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It is about six o'clock on a balmy Monday in late April, and yet the cast and crew of Doctor Who have only just finished their lunch break. Back in Studio 4, a purpose-built studio in the new BBC Wales drama centre at Cardif Bay, David Tennant – dressed in his full pinstripe-and-trainers Time Lord costume – will be shooting until 9pm or later. It is a big scene, too: as Tennant himself puts it, 'quite a major moment in the history of Doctor Who'. Which, given the history of Doctor Who, is quite some statement.
 +
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This is the longest-running sci-fi television series in the world – partly because of its ability to regenerate itself, deploying a procession of actors in the lead role – and in two weeks it will be celebrating its 50th anniversary. A special episode filmed to mark this milestone reunites Tennant with Billie Piper (who played his companion Rose), and brings them alongside the current Doctor, Matt Smith and his companion Clara (played by Jenna-Louise Coleman, who replaced Karen Gillan last year), as well as introducing a suitably momentous plot twist in the form of a new character played by John Hurt.
 +
 +
The programme was first broadcast on November 23 1963. It was the brainchild of the BBC's head of drama Sydney Newman, and starred William Hartnell as the irascible, white-haired first Doctor. In its early days
 +
 +
Doctor Who was broadcast as consecutive serials of several episodes, and the second of these – The Daleks, written by Terry Nation – cemented the Thanks to the Time Lord's talent for regeneration Doctor Who is the longest-running sci-fi series on TV, and a special episode will mark its 50th anniversary. Neil Midgley was there to see it materialise. Photographs by Jonathon Williams
 +
 +
show as a bona fide hit. When Hartnell left, in 1966, the producers had the idea of 'regenerating' the character into a new actor, using the 'hell and dank horror' of a bad LSD trip as their inspiration.
 +
 +
As the show turns 50, Steven Mofat is at the helm, in the role often referred to as 'showrunner' – meaning that he takes both executive producer and lead writer duties. Mofat had written individual episodes for Doctor Who since 2005, and ultimately took over the running of the show from Russell T Davies in 2009. He has written the anniversary episode himself, and promises, 'It's not just about honouring the past, though we do do that. I was aiming for… how about the most important day of the Doctor's life? The adventure that actually has an impact on him. I think most of his adventures make an impression on everybody else – but he probably forgets them 10 minutes later.'
 +
 +
Matt Smith says that fans won't be disappointed. 'What's really interesting is that Steven has managed to invent something new about the character, which is wonderful after 50 years,' he says. 'And it's a testament to the format, and to the idea, and to the nature of the character and the show.' The result is a feature-length episode called The
 +
 +
Day of the Doctor, which the BBC is turning into a global event by ramping up anticipation among fans around the world. (It is to be broadcast simultaneously in 200 countries.) A teaser trailer has been available for three weeks, but today will see the first broadcast of any trailer that includes footage from the episode itself.
 +
 +
Perhaps the biggest clue as to the direction the story would take, though, came at the end of the final episode of the last series. In a convoluted and fantastical story the Doctor and Clara had timetravelled to the Doctor's own grave and, once there, found themselves caught in a sort of vortex that represented the 'time stream' of the Doctor's life. There, the shadowy figures of previous Doctors – such as Hartnell and Peter Davison – flashed past. At the end – and baldly introduced by an on-screen credit as 'the Doctor' – they found John Hurt. 'He's from the Doctor's past, and the Doctor did not expect to see him again,' Mofat says. More will be revealed about Hurt's character in this new anniversary episode. ' We pick up, as it were, months later. So you'll get an update on what Clara's been up to, a little bit about what the Doctor's been up to. And then, as will tend to happen with multi-Doctor stories, things go a bit haywire.
 +
 +
'It will feel, at the beginning, like we get three diferent adventures with three diferent Doctors,' Mofat continues. 'And these connect, to become the same adventure. Very, very roughly, I suppose, and with apologies to Charles Dickens, it's the the past, the present and the future. There's plenty of inter-Doctor rivalry and, as the Doctor's 50thbirthday present, we're establishing a whole new Doctor right there in front of you.'
 +
 +
The pivotal scene about to be filmed calls for all three Doctors – Smith, Tennant and Hurt – as well as their companions, Coleman and Piper. As the technicians prepare for the cameras to roll, the actors chat away easily. (The potential for rivalry between actors as well as characters was, Tennant says, something he feared before coming back. 'It could have been difcult,' he says. 'That was my one nervousness – not about Matt per se, but just that he would have every right to feel like his territory was being in some way infringed. But he doesn't. We're having a right laugh, actually.')
 +
 +
They are all standing in a sort of interplanetary shed. It has a vaulted wooden frame, walls of wattle and plank, and a floor of dirt and twigs punctuated by golden glitter. This, apparently, is the scene for a great Doctor Who moment. 'It's in the middle of a strange desert – out of time, out of place,' says the show's production designer Michael Pickwoad (whose father, it transpires, was an actor called William Mervyn, who appeared as a guest star in the 1960s). 'So it's like a barn. But it's got a slightly sort of Hobbit-like quality – is it in the imagination, is it real, is it not? It's not quite like any barn I've ever been into.'
 +
 +
Smith's and Tennant's Doctors have each arrived in the space-barn in their own Tardis, with Tennant's a slightly muckier shade of blue. At the other end of the barn stands another device: a red jewel, like a huge ruby, sits at chest height on top of a metallic plinth, which is decorated in burnished silver and gold. As the actors block the scene, their hands keep reaching as if to press down on the jewel.
 +
 +
As filming finally gets under way, the dialogue is loaded with moral ambiguity. Since that first, fleeting appearance, Hurt's character has been described as a 'dark Doctor', a hitherto suppressed incarnation of the show's central character. 'You were the Doctor on the day it wasn't possible to get it right,' Smith's Doctor says, trying to comfort Hurt's, whose face is etched with inner pain. As the three Doctors gather around the jewel, it also seems that pressing it down would have terrible consequences. 'What we do today, we do not out of fear or hatred, but because there is no other way,' Tennant's Doctor says portentously.
 +
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 00:06, 21 February 2014

No image available. However there is a transcription available.

Do you have an image? Email us: whovian@cuttingsarchive.org


[edit]

It is about six o'clock on a balmy Monday in late April, and yet the cast and crew of Doctor Who have only just finished their lunch break. Back in Studio 4, a purpose-built studio in the new BBC Wales drama centre at Cardif Bay, David Tennant – dressed in his full pinstripe-and-trainers Time Lord costume – will be shooting until 9pm or later. It is a big scene, too: as Tennant himself puts it, 'quite a major moment in the history of Doctor Who'. Which, given the history of Doctor Who, is quite some statement.

This is the longest-running sci-fi television series in the world – partly because of its ability to regenerate itself, deploying a procession of actors in the lead role – and in two weeks it will be celebrating its 50th anniversary. A special episode filmed to mark this milestone reunites Tennant with Billie Piper (who played his companion Rose), and brings them alongside the current Doctor, Matt Smith and his companion Clara (played by Jenna-Louise Coleman, who replaced Karen Gillan last year), as well as introducing a suitably momentous plot twist in the form of a new character played by John Hurt.

The programme was first broadcast on November 23 1963. It was the brainchild of the BBC's head of drama Sydney Newman, and starred William Hartnell as the irascible, white-haired first Doctor. In its early days

Doctor Who was broadcast as consecutive serials of several episodes, and the second of these – The Daleks, written by Terry Nation – cemented the Thanks to the Time Lord's talent for regeneration Doctor Who is the longest-running sci-fi series on TV, and a special episode will mark its 50th anniversary. Neil Midgley was there to see it materialise. Photographs by Jonathon Williams

show as a bona fide hit. When Hartnell left, in 1966, the producers had the idea of 'regenerating' the character into a new actor, using the 'hell and dank horror' of a bad LSD trip as their inspiration.

As the show turns 50, Steven Mofat is at the helm, in the role often referred to as 'showrunner' – meaning that he takes both executive producer and lead writer duties. Mofat had written individual episodes for Doctor Who since 2005, and ultimately took over the running of the show from Russell T Davies in 2009. He has written the anniversary episode himself, and promises, 'It's not just about honouring the past, though we do do that. I was aiming for… how about the most important day of the Doctor's life? The adventure that actually has an impact on him. I think most of his adventures make an impression on everybody else – but he probably forgets them 10 minutes later.'

Matt Smith says that fans won't be disappointed. 'What's really interesting is that Steven has managed to invent something new about the character, which is wonderful after 50 years,' he says. 'And it's a testament to the format, and to the idea, and to the nature of the character and the show.' The result is a feature-length episode called The

Day of the Doctor, which the BBC is turning into a global event by ramping up anticipation among fans around the world. (It is to be broadcast simultaneously in 200 countries.) A teaser trailer has been available for three weeks, but today will see the first broadcast of any trailer that includes footage from the episode itself.

Perhaps the biggest clue as to the direction the story would take, though, came at the end of the final episode of the last series. In a convoluted and fantastical story the Doctor and Clara had timetravelled to the Doctor's own grave and, once there, found themselves caught in a sort of vortex that represented the 'time stream' of the Doctor's life. There, the shadowy figures of previous Doctors – such as Hartnell and Peter Davison – flashed past. At the end – and baldly introduced by an on-screen credit as 'the Doctor' – they found John Hurt. 'He's from the Doctor's past, and the Doctor did not expect to see him again,' Mofat says. More will be revealed about Hurt's character in this new anniversary episode. ' We pick up, as it were, months later. So you'll get an update on what Clara's been up to, a little bit about what the Doctor's been up to. And then, as will tend to happen with multi-Doctor stories, things go a bit haywire.

'It will feel, at the beginning, like we get three diferent adventures with three diferent Doctors,' Mofat continues. 'And these connect, to become the same adventure. Very, very roughly, I suppose, and with apologies to Charles Dickens, it's the the past, the present and the future. There's plenty of inter-Doctor rivalry and, as the Doctor's 50thbirthday present, we're establishing a whole new Doctor right there in front of you.'

The pivotal scene about to be filmed calls for all three Doctors – Smith, Tennant and Hurt – as well as their companions, Coleman and Piper. As the technicians prepare for the cameras to roll, the actors chat away easily. (The potential for rivalry between actors as well as characters was, Tennant says, something he feared before coming back. 'It could have been difcult,' he says. 'That was my one nervousness – not about Matt per se, but just that he would have every right to feel like his territory was being in some way infringed. But he doesn't. We're having a right laugh, actually.')

They are all standing in a sort of interplanetary shed. It has a vaulted wooden frame, walls of wattle and plank, and a floor of dirt and twigs punctuated by golden glitter. This, apparently, is the scene for a great Doctor Who moment. 'It's in the middle of a strange desert – out of time, out of place,' says the show's production designer Michael Pickwoad (whose father, it transpires, was an actor called William Mervyn, who appeared as a guest star in the 1960s). 'So it's like a barn. But it's got a slightly sort of Hobbit-like quality – is it in the imagination, is it real, is it not? It's not quite like any barn I've ever been into.'

Smith's and Tennant's Doctors have each arrived in the space-barn in their own Tardis, with Tennant's a slightly muckier shade of blue. At the other end of the barn stands another device: a red jewel, like a huge ruby, sits at chest height on top of a metallic plinth, which is decorated in burnished silver and gold. As the actors block the scene, their hands keep reaching as if to press down on the jewel.

As filming finally gets under way, the dialogue is loaded with moral ambiguity. Since that first, fleeting appearance, Hurt's character has been described as a 'dark Doctor', a hitherto suppressed incarnation of the show's central character. 'You were the Doctor on the day it wasn't possible to get it right,' Smith's Doctor says, trying to comfort Hurt's, whose face is etched with inner pain. As the three Doctors gather around the jewel, it also seems that pressing it down would have terrible consequences. 'What we do today, we do not out of fear or hatred, but because there is no other way,' Tennant's Doctor says portentously.

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  • APA 6th ed.: Midgley, Neil (2013-11-09). Many happy returns. The Daily Telegraph p. Magazine, p. 44.
  • MLA 7th ed.: Midgley, Neil. "Many happy returns." The Daily Telegraph [add city] 2013-11-09, Magazine, p. 44. Print.
  • Chicago 15th ed.: Midgley, Neil. "Many happy returns." The Daily Telegraph, edition, sec., 2013-11-09
  • Turabian: Midgley, Neil. "Many happy returns." The Daily Telegraph, 2013-11-09, section, Magazine, p. 44 edition.
  • Wikipedia (this article): <ref>{{cite news| title=Many happy returns | url=http://cuttingsarchive.org/index.php/Many_happy_returns | work=The Daily Telegraph | pages=Magazine, p. 44 | date=2013-11-09 | via=Doctor Who Cuttings Archive | accessdate=2 May 2024 }}</ref>
  • Wikipedia (this page): <ref>{{cite web | title=Many happy returns | url=http://cuttingsarchive.org/index.php/Many_happy_returns | work=Doctor Who Cuttings Archive | accessdate=2 May 2024}}</ref>