Journal of Records
It started out as 32 weekly pages of “Comic strips! Features!Pin-ups!” The modern Doctor Who Magazine is an 84-page, four-weekly record-breaker…
The transfers supplied with Doctor Who Weekly issues 2 and 3 (1979).
Issue 1 of Doctor Who Weekly was published by Marvel on 12 October 1979.
David Tennant reads issue 1 of Doctor Who Weekly on the TARDIS set.
A trade ad for the new publication.
When the first issue of Doctor Who Weekly hit newsagents on 11 October 1979, it’s unlikely anyone expected it to run, without a break, for 44 years and counting – a record not even the TV series has managed. Of course, over time it’s evolved, going monthly in 1980, then every four weeks from 1990, and undergoing a couple of minor name changes (Doctor Who Magazine only stuck from 1984). But for the most part it’s been as constant a companion to the Doctor Who fan as the TARDIS is to the Doctor. It’s hardly a stretch to call DWM an institution. But how did it become one?
The recipe for success was pretty much there from the start: a combination of news features about upcoming episodes, rare photographs, information about the series’ history, reader engagement, a comic strip featuring new adventures for the Doctor, and finally the familiar sign-off: “Happy times and places.” In short, a mix of fact and fiction (and the fact of fiction) that appealed both to children hungry for more Doctor Who stories, and older fans keen to get a glimpse behind the curtain of their favourite show.