 7.8 8.0 7.8 |
43 45 44 47 48 47 |
31 | 4 | The Highlanders (all episodes missing) |
Hugh David | Elwyn Jones and Gerry Davis | 17 December 1966 24 December 1966 31 December 1966 7 January 1967 |
FF | 6.7 6.8 7.4 7.3 |
47 46 47 47 |
32 | 5 | The Underwater Menace (episodes 1 & 4 missing) |
Julia Smith | Geoffrey Orme | 14 January 1967 21 January 1967 28 January 1967 4 February 1967 |
GG | 8.3 7.5 7.1 7.0 |
48 46 45 47 |
33 | 6 | The Moonbase (episodes 1 & 3 missing) |
Morris Barry | Kit Pedler | 11 February 1967 18 February 1967 25 February 1967 4 March 1967 |
HH | 8.1 8.9 8.2 8.1 |
50 49 53 58 |
34 | 7 | The Macra Terror (all episodes missing) |
John Davies | Ian Stuart Black | 11 March 1967 18 March 1967 25 March 1967 1 April 1967 |
JJ | 8.0 7.9 8.5 8.4 |
50 48 52 49 |
35 | 8 | The Faceless Ones (episodes 2, 4, 5 & 6 missing) |
Gerry Mill | David Ellis and Malcolm Hulke | 8 April 1967 15 April 1967 22 April 1967 29 April 1967 6 May 1967 13 May 1967 |
KK | 8.0 6.4 7.9 6.9 7.1 8.0 |
51 50 53 55 55 52 |
36 | 9 | The Evil of the Daleks (episodes 1, 3 - 7 missing) |
Derek Martinus | David Whitaker | 20 May 1967 27 May 1967 3 June 1967 10 June 1967 17 June 1967 24 June 1967 1 July 1967 |
LL | 8.1 7.5 6.1 5.3 5.1 6.8 6.1 |
51 51 52 51 53 49 56 |
Season 5 (1967–68)
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Victor Pemberton was script editor for The Tomb of the Cybermen, with Peter Bryant as producer. After this, Bryant resumed the role of script editor, with Innes Lloyd returning as producer, until The Web of Fear when Bryant took over from Lloyd as producer. Derrick Sherwin replaced Bryant as script editor at the same time.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
37 | 1 | The Tomb of the Cybermen | Morris Barry | Kit Pedler and Gerry Davis | 2 September 1967 9 September 1967 16 September 1967 23 September 1967 |
MM | 6.0 6.4 7.2 7.4 |
53 52 49 50 |
38 | 2 | The Abominable Snowmen (Episodes 1, 3, 4, 5 & 6 missing) |
Gerald Blake | Mervyn Haisman and Henry Lincoln |
30 September 1967 7 October 1967 14 October 1967 21 October 1967 28 October 1967 4 November 1967 |
NN | 6.3 6.0 7.1 7.1 7.2 7.4 |
50 52 51 50 51 52 |
39 | 3 | The Ice Warriors (Episodes 2 & 3 missing) |
Derek Martinus | Brian Hayles | 11 November 1967 18 November 1967 25 November 1967 2 December 1967 9 December 1967 16 December 1967 |
OO | 6.7 7.1 7.4 7.3 8.0 7.5 |
52 52 51 51 50 51 |
40 | 4 | The Enemy of the World | Barry Letts | David Whitaker | 23 December 1967 30 December 1967 6 January 1968 13 January 1968 20 January 1968 27 January 1968 |
PP | 6.8 7.6 7.1 7.8 6.9 8.3 |
50 49 48 49 49 52 |
41 | 5 | The Web of Fear (Episode 3 missing) |
Douglas Camfield | Mervyn Haisman and Henry Lincoln | 3 February 1968 10 February 1968 17 February 1968 24 February 1968 2 March 1968 9 March 1968 |
7.2 6.8 7.0 8.4 8.0 8.3 |
54 53 51 53 55 55 |
|
42 | 6 | Fury from the Deep (All episodes missing) |
Hugh David | Victor Pemberton | 16 March 1968 23 March 1968 30 March 1968 6 April 1968 13 April 1968 20 April 1968 |
RR | 8.2 7.9 7.7 6.6 5.9 6.9 |
55 55 56 56 56 57 |
43 | 7 | The Wheel in Space (Episodes 1, 2, 4 & 5 missing) |
Tristan DeVere Cole | David Whitaker and Kit Pedler | 27 April 1968 4 May 1968 11 May 1968 18 May 1968 25 May 1968 1 June 1968 |
SS | 7.2 6.9 7.5 8.6 6.8 6.5 |
57 60 55 56 57 62 |
Season 6 (1968–69)
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Terrance Dicks took over from Derrick Sherwin as script editor from The Invasion, with Sherwin resuming the role for The Space Pirates. Derrick Sherwin took over as producer from Peter Bryant for The War Games.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
44 | 1 | The Dominators | Morris Barry | Norman Ashby (Mervyn Haisman and Henry Lincoln) | 10 August 1968 17 August 1968 24 August 1968 31 August 1968 7 September 1968 |
TT | 6.1 5.9 5.4 7.5 5.9 |
52 55 55 51 53 |
45 | 2 | The Mind Robber | David Maloney | Peter Ling and Derrick Sherwin | 14 September 1968 21 September 1968 28 September 1968 5 October 1968 12 October 1968 |
UU | 6.6 6.5 7.2 7.3 6.7 |
51 49 53 56 49 |
46 | 3 | The Invasion (Episodes 1 & 4 missing) |
Douglas Camfield | Derrick Sherwin and Kit Pedler | 2 November 1968 9 November 1968 16 November 1968 23 November 1968 30 November 1968 7 December 1968 14 December 1968 21 December 1968 |
VV | 7.3 7.1 7.1 6.4 6.7 6.5 7.2 7.0 |
55 53 54 51 52 56 55 53 |
47 | 4 | The Krotons | David Maloney | Robert Holmes | 28 December 1968 4 January 1969 11 January 1969 18 January 1969 |
WW | 9.0 8.4 7.5 7.1 |
59 57 56 55 |
48 | 5 | The Seeds of Death | Michael Ferguson | Brian Hayles and Terrance Dicks | 25 January 1969 1 February 1969 8 February 1969 15 February 1969 22 February 1969 1 March 1969 |
XX | 6.6 6.8 7.5 7.1 7.6 7.7 |
57 59 55 55 57 59 |
49 | 6 | The Space Pirates (Episodes 1, 3 - 6 missing) |
Michael Hart | Robert Holmes | 8 March 1969 15 March 1969 22 March 1969 29 March 1969 5 April 1969 12 April 1969 |
YY | 5.8 6.8 6.4 5.8 5.5 5.3 |
57 52 55 53 56 52 |
50 | 7 | The War Games | David Maloney | Terrance Dicks and Malcolm Hulke | 19 April 1969 26 April 1969 3 May 1969 10 May 1969 17 May 1969 24 May 1969 31 May 1969 7 June 1969 14 June 1969 21 June 1969 |
ZZ | 5.5 6.3 5.1 5.7 5.1 4.2 4.9 3.5 4.1 5.0 |
55 54 53 50 53 53 53 53 57 58 |
Third Doctor
The Third Doctor was portrayed by Jon Pertwee. Sentenced to exile on Earth and forcibly regenerated at the end of The War Games, the Doctor spent his time working for UNIT. After The Three Doctors, the Time Lords repealed his exile; however, the Doctor still worked closely with UNIT from time to time. The Third Doctor regenerated into his fourth incarnation as a result of radiation poisoning in the last moments of Planet of the Spiders.
Season 7 (1970)
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Barry Letts took over as producer from Derrick Sherwin after Spearhead from Space. From this season onwards the programme was produced in colour. To accommodate the new production methods the number of episodes in a season was cut: season 6 has 44 episodes; season 7 has 25 episodes. The seasons would continue to have between 20 and 28 episodes until season 22.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
51 | 1 | Spearhead from Space | Derek Martinus | Robert Holmes | 3 January 1970 10 January 1970 17 January 1970 24 January 1970 |
AAA | 8.4 8.1 8.3 8.1 |
54 — — 57 |
52 | 2 | Doctor Who and the Silurians | Timothy Combe | Malcolm Hulke | 31 January 1970 7 February 1970 14 February 1970 21 February 1970 28 February 1970 7 March 1970 14 March 1970 |
BBB | 8.8 7.3 7.5 8.2 7.5 7.2 7.5 |
58 58 57 60 58 57 58 |
53 | 3 | The Ambassadors of Death | Michael Ferguson | David Whitaker, Trevor Ray and Malcolm Hulke | 21 March 1970 28 March 1970 4 April 1970 11 April 1970 18 April 1970 25 April 1970 2 May 1970 |
CCC | 7.1 7.6 8.0 9.3 7.1 6.9 6.4 |
60 61 59 58 — 61 62 |
54 | 4 | Inferno | Douglas Camfield and Barry Letts | Don Houghton | 9 May 1970 16 May 1970 23 May 1970 30 May 1970 6 June 1970 13 June 1970 20 June 1970 |
DDD | 5.7 5.9 4.8 6.0 5.4 6.7 5.5 |
61 61 60 60 — 58 60 |
Season 8 (1971)
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This season forms a loose arc with the introduction of the Master, the villain in each of the season's storylines, and introduces the companion Jo Grant.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
55 | 1 | Terror of the Autons | Barry Letts | Robert Holmes | 2 January 1971 9 January 1971 16 January 1971 23 January 1971 |
EEE | 7.3 8.0 8.1 8.4 |
— |
56 | 2 | The Mind of Evil | Timothy Combe | Don Houghton | 30 January 1971 6 February 1971 13 February 1971 20 February 1971 27 February 1971 6 March 1971 |
FFF | 6.1 8.8 7.5 7.4 7.6 7.3 |
— |
57 | 3 | The Claws of Axos | Michael Ferguson | Bob Baker and Dave Martin | 13 March 1971 20 March 1971 27 March 1971 3 April 1971 |
GGG | 7.3 8.0 6.4 7.8 |
— |
58 | 4 | Colony in Space | Michael E. Briant | Malcolm Hulke | 10 April 1971 17 April 1971 24 April 1971 1 May 1971 8 May 1971 15 May 1971 |
HHH | 7.6 8.5 9.5 8.1 8.8 8.7 |
— |
59 | 5 | The Dæmons | Christopher Barry | Guy Leopold (Robert Sloman and Barry Letts) | 22 May 1971 29 May 1971 5 June 1971 12 June 1971 19 June 1971 |
JJJ | 9.2 8.0 8.1 8.1 8.3 |
— |
Season 9 (1972)
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Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
60 | 1 | Day of the Daleks | Paul Bernard | Louis Marks | 1 January 1972 8 January 1972 15 January 1972 22 January 1972 |
KKK | 9.8 10.4 9.1 9.1 |
— |
61 | 2 | The Curse of Peladon | Lennie Mayne | Brian Hayles | 29 January 1972 5 February 1972 12 February 1972 19 February 1972 |
MMM | 10.3 11.0 7.8 8.4 |
— |
62 | 3 | The Sea Devils | Michael E. Briant | Malcolm Hulke | 26 February 1972 4 March 1972 11 March 1972 18 March 1972 25 March 1972 1 April 1972 |
LLL | 6.4 9.7 8.3 7.8 8.3 8.5 |
— |
63 | 4 | The Mutants | Christopher Barry | Bob Baker and Dave Martin | 8 April 1972 15 April 1972 22 April 1972 29 April 1972 6 May 1972 13 May 1972 |
NNN | 9.1 7.8 7.9 7.5 7.9 6.5 |
— |
64 | 5 | The Time Monster | Paul Bernard | Robert Sloman and Barry Letts | 20 May 1972 27 May 1972 3 June 1972 10 June 1972 17 June 1972 24 June 1972 |
OOO | 7.6 7.4 8.1 7.6 6.0 7.6 |
— |
Season 10 (1972–73)
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Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
65 | 1 | The Three Doctors | Lennie Mayne | Bob Baker and Dave Martin | 30 December 1972 6 January 1973 13 January 1973 20 January 1973 |
RRR | 9.6 10.8 8.8 11.9 |
— |
66 | 2 | Carnival of Monsters | Barry Letts | Robert Holmes | 27 January 1973 3 February 1973 10 February 1973 17 February 1973 |
PPP | 9.5 9.0 9.0 9.2 |
— |
67 | 3 | Frontier in Space | Paul Bernard | Malcolm Hulke | 24 February 1973 3 March 1973 10 March 1973 17 March 1973 24 March 1973 31 March 1973 |
QQQ | 9.1 7.8 7.5 7.1 7.7 8.9 |
— |
68 | 4 | Planet of the Daleks | David Maloney | Terry Nation | 7 April 1973 14 April 1973 21 April 1973 28 April 1973 5 May 1973 12 May 1973 |
SSS | 11.0 10.7 10.1 8.3 9.7 8.5 |
— |
69 | 5 | The Green Death | Michael E. Briant | Robert Sloman and Barry Letts | 19 May 1973 26 May 1973 2 June 1973 9 June 1973 16 June 1973 23 June 1973 |
TTT | 9.2 7.2 7.8 6.8 8.3 7.0 |
— |
Season 11 (1973–74)
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This season introduces the companion Sarah Jane Smith.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
70 | 1 | The Time Warrior | Alan Bromly | Robert Holmes | 15 December 1973 22 December 1973 29 December 1973 5 January 1974 |
UUU | 8.7 7.0 6.6 10.6 |
59 — — 60 |
71 | 2 | Invasion of the Dinosaurs | Paddy Russell | Malcolm Hulke | 12 January 1974 19 January 1974 26 January 1974 2 February 1974 9 February 1974 16 February 1974 |
WWW | 11.0 10.1 11.0 9.0 9.0 7.5 |
62 — 63 — — 62 |
72 | 3 | Death to the Daleks | Michael E. Briant | Terry Nation | 23 February 1974 2 March 1974 9 March 1974 16 March 1974 |
XXX | 8.1 9.5 10.5 9.5 |
61 — 61 62 |
73 | 4 | The Monster of Peladon | Lennie Mayne | Brian Hayles | 23 March 1974 30 March 1974 6 April 1974 13 April 1974 20 April 1974 27 April 1974 |
YYY | 9.2 6.8 7.4 7.2 7.5 8.1 |
— |
74 | 5 | Planet of the Spiders | Barry Letts | Robert Sloman and Barry Letts | 4 May 1974 11 May 1974 18 May 1974 25 May 1974 1 June 1974 8 June 1974 |
ZZZ | 10.1 8.9 8.8 8.2 9.2 8.9 |
58 60 57 — — 56 |
Fourth Doctor
The Fourth Doctor was portrayed by Tom Baker. He is, to date, the actor who has played the Doctor on television for the longest time,[6] having held the role for seven seasons.
Season 12 (1974–75)
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Barry Letts served as producer for Robot, after which he was succeeded by Philip Hinchcliffe. Robert Holmes took over from Terrance Dicks as script editor. All serials in this season continue directly one after the other, tracing one single problematic voyage of the TARDIS crew. Despite the continuity, each serial is considered its own standalone story. This season also introduced the character of Harry Sullivan as a companion; this character was intended to undertake action scenes, during the period prior to Tom Baker being cast, when it was unclear how old the actor playing the new Doctor would be.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
75 | 1 | Robot | Christopher Barry | Terrance Dicks | 28 December 1974 4 January 1975 11 January 1975 18 January 1975 |
4A | 10.8 10.7 10.1 9.0 |
53 53 — 51 |
76 | 2 | The Ark in Space | Rodney Bennett | Robert Holmes | 25 January 1975 1 February 1975 8 February 1975 15 February 1975 |
4C | 9.4 13.6 11.2 10.2 |
— |
77 | 3 | The Sontaran Experiment | Rodney Bennett | Bob Baker and Dave Martin | 22 February 1975 1 March 1975 |
4B | 11.0 10.5 |
— 55 |
78 | 4 | Genesis of the Daleks | David Maloney | Terry Nation | 8 March 1975 15 March 1975 22 March 1975 29 March 1975 5 April 1975 12 April 1975 |
4E | 10.7 10.5 8.5 8.8 9.8 9.1 |
— 57 — 58 57 56 |
79 | 5 | Revenge of the Cybermen | Michael E. Briant | Gerry Davis | 19 April 1975 26 April 1975 3 May 1975 10 May 1975 |
4D | 9.5 8.3 8.9 9.4 |
57 — — 58 |
Season 13 (1975–76)
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During this season, Ian Marter (Harry Sullivan) left after Terror of the Zygons, but returned for a guest appearance in The Android Invasion. Terror of the Zygons also saw the last semi-regular appearance of Nicholas Courtney (Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart) who would not return until Season 20 in Mawdryn Undead.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
80 | 1 | Terror of the Zygons | Douglas Camfield | Robert Banks Stewart | 30 August 1975 6 September 1975 13 September 1975 20 September 1975 |
4F | 8.4 6.1 8.2 7.2 |
59 — 54 — |
81 | 2 | Planet of Evil | David Maloney | Louis Marks | 27 September 1975 4 October 1975 11 October 1975 18 October 1975 |
4H | 10.4 9.9 9.1 10.1 |
— 56 57 54 |
82 | 3 | Pyramids of Mars | Paddy Russell | Stephen Harris (Lewis Greifer and Robert Holmes) | 25 October 1975 1 November 1975 8 November 1975 15 November 1975 |
4G | 10.5 11.3 9.4 11.7 |
— — — 60 |
83 | 4 | The Android Invasion | Barry Letts | Terry Nation | 22 November 1975 29 November 1975 6 December 1975 13 December 1975 |
4J | 11.9 11.3 12.1 11.4 |
58 — — — |
84 | 5 | The Brain of Morbius | Christopher Barry | Robin Bland (Terrance Dicks and Robert Holmes) | 3 January 1976 10 January 1976 17 January 1976 24 January 1976 |
4K | 9.5 9.3 10.1 10.2 |
— — 57 — |
85 | 6 | The Seeds of Doom | Douglas Camfield | Robert Banks Stewart | 31 January 1976 7 February 1976 14 February 1976 21 February 1976 28 February 1976 6 March 1976 |
4L | 11.4 11.4 10.3 11.1 9.9 11.5 |
59 — — — — — |
Season 14 (1976–77)
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Elisabeth Sladen (Sarah Jane Smith) left the series this season and was replaced by Louise Jameson (Leela). The season also saw the first story in which the Doctor did not have a companion, The Deadly Assassin.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
86 | 1 | The Masque of Mandragora | Rodney Bennett | Louis Marks | 4 September 1976 11 September 1976 18 September 1976 25 September 1976 |
4M | 8.3 9.8 9.2 10.6 |
58 56 — 56 |
87 | 2 | The Hand of Fear | Lennie Mayne | Bob Baker and Dave Martin | 2 October 1976 9 October 1976 16 October 1976 23 October 1976 |
4N | 10.5 10.2 11.1 12.0 |
— — 62 — |
88 | 3 | The Deadly Assassin | David Maloney | Robert Holmes | 30 October 1976 6 November 1976 13 November 1976 20 November 1976 |
4P | 11.8 12.1 13.0 11.8 |
— 59 — 61 |
89 | 4 | The Face of Evil | Pennant Roberts | Chris Boucher | 1 January 1977 8 January 1977 15 January 1977 22 January 1977 |
4Q | 10.7 11.1 11.3 11.7 |
61 — 59 60 |
90 | 5 | The Robots of Death | Michael E. Briant | Chris Boucher | 29 January 1977 5 February 1977 12 February 1977 19 February 1977 |
4R | 12.8 12.4 13.1 12.6 |
62 — — 57 |
91 | 6 | The Talons of Weng-Chiang | David Maloney | Robert Holmes | 26 February 1977 5 March 1977 12 March 1977 19 March 1977 26 March 1977 2 April 1977 |
4S | 11.3 9.8 10.2 11.4 10.1 9.3 |
— — — 60 — 58 |
Season 15 (1977–78)
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Graham Williams took over as producer from Philip Hinchcliffe. Robert Holmes was replaced as script editor by Anthony Read during The Sun Makers.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
92 | 1 | Horror of Fang Rock | Paddy Russell | Terrance Dicks | 3 September 1977 10 September 1977 17 September 1977 24 September 1977 |
4V | 6.8 7.1 9.8 9.9 |
58 — 60 57 |
93 | 2 | The Invisible Enemy | Derrick Goodwin | Bob Baker and Dave Martin | 1 October 1977 8 October 1977 15 October 1977 22 October 1977 |
4T | 8.6 7.3 7.5 8.3 |
— — — 60 |
94 | 3 | Image of the Fendahl | George Spenton-Foster | Chris Boucher | 29 October 1977 5 November 1977 12 November 1977 19 November 1977 |
4X | 6.7 7.5 7.9 9.1 |
— — — 61 |
95 | 4 | The Sun Makers | Pennant Roberts | Robert Holmes | 26 November 1977 3 December 1977 10 December 1977 17 December 1977 |
4W | 8.5 9.5 8.9 8.4 |
— — 68 59 |
96 | 5 | Underworld | Norman Stewart | Bob Baker and Dave Martin | 7 January 1978 14 January 1978 21 January 1978 28 January 1978 |
4Y | 8.9 9.1 8.9 11.7 |
65 — — — |
97 | 6 | The Invasion of Time | Gerald Blake | David Agnew (Graham Williams and Anthony Read) |
4 February 1978 11 February 1978 18 February 1978 25 February 1978 4 March 1978 11 March 1978 |
4Z | 11.2 11.4 9.5 10.9 10.3 9.8 |
56 — — — — — |
Season 16 (1978–79)
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Douglas Adams took over as script editor from Anthony Read for The Armageddon Factor. Season 16 consists of one long story arc encompassing six separate, linked stories. This season is referred to by the umbrella title The Key to Time and has been released on DVD under this title.
- REDIRECT Doctor Who season 16
Season 17 (1979–80)
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Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
104 | 1 | Destiny of the Daleks | Ken Grieve | Terry Nation | 1 September 1979 8 September 1979 15 September 1979 22 September 1979 |
5J | 13.0 12.7 13.8 14.4 |
67 — 63 64 |
105 | 2 | City of Death | Michael Hayes | David Agnew (Douglas Adams, Graham Williams and David Fisher) |
29 September 1979 6 October 1979 13 October 1979 20 October 1979 |
5H | 12.4 14.1 15.4 16.1 |
— 64 — 64 |
106 | 3 | The Creature from the Pit | Christopher Barry | David Fisher | 27 October 1979 3 November 1979 10 November 1979 17 November 1979 |
5G | 9.3 10.8 10.2 9.6 |
— 67 — — |
107 | 4 | Nightmare of Eden | Alan Bromly | Bob Baker | 24 November 1979 1 December 1979 8 December 1979 15 December 1979 |
5K | 8.7 9.6 9.6 9.4 |
— — — 65 |
108 | 5 | The Horns of Nimon | Kenny McBain | Anthony Read | 22 December 1979 29 December 1979 5 January 1980 12 January 1980 |
5L | 6.0 8.8 9.8 10.4 |
— — — 67 |
— | 6 | Shada | Pennant Roberts | Douglas Adams | Unaired[note 2] | 5M | — | — |
Season 18 (1980–81)
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John Nathan-Turner replaced Graham Williams as producer. Barry Letts returned, as executive producer, for just this season. Christopher H. Bidmead replaced Douglas Adams as script editor. In a return to the format of early seasons, virtually all serials from Seasons 18 through 20 are linked together, often running directly into each other.
Season 18 forms a loose story arc dealing with the theme of entropy. Full Circle, State of Decay, and Warriors' Gate trace the Doctor's adventures in E-Space; they were released in both VHS and DVD boxsets with the umbrella title The E-Space Trilogy.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
109 | 1 | The Leisure Hive | Lovett Bickford | David Fisher | 30 August 1980 6 September 1980 13 September 1980 20 September 1980 |
5N | 5.9 5.0 5.0 4.5 |
— — — 65 |
110 | 2 | Meglos | Terence Dudley | John Flanagan & Andrew McCulloch |
27 September 1980 4 October 1980 11 October 1980 18 October 1980 |
5Q | 5.0 4.2 4.7 4.7 |
61 64 — 63 |
111 | 3 | Full Circle | Peter Grimwade | Andrew Smith | 25 October 1980 1 November 1980 8 November 1980 15 November 1980 |
5R | 5.9 3.7 5.9 5.4 |
— — — 65 |
112 | 4 | State of Decay | Peter Moffatt | Terrance Dicks | 22 November 1980 29 November 1980 6 December 1980 13 December 1980 |
5P | 5.8 5.3 4.4 5.4 |
— — — 69 |
113 | 5 | Warriors' Gate | Paul Joyce & Graeme Harper |
Stephen Gallagher | 3 January 1981 10 January 1981 17 January 1981 24 January 1981 |
5S | 7.1 6.7 8.3 7.8 |
59 — — 59 |
114 | 6 | The Keeper of Traken | John Black | Johnny Byrne | 31 January 1981 7 February 1981 14 February 1981 21 February 1981 |
5T | 7.6 6.1 5.2 6.1 |
— — — 63 |
115 | 7 | Logopolis | Peter Grimwade | Christopher H. Bidmead | 28 February 1981 7 March 1981 14 March 1981 21 March 1981 |
5V | 7.7 7.7 5.8 6.1 |
— 61 — 65 |
Fifth Doctor
The Fifth Doctor was portrayed by Peter Davison.
Season 19 (1982)
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Antony Root took over from Bidmead as script editor for Four to Doomsday and The Visitation (the first stories produced for season 19), with Eric Saward assuming the role for the remainder of the season. The show moved from its traditional once-weekly Saturday broadcast to being broadcast twice-weekly primarily on Monday and Tuesday, although there were regional variations to the schedule.
Castrovalva, together with the previous two serials, The Keeper of Traken and Logopolis, form a trilogy involving the return of the Master. They were released on DVD under the banner title New Beginnings.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
116 | 1 | Castrovalva | Fiona Cumming | Christopher H. Bidmead | 4 January 1982 5 January 1982 11 January 1982 12 January 1982 |
5Z | 9.1 8.6 10.2 10.4 |
– |
117 | 2 | Four to Doomsday | John Black | Terence Dudley | 18 January 1982 19 January 1982 25 January 1982 26 January 1982 |
5W | 8.4 8.8 8.9 9.4 |
– |
118 | 3 | Kinda | Peter Grimwade | Christopher Bailey | 1 February 1982 2 February 1982 8 February 1982 9 February 1982 |
5Y | 8.4 9.4 8.5 8.9 |
– |
119 | 4 | The Visitation | Peter Moffatt | Eric Saward | 15 February 1982 16 February 1982 22 February 1982 23 February 1982 |
5X | 9.1 9.3 9.9 10.1 |
– |
120 | 5 | Black Orchid | Ron Jones | Terence Dudley | 1 March 1982 2 March 1982 |
6A | 9.9 10.1 |
– |
121 | 6 | Earthshock | Peter Grimwade | Eric Saward | 8 March 1982 9 March 1982 15 March 1982 16 March 1982 |
6B | 9.1 8.8 9.8 9.6 |
– |
122 | 7 | Time-Flight | Ron Jones | Peter Grimwade | 22 March 1982 23 March 1982 29 March 1982 30 March 1982 |
6C | 10.0 8.5 8.9 8.1 |
– |
Season 20 (1983)
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To commemorate the twentieth season, the stories in this season involve the return of previous villains. Mawdryn Undead, Terminus and Enlightenment involve the Black Guardian's plot to kill the Doctor; they were released individually on VHS and as a set on DVD as parts of The Black Guardian Trilogy. This season was broadcast twice weekly on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings on BBC1.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
123 | 1 | Arc of Infinity | Ron Jones | Johnny Byrne | 3 January 1983 5 January 1983 11 January 1983 12 January 1983 |
6E | 7.2 7.3 6.9 7.2 |
69 70 67 66 |
||||
124 | 2 | Snakedance | Fiona Cumming | Christopher Bailey | 18 January 1983 19 January 1983 25 January 1983 26 January 1983 |
6D | 6.7 7.7 6.6 7.4 |
65 66 67 67 |
||||
125 | 3 | Mawdryn Undead | Peter Moffatt | Peter Grimwade | 1 February 1983 2 February 1983 8 February 1983 9 February 1983 |
6F | 6.5 7.5 7.4 7.7 |
67 70 67 68 |
||||
126 | 4 | Terminus | Mary Ridge | Stephen Gallagher | 15 February 1983 16 February 1983 22 February 1983 23 February 1983 |
6G | 6.8 7.5 6.5 7.4 |
65 67 64 67 |
||||
127 | 5 | Enlightenment | Fiona Cumming | Barbara Clegg | 1 March 1983 2 March 1983 8 March 1983 9 March 1983 |
6H | 6.6 7.2 6.2 7.3 |
67 65 68 70 |
||||
128 | 6 | The King's Demons | Tony Virgo | Terence Dudley | 15 March 1983 16 March 1983 |
6J | 5.8 7.2 |
65 63 |
||||
' | ||||||||||||
129 | — | The Five Doctors | Peter Moffatt | Terrance Dicks | 25 November 1983[7] | 6K | 7.7 | 75 |
Season 21 (1984)
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Episodes were broadcast twice weekly on Thursday and Friday evenings, with Resurrection of the Daleks broadcast on two consecutive Wednesday nights. The Caves of Androzani saw the regeneration of the Fifth Doctor, and the season finale The Twin Dilemma was the first story of the Sixth Doctor.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (million) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
130 | 1 | Warriors of the Deep | Pennant Roberts | Johnny Byrne | 5 January 1984 6 January 1984 12 January 1984 13 January 1984 |
6L | 7.6 7.5 7.3 6.6 |
65 64 62 65 |
131 | 2 | The Awakening | Michael Owen Morris | Eric Pringle | 19 January 1984 20 January 1984 |
6M | 7.9 6.6 |
65 63 |
132 | 3 | Frontios | Ron Jones | Christopher H. Bidmead | 26 January 1984 27 January 1984 2 February 1984 3 February 1984 |
6N | 8.0 5.8 7.8 5.6 |
66 69 65 65 |
133 | 4 | Resurrection of the Daleks | Matthew Robinson | Eric Saward | 8 February 1984 15 February 1984 |
6P | 7.3 8.0 |
69 65 |
134 | 5 | Planet of Fire | Fiona Cumming | Peter Grimwade | 23 February 1984 24 February 1984 1 March 1984 2 March 1984 |
6Q | 7.4 6.1 7.4 7.0 |
— |
135 | 6 | The Caves of Androzani | Graeme Harper | Robert Holmes | 8 March 1984 9 March 1984 15 March 1984 16 March 1984 |
6R | 6.9 6.6 7.8 7.8 |
65 — 65 68 |
Sixth Doctor
The Sixth Doctor was portrayed by Colin Baker.
Season 21 (1984) continued
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (million) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
136 | 7 | The Twin Dilemma | Peter Moffatt | Anthony Steven | 22 March 1984 23 March 1984 29 March 1984 30 March 1984 |
6S | 7.6 7.4 7.0 6.3 |
61 66 59 67 |
Season 22 (1985)
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The series moved back to once-weekly Saturday broadcasts. All episodes were 45 minutes long, though they also exist in 25-minute versions. Although there were now only 13 episodes in the season, the total running time remained approximately the same as in previous seasons since the episodes were almost twice as long.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
137 | 1 | Attack of the Cybermen | Matthew Robinson | Paula Moore | 5 January 1985 12 January 1985 |
6T | 8.9 7.2 |
61 65 |
138 | 2 | Vengeance on Varos | Ron Jones | Philip Martin | 19 January 1985 26 January 1985 |
6V | 7.2 7.0 |
63 65 |
139 | 3 | The Mark of the Rani | Sarah Hellings | Pip and Jane Baker | 2 February 1985 9 February 1985 |
6X | 6.3 7.3 |
64 64 |
140 | 4 | The Two Doctors | Peter Moffatt | Robert Holmes | 16 February 1985 23 February 1985 2 March 1985 |
6W | 6.6 6.0 6.9 |
65 62 65 |
141 | 5 | Timelash | Pennant Roberts | Glen McCoy | 9 March 1985 16 March 1985 |
6Y | 6.7 7.4 |
66 64 |
142 | 6 | Revelation of the Daleks | Graeme Harper | Eric Saward | 23 March 1985 30 March 1985 |
6Z | 7.4 7.7 |
67 65 |
Season 23 (1986)
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After an 18-month production hiatus, the series returned. Eric Saward was script editor up to part eight, when Nathan-Turner unofficially took over script editing the remainder of the season because of Saward's departure. The whole season is titled as The Trial of a Time Lord, and is split into four segments. The segments are commonly referred to by their working titles[8] (listed below) but the season was broadcast as one fourteen-part story and the working titles did not appear on screen. Episode length returned to 25 minutes, but with only fourteen episodes in the season, making the total running time of this season (and subsequent seasons) just over half of the previous seasons, going back to season 7.
No. story |
No. in season |
Serial title | Episode titles | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [9] |
AI [9] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
143a | 1 | The Mysterious Planet | Nicholas Mallett | Robert Holmes | 7A | ||||
The Doctor's TARDIS is plucked out of time and space. The Sixth Doctor is charged with breaking the First Law of Time by the High Council of Gallifrey, a law forbidding interference in alien worlds and galactic affairs. The Valeyard presents the transgressions on a video screen, depicting the Doctor’s past adventures with his companion Peri Brown. The Doctor becomes suspicious about evidence being censored. In the first flashback, the Doctor and Peri arrive on the tribal planet Ravalox, located two million light years from Earth's known location. The Doctor notes a similarity between Ravalox and Earth, with objects from Earth—notably Marble Arch tube station and the novel Moby Dick—present on Ravalox. The only apparent astronomical difference between the two is Ravalox's position in the galaxy. Rogue Sabalom Glitz attempts to obtain secrets and technology that are guarded by a robot. The Doctor is forced to deactivate the robot’s unstable power supply to avoid a chain reaction, but in the process, the secrets are destroyed. As he leaves Ravalox, the Doctor wonders why Earth appears to have been moved several million light-years from its original position. | |||||||||
143b | 2 | Mindwarp | Ron Jones | Philip Martin | 7B | ||||
The Valeyard presents his second piece of evidence for the prosecution, the Doctor and Peri's activities on Thoros Beta, immediately before the trial. The flashback shows the Doctor investigating arms sales, where he sees his old adversary Sil. Sil's race, the Mentors, are revealed to have been supplying Yrcanos, the local king of a Viking-like primitive culture, with advanced weaponry. Meanwhile, a scientist, Crozier, is preparing for surgery on Kiv, an influential Mentor whose brain is expanding. The Doctor is portrayed as self-serving and unconcerned with Peri's welfare during the flashback, as he appears to help Crozier and the Mentors by abandoning and betraying Peri and Yrcanos. This uncharacteristic behaviour convinces the Doctor that the evidence has been altered. When the Doctor learns that Peri has been chosen as the new host for Kiv's brain, he allies with Yrcanos to kill the Mentors. However, before he can attack he is captured by the High Council, resulting in Peri's 'death'. | |||||||||
143c | 3 | Terror of the Vervoids | Chris Clough | Pip and Jane Baker | 7C | ||||
The Doctor is now allowed to present evidence for his defence. He chooses events from the future, in hopes that it will prove he has reformed after the Thoros-Beta incident. During the presentation, some details appear altered from what the Doctor reviewed, furthering his suspicions that evidence is being tampered with. In the year 2986, the Doctor and his new companion Mel answer a distress call from the interstellar ship Hyperion III. The ship is sabotaged and people are dying at the hands of the Vervoids, plant-like humanoids who the Doctor learns were genetically engineered to be slaves. Although the Doctor and Mel are able to stop the Vervoids, he admits that none of the Vervoids survived the voyage. The Valeyard—under Article 7 of Gallifreyan law—charges the Doctor with genocide. | |||||||||
143d | 4 | The Ultimate Foe | Chris Clough | 7C | |||||
The Doctor claims that the Matrix has been deliberately altered, and the Keeper of the Matrix is summoned. Seconds later, the Master appears on the Matrix's screen. Sabalom Glitz and Mel are then called as witnesses to the Doctor's defence. The secrets Glitz sought had been stolen from the Time Lords, and Earth was ravaged and moved to preserve them. The Doctor was used as a scapegoat, and the Valeyard—an amalgam of the Doctor's evil personalities from between his twelfth and final incarnation—was offered the Doctor's remaining regenerations. To ensure a guilty verdict, the Valeyard distorted the evidence. The Doctor's attempts to prevent the Valeyard from killing the High Council are stopped by the Master, who wants to dispose of the Doctor. The Doctor defeats the Valeyard by destroying the Matrix archive. The Inquisitor clears the Doctor of all charges and offers him the presidency, which he declines, claiming she should stand instead. The Inquisitor informs The Doctor that Peri is not dead, but alive and well and has become the Warrior Queen Consort of King Yrcanos. After the Doctor and Mel leave, she asks the Keeper of the Matrix to make repairs to the Matrix, who reveals his face to be the Valeyard. |
Seventh Doctor
The Seventh Doctor was portrayed by Sylvester McCoy.
Season 24 (1987)
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Andrew Cartmel took over as script editor. This season was moved to a Monday schedule.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
144 | 1 | Time and the Rani | Andrew Morgan | Pip and Jane Baker | 7 September 1987 14 September 1987 21 September 1987 28 September 1987 |
7D | 5.1 4.2 4.3 4.9 |
58 63 57 59 |
145 | 2 | Paradise Towers | Nicholas Mallett | Stephen Wyatt | 5 October 1987 12 October 1987 19 October 1987 26 October 1987 |
7E | 4.5 5.2 5.0 5.0 |
61 58 58 57 |
146 | 3 | Delta and the Bannermen | Chris Clough | Malcolm Kohll | 2 November 1987 9 November 1987 16 November 1987 |
7F | 5.3 5.1 5.4 |
63 60 60 |
147 | 4 | Dragonfire | Chris Clough | Ian Briggs | 23 November 1987 30 November 1987 7 December 1987 |
7G | 5.5 5.0 4.7 |
61 61 64 |
Season 25 (1988–89)
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The series was moved to Wednesdays.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
148 | 1 | Remembrance of the Daleks | Andrew Morgan | Ben Aaronovitch | 5 October 1988 12 October 1988 19 October 1988 26 October 1988 |
7H | 5.5 5.8 5.1 5.0 |
68 69 70 72 |
149 | 2 | The Happiness Patrol | Chris Clough | Graeme Curry | 2 November 1988 9 November 1988 16 November 1988 |
7L | 5.3 4.6 5.3 |
67 65 65 |
150 | 3 | Silver Nemesis | Chris Clough | Kevin Clarke | 23 November 1988 30 November 1988 7 December 1988[11] |
7K | 6.1 5.2 5.2 |
71 70 70 |
151 | 4 | The Greatest Show in the Galaxy | Alan Wareing | Stephen Wyatt | 14 December 1988 21 December 1988 28 December 1988 4 January 1989 |
7J | 5.0 5.3 4.8 6.6 |
68 66 69 64 |
Season 26 (1989)
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The final season continued to push the series towards a darker approach, focusing this time more on Ace's personal life as well as The Doctor's past and manipulations. This season set the tone for the Virgin New Adventures novels that followed.
Story | Serial | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
152 | 1 | Battlefield | Michael Kerrigan | Ben Aaronovitch | 6 September 1989 13 September 1989 20 September 1989 27 September 1989 |
7N | 3.1 3.9 3.6 4.0 |
69 68 67 65 |
153 | 2 | Ghost Light | Alan Wareing | Marc Platt | 4 October 1989 11 October 1989 18 October 1989 |
7Q | 4.2 4.0 4.0 |
68 68 64 |
154 | 3 | The Curse of Fenric | Nicholas Mallett | Ian Briggs | 25 October 1989 1 November 1989 8 November 1989 15 November 1989 |
7M | 4.3 4.0 4.0 4.2 |
67 68 68 68 |
155 | 4 | Survival | Alan Wareing | Rona Munro | 22 November 1989 29 November 1989 6 December 1989 |
7P | 5.0 4.8 5.0 |
69 69 71 |
Eighth Doctor
The Eighth Doctor was portrayed by Paul McGann. The movie is the only television appearance of this Doctor during his tenure. The only production title held by this story was Doctor Who. However, producer Philip Segal later suggested Enemy Within as an alternative title. Lacking any other specific name, many fans have adopted this to refer to the movie. Fan groups have also used other informal titles. The DVD release is titled Doctor Who: The Movie. In 2013, Paul McGann returned for the second television appearance of the Eighth Doctor in the minisode titled "The Night of the Doctor".
Television movie (1996)
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Story | Episode | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
156 | — | Doctor Who | Geoffrey Sax | Matthew Jacobs | 12 May 1996 (Canada) 14 May 1996 (USA) 27 May 1996 (UK) |
TVM[note 4] | 9.08 | 75 |
Ninth Doctor
In 2005, the BBC relaunched Doctor Who after a 16-year absence from episodic television, with Russell T Davies, Julie Gardner and Mal Young as executive producers, Phil Collinson as producer, and Christopher Eccleston taking the lead role of the Ninth Doctor.
The revival adheres to the original continuity. The new series is formatted to a 16:9 widescreen display ratio, and a standard episode length of 45 minutes. For the first time since the 1965/66 season each episode has an individual title, although most stories do not span more than one episode. The show also returned to its traditional Saturday evening slot.
Series 1 (2005)
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The 2005 series constitutes a loose story arc, dealing with the consequences of the Time War and the mysterious Bad Wolf.
Story | Episode | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
157 | 1 | "Rose" | Keith Boak | Russell T Davies | 26 March 2005 | 1.1 | 10.81 | 81 |
In the basement of the shop where she works, plastic mannequins begin to attack Rose Tyler. A mysterious man known as "the Doctor" rescues her and they flee the building, which he blows up. The next day Rose and her boyfriend, Mickey Smith (Noel Clarke) visit the man named Clive (Mark Benton) who runs a conspiracy theory website about a man fitting the Doctor's description who has appeared throughout history. While Rose is talking to Clive, Mickey is kidnapped and replaced by a plastic duplicate. Rose meets the Doctor again where he reveals Mickey to be an Auton and he and Rose locate the Nestene Consciousness which controls the Autons: the London Eye. At this point, Autons come alive everywhere (mainly mannequins), and start killing other people. Rose saves the Doctor and many others the Autons had been killing and she decides to travel with the Doctor through time and space in his TARDIS. | ||||||||
158 | 2 | "The End of the World" | Euros Lyn | Russell T Davies | 2 April 2005 | 1.2 | 7.97 | 79 |
The Doctor takes Rose to the year 5 billion where they land on a space station (Platform 1) which is orbiting the Earth and observing its destruction by the expanding Sun. Among the elite alien guests assembled to watch the phenomenon is Lady Cassandra (Zoë Wanamaker), who takes pride in being the last pure human, though she has received many operations that have altered her image. It is discovered that Cassandra, to receive money for her many operations, plans to let the guests die and then profit from the stock increases of their competitors. She releases discreet robotic spiders all over Platform 1, and they start interfering with the systems. She departs via teleportation and the spiders bring down the shields, causing harmful direct solar radiation to penetrate the station. The Doctor manages to reactivate the system and save Rose, after which he brings Cassandra back and she ruptures from the intense solar heat. | ||||||||
159 | 3 | "The Unquiet Dead" | Euros Lyn | Mark Gatiss | 9 April 2005 | 1.3 | 8.86 | 80 |
The Doctor and Rose travel back to Cardiff in 1869, where a funeral parlour run by Gabriel Sneed (Alan David) with his clairvoyant servant girl Gwyneth (Eve Myles) contains corpses which have been animated by a mysterious blue vapour. Sneed and Gwyneth kidnap Rose and the Doctor teams up with Charles Dickens (Simon Callow) to track her down. In the funeral parlour the group is reunited and the Doctor determines that the blue vapour is the result of a being trying to cross a rift in spacetime the parlour is built on. They are revealed to be the Gelth, who animate bodies until they can build their own and are using Gwyneth as a bridge. As the Gelth respond negatively to gas, Gwyneth volunteers to ignite the gas which will kill all the Gelth, and the Doctor, Rose, and Dickens escape before the parlour is engulfed in flames. | ||||||||
160 | 4 | "Aliens of London" | Keith Boak | Russell T Davies | 16 April 2005 | 1.4 | 7.63 | 81 |
The Doctor takes Rose back to her home, but they arrive a year after she left. Her mother Jackie (Camille Coduri) is furious with the Doctor, and Mickey has been suspected of murdering Rose. Rose and the Doctor witness a spaceship crash into Big Ben and fall into the River Thames. The Doctor suspects this is a trick and discovers that the ship was launched from earth and the pilot is a pig modified by alien technology. The Prime Minister cannot be located and is replaced by Joseph Green (David Verrey), while Margaret Blaine (Annette Badland) and Oliver Charles, other high-ranking members of the government, are also called. The group is revealed to be Slitheen, an alien family who have compressed themselves into human "suits". | ||||||||
5 | "World War Three" | Keith Boak | Russell T Davies | 23 April 2005 | 1.5 | 7.98 | 82 | |
The Doctor learns that the Slitheen are not invading Earth but rather raiding it for commercial gain. The Slitheen claim there is a threat to national security and request that the United Nations release the nuclear activation code so they can strike down a dangerous ship hovering over London. The Doctor speculates they will fire at other countries, start World War III and sell the remaining radioactive weapons. The Doctor helps Mickey hack online to fire a non-nuclear missile at 10 Downing Street to destroy the Slitheen gathered there, and the Doctor, Rose, and MP Harriet Jones (Penelope Wilton) manage to hide in a reinforced cabinet and survive. Meanwhile, the Doctor has earned Jackie's trust and she allows Rose to continue travelling with him. | ||||||||
161 | 6 | "Dalek" | Joe Ahearne | Robert Shearman | 30 April 2005 | 1.6 | 8.63 | 84 |
The TARDIS is drawn off course by a signal and Rose and the Doctor end up near Salt Lake City, Utah in 2012, in an underground bunker owned by Henry van Statten (Corey Johnson), a rich collector of alien artefacts. The Doctor encounters his one living exhibit which the Doctor is horrified to discover is a Dalek that survived the Time War, the last survivor of a race of genetically manipulated mutants bound on purging the universe of all non-Dalek life and the Doctor's greatest enemy. One of van Statten's technicians Adam Mitchell (Bruno Langley) leads Rose to the Dalek, but she takes pity on it and touches it, allowing it to absorb her DNA and become active. The Dalek kills many soldiers before catching up with Rose, Adam and The Doctor. Rose becomes trapped with the Dalek, but it spares her life as it has gained sympathy from Rose's DNA and destroys itself. As the Doctor and Rose leave, Adam boards the TARDIS to avoid the closure of van Statten's Vault. | ||||||||
162 | 7 | "The Long Game" | Brian Grant | Russell T Davies | 7 May 2005 | 1.7 | 8.01 | 81 |
The Doctor, Rose, and Adam travel to the year 200,000 and land on the space station Satellite 5, which controls journalism. Ever since the satellite began broadcasting, something has held the human race's attitude and technology back. The Editor (Simon Pegg) invites the Doctor and Rose to the elite Floor 500 where he holds them captive, explaining that he and a creature known as the Jagrafess have made through Satellite 5 the Fourth Great and Bountiful Human Empire a place where the news has installed fear in the human race, keeping them in a closed society. Meanwhile, Adam has installed a port in his head and is transmitting all the knowledge on Satellite 5 to his parent's answering machine at home. Meanwhile, Cathica (Christine Adams) (another journalist with an info spike linked to Adam's) redirects the heat to Floor 500, allowing Rose and the Doctor to escape, while the Editor and the Jagrafess are destroyed by the heat. The Doctor is furious at Adam and returns him to his house, destroying the answering machine and banishing Adam from the TARDIS. | ||||||||
163 | 8 | "Father's Day" | Joe Ahearne | Paul Cornell | 14 May 2005 | 1.8 | 8.06 | 83 |
Rose asks the Doctor to take her back to the day her father Pete Tyler (Shaun Dingwall) died in a hit and run accident, but when she saves him she creates a paradox. The TARDIS appears to be an ordinary police box and flying creatures known as Reapers appear and attempt to treat the wound in time and space by consuming everyone in it. Everyone hides in a church while the Doctor tries to summon the TARDIS. Jackie accuses Pete of having another daughter, and to prove that Rose is the same as the baby Rose, he puts the baby in the older Rose's arms, causing a bigger paradox, and the Doctor is taken by the reapers. Pete realises he must die for everything to be repaired, and throws himself in front of the car which has been appearing and reappearing around the corner of the church, causing the Doctor to return. | ||||||||
164 | 9 | "The Empty Child" | James Hawes | Steven Moffat | 21 May 2005 | 1.9 | 7.11 | 84 |
Chasing a metal cylinder marked as "dangerous" through the Time Vortex, the Doctor and Rose land in London during The Blitz of World War II. Rose follows a young boy in a gas mask (Albert Valentine) who repeatedly asks if she is his mother; she climbs a rope which is attached to a barrage balloon that rises into the air. Meanwhile, the Doctor talks with a young woman named Nancy (Florence Hoath) who seems to know about the boy, whom she knows is connected to a bomb-like object which had fallen. Rose is rescued by a Captain Jack Harkness (John Barrowman), a time agent-turned-con man who interests Rose in buying a valuable warship. Nancy directs the Doctor to a hospital where Dr Constantine (Richard Wilson) shows him patients with injuries and gas masks identical to the child's, who Nancy claims is her brother, Jamie. Rose and Jack arrive to save the Doctor as Constantine begins to transform like his patients had. | ||||||||
10 | "The Doctor Dances" | James Hawes | Steven Moffat | 28 May 2005 | 1.10 | 6.86 | 85 | |
Jack explains that he sent the metal object through the time vortex to attract "Time Agents" to this time period, where he would have them pay for the object, but before they could receive it, a bomb would fall on it. Jack claims that it is a perfectly safe and "empty" old medical transport, but the Doctor is suspicious. At the site where the transport is held, the Doctor realises that it once contained nanogenes that are able to heal wounds and deduces that the nanogenes attempted to heal Jamie, but thought that all humans should have similar injuries and gas masks. Nancy claims it is all her fault as she is actually Jamie's mother, which she admits in front of the child. As they hug, the nanogenes identify Nancy's DNA as being his mother's and reverse Jamie's transformation so that they resemble each other; the rest is done to all the others who had been converted. Jack captures the bomb that would have fallen on the site and the Doctor and Rose rescue him before it explodes, inviting him on the TARDIS. | ||||||||
165 | 11 | "Boom Town" | Joe Ahearne | Russell T Davies | 4 June 2005 | 1.11 | 7.68 | 82 |
The Doctor, Rose, and Jack visit Cardiff to refuel the TARDIS at the rift, and Mickey meets them there. They discover that the Slitheen impersonating Margaret Blaine is now the mayor of Cardiff and capture her, suspicious of what she has done. The Doctor sees that she has created a nuclear power plant designed to open the rift and destroy Earth, and a device she would use to flee. Margaret objects to being taken back to her home planet, as she is considered a criminal there. After several failed attempts in killing the Doctor, Margaret requests to be taken to another planet. Jack sees the opportunity to use Margaret's extrapolator to speed up recharging the TARDIS, but this proves to be a trap as it was meant to send the nearest alien power source to the rift. As an earthquake strikes Cardiff, Margaret looks into the heart of the TARDIS, which gave her a second chance at life, restoring her back into an egg. | ||||||||
166 | 12 | "Bad Wolf" | Joe Ahearne | Russell T Davies | 11 June 2005 | 1.12 | 6.81 | 85 |
The Doctor, Rose, and Jack wake up from amnesia into various reality television and game shows; the Doctor is in a Big Brother-like house, Rose is a contestant on The Weakest Link where those eliminated are thought to be disintegrated by the Anne Droid (Anne Robinson), and Jack is on a What Not to Wear-like show where two female robots (Trinny Woodall and Susannah Constantine) offer to give contestants a new image. The Doctor and Jack escape from their shows and find they are on Satellite 5 one hundred years later, where it is run by the Badwolf Corporation and known as the Game Station. The Doctor, Jack, and Big Brother contestant Lynda (Jo Joyner) find Rose as she is disintegrated on The Weakest Link and travel to Floor 500, where the Controller (Martha Cope) informs them that the contestants are not disintegrated but rather transmitted to a point in space. They learn that Rose has arrived on a ship containing Daleks and the Doctor vows to rescue her and destroy the Daleks, which prompt the fleet of 400,000 Daleks to begin invading Earth. | ||||||||
13 | "The Parting of the Ways" | Joe Ahearne | Russell T Davies | 18 June 2005 | 1.13 | 6.91 | 89 | |
The Doctor and Jack take the TARDIS to Rose, where they bring her back to the Game Station after talking to the Dalek Emperor. The Doctor prepares to destroy the Daleks using a Delta Wave and asks Rose to hold something on the TARDIS console for him while he fetches something outside; while she is inside, he uses his sonic screwdriver to send her back home to safety. The Daleks invade the Game Station, killing Lynda and Jack among many others. As Rose regains her composure at home, she notices the words "Bad Wolf" around the area where the TARDIS has landed and realises it is a message. With the help of Jackie, Mickey, and a tow truck, she is able to pry open the heart of the TARDIS in hope that its telepathic circuits would see her desire to return to the Doctor. Rose becomes empowered by the Time Vortex and returns to the Doctor, where she uses the vortex's power to destroy all the Daleks, revive Jack (also making him immortal), and scatter the words "Bad Wolf" throughout time and space to lead herself here. To prevent the power from killing Rose, the Doctor absorbs it by kissing her; she wakes up in the TARDIS as the time energy is destroying the Doctor's cells, forcing him to regenerate into the Tenth Doctor (David Tennant). |
Tenth Doctor
The Tenth Doctor was portrayed by David Tennant, who was cast before the first series aired.[15] Mal Young vacated his position as executive producer when he departed the BBC after Series 1. He was not replaced in that capacity.
Series 2 (2006)
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The back-story for the spin-off series Torchwood is "seeded" in various episodes in the 2006 series. Each episode also has an accompanying online Tardisode.
Story | Episode | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
167 | — | "The Christmas Invasion" | James Hawes | Russell T Davies | 25 December 2005 | 2X | 9.84 | 84 |
Rose and the newly-regenerated Tenth Doctor return to Rose's house, where Rose, her mother Jackie (Camille Coduri) and her former boyfriend Mickey Smith (Noel Clarke) carry him inside to rest. When out shopping, Rose and Mickey are attacked by Santa robots; the Doctor theorises that energy from his regeneration has lured them here. Prime Minister Harriet Jones (Penelope Wilton) is threatened by the leader of the Sycorax to give them half of the Earth's population as slaves; Harriet tries to negotiate and is transmatted on their ship. Rose, Mickey, and Jackie drag the Doctor onto the TARDIS, but the TARDIS is detected by the Sycorax and they transport it to their ship, with Rose, Mickey, and the Doctor inside. After the Doctor has fully recovered, he challenges the Sycorax leader to a sword fight for the future of the Earth, which he eventually wins. However, the Sycorax ship is destroyed against the Doctor's wishes by Harriet Jones, who had called Torchwood on the matter. | ||||||||
168 | 1 | "New Earth" | James Hawes | Russell T Davies | 15 April 2006 | 2.1 | 8.62 | 85 |
The Doctor and Rose go to New Earth, the planet which humanity inhabited after the Earth's destruction by the Sun. They go into a hospital in New New York, where Rose meets the villain Cassandra (Zoë Wanamaker) again. Cassandra possesses Rose's body as she is in need of one, but the Doctor is suspicious of "Rose"'s actions. They discover that the hospital holds hundreds of artificially-grown humans that have been infected with diseases so the Sisters of Plenitude can find their cures. "Rose" releases several of the humans as a distraction, but they release others and a zombie-like attack begins. The Doctor sprays the infected humans with the solution from a disinfectant shower, curing them. The Doctor orders Cassandra out of Rose and she transfers her consciousness to her servant Chip (Sean Gallagher), but his cloned body fails and Cassandra accepts her death. | ||||||||
169 | 2 | "Tooth and Claw" | Euros Lyn | Russell T Davies | 22 April 2006 | 2.2 | 9.24 | 83 |
The Doctor and Rose end up in Scotland in 1879, where Queen Victoria (Pauline Collins) invites them to Torchwood Estate. Unknown to them, the estate has been captured by a group of monks who have brought a werewolf in hopes to infect Queen Victoria. The Doctor notices the trap and tries to shield himself, Victoria, and Rose from the werewolf. He learns that the estate was designed as a trap for the werewolf as it contains a large telescope which, with Victoria's Koh-i-Noor diamond and full moonlight, can force the werewolf into a human form. Though they save her, Queen Victoria is appalled by the Doctor and Rose's modern eccentricities and founds Torchwood Institute to defend Britain from further alien attacks. | ||||||||
170 | 3 | "School Reunion" | James Hawes | Toby Whithouse | 29 April 2006 | 2.3 | 8.31 | 85 |
The Doctor works undercover as a teacher in a school which Mickey believes is suspicious. Rose, working as a dinner lady, notices the cafeteria's chips have an adverse effect on other members of the kitchen staff, while the Doctor notes the chips seem to make the students more intelligent. The success of headmaster Mr Finch (Anthony Head) has aroused media attention; investigative journalist and the Doctor's former companion Sarah Jane Smith (Elisabeth Sladen) arrives at the school and discovers the TARDIS one night. She and her robotic dog K-9 join up with the Doctor, Rose, and Mickey and they discover that the teachers are actually Krillitanes and the chips are coated with Krillitane oil, intended to make the children smart enough so they can decode the "Skasis Paradigm", a theory of everything, which will give the Krillitanes full control of time and space. The Doctor refuses to join the Krillitanes and evacuates the children of the school, after which K-9 detonates the container of the chip oil which destroys the Krillitanes, the school, and K-9. Sarah Jane declines the Doctor's offer to travel with him and suggests that Mickey do so instead, and the Doctor gives her a brand new model of K-9. | ||||||||
171 | 4 | "The Girl in the Fireplace" | Euros Lyn | Steven Moffat | 6 May 2006 | 2.4 | 7.90 | 84 |
The Doctor, Rose, and Mickey arrive on an abandoned spaceship which contains several "time windows" into the life of Madame de Pompadour, known as "Reinette" (Sophia Myles). The Doctor first enters her bedroom through an 18th-century fireplace when she is seven years old and saves her from a clockwork man which has hidden under her bed. On the ship, the Doctor and his companions discover more time windows into Reinette's life and see that the clockwork droids continue stalking her, but do not consider her "complete". The Doctor discovers that the ship's human crew have died out and the droids have recycled some of their organs for use in the ship but still needs Reinette's brain to be fully functional. The brain must be 37 years old, the age of the ship; the ship is actually named after Madame de Pompadour. The Doctor manages to arrive at her 37th birthday costume ball and save her from the droids, who shut down because they have no way of returning to their ship. | ||||||||
172 | 5 | "Rise of the Cybermen" | Graeme Harper | Tom MacRae | 13 May 2006 | 2.5 | 9.22 | 86 |
A problem causes the Doctor, Rose, and Mickey to reach a parallel universe, in which most of the people of London wear EarPods that feeds information directly into the wearer's brain and Rose's father Pete (Shaun Dingwall) is still alive. The EarPods are designed by John Lumic (Roger Lloyd-Pack), who is trying to give them an "upgrade" which will ultimately turn the humans into Cybermen. Though he has not received permission to do this, he has been abducting and converting numerous homeless people. Mickey is mistaken for his parallel universe self Ricky and is taken by Jake Simmonds (Andrew Hayden-Smith), a member of a gang called the "Preachers" who are aware of the dangers of the EarPods. Cybermen begin attacking at the parallel universe Jackie's birthday party, at which the Doctor and Rose are posing as waiters. They, along with Pete, escape and run into Mickey and the Preachers, but the Cybermen close in on them. | ||||||||
6 | "The Age of Steel" | Graeme Harper | Tom MacRae | 20 May 2006 | 2.6 | 7.63 | 86 | |
Escaping from the Cybermen, the group go to the Battersea Power Station, where Lumic has ordered the people of London to go for conversion into Cybermen. On the way, Ricky is killed by the Cybermen. The group splits up to destroy the EarPod transmitter in the zeppelin; Mickey and Jake board the zeppelin, Rose and Pete pose as humans marching for conversion, and the Doctor and Mrs. Moore head to Lumic. Eventually, Mrs. Moore is killed and the Doctor, Rose and Pete are captured by the Cybermen and taken to Lumic, who has become the Cyber Controller. Mickey and Jake disable the transmitter, freeing the humans who had not been converted. The Doctor tricks Lumic into giving the inhibitor code which Mickey hears on surveillance and sends to Rose's phone; the Doctor plugs the phone into the computer systems which changes the signal and sends the Cybermen into despair. The group flees, leaving Lumic to his death. Mickey decides to stay and help fix the parallel universe with Jake, as he understands Rose prefers the Doctor. | ||||||||
173 | 7 | "The Idiot's Lantern" | Euros Lyn | Mark Gatiss | 27 May 2006 | 2.7 | 6.76 | 84 |
The Doctor and Rose land in Muswell Hill, London in 1953 on the day before Queen Elizabeth II's coronation. The Doctor befriends teenager Tommy Connolly (Rory Jennings), whose grandmother is hidden because she lacks any facial features and has no brain activity, a phenomenon that is common with those who have purchased television sets sold cheap for the coronation from Magpie Electricals, owned by Mr Magpie (Ron Cook). Rose, investigating the shop, finds that Mr Magpie is under the influence of an entity known as "The Wire" (Maureen Lipman), a refugee who has converted herself to an electrical form and is using the televisions and hopefully the upcoming coronation to consume enough minds to rebuild its body; she takes Rose's face as well. In discovery of this the Doctor is outraged and foils the Wire's plan with a device he creates, and those whose minds and faces were consumed are returned and London can safely watch the coronation. | ||||||||
174 | 8 | "The Impossible Planet" | James Strong | Matt Jones | 3 June 2006 | 2.8 | 6.32 | 85 |
The Doctor and Rose arrive on a base on a planet which is impossibly orbiting a black hole. The crew of the base, who are there on an expedition to drill to the middle of the planet, is led by Captain Zachary Cross Flane (Shaun Parkes). A race of aliens known as the Ood serve them. A quake strikes the planet, causing several sections of the base, including the one where the TARDIS was, to fall into the planet. As the drill nears the planet's centre, the Ood begin foretelling the awakening of a "Beast", which possesses archaeologist Toby Zed (Will Thorp) and later the Ood. The drilling finishes, and the Doctor offers to go with Ida Scott (Claire Rushbrook) to the depths of the planet, where they discover a disc with unreadable markings found on the base and the possessed Toby's face. The Doctor believes the disc to be a door, and as it begins to open the possessed Toby tells Rose that the planet has begun to fall into the black hole and the voice of the Beast (Gabriel Woolf) announces that he is free. | ||||||||
9 | "The Satan Pit" | James Strong | Matt Jones | 10 June 2006 | 2.9 | 6.08 | 86 | |
Ida and the Doctor investigate the door and Rose and the other members of the crew witness a force leaving Toby's body and assume that he is no longer possessed. The Doctor descends into the dark pit and the Beast speaks to him, revealing he is the epitome of evil of several religions and has been sealed inside the planet, but is seeking to escape. The Doctor runs out of rope and believes he can survive the drop and falls, the news of which distresses Rose. Most of the crew and Rose escape from the Ood and board and launch an escape rocket. The Doctor discovers he has survived the crash and finds the physical form of the Beast, who reveals that his consciousness has managed to escape. Having faith in Rose, the Doctor triggers the sequence for the Beast and the planet to fall into the black hole, but as the Beast's consciousness is inside Toby the rocket begins to pull toward the black hole. Rose realises this and releases Toby from the rocket, and the Doctor finds the TARDIS in the pit and uses it to rescue Rose. | ||||||||
175 | 10 | "Love & Monsters" | Dan Zeff | Russell T Davies | 17 June 2006 | 2.10 | 6.66 | 76 |
Through his video diary, Elton Pope (Marc Warren) tells how he first saw the Doctor in his living room when he was a boy, and that he plans to find the Doctor again. Through Internet searches he finds Ursula Blake (Shirley Henderson), who has also had past experiences with the Doctor. Elton, Ursula, and three other members who have had encounters with the Doctor, form the London Investigation 'N' Detective Agency (LINDA) to discuss these encounters, but their meetings soon become more social. One day a man known as Victor Kennedy (Peter Kay) interrupts one of the group's meetings and reinvigorates LINDA's purpose to locate the Doctor. Later, two members of the group mysteriously go missing, and one day Ursula and Elton return to the meeting room to retrieve Ursula's phone. There Kennedy reveals himself to be an Abzorbaloff, who has absorbed the other three LINDA members. Ursula receives the same fate and the Abzorbaloff corners Elton, but the TARDIS appears and the Doctor discovers the Abzorbaloff's cane is a field generator and Elton breaks it, destroying the creature. The Doctor manages to preserve Ursula in a paving slab, which Elton takes home. | ||||||||
176 | 11 | "Fear Her" | Euros Lyn | Matthew Graham | 24 June 2006 | 2.11 | 7.14 | 83 |
The Doctor and Rose arrive in a London neighbourhood just prior to the start of the 2012 Olympic Games. Children have been disappearing and the Doctor and Rose discover the source is a 12-year-old girl named Chloe Webber (Abisola Agbaje), who can cause people to disappear by drawing them. The Doctor finds that she is possessed by an Isolus, an alien life form that has crashed on Earth and can relate to Chloe's loneliness. For the Isolus to leave Chloe's body, they must find the Isolus' pod and give it power; Rose finds it under just-poured tar in the street and is able to power it by throwing it into the Olympic Torch as it comes by the street, giving the pod heat and emotional strength. As the missing children reappear, the demon-like drawing of Chloe's violent and dead father comes to life, but Chloe's mother (Nina Sosanya) calms Chloe's fears. The Isolus peacefully leaves Chloe's body. | ||||||||
177 | 12 | "Army of Ghosts" | Graeme Harper | Russell T Davies | 1 July 2006 | 2.12 | 8.19 | 86 |
The Doctor and Rose return to London and visit Jackie and learn that for a few months the Earth has experienced silhouettes which appear at a certain time each day around the world. The public have accepted these as ghosts. However, the Doctor thinks they are the impressions of something forcing its way into the universe and tracks the source to the headquarters of a secret organisation known as Torchwood. Torchwood's director Yvonne Hartman (Tracey-Ann Oberman) reveals that the ghosts are a result of a breach in the universe which a spherical "void ship", kept at Torchwood, has arrived. Three employees of Torchwood become manipulated by an unseen party and open the breach, which breaks down and causes millions of the ghosts to appear worldwide and shift into their true form of the Cybermen from the parallel universe. However, the Cybermen merely followed the void ship through the breach, and the ship is revealed to contain four Daleks. | ||||||||
13 | "Doomsday" | Graeme Harper | Russell T Davies | 8 July 2006 | 2.13 | 8.22 | 89 | |
The four Daleks, later identified as the Cult of Skaro, have brought a device known as the Genesis Ark through the breach and declare war on the Cybermen and the two races soon begin fighting worldwide. Meanwhile, the Doctor has discovered that Jake Simmonds, Pete Tyler, and Mickey - who masqueraded as a Torchwood employee and is with Rose and the Daleks - have been able to travel between the universes. The Cult of Skaro is keeping Rose and Mickey alive because they, being time travellers, would activate the Genesis Ark, which the Daleks are incapable of as it is stolen Time Lord technology. The Doctor plans to open the breach, which will pull in anyone who has crossed the Void including the Daleks, Cybermen, and Rose's family, and then close the breach forever. Rose refuses to reside in the parallel universe and stays to help the Doctor, but she is unable to hold on and becomes marooned in the parallel universe forever. The Doctor is able to use the power of a supernova to transmit his image through one of the final breaches, and the two share a tearful goodbye before a mysterious woman named Donna Noble in her wedding dress appears in the TARDIS. |
Series 3 (2007)
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This series introduces Martha Jones and deals with the Face of Boe's final message, the mysterious Mr. Saxon, and the Doctor dealing with the loss of Rose Tyler. Susie Liggat was the producer for "Human Nature" and "The Family of Blood", with Phil Collinson credited as executive producer for those episodes.
Story | Episode | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
178 | — | "The Runaway Bride" | Euros Lyn | Russell T Davies | 25 December 2006 | 3X | 9.35 | 84 |
Donna (Catherine Tate), a woman about to walk down the aisle on her wedding day, suddenly materialises in the TARDIS, much to the shock of both her and the Doctor, who has just said his final goodbyes to Rose Tyler. While trying to get her back to her wedding, the Time Lord discovers that Donna has unwittingly been placed into the center of an alien plot to release an alien spider's offspring trapped in the centre of the Earth, which would thereby destroy the planet. The two must face the Empress of Racnoss (Sarah Parish), the alien spider and the last of her kind, together to stop it. | ||||||||
179 | 1 | "Smith and Jones" | Charles Palmer | Russell T Davies | 31 March 2007 | 3.1 | 8.71 | 88 |
The Doctor goes undercover at the Royal Hope Hospital in London, where he meets medical student Martha Jones. The entire hospital is transported to the moon by an alien courier connected with the Judoon, a brutal outer-space police force, who are searching for the blood-sucking Florence Finnegan (Anne Reid). Mrs Finnegan is a Plasmavore and has been assimilating the human blood of hospital workers. The Doctor allows her to drink his blood and she is detected as the Doctor is not human. Martha revives the Doctor using CPR and he invites her to join him for a trip in the TARDIS in return. | ||||||||
180 | 2 | "The Shakespeare Code" | Charles Palmer | Gareth Roberts | 7 April 2007 | 3.2 | 7.23 | 87 |
The Doctor and Martha land in 1599 London, Elizabethan England, where they discover that William Shakespeare (Dean Lennox Kelly) is under influence of witch-like aliens known as Carrionites who are forcing him to finish Love's Labour's Won using a poppet. The Doctor learns that they are using the powerful words of the play to bring back their imprisoned species; the words spoken by the actors are instructions which open a portal. The Doctor convinces Shakespeare to use his powerful gift of words to close the portal. | ||||||||
181 | 3 | "Gridlock" | Richard Clark | Russell T Davies | 14 April 2007 | 3.3 | 8.41 | 85 |
The TARDIS takes the Doctor and Martha to New Earth in the year Five Billion and Fifty-Three, where the Face of Boe finally reveals "The Great Secret" to the Time Lord: "You are not alone", meaning there is another living Time Lord. Meanwhile, terrifying beasts are lurking beneath the city of New New York – creatures that the Doctor believed he defeated many, many years ago. | ||||||||
182 | 4 | "Daleks in Manhattan" | James Strong | Helen Raynor | 21 April 2007 | 3.4 | 6.69 | 86 |
The Doctor and Martha arrive in 1930's New York, where they expect to see dancing girls on Broadway and the dire effects of the Depression, and instead encounter trouble as the Daleks return once more, this time attempting to create a Dalek/Human hybrid. | ||||||||
5 | "Evolution of the Daleks" | James Strong | Helen Raynor | 28 April 2007 | 3.5 | 6.97 | 85 | |
Concluding part to Daleks in Manhattan. The Dalek plan is in full force until the human-Dalek hybrid, Dalek Sec, begins raising doubts among the three remaining Daleks. When Dalek Sec asks for the Doctor's assistance in relocating them to a new planet, the other Daleks rebel, and The Doctor, Martha and their New York friends must fight to save the planet from the Daleks and a new type of foe. | ||||||||
183 | 6 | "The Lazarus Experiment" | Richard Clark | Stephen Greenhorn | 5 May 2007 | 3.6 | 7.19 | 86 |
A 76-year-old scientist, Doctor Lazarus of LazLabs, has created a device that appears to restore eternal youth. However, the process doesn't go as planned, and The Doctor and Martha must stop Lazarus before it's too late. | ||||||||
184 | 7 | "42" | Graeme Harper | Chris Chibnall | 19 May 2007 | 3.7 | 7.41 | 85 |
The Doctor and Martha answer a distress call and find themselves on a cargo ship hurtling towards the center of a star. The Doctor only has 42 minutes to save Martha and the rest of the ship's crew from an inevitable doom. The key lies behind the universe's deadliest "pub quiz", but the situation is a lot hotter than it appears. | ||||||||
185 | 8 | "Human Nature" | Charles Palmer | Paul Cornell | 26 May 2007 | 3.8 | 7.74 | 86 |
John Smith is a teacher in the year 1913 who dreams of adventures that involve an alien time traveller who calls himself the Doctor and journeys through time and space in a blue box, picking up numerous companions along the way. As John and Joan Redfern (Jessica Hynes), the school nurse, begin to develop feelings for one another, a mysterious, other-worldly family with an army of animated scarecrows make their presence known, and Martha must find a way to keep the TARDIS hidden while still maintaining her school-maid identity. | ||||||||
9 | "The Family of Blood" | Charles Palmer | Paul Cornell | 2 June 2007 | 3.9 | 7.21 | 86 | |
The Great War arrives a year ahead of time as the Family of Blood takes over the bodies of four individuals and attack the school, all while the Doctor remains unaware of his true being. Martha tries to convince the Doctor that the "dreams" he has recorded in his book are real and that it is his current life as a school master that is the fantasy. As time runs out, John Smith faces an impossible decision while fighting to retain his identity. | ||||||||
186 | 10 | "Blink" | Hettie MacDonald | Steven Moffat | 9 June 2007 | 3.10 | 6.62 | 87 |
In an abandoned house, the Weeping Angels wait. The only hope to stop them is a young woman named Sally Sparrow and her friend Larry Nightingale. The only catch: The Weeping Angels can move in the blink of an eye. To defeat the ruthless enemy – with only a half of a conversation from the Tenth Doctor as help – the one rule is this: don't turn your back, don't look away and don't blink! | ||||||||
187 | 11 | "Utopia" | Graeme Harper | Russell T Davies | 16 June 2007 | 3.11 | 7.84 | 87 |
Professor Yana (Derek Jacobi) is trying to save mankind in the very distant future at the end of the universe, but is he what he seems? Featuring the return of Captain Jack Harkness. | ||||||||
12 | "The Sound of Drums" | Colin Teague | Russell T Davies | 23 June 2007 | 3.12 | 7.51 | 87 | |
The Doctor, Martha, and Jack return to the 21st Century, just four days after leaving. They arrive to find that they've missed the election, and the new Prime Minister, Harold Saxon (John Simm), is the Master, the Doctor's old enemy, who was seen to regenerate in the previous episode. | ||||||||
13 | "Last of the Time Lords" | Colin Teague | Russell T Davies | 30 June 2007 | 3.13 | 8.61 | 88 | |
It's been a year since The Master unleashed the mysterious Toclafane onto Earth. With the human race and the Doctor enslaved under the Master's control, Martha Jones secretly returns to England. The Toclafane are building a fleet of rockets they will use to attack other worlds, and The Master takes great pleasure in humiliating the Doctor and has Martha's family doing menial chores. However, Martha turns the Master's mind-control satellite technology against him; having travelled the world to gather support for the captured Doctor, she has instructed them to think of the Doctor just as the Master intends to launch his fleet, so that their combined thoughts, travelling through the network, are able to give him immense powers. The events of the Master's reign are undone so that no one who was not directly involved will remember, and Lucy Saxon, the Master's wife, shoots him dead. |
Series 4 (2008)
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This series explores the coincidences binding the Doctor and Donna together. Susie Liggat was the producer for "Planet of the Ood", "The Sontaran Stratagem", "The Poison Sky", "The Unicorn and the Wasp" and "Turn Left", with Phil Collinson credited as executive producer for those episodes. Phil Collinson left the position of producer at the end of the series.
Story | Episode | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
188 | — | "Voyage of the Damned" | James Strong | Russell T Davies | 25 December 2007 | 4X | 13.31 | 86 |
The Doctor finds his TARDIS colliding with an interstellar replica of the famous ocean liner Titanic orbiting present-day Earth, during a Christmas party. With the help of a waitress named Astrid (Kylie Minogue) and several passengers, the Doctor must take on an enemy called the Heavenly Host as the lives of the Titanic crew and those on Earth are in danger. The angels have been tasked with killing everyone aboard and crashing the space liner into the Earth. The reason why is not obvious though the ship's owner, Max Capricorn, has his reasons. Can the Doctor stop the Christmas inferno? | ||||||||
189 | 1 | "Partners in Crime" | James Strong | Russell T Davies | 5 April 2008 | 4.1 | 9.14 | 88 |
With a new weight-loss pill tested in London by Adipose Industries, the Doctor goes to investigate the sinister truth behind the product, only to find out that his former companion Donna Noble (Catherine Tate) is investigating as well. Together, they attempt to stop businesswoman Miss Foster (Sarah Lancashire) from killing thousands of people in London during the birth of the Adipose, short white aliens made from body fat. | ||||||||
190 | 2 | "The Fires of Pompeii" | Colin Teague | James Moran | 12 April 2008 | 4.3 | 9.04 | 87 |
The Doctor and Donna land in Pompeii during the 79AD eruption of Mount Vesuvius. The Doctor's activities in Pompeii are impeded by the rock-like Pyrovile and their allies, the Sybilline Sisterhood, who are using the volcano to convert the humans to Pyroviles. The Doctor is faced with a moral dilemma: whether to rescue himself and all of Pompeii from the situation and leave the Pyroviles to have their way, or to make Vesuvius erupt, killing the Pyroviles and the population of Pompeii- himself and Donna included. | ||||||||
191 | 3 | "Planet of the Ood" | Graeme Harper | Keith Temple | 19 April 2008 | 4.2 | 7.50 | 87 |
The Doctor and Donna arrive on the Ood-Sphere in the year 4126. They arrive at a factory where the Ood are prepared for sale to anyone willing to pay the price. When they find a group of unprocessed Ood, they become horrified at the alterations performed and resolve to free the Ood. | ||||||||
192 | 4 | "The Sontaran Stratagem" | Douglas Mackinnon | Helen Raynor | 26 April 2008 | 4.4 | 7.06 | 87 |
The Doctor gets a call from previous travelling companion, now medical officer at UNIT, Martha Jones (Freema Agyeman) with a request that he return to Earth immediately. She requests the Doctor's help in investigating ATMOS (Atmospheric Omission System) and why 52 people around the world all died simultaneously. The Doctor learns that the Sontarans are planning to take over the Earth. They take Martha prisoner and she is cloned. Donna meanwhile misses her family and decides to pay them a visit. | ||||||||
5 | "The Poison Sky" | Douglas Mackinnon | Helen Raynor | 3 May 2008 | 4.5 | 6.53 | 88 | |
Continuing from the end of "The Sontaran Stratagem", the Sontarans launch the attack with their poison gas slowly encircling the Earth. The Doctor—impeded by a Sontaran-controlled clone of Martha—aids UNIT in repelling the Sontarans in the ATMOS factory while Donna infiltrates the Sontarans' warship. He decides to try to burn the poison gas that now encircles the Earth and, with the help of the Sontarans' teleportation system, send them a little surprise as well. At the end of it all, both Martha and Donna have to decide if they want to stay with the Doctor. | ||||||||
193 | 6 | "The Doctor's Daughter" | Alice Troughton | Stephen Greenhorn | 10 May 2008 | 4.6 | 7.33 | 88 |
The TARDIS, as seen before, seems to display a mind of its own and whisks the Doctor, Donna, and the Time Lord's former companion Martha Jones to the planet Messaline, in the midst of a savage war between humans and the fish-like Hath. Martha is abducted by the Hath shortly after the time travellers arrive. Rescuing Martha becomes the Doctor and Donna's main priority, as well as attempting to put a stop to the ugly war that has consumed the planet. But that would have been complicated enough had it not been for the fact that the humans had just used the Doctor's DNA to create a warrior clone, Jenny (Georgia Moffett). | ||||||||
194 | 7 | "The Unicorn and the Wasp" | Graeme Harper | Gareth Roberts | 17 May 2008 | 4.7 | 8.41 | 86 |
The Doctor and Donna travel to December 1926 and meet the renowned murder mystery writer Agatha Christie (Fenella Woolgar), who is attending a party at Lady Eddison's (Felicity Kendal) country manor. They investigate a jewel robbery perpetrated by the "Unicorn" (Robina Redmond, portrayed by Felicity Jones) and a spree of murders committed by an extraterrestrial wasp (Reverend Golightly, portrayed by Tom Goodman-Hill), and discover, in true Agatha Christie's fashion, that the solution to the murder and the meaning of Agatha's famous disappearance are found in a false identity and events that occurred long ago. | ||||||||
195 | 8 | "Silence in the Library" | Euros Lyn | Steven Moffat | 31 May 2008 | 4.9 | 6.27 | 89 |
The Doctor and Donna land in the 51st century to visit the greatest library in the universe, encompassing an entire planet, but are baffled when they find it deserted. To the best he can determine, the library has been closed for 100 years, so the arrival of a team of archaeologists led by River Song (Alex Kingston) comes as something of a surprise. They discover the Vashta Nerada, carnivorous creatures living in the shadows, are responsible. All they have is one warning - count the shadows. | ||||||||
9 | "Forest of the Dead" | Euros Lyn | Steven Moffat | 7 June 2008 | 4.10 | 7.84 | 89 | |
Continuing from the end of "Silence in the Library", the Doctor and the team of archaeologists flee the Vashta Nerada, while Donna finds herself trapped in an alternate reality, in the care of Doctor Moon (Colin Salmon). As the Doctor progresses closer to the library's command centre, he discovers that the alternate reality—and the missing people—are sustained by CAL (Eve Newton). The solution to it all lies in understanding what the computer has been telling them all along. | ||||||||
196 | 10 | "Midnight" | Alice Troughton | Russell T Davies | 14 June 2008 | 4.8 | 8.05 | 86 |
The Doctor and Donna are taking a bit of a break from their adventures and spending a bit of time on the planet Midnight. The Doctor leaves Donna at a spa while he takes a four-hour trip to the beautiful Sapphire Waterfalls. When the vehicle stops for no apparent reason, the passengers hear a noise coming from outside the vehicle and begin to panic. When an unknown lifeform capable of stealing voices takes control of Sky Silvestry (Lesley Sharp), the passengers' paranoia and fear know no bounds, and the focus of their solution is to eliminate the Doctor. | ||||||||
197 | 11 | "Turn Left" | Graeme Harper | Russell T Davies | 21 June 2008 | 4.11 | 8.09 | 88 |
On a visit to the Chino-planet Shan-Shen, Donna agrees to have her fortune read by a fortune teller (Chipo Chung). She inexplicably finds herself in an alternate timeline, where she never meets the Doctor and saving his life, thus resulting in alien invasions and other disasters, which the Doctor wasn't around to stop. The Doctor's previous companion Rose Tyler (Billie Piper), who has managed to travel from her parallel universe, works with Donna to restore the status quo and warn the Doctor of impending doom. | ||||||||
198 | 12 | "The Stolen Earth" | Graeme Harper | Russell T Davies | 28 June 2008 | 4.12 | 8.78 | 91 |
The universe is beginning to crumble and the Earth is stolen, along with twenty-six other planets, by Davros (Julian Bleach), creator and commander of the Daleks. As the Doctor and Donna try to find Earth, the Doctor's previous companions and what comes to be called the Doctor's private army--Captain Jack Harkness (John Barrowman), Sarah Jane Smith (Elisabeth Sladen), Martha Jones (Freema Agyeman), and Rose Tyler--convene together to contact the Doctor and mount a defence against the Daleks. However, the wounded Doctor is forced to regenerate. | ||||||||
13 | "Journey's End" | Graeme Harper | Russell T Davies | 5 July 2008 | 4.13 | 10.57 | 91 | |
At the beginning of the episode the Doctor aborts a regeneration halfway through to heal himself from a Dalek attack. The Doctor and his companions prepare to do battle with Davros and the Daleks, who are out to destroy everything and everyone in the universe other than themselves. All seems lost when the Daleks apparently destroy the TARDIS, but it's not that simple, as an empowered Donna and a half-human Doctor who formed from the Doctor's regeneration take control and face the Dalek menace head on. The two Doctors, Donna, Jack, Rose, Martha, and Sarah Jane, along with Rose's ex-boyfriend Mickey Smith (Noel Clarke) and mother Jackie Tyler (Camille Coduri), attempt to foil Davros' plans to destroy reality itself. However, Donna has her mind wiped of all her adventures with the Doctor because otherwise the Time Lord knowledge will overwhelm and kill her. |
Specials (2008–10)
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From "Planet of the Dead", episodes were filmed in HD.[16] Susie Liggat produced "The Next Doctor", while Nikki Wilson produced "The Waters of Mars" and Tracie Simpson produced "Planet of the Dead" and The End of Time. For practical reasons, these specials continued to use Series 4 production codes.
No. story |
No. special |
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [17] |
AI [18] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
199 | 1 | "The Next Doctor" | Andy Goddard | Russell T Davies | 25 December 2008 | 4.14 | 13.10 | 86 |
The Tenth Doctor lands in Victorian London and, overhearing cries for help, encounters a man calling himself "the Doctor" and his companion Rosita Farisi attempting to capture a Cybershade, which escapes. The Doctor initially believes this man is a future incarnation of himself suffering from amnesia. The man is investigating a series of disappearances around London and the Cybershades. They discover Cybermen data-storage infostamps, which the man recalls holding when he lost his memories. The Doctor realises that the man is actually Jackson Lake, a missing human who believed he was the Doctor due to absorbing the data of infostamp about the Doctor. The Cybermen have constructed, using child labour, a "CyberKing" (a giant mechanical Cyberman), using their human ally Miss Hartigan as its controller. The Doctor discovers another entrance to the Cybermen's base under Jackson's house. The Doctor, Jackson, and Rosita manage to rescue the children, including Jackson's son. The CyberKing rampages over London. The Doctor uses the infostamps to sever Hartigan's connection to the CyberKing. The emotional feedback destroys both the Cybermen and Hartigan. Using technology from Jackson's cellar, the Doctor sucks the toppling CyberKing into the Time Vortex. | ||||||||
200 | 2 | "Planet of the Dead" | James Strong | Russell T Davies & Gareth Roberts | 11 April 2009 | 4.15 | 9.75 | 88 |
Lady Christina de Souza, a thief, steals an ancient gold chalice and catches a bus with the Doctor just before the bus passes through a wormhole and ends up on the desert planet San Helios. The Doctor contacts UNIT to return the other passengers safely to Earth. The Doctor and Christina scout ahead, while the others attempt to repair the bus, and are taken to a wrecked spaceship by two alien Tritovores. The Doctor realises that a swarm of stingray-like aliens that feed by destroying the ecosystem is approaching them. The spaceship is revealed to have been crashed by the stingrays, who kill the Tritovores. The Doctor then realises that the wormhole was created by the stingrays to move to their next feeding planet; Earth. With the swarm nearly on them, the Doctor uses technology from the spaceship and the chalice to enable the bus to fly. They fly back through the wormhole just as UNIT close it, but not before three stingrays get through, which UNIT quickly kill. Christina is arrested but the Doctor allows her to escape using the bus. Carmen, a passenger who is slightly psychic, tells the Doctor "He will knock four times" before his death, unnerving him. | ||||||||
201 | 3 | "The Waters of Mars" | Graeme Harper | Russell T Davies & Phil Ford | 15 November 2009 | 4.16 | 10.32 | 88 |
The Doctor arrives on Mars in 2059, near humanity's first Martian colony, "Bowie Base One". He arrives at the base, where he is detained by Captain Adelaide Brooke. As the crew interrogate him, he discovers that today, the base will explode, killing the entire crew. He tries to stay uninvolved, but Adelaide forces him to assist. Two crewmen appear to be in a zombie-like state, generating copious amounts of water. With the remaining crew uninfected, Adelaide orders the crew to evacuate to their rocket back to Earth while setting the base to self-destruct. The Doctor explains to Adelaide what he knows and why he cannot get involved, and begins to leave. Ed, the rocket's pilot, is infected, and sacrifices himself by causing the rocket to self-destruct, stranding the remaining crew. The Doctor rescues Adelaide and the two surviving crew, Yuri and Mia. He returns them to Earth. The Doctor insists that he has the power to change the future of the human race and no-one can stop him; Adelaide returns home and kills herself, leaving history mostly unchanged. Ood Sigma appears; the Doctor asks if it is time for him to die, but Sigma vanishes. | ||||||||
202a | 4 | "The End of Time – Part One" | Euros Lyn | Russell T Davies | 25 December 2009 | 4.17 | 12.04 | 87 |
On the Ood-Sphere in 4226, the Ood warn the Doctor that the Master has returned, heralding "the end of time". On Earth, a cult of women resurrect the Master, but Lucy Saxon sabotages the ceremony, causing the Master to be brought back with incredible strength and constant hunger. Arriving back on Earth on Christmas Eve, the Doctor encounters Wilfred. The Doctor finds the Master at wastelands outside London, and learns that the Master has been suffering from hearing the sound of drums. The Master is taken by armed troops and placed in custody of Joshua Naismith. Naismith has recovered a broken alien "Immortality Gate" and wants the Master to fix its programming. The Doctor regroups with Wilfred; a woman in white warns Wilfred to arm himself before departing. At Naismith's mansion, the Doctor and Wilfred meet two Vinvocci disguised as humans, who assert the Gate is a harmless medical device. The Master activates the Gate, which he has reprogrammed to replace all of humankind's DNA with his own; only Wilfred and Donna are unchanged, and Donna remembers the Doctor. Elsewhere, the President of the Time Lords, Rassilon, asserts their plan to bring back the Time Lords. | ||||||||
202b | 5 | "The End of Time – Part Two" | Euros Lyn | Russell T Davies | 1 January 2010 | 4.18 | 12.27 | 89 |
The Doctor and Wilfred become fugitives from the Master and his duplicates, and take refuge on a spacecraft. The Lord President implants the sound of drums (revealed to be a Time Lord's heartbeat) in the Master's head as a child. He also creates a whitepoint star that allows the Time Lords to bring Gallifrey to Earth, inadvertently releasing the horrors of the Time War alongside it. The Lord President and other Time Lords appear in Naismith's mansion. The Doctor jumps from the spacecraft into Naismith's mansion. He debates shooting the Master or the President, who plans to destroy the Time Vortex and the universe so that the Time Lords can become beings of pure consciousness. The Doctor fires the gun at the whitepoint star, shattering it. As Gallifrey is pulled back, Rassilon attempts to kill the Doctor, but the Master intervenes, restoring humanity. The Doctor finds Wilfred is trapped in one of the Gate's control rooms that is about to be flooded by radiation. The Doctor absorbs the radiation, but knows that the radiation has triggered his regeneration. After returning Wilfred home, the Doctor visits past companions. Inside his TARDIS, the Doctor regenerates into his eleventh incarnation (Matt Smith). |
Eleventh Doctor
The Eleventh Doctor was portrayed by Matt Smith. Steven Moffat took over as head writer and executive producer after Russell T Davies stepped down. Julie Gardner also stepped down as executive producer and was replaced by Piers Wenger and Beth Willis.
Series 5 (2010)
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Tracie Simpson and Peter Bennett shared producer duties for this series only, with Patrick Schweitzer co-producing with Simpson for "The Vampires of Venice" and "Vincent and the Doctor".
Story | Episode | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
203 | 1 | "The Eleventh Hour" | Adam Smith | Steven Moffat | 3 April 2010 | 1.1 | 10.09 | 86 |
The failing TARDIS crashlands outside the house of seven-year-old Amelia Pond (Caitlin Blackwood), who welcomes newly regenerated Eleventh Doctor into her house to investigate the crack in her bedroom wall. He must use the TARDIS to regulate its engines, and promises he will return in five minutes which Amelia waits for. However, the TARDIS takes him twelve years into the future, where he joins the adult "Amy" Pond and her boyfriend Rory Williams in capturing the shapeshifting alien known as Prisoner Zero who has escaped from the crack in Amy's wall and the failure of which will lead to the destruction of Earth by the galactic police force known as the Atraxi. After the Earth is saved, the Doctor tests the newly remodelled TARDIS and accidentally returns for Amy two years later, the night before her wedding to Rory, and where she joins him for the promised travels of space and time. | ||||||||
204 | 2 | "The Beast Below" | Andrew Gunn | Steven Moffat | 10 April 2010 | 1.2 | 8.42 | 86 |
The Doctor takes Amy to the distant future, where they explore the Starship UK, a spaceship holding the population of Britain (with the exception of Scotland) after they fled Earth due to dangerous solar flares. They discover that the ship is guided by a Star Whale, who is being tortured out of fear that when let to make its own decisions it will abandon them. Believing that the future cannot go on this way, the Doctor prepares to render Star Whale brain-dead so it will continue to operate the ship but not feel it; however, Amy discovers that it is willing to serve the ship as it could not stand the children crying because of the solar flares. | ||||||||
205 | 3 | "Victory of the Daleks" | Andrew Gunn | Mark Gatiss | 17 April 2010 | 1.3 | 8.21 | 84 |
The Doctor and Amy respond to a call from Winston Churchill (Ian McNeice) and visit him during the London Blitz, where he has employed "Ironsides", a scientific creation of Professor Bracewell (Bill Paterson) but which the Doctor recognises as his arch-enemies the Daleks. The Daleks reveal their plan to detonate a device built around Bracewell, who is revealed to be an android, and destroy planet Earth. As the device begins to activate, the Doctor and Amy convince Bracewell that he is human, which deactivates the device. | ||||||||
206 | 4 | "The Time of Angels" | Adam Smith | Steven Moffat | 24 April 2010 | 1.4 | 8.59 | 87 |
River Song (Alex Kingston), a woman from the Doctor's future, summons the Doctor and Amy to help her and Father Octavian (Iain Glen) and his group of militarized clerics destroy the last Weeping Angel in the site of the crashed ship Byzantium on the planet Alfava Metraxis. However, it is revealed that all statues in the stone labyrinth where the ship has crashed are Angels and are becoming more powerful from the radiation leaking from the ship. As the Angels surround the group and several clerics are revealed to be dead, the Doctor destroys the gravity globe that had been causing the labyrinth not to be affected by gravity. | ||||||||
5 | "Flesh and Stone" | Adam Smith | Steven Moffat | 1 May 2010 | 1.5 | 8.50 | 86 | |
In continuation from "The Time of Angels", the group finds themselves thirty feet above at the opening of the Byzantium, which they enter to try escaping from the Weeping Angels. A crack very similar to the one in Amy's bedroom appears in the interior of the ship, which the Doctor discovers erases persons and objects from existence and was caused by an explosion on 26 June 2010. Meanwhile, it is discovered that a projection of an Angel had entered Amy's eye after she had looked into an Angel's eye in the previous episode, and the Doctor instructs her to keep her eyes closed. As the gravity fails, the Weeping Angels fall into the crack, erasing them from history and from Amy's eye, and the Doctor takes Amy to her house on her request. He resists her attempt to seduce him and discovers that the day of Amy and Rory's wedding is 26 June 2010. | ||||||||
207 | 6 | "The Vampires of Venice" | Jonny Campbell | Toby Whithouse | 8 May 2010 | 1.6 | 7.68 | 86 |
The Doctor takes Amy and Rory to 16th century Venice as a romantic date, where they meet a man named Guido (Lucian Msamati) whose daughter Isabella (Alisha Bailey) was entered into the House of Calvierri, a school for girls. Guido is distressed because Isabella did not recognize him on the street and bore vampire-like fangs. The Doctor, Amy and Rory investigate the school, where they discover that the city's patron, Rosanna Calvierri (Helen McCrory), is a race of vampiric fish from another planet and has sealed off Venice in attempt to overtake it and make it a place for her race to live after they fled their planet because of the cracks in the universe. She transforms the girls admitted to her school into her race to become mates of ten thousand of her male children waiting in the water. Despite the Doctor's reasoning, she activates a storm which will flood Venice, but the Doctor deactivates the device and she sacrifices herself. As they leave, Amy asks Rory to stay and travel with her. | ||||||||
208 | 7 | "Amy's Choice" | Catherine Morshead | Simon Nye | 15 May 2010 | 1.7 | 7.55 | 84 |
The Doctor, Amy and Rory find themselves travelling between two realities; in one, Amy and Rory are happily married but are being pursued by elderly people possessed by aliens, while in another they are in a powerless TARDIS that will slowly crash into a cold star which will freeze them to death. A man known as the Dream Lord (Toby Jones) says that he has put them in this trap and they must decide which is real and which is fake and die in the false one to wake up in the real reality and escape the trap. When Rory dies in the future reality, Amy decides that it must be fake because she does not want a life without Rory. At the conclusion it is revealed that psychic pollen had entered the TARDIS and caused the dream state, and the Dream Lord is revealed to be a psychic manifestation of the Doctor's dark side and self-loathing. | ||||||||
209 | 8 | "The Hungry Earth" | Ashley Way | Chris Chibnall | 22 May 2010 | 1.8 | 6.49 | 86 |
The Doctor, Amy and Rory arrive in Wales in 2020, where Dr. Nasreen Chaudhry (Meera Syal) and Tony Mack (Robert Pugh) are drilling into the Earth for a mining experiment. Mack's son-in-law, Mo (Alun Raglan), had previously been dragged below the ground, which then happens to Amy. The Doctor discovers that reptilian humanoids the Silurians have been disturbed by the drilling project and reach the surface, where they kidnap Mo's son Elliot (Samuel Davies). Rory and the Doctor capture one known as Alaya (Neve McIntosh); the Doctor instructs Rory, Tony, and Mo's wife Ambrose (Nia Roberts) to leave Alaya alone as anything done to her may been seen as an act of war. As a Silurian is about to vivisect Amy as he had done to Mo, the Doctor takes Nasreen on the TARDIS below where they discover an immense Silurian civilisation. | ||||||||
9 | "Cold Blood" | Ashley Way | Chris Chibnall | 29 May 2010 | 1.9 | 7.49 | 85 | |
Amy and Mo escape and discover Elliot is being held in an observation chamber. The Doctor is captured and ordered to execution by Alaya's sister Restac (Neve McIntosh), but Amy and Mo interrupt the trial. They contact Rory, Tony, and Ambrose to inform them they are sending a transport up for they and Alaya, the completion of which will leave them all free to return to the surface. However, Ambrose had killed Alaya out of revenge and they return her body to her people. A deal is made that the Silurians will hibernate for a thousand years as humanity was not ready to share the planet with them. Tony and Nasreen decide to stay and hibernate as well. As they leave with Elliot, they find a crack in the cavern which the Doctor reaches into to investigate and pulls out what is later revealed to be a piece of the TARDIS. Before they leave, Restac shoots Rory and he dies and is consumed by the crack, erasing him from existence and Amy's memory altogether. | ||||||||
210 | 10 | "Vincent and the Doctor" | Jonny Campbell | Richard Curtis | 5 June 2010 | 1.10 | 6.76 | 86 |
When visiting a museum, the Doctor finds a creature in the window of a church in Vincent van Gogh's The Church at Auvers, and the Doctor takes Amy back to meet Vincent (Tony Curran) and defeat the evil creature. Welcoming them, van Gogh works with the Doctor to find the Krafyis, a lost and blind alien whom only van Gogh can see. Van Gogh kills the creature, though he empathises with its pain. Before leaving, the Doctor and Amy take van Gogh to the present where he discovers that people will admire him, but Amy is devastated to learn that he still committed suicide. | ||||||||
211 | 11 | "The Lodger" | Catherine Morshead | Gareth Roberts | 12 June 2010 | 1.11 | 6.44 | 87 |
The TARDIS dematerialises with Amy still inside, leaving the Doctor stranded in present-day Colchester. He tracks the disturbance that caused the TARDIS to behave that way to the second floor of a flat, where people have been persuaded to go up to but have never come down. The Doctor rents part of the downstairs apartment occupied by Craig Owens (James Corden), a man who wishes to confess his love for his close friend Sophie (Daisy Haggard). When Sophie is lured up to the second floor, the Doctor and Craig enter it and discover that it is really a TARDIS-like spaceship disguised by perception filter and has been luring passerby to find a suitable pilot. When Craig does not want to leave this counteracts the ship's protocols, breaks the ship's hold on the house and allows the TARDIS to land. On the TARDIS, Amy discovers her engagement ring from Rory. | ||||||||
212 | 12 | "The Pandorica Opens" | Toby Haynes | Steven Moffat | 19 June 2010 | 1.12 | 7.57 | 88 |
River Song summons the Doctor and Amy to 102 A.D. where she shows them a painting by Vincent van Gogh that depics the TARDIS exploding and contains the coordinates of Stonehenge. Underneath Stonehenge, they discover a prison box called the Pandorica, which is fabled to contain the most powerful and feared being in the universe. However, it is revealed that the Pandorica is empty and an Alliance of the Doctor's enemies arrive to put him in the Pandorica as the deadly cracks in the universe were linked to the TARDIS. The trap, which was constructed from Amy's memories, also contains an Auton version of Rory, who shoots Amy. Meanwhile, the TARDIS takes River outside Amy's house on 26 June 2010 and explodes, causing the cracks to widen and the universe to begin erasing. | ||||||||
13 | "The Big Bang" | Toby Haynes | Steven Moffat | 26 June 2010 | 1.13 | 6.70 | 89 | |
The Doctor from the future gives Rory his sonic screwdriver and Rory uses it to get him out of the Pandorica; they place the dead Amy in the Pandorica, which will force her to stay alive once her DNA is given in the form of seven-year-old Amelia in 1996 who places her hand on the Pandorica by way of instructions left by the Doctor. As the universe is collapsing, the Doctor rescues River from the time loop in the exploding TARDIS and realises that if he flew the Pandorica, which contains a restoration field, and collided with the exploding TARDIS it would restore the universe, though this process erases him from history as it closes the cracks. However, Amy is able to bring him back at her wedding with Rory due to something the Doctor told her as he was being erased, and the newly wedded couple continue to travel with him. |
Series 6 (2011)
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The original transmission of series 6 was split into two parts, with the first seven episodes airing April to June 2011 and the final six from late August to October 2011. Sanne Wohlenberg continued as producer for the first block of filming, consisting of "The Doctor's Wife" and "Night Terrors". Marcus Wilson then took over as series producer, with Denise Paul producing "Closing Time".
Story | Episode | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] | ||||
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' | ||||||||||||
213 | – | "A Christmas Carol" | Toby Haynes | Steven Moffat | 25 December 2010 | 2.X | 12.11 | 83 | ||||
A space liner containing 4,000 people and Amy and Rory on their honeymoon becomes caught in an electrified cloud. The Doctor, summoned by Amy, lands on the planet beneath and discovers that the atmosphere is controlled by the miserly Kazran Sardick (Michael Gambon) who refuses to let the ship safely land. The Doctor travels back to Kazran's youth and attempts to alter his past to make him kinder, spending time adventuring with young Kazran and a young woman named Abigail (Katherine Jenkins), who was released from a cryogenic chamber as her singing abilities calm the sharks which occupy the atmosphere. However, Abigail was suffering from an incurable disease, and Kazran grows up bitter that she cannot be let out again or she will die; however, the Doctor shows Kazran's younger self what he would become and he decides to release the ship. As he needs his sonic screwdriver which had been eaten by a shark, the Doctor convinces Kazran to release Abigail to sing, and the two enjoy their last time together. | ||||||||||||
' | ||||||||||||
214 | 1 | "The Impossible Astronaut" | Toby Haynes | Steven Moffat | 23 April 2011 | 2.1 | 8.86 | 88 | ||||
Amy, Rory and River Song receive invitations to the Utah desert where they meet the Doctor, who claims to be nearly 200 years older than when they had last seen him and says that he will take them to "Space: 1969". As they dine beside Lake Silencio they witness an unknown figure in a spacesuit kill the Doctor and are then met by an old man called Canton Everett Delaware III (William Morgan Sheppard), who had also been invited. They meet a younger version of the Doctor who had been invited and land in the Oval Office in 1969, where they are enlisted by President Nixon (Stuart Milligan) to assist a younger version of Canton (Mark Sheppard) in saving a terrified little girl (Sydney Wade) from a mysterious spaceman. The Doctor traces her to a warehouse in Florida where they investigate, unaware that the warehouse contains creatures which they forget after looking away from. After Amy tells the Doctor she is pregnant, the little girl appears in a spacesuit and Amy shoots at her. | ||||||||||||
2 | "Day of the Moon" | Toby Haynes | Steven Moffat | 30 April 2011 | 2.2 | 7.30 | 87 | |||||
Amy's shot had missed and she, Rory, and River spend three months searching for the creatures — later revealed to be called Silence — while the Doctor and the TARDIS are held in Area 51 by Canton. The group reunites and discuss the Silence, which have been found throughout America and have the ability to implant post-hypnotic suggestions in the humans they encounter. While the Doctor tampers with Apollo 11, Amy and Canton visit a Silence-infested orphanage where the little girl was kept. Amy sees a woman with an eye-patch through a hatch and finds a picture of herself with a baby in the little girl's room before she is kidnapped by the Silence. Canton wounds a Silent in the Doctor's prison and records it taunting him, "you should kill us all on sight." The Doctor tracks down Amy in the Silence's base and shows them the live broadcast of the moon landing. He implants Canton's recording of the Silence into the footage, thereby instructing all humans watching it to attack the Silence when they see them. Later, Amy tells the Doctor that she was afraid travelling on the TARDIS would have an effect on the possible development of her child; Amy denies that she is actually pregnant but the Doctor initiates a scan, the result of which is inconclusive. Six months later in New York City, the little girl is dying but reveals that she can regenerate, a trait of which only the Time Lords are capable. | ||||||||||||
215 | 3 | "The Curse of the Black Spot" | Jeremy Webb | Stephen Thompson | 7 May 2011 | 2.9 | 7.85 | 86 | ||||
Following a distress signal, the TARDIS lands on a 17th-century pirate ship captained by Henry Avery (Hugh Bonneville), whose crew is terrorised by a Siren-like creature (Lily Cole) who marks crew members with black spots when they are injured and then seemingly disintegrates them. Rory receives a cut, and Amy and the Doctor keep him away from the Siren. Discovering that the Siren uses reflection as a portal, they rid the ship of any reflective surfaces. When Rory and Avery's son Toby (Oscar Lloyd) are taken by the Siren, the Doctor, Amy, and Avery prick themselves and the Siren teleports them on an invisible alien spaceship which occupies the same spot as the pirate ship. There they find a sickbay where Rory and Toby are kept; Amy and the Doctor pull Rory off life support and Amy performs CPR to revive him. | ||||||||||||
216 | 4 | "The Doctor's Wife" | Richard Clark | Neil Gaiman | 14 May 2011 | 2.3 | 7.97 | 87 | ||||
A distress signal from a Time Lord sends the Doctor, Amy and Rory outside the universe to a junkyard on an asteroid. They are introduced to the place's strange inhabitants — Auntie (Elizabeth Berrington), Uncle (Adrian Schiller), an Ood known as Nephew, and an excited woman named Idris (Suranne Jones), who seems attracted to the Doctor. An intelligence called "House" (voiced by Michael Sheen) is controlling the asteroid. The Doctor discovers that other Time Lords have been lured to the asteroid and killed so House could feed off the energy. Upon learning that the Doctor is the last of the Time Lords, House takes possession of the TARDIS to escape to the regular universe, with Amy and Rory trapped inside. The Doctor learns that House has trapped the personality of the TARDIS inside Idris, causing her body to fail quickly. The two decide to build a makeshift TARDIS out of the scraps in the junkyard to pursue Amy, Rory and House. As they materialise inside the TARDIS, Idris releases the TARDIS's matrix, destroying House and liberating the TARDIS. | ||||||||||||
217 | 5 | "The Rebel Flesh" | Julian Simpson | Matthew Graham | 21 May 2011 | 2.5 | 7.35 | 85 | ||||
Caught in a "solar tsunami", the TARDIS crash-lands on a 22nd century monastery which been turned into a factory for pumping the deadly acid off an island. The crew of the factory, headed by Miranda Cleaves (Raquel Cassidy), creates doppelgängers (called "Gangers") of themselves using a self-replicating fluid known as the Flesh, which they can safely operate through dangerous duties and are disposable. Cleaves refuses to heed the Doctor's warning about the solar storm until she receives official orders. The Doctor attempts to disconnect the solar connector, but an electrical strike knocks everyone unconscious and have caused the crew's Gangers to become sentient, and the Gangers are planning on killing the humans. As the Doctor herds the humans to a safe place in the monastery, Rory leaves to find Jennifer (Sarah Smart), whose estranged Ganger is hunting her. In the chapel, Amy and the Doctor discover a Flesh version of the Doctor. | ||||||||||||
6 | "The Almost People" | Julian Simpson | Matthew Graham | 28 May 2011 | 2.6 | 6.72 | 86 | |||||
Amy does not trust the Flesh version of the Doctor but accidentally tells it about his future death at Lake Silencio. Jennifer's Ganger, leading the war against the humans, kills her human counterpart and creates another Ganger, manipulating Rory into imprisoning the humans in an acid storage room. The Doctor's Ganger persuades the Gangers to liberate the humans, but they are pursued by Jennifer's Ganger, who has transformed herself into a monster. The Doctor reveals that Amy was actually distrusting the real version of him, and his Ganger and Cleaves' Ganger stay behind to destroy the monster. Amy begins experiencing contractions, and the Doctor explains she is going into labour and had been replaced by a Ganger which her real self is controlling. He disintegrates her Flesh form and she awakes in her real body fully pregnant in a white tube, watched over by the "Eye Patch Lady" (Frances Barber), who instructs her to "push". | ||||||||||||
218 | 7 | "A Good Man Goes to War" | Peter Hoar | Steven Moffat | 4 June 2011 | 2.7 | 7.51 | 88 | ||||
The Doctor assembles an army and he and Rory infiltrate the asteroid base Demon's Run, where Amy is held captive and her newborn child, Melody Pond, has been taken by the Eye Patch Lady, Madame Kovarian. River Song refuses to join the Doctor, explaining that she cannot be there until the end, when he discovers her identity. The Doctor and Rory secure the base, free Amy, and take back Melody. The Doctor's allies discover that Melody contains both human and Time Lord DNA, a result of her being conceived on the TARDIS on Amy and Rory's wedding night ("The Big Bang"). As Rory and the rest of the Doctor's allies battle the Headless Monks, the Doctor learns that he has been tricked: Melody has been replaced by a Ganger duplicate, and he is too late. River Song arrives communicates her identity to the Doctor and he races off in the TARDIS, promising Amy and Rory that he will get their daughter back. River then informs the couple that she is in fact their daughter; "River Song" is a translation of "Melody Pond" in the language of the Gamma Forest. | ||||||||||||
' | ||||||||||||
219 | 8 | "Let's Kill Hitler" | Richard Senior | Steven Moffat | 27 August 2011 | 2.8 | 8.10 | 85 | ||||
Amy and Rory summon the Doctor to Leadworth, and he admits he has not found Melody. They are met by Mels (Nina Toussaint-White), their childhood friend responsible for Amy and Rory's relationship and whom Amy named Melody after. Mels hijacks the TARDIS and causes it to spin out of control and crash into Hitler's office in 1938 Berlin. They accidentally save Hitler, as they disrupted a Teselecta, a shapeshifting robot piloted by miniaturised people to punish criminals, from killing him. Before Rory locks him away, Hitler shoots at the Teselecta but hits Mels instead. Instead of dying, however, Mels begins to regenerate into another incarnation which they recognise as River Song. She attempts to kill the Doctor several times before she kisses him; he discovers her lipstick was laced with poison that will kill him in 32 minutes. The Teselecta identifies River as responsible for the Doctor's death and thus a criminal, but Amy and Rory plead they not torture her and turn the Teselecta's security robots against the crew, who promptly teleport out. River saves the dying Doctor by giving up all her remaining regenerations. | ||||||||||||
220 | 9 | "Night Terrors" | Richard Clark | Mark Gatiss | 3 September 2011 | 2.4 | 7.07 | 86 | ||||
The Doctor, Amy, and Rory make a "house call" to a young boy named George (Jamie Oram) who is terrified of almost everything, especially the wardrobe in his room. As the Doctor talks to his father Alex (Daniel Mays), Amy and Rory find themselves suddenly transported from the lift to a life-size doll house where other members of the housing estate have arrived, only to be turned into life-size peg dolls, which soon happens to Amy. The Doctor investigates and Alex suddenly realises that his wife Claire (Emma Cunniffe) was never pregnant and cannot have children. The Doctor asserts that George is a Tenza child, an empathic alien who took on the form of Alex and Claire's desired child through a perception filter, and has the ability to literally lock away his fears within the wardrobe. George panics, causing the Doctor and Alex to be sucked into the doll's house in his wardrobe. The Doctor soon realizes that if George faces his fears by opening the wardrobe, the world in the dollhouse will be destroyed and the inhabitants safe. George opens the wardrobe and is surrounded by dolls due to his belief that he is not wanted. Alex stops the fear when he embraces George as a son, causing the dollhouse world to cease to exist and so the earlier inhabitants are returned to their world. | ||||||||||||
221 | 10 | "The Girl Who Waited" | Nick Hurran | Tom MacRae | 10 September 2011 | 2.10 | 7.60 | 85 | ||||
The Doctor takes Amy and Rory to the planet Apalapucia, but they find that the planet is under quarantine as the two-hearted natives are susceptible to a deadly plague which will kill the infected within a day. Those infected by the plague are placed in an accelerated time stream, allowing them to live out their lives whilst in communication with their loved ones. Amy accidentally enters one of these rooms and is separated from the Doctor and Rory. The Doctor uses the TARDIS to locate her and Rory leaves to rescue her; the Doctor, who has two hearts, must remain on the TARDIS to avoid catching the plague. However, they have arrived 36 years later in Amy's time stream and the older Amy refuses to let them rescue her younger self. She later softens, however, and the Doctor says that both versions of Amy will be able to travel on the TARDIS. However, as both Amys are brought together and proceed to enter the TARDIS, the Doctor locks the older Amy out, explaining to Rory that the TARDIS would not allow this paradox. | ||||||||||||
222 | 11 | "The God Complex" | Nick Hurran | Toby Whithouse | 17 September 2011 | 2.11 | 6.77 | 86 | ||||
The TARDIS lands in what appears to be a 1980s hotel, which the Doctor recognises as a disguised alien structure. The layout of the hotel is constantly shifting, and they soon lose the TARDIS. They meet others who had also suddenly found themselves in the hotel: humans Rita (Amara Karan), Howie (Dimitri Leonidas), Joe (Daniel Pirrie), and the alien Gibbis (David Walliams). One by one, Joe, Howie, and Rita are seemingly possessed by a minotaur-like monster and lured to it and subsequently killed. The Doctor surmises that the minotaur fed on a specific faith each of them had and discovers that Amy will be next, as she has faith in him. He convinces her to break her faith and the monster collapses and the hotel setting is revealed to be part of a simulation taking place on a prison ship. The Doctor takes Amy and Rory back to Earth, believing it is best for them to stop travelling with him before they are killed. | ||||||||||||
223 | 12 | "Closing Time" | Steve Hughes | Gareth Roberts | 24 September 2011 | 2.12 | 6.93 | 86 | ||||
Nearly 200 years have passed for the Doctor, and as he nears his death at Lake Silencio he decides to visit his friend Craig Owens (James Corden), previously seen in "The Lodger". Craig has moved in with his girlfriend Sophie (Daisy Haggard) and the two are raising their baby son, Alfie. The Doctor arrives just as Sophie has departed for a holiday and is compelled to stay and investigate strange electrical disturbances in the area. He traces this back to a department store, which The Doctor and Craig discover contains a teleporter to a Cyberman spacecraft as well as a Cybermat. The Doctor finds the ship underneath the building and is captured by the Cybermen; Craig follows and is nearly converted to a Cyberman, but he hears Alfie crying and recovers the strength to reverse the conversion. Elsewhere, Kovarian and the Silence strap River into the astronaut suit. | ||||||||||||
224 | 13 | "The Wedding of River Song" | Jeremy Webb | Steven Moffat | 1 October 2011 | 2.13 | 7.67 | 86 | ||||
Understanding his death cannot be avoided, the Doctor gives the invitations to Lake Silencio for Amy, Rory, River, and Canton to a Teselecta. However, the River in the astronaut suit refuses to kill him, but as it was meant to be a fixed point in time the Earth is thrown into an aborted timeline where all of history is running at once. He is found by Amy who is able to remember the universe as it was due to the crack in her wall, though she is unaware that one of her soldiers is Rory. The Doctor is taken to River, who is aware that if the two of them touch the correct time will resume. Amy realises who Rory is and kills Madame Kovarian for taking their child. The Doctor, believing the universe will collapse if they stay in the aborted timeline as River suggests, whispers something in River's ear and then marries her. They kiss, allowing the universe to return. Later, Amy and Rory are visited by River, who reveals that the Doctor had revealed to her that the Teselecta was impersonating him while he was safely inside it, and therefore he did not really die. Elsewhere, the Doctor is warned by the head of his ally Dorium (Simon Fisher-Becker) that the question the Silence were attempting to prevent will be asked as they did not succeed in killing him: "Doctor who?" |
Series 7 (2012–13)
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Series 7 started with five episodes in late 2012, followed by a Christmas special and eight episodes in 2013. From this series on, the use of production codes were abandoned. The Christmas special had Steven Moffat, Wenger and Caroline Skinner as executive producers.[19] Beth Willis left the BBC and stepped down as executive producer after series 6[20] and Wenger also departed following the Christmas special, leaving Moffat and Skinner as executive producers for series 7.[21] Denise Paul produced "The Bells of Saint John", "The Rings of Akhaten", "Nightmare in Silver" and "The Name of the Doctor" with Marcus Wilson credited as series producer on those episodes.[citation needed]
No. story |
No. in series |
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Special (2011) | ||||||||||||
225 | – | "The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe" | Farren Blackburn | Steven Moffat | 25 December 2011 | 10.77 | 84 | |||||
The Doctor crash-lands on Earth in 1938. He is helped back to the TARDIS by Madge Arwell. Three years later, Madge's husband Reg has disappeared while piloting an Avro Lancaster bomber in the Second World War, but she keeps it a secret from her two children, Lily and Cyril. They evacuate London to stay at a house in Dorset, where the Doctor masquerades as the caretaker. Cyril is lured through a present, which is a portal to a winter planet. Looking for Cyril, the Doctor and Lily and later Madge enter the box; Madge encounters miners, who plan to harvest the trees. Lily and the Doctor follow Cyril's tracks to a tower where wooden humanoids attempt to put a crown on Cyril, which will allow the souls of the trees to escape. When Madge arrives, she is deemed strong enough to pilot the top of the tower to safety. When they land, Reg is alive as he had followed the light from the tower and landed safely. The Doctor turns down Christmas dinner with the family and visits Amy and Rory, two years after he last saw them. | ||||||||||||
Part 1 | ||||||||||||
226 | 1 | "Asylum of the Daleks" | Nick Hurran | Steven Moffat | 1 September 2012 | 8.33 | 89 | |||||
The Doctor, Amy, and Rory are kidnapped by the Daleks, who explain that a planet they use as an asylum must be destroyed, but to do that its force-field must be disabled. The field has already been ruptured due to the crash-landing of a young woman, Oswin Oswald one year previously. The Daleks provide the three with bracelets to protect them against the planet's defense system, which will convert visitors into Dalek puppets. Although they are guided by Oswin, who has hacked into the planet's systems, the converted remains of Oswin's crew steal Amy's bracelet. The Doctor goes to find Oswin, as she claims to be able to disable the planet's force-field, and Oswin hacks into the Dalek psychic link and erases all memory of the Doctor from the Daleks. The Doctor discovers that Oswin has been fully converted into a Dalek, yet she still believes herself to be human. She ultimately realises the truth, but lowers the force-field and the Doctor, Amy, and Rory escape via teleporter before Daleks destroy the planet. The Doctor returns to the Dalek Parliament to find they have no memory of him due to Oswin's interference. | ||||||||||||
227 | 2 | "Dinosaurs on a Spaceship" | Saul Metzstein | Chris Chibnall | 8 September 2012 | 7.57 | 87 | |||||
The Doctor attempts to prevent the destruction of an unmanned spaceship with a cargo of dinosaurs alongside Rory's father, Brian, Queen Nefertiti, and big-game hunter John Riddell. The Doctor and his companions discover that the ship is a Silurian ark designed to carry the reptilian humanoids to a new planet along with flora and fauna from their time period. They find that a man named Solomon had killed the Silurian inhabitants in order to sell the dinosaurs on board, and goes after Nefertiti after seeing her value. The Doctor foils Solomon's plan and prevents the missiles from destroying the ship, but does not extend mercy to Solomon. | ||||||||||||
228 | 3 | "A Town Called Mercy" | Saul Metzstein | Toby Whithouse | 15 September 2012 | 8.42 | 85 | |||||
The TARDIS accidentally lands in Mercy, a town in the American West around 1870. The TARDIS crew discovers that the town's doctor, Jex, is an alien being sought by the cyborg Gunslinger. The Doctor discovers Jex was a scientist who experimented on volunteers to create cyborgs to fight in a war on his home planet; the Gunslinger is seeking revenge for what was done to him. The Doctor faces a moral dilemma of whether he should offer Jex to the Gunslinger; he devises a plan to help Jex escape, but Jex commits suicide to save more innocent people from being harmed. The Doctor saves the Gunslinger from self-destruction and makes him the marshal of Mercy. | ||||||||||||
229 | 4 | "The Power of Three" | Douglas Mackinnon | Chris Chibnall | 22 September 2012 | 7.67 | 87 | |||||
Amy and Rory begin to wonder whether they should choose between normal life and "Doctor life." Many black cubes appear around the world, and the Doctor stays with the Ponds to investigate but the cubes are inactive and the Doctor leaves UNIT in charge. A year goes by and the cubes suddenly begin activating random features before stopping the hearts of one-third of humanity. The Doctor eventually tracks the cubes to the Shakri, who plan to eliminate humanity before they can colonise in space, believing them to be an infestation. The Doctor reverses the electric pulse used to stop people's hearts and destroys the Shakri ship. At Brian's urging the Doctor takes Amy and Rory back as full-time companions. | ||||||||||||
230 | 5 | "The Angels Take Manhattan" | Nick Hurran | Steven Moffat | 29 September 2012 | 7.82 | 88 | |||||
The Doctor takes Amy and Rory to Central Park. While the Doctor is reading Amy a novel about Melody Malone, Rory is taken by a Weeping Angel on his way back from getting coffee. In 1938 New York City, Rory meets River Song, the author of the novel. The Doctor and Amy use the novel to break their way into 1938 and find Rory, while he and River investigate the Angels' takeover of Manhattan. At the Winter Quay hotel, they find an aged Rory on his deathbed. The Angels created the hotel in order to keep their victims and maintain a constant source of potential energy. To escape his fate, Rory and Amy jump off the top of the building to their deaths, creating a paradox. Waking up in a graveyard with the TARDIS, Rory is transported by a surviving Angel. As the Doctor begs Amy to come back into the TARDIS, she bids him a tearful farewell and allows the Angel to send her back to Rory. Later, the devastated Doctor reads an afterword by Amy in the novel, telling him all is well and requesting he visit young Amelia Pond as she waits for him. | ||||||||||||
Special (2012) | ||||||||||||
231 | – | "The Snowmen" | Saul Metzstein | Steven Moffat | 25 December 2012 | 9.87 | 87 | |||||
Depressed after the loss of Amy and Rory, the Doctor hides himself in Victorian London. The "Great Intelligence", a form of "memory snow" which can mirror the thoughts of anything around it, hatches a plot to create an army of ice people. While Strax drives the Doctor around, they run into Clara, a barmaid. The Doctor refuses to investigate the snowmen and returns to the TARDIS, in a cloud above London, accessible via a staircase. Clara soon returns to her job as a governess and learns of the danger to all of humanity. She turns to the Doctor for help and he takes action. With Madame Vastra, Jenny Flint, and Strax, the Doctor and Clara defeat the Great Intelligence and its human servant. In the process, the Doctor regains his enthusiasm, deciding to take Clara on as his companion. However, Clara is thrown off the edge of a cloud and falls to her death. The Doctor discovers Clara's full name – Clara Oswin Oswald – and realises that Clara is the same person as Oswin Oswald. He concludes that she is likely still alive in some other time and leaves in the TARDIS to find her. | ||||||||||||
Part 2 | ||||||||||||
232 | 6 | "The Bells of Saint John" | Colm McCarthy | Steven Moffat | 30 March 2013 | 8.44 | 87 | |||||
The Doctor manages to find another version of Clara in the present day. Meanwhile, Miss Kizlet and her employees at The Shard are using walking Wi-Fi base stations nicknamed "Spoonheads" to upload people's souls to a datacloud, allowing her client the Great Intelligence to grow stronger. The Doctor saves Clara from this fate by tricking Miss Kizlet into returning all the souls back to their bodies. The Great Intelligence erases all memory of working for him from the employees' minds, effectively making them innocent of any wrongdoing. The Doctor invites Clara to be his companion, but she requests that he come back the next day; she wants time to think about it. | ||||||||||||
233 | 7 | "The Rings of Akhaten" | Farren Blackburn | Neil Cross | 6 April 2013 | 7.45 | 84 | |||||
The Doctor investigates Clara's past, finding nothing unusual but discovering that her mother died when she was young. When he returns to Clara, she requests that she be taken to see "something awesome". The Doctor takes her to the Rings of Akhaten, a ring system orbiting a large planet where the local religion believes life began. The society's currency is items of sentimental value. Clara runs into a young girl named Merry Gejelh, who is about to be sacrificed in the Festival of Offerings to appease the Old God. The Doctor and Clara save Merry and discover that the Old God is really a parasite of memories and sentiment that lives inside the large planet. Clara offers it her treasured leaf that caused her parents to meet, and as she points out that there are infinite possibilities to every choice, she defeats the parasite. | ||||||||||||
234 | 8 | "Cold War" | Douglas Mackinnon | Mark Gatiss | 13 April 2013 | 7.37 | 84 | |||||
The Doctor and Clara attempt to land in Las Vegas; however, the TARDIS instead lands in a Russian submarine in 1983 and takes off without them. To the Doctor's surprise, he finds an Ice Warrior, the famed Grand Marshal Skaldak, who had been thawed out of the ice after 5000 years. However, Captain Zhukov distrusts both the Doctor and Clara and has Skaldak chained up to prevent damage to the submarine. By Martian Law, Skaldak now considers that humanity as a whole has declared war on the Ice Warriors. The Doctor tries to convince Skaldak that he and Clara are peaceful; when Skaldak believes no other Ice Warriors are left, he exits his armour to begin forensic analysis of human bodies. Skaldak tricks Lieutenant Stepashin into revealing the circumstances of the Cold War, and prepares to start an alternate timeline by firing off a single nuclear missile. However, Clara manages to convince him that it would be wrong to end innocent lives, just as an Ice Warrior ship arrives and retrieves Skaldak. Out of danger, the Doctor's sonic screwdriver tells him the Hostile Action Displacement System had been activated and sent the TARDIS to the South Pole. | ||||||||||||
235 | 9 | "Hide" | Jamie Payne | Neil Cross | 20 April 2013 | 6.61 | 85 | |||||
Thinking empathic psychic Emma Grayling may be able to shed some light on Clara, the Doctor goes to 1974, where Emma and her future husband Prof. Alec Palmer are investigating a ghost known as the Witch of the Well, in Caliburn House. After the house grows cold and the message "help me" appears, the Doctor borrows Alec's camera and uses the TARDIS to take pictures of the mansion's location throughout time. Thanks to this, the Doctor learns it's not a ghost in the pictures, but a time traveler named Hila Tukurian who got stuck in a pocket dimension; she's running from a hideous creature. The Doctor quickly constructs a device that amplifies Emma's psychic abilities, creating a portal to the pocket dimension. Emma cannot keep the portal open long enough for the Doctor to escape. Clara manages to persuade the TARDIS to briefly fly through and collect the Doctor, who hangs on to the exterior and is dragged back to reality. The Doctor explains Hila is a descendant of Emma and Alec. The Doctor realises another creature was inside the mansion and its mate was the creature in the pocket dimension; he quickly returns to save it. | ||||||||||||
236 | 10 | "Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS" | Mat King | Stephen Thompson | 27 April 2013 | 6.50 | 85 | |||||
The TARDIS is picked up by a salvage crew, knocking Clara into the depths of the TARDIS. The Doctor promises the Van Baalen brothers the salvage of a lifetime to rescue her. The Doctor locks everyone in to save Clara. Clara runs from a molten creature and discovers the TARDIS library, where she finds the Doctor's real name. Reunited, everyone races to the engine room, which is damaged by the Van Baalens' "magno-grab", and the Doctor reveals the molten zombies are their future selves, resulting from staying too long in the room housing the Eye of Harmony. The Doctor and Clara arrive in the engine room, where he confronts her about her other lives; Clara has no clue about her other lives, making the Doctor happy to know she's not the one responsible. Clara asks the Doctor about his name. The Doctor sends a remote control device to his past self through a time fissure so the earlier Doctor can send the TARDIS to a different location just as the Van Baalens detected it. This rewrites the moment the Van Baalens pick up and damage the TARDIS and erases Clara's memories. | ||||||||||||
237 | 11 | "The Crimson Horror" | Saul Metzstein | Mark Gatiss | 4 May 2013 | 6.47 | 85 | |||||
Madame Vastra, Jenny and Strax investigate the mystery of the "Crimson Horror." Bodies have been found completely red, with a substance on them Vastra recognises from before the Silurians went into hibernation as the venom of an ancient leech, in a diluted version. An investigator shows Vastra optographs, one of which shows the Doctor, screaming. As Sweetville, run by Mrs. Gillyflower, proves suspicious, Jenny is sent to investigate and find the Doctor. She succeeds, finding him a victim of the venom, but still alive; he quickly reverses the process for him and Clara. Confronting Mrs. Gillyflower, they discover "Mr. Sweet" working with Mrs. Gillyflower is one of the leeches; she plans to use his venom to preserve humanity by making a rocket with it explode. However, the rocket goes off without the venom on board, thanks to Vastra and Jenny. Strax shoots at her, and Mrs. Gillyflower tumbles and dies, after being revealed to have tested Mr. Sweet's venom on her daughter. Mr. Sweet is killed by Ada's cane. Once Clara is back home, she finds that the Maitland children have found photos of her from her travels, along with a picture of Victorian Clara. | ||||||||||||
238 | 12 | "Nightmare in Silver" | Stephen Woolfenden | Neil Gaiman | 11 May 2013 | 6.64 | 84 | |||||
Because Artie and Angie are blackmailing Clara, the Doctor decides to take the children to Hedgewick's World Of Wonders; however, it has long been abandoned since the Cyber-wars. Seeing strange insects, the Doctor decides to stay; at the same time, the Emperor of several galaxies has also gone missing. Cybermites, the upgraded versions of Cybermats, graft a cybernetic piece to the Doctor's head, giving him a split personality, the Cyber-Planner; they agree to play chess to win complete dominance over their shared mind. The Cybermen, now faster and sleeker, capture Artie and Angie, putting them under their mind control. The Cyber-Planner makes the Doctor sacrifice his queen piece to free the children. The Doctor makes a half-bluff, gets a neural shock device, amplifies it, and fries the headpiece. Now free, the Doctor sees there's no way to stop the Cybermen unless they blow up the planet; Porridge, someone who worked with Wibbly to con customers, is revealed to be the missing Emperor. Porridge voice-activates a bomb, getting everyone and the TARDIS teleported to an imperial ship. Clara rejects an offer of marriage from Porridge and the Doctor returns everyone home. | ||||||||||||
239 | 13 | "The Name of the Doctor" | Saul Metzstein | Steven Moffat | 18 May 2013 | 7.45 | 88 | |||||
An imprisoned murderer tells Madame Vastra that the Doctor's secret will be taken to his grave. She uses a soporific to bring herself, Jenny and Strax to a conference call in their dreams; she sends a letter to Clara to include her. River Song attends, and explains Vastra misunderstood the message; it is his grave that has been discovered. The Whispermen kidnap Vastra's group, while Clara awakens and informs the Doctor, making him realise the prophecy the Silence predicted is unfolding. At Trenzalore, the Doctor's resting place is a dying, monolithic TARDIS. Inside, the Great Intelligence waits for them; it demands the Doctor speak his true name to unlock the TARDIS. When the Doctor refuses, River speaks it instead. The Doctor explains that the TARDIS houses his entire timeline. The Great Intelligence steps into it and scatters itself throughout the Doctor's life, to rewrite all his victories into defeats. Clara follows after it, becoming two of the echoes of herself that the Doctor met. The Doctor enters his own timeline to rescue Clara, after she discovers a previously unseen incarnation of the Doctor that apparently broke the promise that goes alongside the title The Doctor. |
Specials (2013)
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Following Caroline Skinner's departure, BBC Wales' Head of Drama, Faith Penhale, served as Executive Producer with Moffat for the 50th anniversary special;[22] Brian Minchin, previously a script editor in series 5, took over the role thereafter.[23] Marcus Wilson left the position of producer following the Christmas special.
Story | Episode | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
240 | 1 | "The Day of the Doctor" | Nick Hurran | Steven Moffat | 23 November 2013 | 12.80 | 88 |
The Eleventh Doctor and Clara are called in by UNIT to investigate mysterious three-dimensional paintings, including one depicting the Time War of Gallifrey. In the war, the War Doctor, a previously unknown incarnation of the Doctor, plans to use an ancient weapon called "The Moment" to end the ongoing war between Time Lords and Daleks. The Moment, knowing the disasters its use will cause, shows the War Doctor how its use will affect him by uniting him with the Eleventh Doctor, as well as the Tenth Doctor. Together, the three Doctors are able to end a Zygon invasion by enacting peace between Zygons and humans. Though the Doctors still contemplate using the Moment anyway, Clara convinces them to try another way to end the war. Uniting with all their previous and future incarnations, the Doctors use their TARDISes to trap Gallifrey in a pocket universe. In the aftermath, the War and Tenth Doctors return to their own times, with the War Doctor regenerating into the Ninth Doctor, and the Eleventh Doctor is told by a mysterious curator resembling the Fourth Doctor that it is his mission to find Gallifrey, which the Doctor vows to do. | |||||||
241 | 2 | "The Time of the Doctor" | Jamie Payne | Steven Moffat | 25 December 2013 | 11.14 | 83 |
A message echoing through all of time and space emanates from the farming town of Christmas on the planet Trenzalore, where a prophecy states the Doctor will spend the last of his years. With the help of the Papal Mainframe, the Doctor and Clara travel to the village and discover that the message is being sent from Gallifrey by the Time Lords. Sending Clara home, he proceeds to spend hundreds of years fighting and defending Trenzalore against hordes of aliens determined to prevent the Time Lords from returning. Clara returns to find the Daleks are the last remaining aliens, and that the Doctor has fought for so long, with no more regenerations, that he is on the cusp of dying of old age. As the Doctor faces his last stand, Clara convinces the Time Lords to give the Doctor a new regeneration cycle. The Doctor begins to regenerate, destroying the Daleks and ending the war. Clara returns to the TARDIS to find a rejuvenated Doctor about to finish his regeneration. After vowing to remember the incarnation he was and hallucinating a final goodbye to Amy Pond, he finally regenerates into the Twelfth Doctor, as the TARDIS suddenly begins crashing. |
Twelfth Doctor
The Twelfth Doctor is portrayed by Peter Capaldi.
Series 8 (2014)
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Nikki Wilson and Peter Bennett returned as producers, with Paul Frift producing "In the Forest of the Night".
No. story |
No. in series |
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [5] |
AI [5] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
242 | 1 | "Deep Breath" | Ben Wheatley | Steven Moffat | 23 August 2014 | 9.17 | 82 |
In Victorian London, a dinosaur spits out the TARDIS onto the banks of the River Thames. The newly-regenerated Twelfth Doctor, and Clara, emerge from the TARDIS. The Doctor rests at the Paternoster Gang's residence to recover. After the spontaneous combustion of the dinosaur, the Doctor and Clara take on the case of the dinosaur's death and similar recent human combustions. The Doctor and Clara are called to a restaurant, where they find it is part of a spaceship that crashed in the past and is filled with humanoid robots. Upon Clara's prompting, the robots' cyborg control node, the Half-Face Man, reveals that he is trying to reach the "promised land" and killed the dinosaur to use her as parts for his computer. The Doctor confronts the Half-Face Man, claiming the Half-Face Man does not want to continue his existence because of how many times his body was replaced. The Half-Face Man falls to his death from a hot-air balloon, and the other robots go lifeless. Unsure about continuing to travel with the new Doctor, Clara is convinced by a phone call from the Eleventh Doctor. Meanwhile, the Half-Face Man awakes in the promised land, greeted by a woman called Missy. | |||||||
243 | 2 | "Into the Dalek" | Ben Wheatley | Phil Ford and Steven Moffat | 30 August 2014 | 7.29 | 84 |
Clara asks fellow Coal Hill School teacher and former soldier Danny Pink out for a drink. The Doctor brings Clara to the human rebel ship Aristotle to help the "good" Dalek Rusty, despite the Doctor's contention that Daleks cannot be turned good. The Doctor, Clara, and a team of rebels from the Aristotle are miniaturised and sent into Rusty. The Doctor repairs Rusty's power cell, but it reverts to its old way of thinking and forgets the memory of seeing the beauty of a star being born that had made it want to destroy the other Daleks. It sends a message to the Dalek mothership, giving the other Daleks the rebel ship's location. Clara awakens Rusty's memory of seeing the star being born. In an attempt to show Rusty the beauty of the universe, the Doctor connects his mind with Rusty's. Rusty, however, sees the Doctor's hatred for the Daleks, and decides to exterminate its own race. The Doctor turns down the surviving soldier Journey's offer to travel with him. | |||||||
244 | 3 | "Robot of Sherwood" | Paul Murphy | Mark Gatiss | 6 September 2014 | 7.28 | 82 |
The Doctor and Clara meet the outlaw Robin Hood in Sherwood Forest. The Doctor wins a duel against Robin by knocking him into a river. Robin takes part in an archery contest against the Sheriff of Nottingham. The Doctor challenges Robin before blowing up the target. The Doctor allows the Sheriff's robot knights to capture him, Robin and Clara so he can learn more about the Sheriff's plans. The Doctor and Clara discover the Sheriff has been trying to repair a crashed spaceship and intends to repair its circuitry with the countryside's gold, so that he can take over the world. However, there is not enough gold to make orbit, and the damage to the engines would destroy half of England. Robin defeats the Sheriff in a duel by knocking him into a gold vat. Since Robin's arm is injured (and the Doctor cheated during the archery contest), the Doctor, Clara, and Robin work together to fire the golden arrow from the contest into the ship, which then climbs into orbit and detonates harmlessly. The Doctor admits that Robin will be remembered as a legend rather than as a man, and finds Maid Marian for him before departing. | |||||||
245 | 4 | "Listen" | Douglas Mackinnon | Steven Moffat | 13 September 2014 | 7.01 | 82 |
After a failed date with Danny, Clara returns to her home to find the Doctor awaiting her. He seeks a creature he believes has perfected its ability to hide and is related to a childhood fear everyone has of a hand grabbing someone's leg from under the bed. Clara tries to home in on her childhood using the TARDIS' telepathic circuits, but lands at the children's home where Danny, as a boy called Rupert, grew up. The Doctor comforts Rupert from his fear when something under his bedspread scares him. After failing to apologise to Danny on the date, Clara is beckoned back to the TARDIS by time traveller Orson Pink. Clara is taken to the end of the universe where Orson's ship was stranded and the Doctor attempts to observe the hiding creature. When something on the ship knocks the Doctor out, Clara triggers the TARDIS' departure to a barn, where she finds a crying child. Hiding beneath the bed, she realises that the child is the Doctor. When the boy gets up, Clara accidentally grabs his leg. She comforts him with the Doctor's previous advice to Rupert. Orson is returned home, and Clara and Danny reconcile. | |||||||
246 | 5 | "Time Heist" | Douglas Mackinnon | Stephen Thompson and Steven Moffat | 20 September 2014 | 6.99 | 84 |
The TARDIS' phone rings in Clara's apartment, and the Doctor and Clara find themselves in a strange chamber suffering from memory loss along with Psi the augmented human and Saibra the mutant human. They have been recruited by the Architect to rob the Bank of Karabraxos. The quartet collect the tools required for their heist, before witnessing a mysterious alien named the Teller melt the brain of a criminal with its psychic abilities. Saibra is later caught by the Teller and activates an atomic shredder to dissolve herself, and Psi soon follows her in the same manner. Clara and the Doctor gain access to the vaults of the bank to gain the rewards of their heist, and proceed to the Private Vault, after finding Psi and Saibra; the shredders were really teleporters. The Doctor regains his lost memories back from the Teller, revealing himself as the Architect, set up to rejoin the Teller with the only other one of its species, after the bank's director, Madame Karabraxos, regretted leaving the Teller's mate in the vault to die in a solar storm and phoned the TARDIS. The Teller frees its mate. The Doctor takes the two aliens away to live out their lives. | |||||||
247 | 6 | "The Caretaker" | Paul Murphy | Gareth Roberts and Steven Moffat | 27 September 2014 | 6.82 | 83 |
Clara is trying to maintain two separate lives: one as the Doctor's companion, and the other as a schoolteacher in a relationship with Danny. The Doctor goes into deep cover as the caretaker at Coal Hill. Tracking the Skovox Blitzer, one of the deadliest machines created, he plans to displace it a billion years into the future where nothing else can be harmed. Danny accidentally tampers with the Doctor's trap, and the Skovox Blitzer is only sent 74 hours into the future. The Doctor learns of Danny's relationship with Clara, and Danny about Clara's double life. The Doctor believes that Clara made an error in dating a soldier. When the Skovox Blitzer rematerialises earlier than expected, the three work together to trick it into deactivating. Danny warns Clara about the Doctor pushing her into dangerous actions. A disintegrated community support officer awakens in the promised land, also called the Nethersphere, being greeted Missy's assistant Seb. | |||||||
248 | 7 | "Kill the Moon" | Paul Wilmshurst | Peter Harness | 4 October 2014 | 6.91 | 82 |
The Doctor takes Clara and her student Courtney on a trip. They arrive in 2049 on a Space Shuttle to the Moon with one hundred nuclear bombs. Noting the Moon's higher gravity and meeting Captain Lundvik, the Doctor questions her, where he's told that her team are on a suicide mission to blow up the Moon. A sudden mass high tide had threatened humanity's existence. Miners are found entombed in spider webs. The Doctor notices from the miners' photographs that the Moon is starting to break apart. A spider-like being attacks the group. The Doctor determines that the Moon is an egg, with the creature inside ready to hatch. The Doctor abandons them, forcing Lundvik, Clara, and Courtney to decide the fate of the creature. They let Earth's population decide; people of Earth vote to destroy the creature. Clara intervenes and stops the bombs' countdown, and the Doctor rescues them from the Moon. From Earth, they watch the creature hatch and the shell disintegrate, with the creature laying a new egg as a new Moon. Clara confronts the Doctor, claiming that it was his decision to make too. She leaves the Doctor, to be comforted by Danny. | |||||||
249 | 8 | "Mummy on the Orient Express" | Paul Wilmshurst | Jamie Mathieson | 11 October 2014 | 7.11 | 85 |
Clara rejoins the Doctor for one last outing before she leaves the TARDIS and the Doctor. They arrive on a train which travels through space, which is modelled after Orient Express. The Doctor then discovers that an elderly woman called Mrs. Pitt has recently been murdered by a mummy only she could see. When other occupants die in the same way, the Doctor realises that the mummy, identified as a legendary entity called the Foretold, is invisible to all but the one about to die. Once it is seen, it kills its victim in exactly sixty-six seconds. The train's computer program, Gus, reveals to the Doctor that he has tasked him to capture the Foretold. The Doctor discovers that it is a dead soldier powered by phase-shifting technology with unfinished business. The Doctor discharges the soldier by surrendering, and the train's occupants are saved. The Doctor uses the phase-shifting technology to teleport the train's occupants to safety. After a conversation with the Doctor about whether or not he is really cold-hearted, Clara decides she is not ready to leave him yet, and they set off on further adventures together. | |||||||
250 | 9 | "Flatline" | Douglas Mackinnon | Jamie Mathieson | 18 October 2014 | 6.71 | 85 |
Arriving in Bristol, the Doctor and Clara find the TARDIS has shrunk on the outside. Clara investigates the area, encountering a young graffiti artist named Rigsy, while the Doctor stays in the TARDIS until it has shrunk down to a handheld size, theorising that something was leaching its external dimensions. The Doctor tells Clara that the thing they are facing is an alien from a universe with two dimensions which is flattening people that went missing on Rigsy's estate. The creatures, known as the Boneless, can make 3D objects 2D. Clara, Rigsy, and community service people run from the Boneless into tunnels. The Doctor creates a device that can change the dimensions of objects similarly to the Boneless. The Doctor turns on Siege Mode to prevent the TARDIS from being damaged, but leaving him without enough power to deactivate Siege Mode. The Boneless have also learned to make themselves three-dimensional, and assume guises of the people they have flattened. Clara has Rigsy tricks the creatures into restoring the TARDIS by placing the TARDIS on the other side of a fake door Rigsy painted. The Doctor uses its power to send the Boneless back into their dimension. | |||||||
251 | 10 | "In the Forest of the Night" | Sheree Folkson | Frank Cottrell-Boyce | 25 October 2014 | 6.92 | 83 |
Clara's student Maebh knocks on the TARDIS after hearing a thought from Clara to find the Doctor. The Doctor answers, and realises that a forest has grown over the world. Clara and Danny lead a group of students out into the new forest after a museum sleepover. They regroup in Trafalgar Square to recover Maebh. The Doctor realises Maebh is missing, and he and Clara set out to find her. They find Maebh. Some bug-like creatures talk through Maebh, telling them they had grown the forest and previous big forests. The Doctor believes a giant solar flare Maebh predicted in her notebook is heading towards Earth. Heading back to the TARDIS, the Doctor offers an escape route. Clara refuses to become the last of her kind, and Danny decides to stay with the students. The Doctor realises the trees have grown to protect Earth. Maebh reads off a message prepared by the other students to send a message to the world to not destroy the trees. Danny tells Clara he wants to know the truth about her travels with the Doctor and asks her to think about it first. The solar flare passes by harmlessly and the excess trees disappear. | |||||||
252a | 11 | "Dark Water" | Rachel Talalay | Steven Moffat | 1 November 2014 | 7.34 | 85 |
While Clara attempts to gain the courage to tell Danny about her life with the Doctor, Danny is killed. Clara attempts to blackmail the Doctor into saving Danny. The Doctor removes her from the dream state he placed on her and uses the TARDIS' telepathic interface to find Danny. The Doctor and Clara are brought to the 3W Institute, in which skeletons are contained in a blue liquid called "dark water" that hides the exoskeletons that support the skeletons. In an apparent afterlife called the Nethersphere, Danny is being consoled by Seb for his death. Missy greets the Doctor and Clara. The scientist Doctor Chang explains that the dead are conscious. Meanwhile, Missy awakens the skeletons and the tanks begin to drain. Clara talks with Danny, but Danny refuses to let her be with him in death. The skeletons are revealed to be Cybermen. Missy tells the Doctor that dying minds are uploaded to the Nethersphere—a Time Lord "hard drive"—where emotions are deleted and the mind is downloaded into Cyberman bodies. The Doctor and Missy exit and find themselves on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral. Missy reveals that she is the Master. | |||||||
252b | 12 | "Death in Heaven" | Rachel Talalay | Steven Moffat | 8 November 2014 | 7.60 | 83 |
Cybermen detonate themselves around the British Isles, to reincarnate and transform the dead into Cybermen with clouds that rain "Cyberpollen". Similar events occur all over the world. Danny is one of these Cybermen, and he rescues Clara. UNIT bring the Doctor and Missy aboard a plane, where the Doctor is inducted "President of Earth". Missy overpowers UNIT, kills Osgood, and blows up the plane. She reveals she gave Clara the phone number to the TARDIS. The Doctor reunites with Clara and Danny in a graveyard. Danny reveals that a forthcoming rainfall will convert all living people into Cybermen. Missy arrives and gifts the Doctor with control of the Cybermen to prove he and Missy are the same. The Doctor refuses and gives control to Danny, who leads other Cybermen into exploding and stopping the rainfall. Missy claims the planet Gallifrey is in its original location. The Doctor threatens to kill Missy to prevent Clara from doing so herself. Missy is seemingly disintegrated by Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart, reanimated as a Cyberman. Clara and the Doctor bid farewell with lies to each other: Clara tells the Doctor that Danny was brought back from the Nethersphere, and the Doctor tells Clara he found Gallifrey. |
Series 9 (2015)
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Christmas special (2015)
Story | Episode | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) |
AI |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
263 | – | "The Husbands of River Song" | Douglas Mackinnon | Steven Moffat | 25 December 2015 | 7.69[24] | 82[25] |
Series 10
On 14 July 2015, BBC Worldwide's Annual Review revealed that it had invested in a tenth series.[26] Steven Moffat has stated that it will be a full series of twelve episodes and a Christmas special.[27]
See also
- List of Doctor Who missing episodes
- List of Doctor Who Christmas specials
- List of unmade Doctor Who serials
- List of Doctor Who audio releases
- List of Doctor Who home video releases
- List of Doctor Who audio plays by Big Finish
- List of Doctor Who radio stories
- List of special Doctor Who episodes
- Doctor Who films
- Doctor Who spin-offs
Footnotes
- ↑ Although technically the sixteenth season, the season was known by its subtitle, The Key to Time.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Shada was left unfinished due to a strike. Its recorded footage was later released on home video using linking narration by Tom Baker to complete the story. It is not included in the episode or story counts as it was not broadcast.
- ↑ Although technically the twenty-third season, the season was known by its subtitle, The Trial of a Time Lord.
- ↑ "TVM" is used in the BBC's online episode guide.[12] The actual code used during production is 50/LDX071Y/01X.[13] Doctor Who Magazine's "Complete Eighth Doctor Special" gives the production code as #83705.[14] Big Finish Productions uses the code 8A, and numbers its subsequent Eighth Doctor stories correspondingly.
References
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 5.00 5.01 5.02 5.03 5.04 5.05 5.06 5.07 5.08 5.09 5.10 5.11 5.12 5.13 5.14 5.15 5.16 5.17 5.18 5.19 5.20 5.21 5.22 5.23 5.24 5.25 5.26 5.27 5.28 5.29 5.30 5.31 5.32 5.33 5.34 5.35 5.36 5.37 5.38 5.39 5.40 5.41 5.42 5.43 5.44 5.45 5.46 5.47 5.48 5.49 5.50 5.51 5.52 5.53 5.54 5.55 5.56 5.57 5.58 5.59 5.60 5.61 5.62 5.63 5.64 5.65 5.66 5.67 5.68 5.69 5.70 5.71 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ The Five Doctors was first broadcast in the United States on 23 November 1983, the actual date of the programme's 20th anniversary.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Parts Two and Three of Silver Nemesis were first broadcast in New Zealand on 25 November 1988 as part of a compilation broadcast before their UK transmission.[10]
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ "Bad Wolf" / "The Parting of the Ways" at Doctor Who: A Brief History of Time (Travel) Retrieved 28 November 2007.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (No permanent link available. Search for relevant dates.)
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Sources
- Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
- Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
- Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
- BBC Classic Series Episode Guide
- BBC Episode Guide (Classic and New Series)
- Doctor Who Reference Guide – detailed descriptions of all televised episodes, plus spin-off audio, video, and literary works.
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Doctor Who (1963–1989) at IMDb
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Doctor Who (1996) at IMDb
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Doctor Who (2005–) at IMDb
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