My tweets

  • Wed, 10:45: RT @tconnellyRTE: NEW: A majority of people in the South do not believe there will be a United Ireland inside the EU within the next ten ye…
  • Wed, 11:11: RT @BorderKent: Ms Truss appears to have broken Kentish diplomatic rule (of Kent) #4 Don’t insult overseas trade teams that are – more ex…

Posted in Uncategorised

Whoniversaries 21 April

i) births and deaths

21 April 1927: birth of Gerald Flood, who played Kamelion in 1983 and 1984, and also King John in The King's Demons (Fifth Doctor, 1983)

21 April 1935: birth of Anthony Read, script editor of Doctor Who from Underworld (Fourth Doctor, 1978) to The Armageddon Factor (Fourth Doctor, 1979), co-writer of The Invasion of Time (Fourth Doctor, 1978) and writer of The Horns of Nimon (Fourth Doctor, 1979-80).

21 April 1973: birth of Mark Dexter, who played Charlotte's Dad in Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead (Tenth Doctor, 2008) and Charles Babbage in Spyfall (Thirteenth Doctor, 2020).

21 April 1983: birth of Gugu Mbatha-Raw, who played Martha Jones' sister Tish in 2006.

21 April 2002: death of Terry Walsh, stuntman and actor in many Old Who stories.

ii) broadcast anniversaries

21 April 1973: broadcast of third episode of Planet of the Daleks. The Doctor and the Thals escape from the Dalek base.

21 April 1996: last ever appearance on TV of Jon Pertwee, playing the Third Doctor on Cilla Black's Surprise, Surprise!

21 April 2005: David Tennant films his half of the Ninth/Tenth Doctor regeneration scene.

21 April 2007: broadcast of Daleks in Manhattan. The Doctor and Martha land in New York in 1930 where the Daleks are attempting to merge with humans.

Posted in Uncategorised

Doctor Who: Adventures in Lockdown, ed. Steve Cole

Second paragraph of third story (“The Terror Of The Umpty Ums", by Steven Moffat):

“Did you hear me?” emitted the Human from its flapped aperture. “Did you understand? Do you understand what I’m saying?” The encoded sound stream was accompanied by a fresh flow of smells also emanating from the aperture. Karpagnon’s sensory filter began processing the new odours, while his tactical monitor noted that they were unlikely to be directly significant to the Human’s communication. The light spray of moisture was similarly dismissed. “I’ll be back tomorrow morning. Dr. Johnson and Dr. Ahmed will be here too. Do you remember them?”

A collection of short stories, most of which were published on the BBC website or in various other places last year during what we must now call the first lockdown. The high point is Neil Gaiman's “One Virtue, and a Thousand Crimes”, featuring the Corsair (see also), and there are a couple of wee gems by Paul Cornell, but I must say that I enjoyed them all, especially the feeling that the collection was not so very deliberately crafted – sometimes these anthologies try a bit too hard for coherence. Diehard fans will enjoy some of the obscure continuity references, but I think even casual fans will just enjoy the stories as such. You can get it here.

Posted in Uncategorised

My tweets

Posted in Uncategorised

My tweets

Posted in Uncategorised

Whoniversaries 20 April

i) births and deaths

20 April 1951: birth of Louise Jameson, who played the Fourth Doctor companion Leela from 1977 to 1978. She is 70! It doesn’t seem possible!

ii) broadcast and publication anniversaries

20 April 1968: broadcast of sixth episode of Fury from the Deep

20 April 1972: publication of The Making of Doctor Who by Malcolm Hulke and Terrance Dicks, the first book about the show.

20 April 1974: broadcast of fifth episode of The Monster of Peladon. Eckersley's treachery is revealed.

20 April 2007: broadcast of third episode of The Infinite Quest.

20 April 2013: broadcast of Hide. Clara and the Doctor arrive at the haunted Caliburn House, set alone on a desolate moor. Within its walls, a ghost-hunting professor and a gifted empathic psychic are searching for the Witch of the Well. Her apparition appears throughout the history of the building, but is she really a ghost? And what is chasing her?