The new Who
- Publication: TV Guide
- Date: 1996-05-11
- Author: Mark Nollinger
- Page: 22
- Language: English
A venerable sci-fi cult favorite, Doctor Who is vividly reborn on network TV
On a cold and rainy winter night in Vancouver, an accident has snarled traffic on a busy thoroughfare. Suddenly, an attractive woman and a handsome, long-haired man wearing a velvet Victorian jacket burst from the back of a stalled ambulance and sprint past the line of waiting cars, only to be intercepted by a motorcycle cop. As the man in the period clothing thrusts a hand into his pocket, the officer goes for his gun.
"No, stop!" the woman pleads with the cop. "He's, he's...British." Smiling, the gentleman proffers a small brown bag filled with candy. "Jelly baby, officer?" he politely asks the bewildered policeman.
At this point, you may well be asking yourself, "What is going on here?" Actually, the operative word is who—Doctor Who. Seven years after being cast into oblivion by executives at the BBC, the time-traveler with the sweet tooth—for decades one of Britain's most popular television exports—is in front of the cameras again, this time for a Fox TV-movie.
British actor Paul McGann ("Withnail & I") stars as the Doctor, an eccentric explorer from the planet Gallifrey. The movie pits him against an old nemesis, the Master, played here by Eric Roberts ("It's My Party"). Daphne Ashbrook costars as a heart surgeon who lends support to the Doctor in his struggle to save the universe from the Master's villainy.
Set in a gang-plagued San Francisco on New Year's Eve, 1999, the sci-fi adventure is budgeted at about $5 million, putting it among the priciest Fox TV productions to date.
For the uninitiated, Doctor Who is the saga of a 950-year-old alien who speeds through time and the cosmos in a vehicle called a TARDIS (an acronym for Time And Relative Dimensions In Space)—which is stuck in the shape of a battered blue English police call box. On the outside, this booth is roughly the size of a Porta Potti, but the interior is magically spacious. The Doctor, who possesses two hearts and a cool 60-degree body temperature, must battle an array of cheesy monsters and dastardly villains. In the event of serious injury, he can regenerate his body, adopting an altered appearance. That premise not only makes recasting easy (McGann is the eighth actor to take a turn in the role), but is part of the tale's droll charm.
"He's a magical character who appeals to the child in all of us," says the movie's executive producer Philip Segal. "He's charming, a little dangerous, full of fun and humor, and willing to take risks—a classic hero." Adds Sylvester McCoy, who played the character for the final three years of the series' astonishingly long run, and who returns in the movie to pass the baton to McGann, "He's a very human alien. He gives off a sense of hope. He's got a big heart--two hearts, actually."
For legions of loyal Whovians, as fans are known, the revival was long overdue. They had gotten rather used to having the guy from Gallifrey in their lives. The original show, after all, ran on the BBC from 1963 to 1989, making it easily the longest-running sci-fi series in history. (The program had its U.S. debut in the '70s, and has since been seen on PBS and cable channels.) All told, the Doctor's adventures have been broadcast in more than 80 countries, attracting an estimated worldwide audience of more than 110 million viewers during the show's peak in the late 1970s and early '80s. Die-hard fans attend Doctor Who conventions (see next page), hang out on-line at Doctor Who Internet sites, and religiously scoop up Doctor Who merchandise ranging from comic books to videos to wallpaper to pinball machines. "It has more fans than Star Trek," Segal claims. "It's a complete underground cult."
Segal knows a thing or two about this sci-fi phenomenon—he's seen every one of the almost 700 episodes filmed during Doctor Who's 26-year run. "I was a little boy whose grandfather sat him on his knee one night in 1963 to watch the pilot episode of Doctor Who," recalls the British-born producer. "I've been a fan ever since."
So how do you go about updating a story that is such a cherished part of so many people's lives? Very carefully, Segal says. "If you try to change it, then you
damage the fabric of what it is," he explains. "We've really held on to the mythology of the character, but we've given him a bigger world to play in." An example: the elegant new interior of the TARDIS. Determined to be as true to the old show as possible, Segal and his colleagues constructed the facade from original blueprints obtained from the BBC, then spent a big piece of the film's budget creating an interior that resembles a lavish Victorian gentleman's club.
One crucial decision the producers faced was choosing which of the show's distinctively goofy evil-doers to include in the new movie. Despite their amateurish construction—the original Doctor Who was a stupendously low-budget affair—the Daleks, Yetis, Cybermen, and other garish fiends are huge fan favorites. In the end, the filmmakers elected to revive the Master, a rival Time Lord who has long given the Doctor fits. "What made the most sense to me was to pit him against as human an adversary as we possibly could," Segal explains, "so that an American audience who has never heard of Doctor Who could at least have something to grab onto."
Roberts, who remembers watching Doctor Who on the telly when he was attending the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London in the '70s, is cryptic when asked to describe his character. "He's got magic eyes—let's put it that way," says the actor.
The movie introduces a new element into the Doctor Who myth: an air of romance. While the seasoned time-traveler often enjoyed the companionship of attractive females in the old series, the relationships were always decidedly chaste. Not this time. "It's very '90s," says Ash-brook of her character's chemistry with the Doctor. "We get romantic. We don't, like, do it or anything. But we kiss."
Of course, the biggest challenge in updating the series was finding the right actor for the lead. McCoy, the outgoing Doctor, endorses his successor whole-heartedly. "I think he's going to bring a lot of mystery to the role," says McCoy. "He has a wonderful sense of angst about him, which will be quite good for it."
McGann himself didn't think he was flamboyant enough for the part when he first approached. "There as a style to the Doctor that, quite honestly, I didn't I could live up to," the actor says, taking a break on thee set. "Some of the skills were almost vaudevillian. It was sort of that indoor scarf-wearing, eccentric kind of thing. It wasn't me."
Eventually McGann was on over. But he wasn't prepared for the public response his signing would generate, especially in Britain, where Doctor Who is much more than a TV program—it's a bona fide cultural institution. "It was on the evening news and in all the lead columns of the newspapers," he says with amazement. "It felt like I just got the U.S. ambassadorship or something. It's only been the last few days that I've been thinking, 'Whoa, I'm going to have to live up to this.'"
He may have time to get used to the attention. The movie also serves as a pilot, and McGann has already signed a long-term contract to star in a prospective Doctor Who series that would air both here and in Britain. "It's a classic franchise," Segal says. "If we get a strong [rating], the future bodes very well for the good Doctor."
Mark Nollinger is a freelance writer based in Los Angeles.
The Doctor Is In
Doctor Who has spawned an alternate universe of theme events and collectibles
The epicenter of Who mania lies in Britain, but hard-core fans abound here in the colonies as well. In Los Angeles, they gather annually at the Gallirey Convention, named (as even fledgling Whovians know) after the Doctor's home planet. We decided to attend this February's fest, where we found 500 or so fans of all ages—a smattering dressed in Who costumes—spending a Saturday afternoon sharing their passion. There's a buzz in the air as they peruse Who merchandise, queue up for the autograph of Sylvester McCoy (Doctor #7), and—best of all—cheer at slides from the new TV-movie. When executive producer Philip Segal is introduced as "the man who rescued the Doctor," the crowd gives him a standing ovation. "People are overjoyed," says event organizer Shaun Lyon. "I don't think many expected it to come back."
So who are all these Whovians? Lyon, a health-care worker, says they're just ordinary folks. "Lots of [outsiders] think it's an obsession, but it's not," he insists. "This is a hobby, not something we spend our lives doing."
Still, some fans can go a little overboard with their enthusiasm. McCoy says that on a Who-themed Caribbean cruise last year—yes, there really are such things—one woman got so enthused that she threatened to throw herself off the boat. "She didn't think life would be worth living after the cruise," McCoy recalls. "Strange. Dangerous. But she's alive and well and living a happy life now." —M.N.
Caption: Assuming the role of the mercurial Doctor, Paul McGann emerges from his time machine.
Caption: McGann gets temporal with Yee Jee Tso and Daphne Ashbrook.
Caption: Serious Whovians pore over memorabilia in Los Angeles
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.: Nollinger, Mark (1996-05-11). The new Who. TV Guide p. 22.
- MLA 7th ed.: Nollinger, Mark. "The new Who." TV Guide [add city] 1996-05-11, 22. Print.
- Chicago 15th ed.: Nollinger, Mark. "The new Who." TV Guide, edition, sec., 1996-05-11
- Turabian: Nollinger, Mark. "The new Who." TV Guide, 1996-05-11, section, 22 edition.
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- Wikipedia (this page): <ref>{{cite web | title=The new Who | url=http://cuttingsarchive.org/index.php/The_new_Who | work=Doctor Who Cuttings Archive | accessdate=22 November 2024}}</ref>