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THE DIARY OF Doctor Who

The series’ tenth-anniversary celebrations were already underway by the time 1973 began...

+ By 1973, Jon Pertwee was well-established as Doctor Who.

JANUARY

Doctor Who’s tenth season and anniversary year kicked off a couple of days before the end of 1972, when Episode One of The Three Doctors aired on 30 December. This landmark first reunion of different incarnations earned a Radio Times cover and feature, published two days earlier. The weekly billings in the Radio Times this season were accompanied by stamp-sized illustrations from the famed comic artist Frank Bellamy, as they had been towards the latter half of the previous series too.

The serial was widely promoted. Jon Pertwee guested on the light-entertainment show The Generation Game on New Year’s Day 1973, then appeared with Patrick Troughton on BBC1’s lunchtime magazine Pebble Mill at One on 10 January. Most memorably, Troughton impersonated a Dalek, with his coat over his head and one arm outstretched as an eyestalk.

Elsewhere, Dalek creator Terry Nation spoke to Denis Frost on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on the 8th. Following an introduction by presenter Michael Aspel, doing his ring-modulated Dalek impression, Nation revealed the Daleks’ imminent return: “They are coming back in February for four episodes and they’re as nasty and as brutal as ever they were.” In fact, the story would run to six episodes and reach TV screens in April. Radio 2’s Open House, meanwhile, featured Pete Murray interviewing Pertwee on the 12th.

In the week between the third and last episodes of The Three Doctors (15 to 19 January), fans could even catch Patrick Troughton reading an appropriately titled Jackanory story – The Three Toymakers.

The secretary of the Doctor Who Fan Club, recognised by the BBC and supported by producer Barry Letts via his secretary Sarah Newman, was 14-year-old Keith Miller from Edinburgh. In this exalted position, Miller had attended a studio session for The Three Doctors on 27 November 1972, which was duly reported on in issue 12 of his DWFC Monthly (January 1973). Watching the recording from the gallery, Miller had to leave to catch his train home just as Troughton emerged to great applause from the crew.

Miller excitedly assessed The Three Doctors in DWFC Monthly No 13 (February 1973): “A brilliant start to what I’m sure is going to be one of the best series in the history of the programme,” he enthused. “The story, acting, sets, music were all fantastic, the best I’ve seen and heard for a long time. It showed how much the Doctor has changed over the ten years he has been in our homes.”

A weekly comic strip drawn by Gerry Haylock was currently running in TV Action, with the conclusion of the serial The Zeron Invasion appearing on the first two covers of the year. From issue 101, cover-dated the week ending 20 January, a new colour strip called Deadly Choice involved scientists being kidnapped by a mystical abbot.

Keith Miller was enthusiastic about The Three Doctors in DWFC Monthly 13.

FEBRUARY

Top: Vorg (Leslie Dwyer) and Shina (Cheryl Hall) with the body of a fallen Drashing, in Carnival of Monsters Episode Four, broadcast on 17 February.

First aired from 27 January, Carnival of Monsters was broadcast through much of this month. Again, Keith Miller had visited a studio recording the previous year, meeting Jon Pertwee, Katy Manning and Barry Letts. Miller was played Brian Hodgson’s proposed new ‘Delaware’ arrangement of the programme’s theme tune – and declared it “awful”, helping to ensure its rejection.

Reviewing Carnival of Monsters in DWFC Monthly No 14 (March 1973), Miller said: “The acting is getting better by the episode. I don’t know what the writers are doing to make the prog better but whatever it is, I hope it continues! There was no end to the brilliance of the acting and special effects when Jo was being sucked down into the swamp and the Doctor scared the monsters away with those fantastic fire explosions! Great stuff!”

Fans in Nottingham could see their hero, Jon Pertwee, at a Carlton Forum car show on the 10th, organised by PCF Motors. PCF owner Peter Farries was at the time designing a unique futuristic car for Pertwee’s public appearances, a vehicle that was to be unveiled later in the year.

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Editorial
DOCTOR WHO CHRONICLES
A glance at the internet paints a fairly
Doctor Who Magazine Special
SATURDAY NIGHT’S ALRIGHT FOR FIGHTING
Despite limited personnel changes, 1973 was a transformative year for Doctor Who. As the show began its second decade, things would never be quite the same again…
THE THREE DOCTORS
If the Doctor’s own people are prepared to break the laws of time, then it must be a grave matter indeed…
GETTING THE PICTURE
For Doctor Who’s tenth season, producer Barry Letts stretched the technical resources of the BBC’s electronic multi-camera studios to the limit.
LETTERS FROM WHITE CITY
Terrance Dicks’ letters to the writers of The Three Doctors and Planet of the Daleks reveal some fascinating insights into the work of the Doctor Who script editor.
Stitches in Time
Although he was the most flamboyant Doctor to date, Jon Pertwee’s outfits were relatively conventional compared to some of the other challenges facing the costume designers of 1973.
CARNIVAL OF MONSTERS
The Doctor is finally free to wander space and time again – but on his very first trip, he finds his horizons suddenly limited…
SPECIAL EFFECTS
The demands of the most ambitious serials prompted the BBC Visual Effects Department to enlist freelance contributors.
STATE OF THE ART
Comic strips inspired by the series appeared in different forms – and across several publications – in 1973. The best of these stories are some of the most faithful Doctor Who adaptations published up to that point.
WHERE WERE THEY THEN?
Many past and present stars of Doctor Who appeared in a lavish photoshoot for a Radio Times special celebrating the show’s tenth anniversary. But let’s see where their careers were at in 1973…
FRONTIER IN SPACE
Assisted by the Ogrons, someone is using “hypno-sound” to make space pilots see things they haven’t – in an effort to spark an apocalyptic war.
The Final Fronier
Photographs taken during the making of Frontier in Space Episode Six provide a unique record of Doctor Who production in the early 1970s.
ON LOCATION
Location shooting for Season 10 was complicated by the need to film the series on land, in the sea and from the air….
TOY STORIES
Perhaps surprisingly, this was a rather lean year for merchandise – although it did introduce a series of books that continues to this day.
PLANET OF THE DALEKS
No, not Skaro – this time the Daleks are massing on Spiridon. The planet may be different, but the plan is familiar…
PAGES OF history
The Dr Who Annual 1974 happens to be the only one from that decade that doesn’t include a roll-and-move game. Unfortunately, there’s rather less originality on offer in the book’s fictional adventures…
FROM THE ARCHIVES
BBC paperwork from 1973 reveals that the producer’s remit involved soothing the nation’s heartache and defending the series from accusations of irresponsibility.
THE GREEN DEATH
There’s trouble down the pit at Llanfairfach when some fellow turns up “bright green, apparently – and dead!”
Partner in Time
The Green Death brought Jo Grant’s relationship with the Third Doctor to a poignant end. Jo is still one of the series’ most popular characters, but how much do we actually know about her?
MOONBASE 3
Science-fiction drama Moonbase 3 has significant behind-thescenes links to early 1970s Doctor Who. But is this short-lived series worthy of greater recognition in its own right?
Times and SPACE
The Radio Times celebration of Doctor Who’s tenth anniversary was a groundbreaking magazine that included the series’ first official episode guide.
MASTERING THE DALEK PLANS
For many readers of 1973’s Doctor Who Radio Times special, the highlight of the souvenir magazine was a set of instructions showing how to build a full-size Dalek.
BREAKING NEWS
In 1973, the series offered newspaper and magazine journalists plenty to write about – including three Doctors, a new assistant and a flying car.
On the BOX
The adventures of the Third Doctor attracted huge audiences in 1973 – especially when he was joined by his two predecessors. There was, however, plenty of high-quality alternative viewing on offer from ITV and the BBC.
FINAL SCORE
As Doctor Who entered its eleventh year on screen, Jon Pertwee led a resurgence in the show’s popularity, with audience numbers reaching heights not seen since the days of Dalekmania.
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