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Latest revision as of 23:41, 6 May 2017
- Publication: Starlog
- Date: number 106 (May 1986)
- Author: Patrick Daniel O'Neill
- Page: 34
- Language: English
The man who charted the rebellious escapades of "Blake's Seven" remembers his life and 'TV times with
"I was the first writer to keep control of my creation for television, I believe," says Terry Nation, referring to his most famous brainstorm, the evil Daleks. When he originated those infamous alien enemies for the BBC's Doctor Who, Nation's contract included a piece of the rights to the salt shaker-shaped villains.
"My agent very cleverly did that for me," he reveals. "There was no such thing as BBC merchandising in those days. In fact, the first licensing for Dalek toys went to somebody else. The BBC hadn't begun to develop and do its own licensing. Almost anyone in BBC Enterprises [the licensing and merchandising arm of the British TV and radio system], who has been there long enough, will say that Enterprises was built on the Daleks. They were the first thing they really did."
Surprisingly, the inspiration for the mechanical-voiced assassins, with their constant cries of "Exterminate!," was a graceful dance troupe. "All my life," Nation explains, "I had been watching movies, where, no matter how scared I was at the fearsome creature, I knew, at the back of my mind, that it was only a man dressed up in a costume. There were arms, legs and a head. No matter what you did with it—it was a man. So, I really started from that basis. I did not want this alien to be humanoid in any way.
"I had seen, that very week on television, a Russian ballet company, the Georgian State Dancers. The girl dancers did a number in which they wear long dresses that touch the floor, and they move in tiny steps, so they appear to glide. You never see their feet move. It's exactly the way a Dalek moves. Then, I took off the head and the arms, and gave it a few things to make it work, and in the end, a Dalek did not look like a man dressed up."
Returning to the business end of writing for series television, Nation explains why, after their first two or three appearances, there was a gap of several years before the Daleks returned to menace Doctor Who. "I never really had a dispute with the Beeb," he says. "I think the show was always trying to do without the Daleks. They were never terribly happy that the Daleks, at least in the early days, were a continuing big success. I have no direct evidence of this belief, but I've always felt it. Inevitably, when Doctor Who began to dip in the ratings, they would say, 'Can we do another Dalek series?' because they always raised their ratings right away."
On the other hand, Nation admits, that the big gap between Dalek deviltries may have been his fault. "I was working on many other shows at the time, and may not have wanted anyone else to write it. I was never terribly happy with other people writing the Daleks."
Eventually, though, Nation permitted other writers to take a hand in charting the Daleks' destiny. "Ultimately, I realized that, if I wanted them to be seen again, and I wasn't going to have the time, others would have to write the Dalek scripts. But I kept script control and I have to approve the scripts. I won't let them be killed off again."
The Blake's Seven crew, however, was killed off at the end of their last episode—and Nation's not entirely happy about it. "That's the sort of thing you must protect against," he says. "It makes a wonderful finish for the show, but I'm also protecting an investment of creativity that has a long life. There's a way of reviving them, and with some literary skill, we can get them back."
That end, the destruction of all the heroes, was a somewhat downbeat finale to what many American fans have found to be a depressing, albeit fascinating, TV series. Blake and his fellow rebels are up against overwhelming military opposition, and never seem to win a decisive victory. Nation admits that is a theme which runs throughout his work. "I suppose it's the little guy against City Hall," he says. "I disagree that it's depressing—I think it's constantly hopeful, that people will continue, in the face of incredible opposition, to do what they believe. They're not going to be put down and say, 'All right, they're bigger than us, let's join them.' With Blake, they go on, fighting what is probably a losing battle. But if you want to look historically—I don't want to bring up Vietnam especially—but they were primitive unarmed men fighting first the French, then the Americans. Against the greatest firepower in the world, they won their war.
"You can't destroy a belief. You can destroy an army, but you can't destroy a belief. Blake and his people believe."
Nation is not unhappy when fans note his penchant for strong villains and emotionless creatures. "I think characters without apparent emotion—the Daleks, Zen and Orac in Blake's Seven, even to some extent Servalan and Travis—help to play up the human feelings of the other characters," he says. "In addition, when these emotionless characters are grand villains, they allow the writer a chance to say something about the primacy of humanity, when his emotion-filled good guys win out. I knew my guys were the good guys, the white hats, so, ultimately, I suppose I must take responsibility for the fact that I was making a political statement, whether I was aware of it or not."
One thing the writer will not take responsibility for is the thrust of Blake's Seven after he stopped scripting it. "It's very hard for a writer, or somebody who has created something, to actually see how talented the other people are. And they may be very talented. I've heard there are some very good episodes by others. But Blake's Seven was my show, my baby, and I'm never going to believe it was as good as I would have done it. They sent it in some directions I didn't like."
Surprisingly, Nation is not upset with other writers for disposing of certain characters. "After all," he observes, "I killed an early member of the cast. I thought it was fascinating when Blake vanished after the first season. Blake's Seven may be a unique TV show, in that in most of the episodes, the title character doesn't appear. For more than a complete season, Roj Blake isn't in it. He motivates everyone, they're looking for him, but Blake is out of the show."
Unfortunately, many American fans think of Nation (who now lives in Los Angeles) only in terms of the Daleks and Blake's Seven. He is quick to point out that "It's not as though Terry Nation created the Daleks in 1963, and then 20 years or so later, came up with Blake's Seven." Indeed not, for during that time, Nation was a busy TV writer, contributing to many established British series, including The Avengers and The Saint. In addition, he created another semi-science-fiction series, The Survivors, which concerns a group of people in the aftermath of a cataclysmic war. Summing up his career between his two great SF successes, Terry Nation says, "I can't remember a day during those years when I wasn't working."
Captions: The Dr. Who movies with Peter Cushing as the Time Lord were based on Nation's TV stories, though he didn't script.
Surrounded by his robotic opponents, the Third Doctor (Jon Pertwee) considers escape In Nation's "Death to the Daleks."
The heroes of Blake's Seven — Dayna (Josette Simon), Tarrant (Steven Pacey), Avon (Paul Darrow), Vila (Michael Keating) and Daily (Jan Chappell) — engage in "Powerplay," an episode written by Nation.
Disclaimer: These citations are created on-the-fly using primitive parsing techniques. You should double-check all citations. Send feedback to whovian@cuttingsarchive.org
- APA 6th ed.: O'Neill, Patrick Daniel (number 106 (May 1986)). Terry Nation: Of Tin Cans and Rebels. Starlog p. 34.
- MLA 7th ed.: O'Neill, Patrick Daniel. "Terry Nation: Of Tin Cans and Rebels." Starlog [add city] number 106 (May 1986), 34. Print.
- Chicago 15th ed.: O'Neill, Patrick Daniel. "Terry Nation: Of Tin Cans and Rebels." Starlog, edition, sec., number 106 (May 1986)
- Turabian: O'Neill, Patrick Daniel. "Terry Nation: Of Tin Cans and Rebels." Starlog, number 106 (May 1986), section, 34 edition.
- Wikipedia (this article): <ref>{{cite news| title=Terry Nation: Of Tin Cans and Rebels | url=http://cuttingsarchive.org/index.php/Terry_Nation:_Of_Tin_Cans_and_Rebels | work=Starlog | pages=34 | date=number 106 (May 1986) | via=Doctor Who Cuttings Archive | accessdate=9 November 2024 }}</ref>
- Wikipedia (this page): <ref>{{cite web | title=Terry Nation: Of Tin Cans and Rebels | url=http://cuttingsarchive.org/index.php/Terry_Nation:_Of_Tin_Cans_and_Rebels | work=Doctor Who Cuttings Archive | accessdate=9 November 2024}}</ref>