Pages

The first female Doctor Who director Paddy Russell has sadly died

Paddy Russell, who has died at 89, was a television maverick, establishing herself as a director on some of the BBC’s most popular early dramas at a time when it was almost unheard of for a woman to assume such a role.

It was an achievement matched only by Julia Smith, who went on to co-create and produce EastEnders.

In a career spanning 40 years, Paddy’s name was to be seen on programmes as diverse as Doctor Who and Yorkshire Television’s Calendar. It was in Yorkshire where she spent the second half of her professional life, living in Oxenhope, on the moors beyond Keighley, and working on prime-time entertainment shows including 3-2-1 in its early days.

It is for her work on Doctor Who that she is perhaps best known, but the series was a relatively small part of her drama portfolio, which ranged from the classics – Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women and Honoré de Balzac’s Pere Goriot – to audience-pullers like Z-Cars, Within These Walls and, later, Emmerdale Farm.

Originally an actress, she moved into television floor management and production, working with the renowned director Rudolph Cartier on national viewing events such as The Quatermass Experiment and the 1954 production of George Orwell’s 1984, both expanding the horizons of the then-new medium of television.

In Cartier’s experimental and partly improvised Holocaust drama Doctor Korczak and the Children in 1962, which was shot with neither sets nor costumes, Paddy appeared on screen and instructed the actors on the characters they were to inhabit.

She worked with at least three Doctor Whos – William Hartnell, Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker, the last of whom she described as “desperately difficult to work with” – but she was as formidable as any actor. When told in the 1950s by BBC managers that they were reluctant to hire her as a floor manager on the grounds that a woman couldn’t control a studio like a man, she told them curtly that she had no intention of trying to do so.

Among Doctor Who aficionados, her name is spoken with some reverence, and two of her stories, Pyramids of Mars and Horror of Fang Rock, are considered classics of the genre. Her ability to stand up to Mr Baker, who had a fearsome reputation among directors, helped her get the best out of him, despite their frequent clashes.

She was attuned to the benefits of having a forename that was not gender-specific, and recalled with some glee the reaction of a crew waiting on set for their new director before, as she put it, “a little girl in a short blue dress” came down the steps. Jaws dropped around the studio, she said.

Patricia “Paddy” Russell was born on July 4 1928 in Highgate, London, to a family that had been employed in shipping for two generations. During the Second World War, the family moved to Hertfordshire, although Paddy had already experienced rural life as an evacuee to the West Country with her convent school. After she sneaked out of the dormitory at the stately home where they were billeted, to play with the notoriously ferocious estate horses, the Reverend Mother asked her parents to come and take her home. The blitz was less dangerous than the horses, they felt.

Against her family’s wishes, Paddy went to the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, and the training came in handy when she worked on live opera broadcasts, many done from Alexandra Palace, of which Paddy was one of the last survivors.

Subsequently she branched out to work as a freelance, and it was one such engagement that brought her to Yorkshire Television in the 1970s, initially to work a sitcom called My Old Man, starring Dad’s Army veteran Clive Dunn.

Her reputation preceded her, and she remained a formidable presence at YTV, not least when required to train new directors – whom she kept in check with a voice described by one former colleague as a mixture of Gold Flake and gin.

At home, she became involved with cat rescue and protection, and her home was never short of its complement of felines, whose welfare was often given priority over her own.

Her final days were clouded by illness, but she retained a fierce intelligence and wicked sense of humour.

She is survived by her brother, Chris.

Via the Yorkshire Post

Doctor Who Roundup (3rd November 2017)


Another selection of Whovian links for your entertainment...

Whovian News
Bernard Cribbins wants to travel with Jodie Whittaker's new Doctor The Doctor Who Christmas special sees both Doctors in a "personal crisis" says David Bradley Dalek sacked from Doctor Who for sneaking offensive message into show's magazine Doctor Who's David Bradley salutes "brilliant, fun" new Doctor Jodie Whittaker David Bradley says he'd "bite their hand off" if the BBC asked him to do more Doctor Who
Whovian Miscellany

Happy Wholloween RIP director Paddy Russell David Bradley Would Love To Be Cast In The League Of Gentlemen - From MCM London Comic Con 'Doctor Who' Underrated Villain of the Week: Boneless - Geek.com 'Doctor Who': 10 Things You May Not Know About 'The Girl Who Waited' | BBC America Fan Scene- CT 1981 Part 2
WhoTube

Doctor Who - David Bradley Talks About The Christmas Special & Peter Capaldi A Word to the Pennywise Doctor Who Velocity Theme by HardWire Doctor Who Velocity - Fan Film - Episode One Doctor Who: 5 Underrated Episodes Doctor Who London Location Tours | HD History of the Ice Warriors - History of Doctor Who
Whovian Fun

Hilariously grumpy Doctor Who interview resurfaces IN PRINT - 121 Another five bits of Dr WHO artwork...
Whovian Events

Doctor Who David Bradley Claudia Grant London MCM October 2017 Panel Big Finish at Timelash! - News - Big Finish The Doctor is coming to Torquay and here's how you can meet him
Doctor Who Product News

The Time War Trailer - Doctor Who River Song is back! Jenny: the Doctor's Daughter is coming to Big Finish Gallifrey - Time War from Big Finish Doctor Who The Lost Dimension - Omega Issue out now Backwards Traveller
Whovian Twitterverse

Hello Tweetie (29th October)

More Whovian tweets that you may like

DWAS ONLINE on Twitter

Our 2017 Christmas Cards, supporting the Multiple Sclerosis Trust are now available at our eBay Shop: https://t.co/hf6jkHPKgN

Big Finish on Twitter

Anyone fancy a lunchtime read? #DavidTennant and @billiepiper are reunited in this month's Vortex magazine -> https://t.co/cr8duB88in

BBC Archive on Twitter

Alan Whicker's travelogue of terror continued, with a visit to Terry Nation and his abominable creations, the Daleks. #HappyHalloween https://t.co/htReP6sUqm

Outside the TARDIS

Prince Charles appears a reluctant Time Lord as he tries Doctor Who's time machine Simon Callow can't wait for female Doctor Who Jodie Whittaker Matt Lucas is switching on the Christmas lights in a Welsh market town Matt Smith went incognito to a massive Doctor Who promo - and no-one recognised him David Tennant and Steven Yeun head to the edge of the universe in Final Space trailer Mark Gatiss on the best places in London to date, buy books and spend a tenner Eccleston: We're still as prehistoric as the Weinstein scandal has shown us Matt Smith and Cara Delevingne star in Burberry's winter advert John Simm headlines ITV's new conspiracy thriller How old is John Barrowman, who does he play in Doctor Who, Arrow and Torchwood and is he doing panto? Olivia Colman would LOVE David Tennant to play Prince Philip in The Crown series three
Whovian Reviews

Whovian Reviews on Flipboard
Whopods - Doctor Who Podcasts

WhoPods on Flipboard
Little Shop

Doctor Who: Mid-Era Doctors Set Doctor Who: T-Shirt: Cat Doctors Doctor Who: Twelve Doctors Of Christmas Main Range - The Silurian Candidate (Doctor Who Main Range) The Fourth Doctor Adventures - The Thief Who Stole Time (Doctor Who: The Fourth Doctor Adventures) The Early Adventures - The Night Witches (Doctor Who - The Early Adventures) Main Range - Time in Office (Doctor Who Main Range) Doctor Who: The Five Doctors: 5th Doctor Novelisation Doctor Who: Rhythm of Destruction: 12th Doctor Audio Original Doctor Who: 100 Illustrated Adventures

Gallifrey - Time War from Big Finish

Lalla Ward, Louise Jameson and Sophie Aldred are joined by Derek Jacobi in the depths of the Time War for this new chapter of Gallifrey.

Hot on the heels of The Eighth Doctor in The Time War with Paul McGann and Rhakee Thakrar, we take a look at this highly anticipated forthcoming release where you can see the Time War from the front lines.

Out in February 2018, four new chapters from Gallifrey's history will emerge, comprising of:
1. Celestial Intervention by David Llewellyn
2. Soldier Obscura by Tim Foley
3. The Devil You Know by Scott Handcock
4. Desperate Measures by Matt Fitton



And Big Finish confirms that joining President Romanadvoratrelundar, Leela, Ace, Narvin and Braxiatel will be the War Master, played by Derek Jacobi. But to find out how he is involved in the Time War, you’ll have to listen to the box set in February!

Director and writer, Scott Handcock, tells us more: “I’ve felt very lucky to play in the Gallifrey sandbox for its most recent releases, but it’s an even bigger thrill to take us into the Time War and explore how that epic, devastating event impacts upon the lives of our characters.

“It’s given all our regulars some lovely material to work with, plus an opportunity to get in some brilliant guest voices including Pippa Bennett-Warner, Zulema Dene, Bryan Dick, and of course Sir Derek Jacobi is back as the Master – not to mention Nicholas Briggs as the Daleks. It’s the beginning of a terrifying new start for the Gallifrey team, and possibly the end for some of our regulars...”

Gallifrey: Time War is available to pre-order from the Big Finish website for £23 on CD or £20 as a download. Don’t forget that all CD purchases unlock a download exclusive in the Big Finish app.
Or you can save money by ordering a bundle with The War Master and Tales From New Earth at £63 on CD or £54 on download from www.bigfinish.com

Via Big Finish

Dalek sacked from Doctor Who for sneaking offensive message into show's magazine

A Dalek operator on Doctor Who has been exterminated from his job after hiding an offensive message inside the show’s official magazine.

Nicholas Pegg has worked with the Time Lords’ deadliest foe – the Daleks – since the BBC series was rebooted in 2005.

Under pen-name The Watcher, he launched an extraordinary attack on BBC Worldwide , which distributes the sci-fi show, and Panini, who publish the magazine.

For reasons that are not entirely clear, Pegg has included a coded message in the current edition of Doctor Who Magazine.

The first letter of each sentence in his column spells out, “Panini and BBC Worldwide are ****s.”

The digital version of the page has been altered and Pegg will not be returning to either job.

Fans have speculated he was annoyed about a decision not to release a DVD of Shada, an unaired serial of the show from 1979-80.

Pegg headed his Wotcha column, “the page that is not ­something to be shuffled off onto some stray boffin”.

He added a clue at the end, which reads: “If you look hard enough there is always something hidden in plain sight.”

A BBC Worldwide spokesman said: “The matter was raised with the publisher who have dismissed the writer.”

No surprise there.

It turns out Pegg was not due to be involved in the new series, starring Jodie Whittaker and Bradley Walsh. Perhaps he had just had enough of crouching inside a small metal dome, yelling ­“exterminate”. But there must be better ways to leave your job...

Via the Mirror by Nicola Methven

Jenny: the Doctor’s Daughter is coming to Big Finish

Coming soon from the Worlds of Doctor Who – Jenny: the Doctor's Daughter! She's back, and the universe better be ready for her.

Georgia Tennant (née Moffett) returns to the world of Doctor Who in Jenny: The Doctor’s Daughter, four new adventures from Big Finish, made in arrangement with BBC Worldwide. Jenny originally featured in the Doctor Who television episode, The Doctor’s Daughter, from Series 4 back in 2008.

“I'm so thrilled to be joining forces with Big Finish to bring Jenny back,” Georgia tells us, “As we head into the 21st century, FINALLY a female Time Lord in charge of her own spaceship... oh wait!”

“Having worked with Georgia before at Big Finish,” says producer David Richardson, “I was very keen to make this series happen – and how brilliant to be able to bring Jenny into her own audio adventure series. I’m very proud of the female role models we have in our catalogue – River Song, Bernice Summerfield, Sarah Jane Smith, Charlotte Pollard among them – and in Jenny we have another brave, bold, intelligent woman who risks everything to save and protect others.”

The last we saw of Jenny, the fantastic creation of Russell T Davies and Stephen Greenhorn, was her revival after a fatal shooting at the end of episode six, series four of Doctor Who, and her setting off to explore the cosmos. These new adventures will find out what exactly she saw, and where she ran off to amongst the stars.

Joining Georgia Tennant will be her own companion, much like the Doctor! Sean Biggerstaff (Harry Potter) plays Noah and follows Jenny in her adventures through time and space.

Georgia, also associate producer of these adventures, has been instrumental in continuing the legacy of the character in the Doctor Who universe. As the wife of David Tennant and daughter of Peter Davison – both former incarnations of the Doctor – the rebellious Time Lord spirit certainly runs in the family!

“I am very excited about discovering the new adventures of Jenny – a rogue element in the universe of Doctor Who,” says executive producer Jason Haigh-Ellery. “There is so much we can do with the character and I’m really glad that Georgia has agreed to not only come back to play the part, but also to participate in moving the series forward.”

These four new adventures come from popular Doctor Who writers Matt Fitton and John Dorney, joined by Christian Brassington from BBC One’s Poldark, and Adrian Poynton, writer of BBC Three’s White Van Man. Available as a box set, the stories consist of:
  • Stolen Goods by Matt Fitton
  •  Prisoner of the Ood by John Dorney
  •  Neon Reign by Christian Brassington
  •  Zero Space by Adrian Poynton
Jenny: The Doctor’s Daughter is available for pre-order for its release in June 2018 at £23 on CD or £20 on download from Big Finish and will remain at this price until general release when it will be available for £35 on CD or £30 on download.

You can also purchase Jenny as part of a special bundle with The Diary of River Song Series 4 and Series 5, pre-ordering all three box sets for £68 on CD or £60 on download.

The Doctor Who Christmas special sees both Doctors in a “personal crisis” says David Bradley

In all the excitement about Jodie Whittaker’s upcoming debut as the Thirteenth Doctor this Christmas it’s easy to forget that we have so much to enjoy before her first scene, with a whole hour-long episode written by departing showrunner Steven Moffat set to unite Peter Capaldi’s Twelfth Doctor with his very first incarnation (played by David Bradley in imitation of William Hartnell’s original 1960s performance).

And now Bradley has shed some new light on what fans can expect from the upcoming Twice Upon a Time, which apparently sees both version of the Time Lord on a very similar emotional journey.

“It brings together these two Doctors, who are both going through a personal crisis about [whether they should be] regenerating, or just ending it all there,” Bradley told the crowd at MCM Comic-con, where he appeared this weekend.

“And they’re both on this parallel journey of doubt and fear and everything.”

And apparently this inner turmoil manifests itself as some tension between the two men, partly because of the First Doctor’s slightly outdated attitudes (as previously hinted by Bradley in an earlier comic-con appearance).

“There’s a bit of conflict between them – ‘I’m the Doctor,’ ‘No I’m the Doctor,’ ‘No I’m the Doctor!’ and so on,” Bradley said.

“And the kind of contrast in what Hartnell’s Doctor brings coming from the early 60s, and Peter’s Doctor, who’s, shall we say a bit more politically correct than the Hartnell version. There’s a bit of conflict there. But hopefully it’ll be funny as well.

“There’s this tension between them, but I think throughout the story a growing realisation that… ‘Hang on, we’re the same person! What’s this about?’”


And as Bradley went on to explain, this more positive interaction between the Doctors was reflective of his own experience with working alongside incumbent Doctor Capaldi, who made an effort to make Bradley feel welcome on set.

“There’s a kind of mutual respect, I like to think, which grows through the story,” Bradley said of the two Doctors. “Reflected in Peter and I’s relationship – we just got on right from the word go. He made me feel so welcome.

“The first read-through was about 30 people sitting round the table, then another 20 sitting on the outer circle, all the BBC heads of department, all the cast, all the directors and costume, makeup.

“And I thought ‘My God, this is quite big, you know?’ It could have been intimidating, but Peter set next to me and he made me feel really at home right from the word go.


“We had a great time together, and it was a great experience,” Bradley concluded. “I hope it won’t be the last time we’ll work together.”

And who knows? If Capaldi could be persuaded to join Bradley, Whittaker and other stars for another multi-Doctor special in the future, maybe they just might join forces once more. We’re pretty sure Mr Bradley would be up for it, anyway.

Via Radio Times by Huw Fullerton

River Song is back!

River Song is going to return next year – and she’ll be back again and again!

The Diary of River Song is all set to continue as Alex Kingston will be reprising her role as River Song for another three series, at least.

Having encountered the Doctor’s Sixth and Seventh incarnations in Series Two, and the Eighth in Series One, River Song will be brushing past a couple more Doctors in her future. Let’s hope she doesn’t trip over any long scarves...

THE DIARY OF RIVER SONG

As revealed in Doctor Who Magazine this month, The Diary of River Song Series Three will be released in January 2018, with the Fifth Doctor (played by Peter Davison) facing off against the most evil midwife in Doctor Who history, Madame Kovarian (Frances Barber).

This action-packed box set will contain four hour-long adventures where the Doctor’s wife, archaeologist, crack shot with an intoxicating kiss and time traveller will have to face the demons of her past, present and future.

Today we can reveal the synopses of this upcoming release. These four new tales come from favourite Big Finish writers:
When River Song goes shopping for a whole load of unclaimed loyalty points, she uncovers secrets linked to her tangled past.
The Doctor arrives, and the mystery deepens. He is already exploring the universe with another companion – someone River knows nothing about.
Madame Kovarian has been busy, and this time she will not accept failure… 

3.1 – The Lady in the Lake by Nev Fountain
On Terminus Prime, clients choose their own means of demise. Something exciting, meaningful, or heroic to end it all.
But when River discovers that there are repeat customers, she knows something more is going on.
She begins to uncover a cult with worrying abilities. Its members can apparently cheat death, and that’s not all they have in common with River…

3.2 – A Requiem for the Doctor by Jac Rayner
River has joined the Doctor and his friend Brooke on their travels, and they stop off in 18th century Vienna.
Brooke thinks history is dull. Until people start dying.
Mozart’s legacy is not just his music. River has more than one mystery to solve before a killer is let loose on the people of Vienna – and on the Doctor. 

3.3 – My Dinner with Andrew by John Dorney
Welcome, Mesdames et Messieurs, to The Bumptious Gastropod.
The most exclusive, most discreet dining experience outside the universe. For the restaurant exists beyond spacetime itself, and the usual rules of causality do not apply. Anything could happen.
It is here that the Doctor has a date. With River Song. And with death. 

3.4 – The Furies by Matt Fitton
Stories of the Furies abound across the cosmos: vengeful spirits hounding guilty souls to death. Madame Kovarian taught them to a child raised in fear, trained to kill, and placed inside a spacesuit.
Kovarian knows the universe’s greatest threat. The Doctor must be eliminated. An assassin was created for that purpose.
But if Melody Pond has failed, Kovarian will simply have to try again…

  The Diary of River Song Series Two

And in Series Four River will be encountering the Fourth Doctor, played by Tom Baker. More details on this series will be announced in the future.

To celebrate, you can pre-order each series of The Diary of River Song, at £23 on CD or £20 on download.

Or you can pre-order some of these releases in a bundle. Pre-order Series Four (out August 2018) and Series Five (out January 2019) of The Diary of River Song from today at £45 on CD or £40 on download.

Via Big Finish

Bernard Cribbins wants to travel with Jodie Whittaker’s new Doctor

The news that Jodie Whittaker had been cast as Doctor Who’s next lead swept round the world this summer, with the first female Doctor making headlines and charging conversations across the globe.

However, one fairly important figure from the sci-fi series’ past had actually missed the news entirely, with former Who star Bernard Cribbins (who played Wilfred Mott, grandfather to Catherine Tate’s Donna Noble from 2007-2010) revealing at an MCM London comic-con panel earlier today that he was none the wiser about the next Doctor.

“The next Doctor Who? I haven’t heard anything about this,” Cribbins told the crowd. “Truly, I didn’t know anything about it. I thought they were going to have a lady, weren’t they?

“They are having one? You see I’m out of touch with it really.”

Still, after learning of Whittaker’s involvement Cribbins was full of praise, suggesting (as many others have before him) that the advent of a female Doctor can help reinvent the series for a new generation.

“I think it’s good – I think it’s great that a lady’s gonna do it,” the 88-year-old said. “I really do.

“Because we’ve had a lot of gentlemen and they’ve all been successful, but you know – I think a lady might give it another kick again. Great. Super.”

And in fact, Cribbins was so keen on the idea that he thought it might even be a way to get his character Wilf back in the action…

“He was a very caring, kind, compassionate man, you know,” Cribbins said of Wilf, who appeared sporadically in the series before becoming a full companion for David Tennant’s final two-part episode The End of Time. “I loved him, he was great.

“I’d love to do Wilf again. Somebody have a word, I’ll be on to look after that young lady who’s about to start!”

Via Radio Times by Huw Fullerton