Foe Yay/Live-Action TV/Doctor Who



"Doctor: You could be so wonderful. You're a genius, you're stone-cold-brilliant, you are, I swear, you really are. But you could be so much more. You could be beautiful. With a mind like that? We could travel the stars, it would be my honour. Because you don't need to own the universe, just see it. To have the privilege of seeing the whole of time and space -- that's ownership enough.

Master: Would it stop then? The noise in my head?

Doctor: I can help.

Master: ...I don't know what I'd be without that noise.

Doctor: I wonder what I'd be, without you.

Master: (smiling) Yeah."

- Doctor Who, The End of Time

-

The Master
"The Doctor: I've been alone ever since...but not anymore, don't you see? All we've got is each other! The Master: Are you asking me out on a date?"
 * He and the Doctor used to be best friends in their schooldays, and have been chasing each other around and aiming [[media:The_Time_Monster_1-6_avi-20080703-075830_3722.jpg|ludicrously phallic objects]] at each other since the 1970s. They're now the last of their kind, making the Doctor even more desperate to help the Master, who is fully aware of what it all sounds like:

"Master: Doctor. Doctor: Master. Master: I like it when you use my name."
 * Helped along by the sixth Master being specifically cast and acted to resemble the Doctor in his actions and mannerisms. His wife, or as the Doctor indirectly calls her, The Beard, clearly was not willing to let another man run off with her husband though.
 * The Master was quite clearly being sarcastic during the part of the conversation quoted above. Of far more relevance to this trope is the following telephone exchange.

"The Doctor: The Rani IS a genius. Shame I can't stand her. [pause] I wonder if I was particularly nice to her she might... no. No, of course not."
 * Pretty much the whole thing is quality Foe Yay. See for yourself.
 * Later in the same episode, while the Master is bouncing around the command deck of the Valiant to the tune of "Voodoo Child", he even blows the Doctor a good-bye kiss.
 * It should be noted that this is the pre-watershed way of saying "Fuck you, I win."
 * There's also the Master pushing the Doctor around in his wheelchair, singing along to "I Can't Decide". Although the line doesn't feature in the programme, since Doctor Who is a child-friendly programme, the song contains the line 'F*** and kiss you both at the same time'.
 * "Lock the doors/And close the blinds/We're going for a ride..."
 * The Mark of the Rani provided some three-way Foe Yay between the Doctor, the Master and the Rani. Apparently strong enough to deserve a bit of lampshading.

"The Doctor: So why do they call you "The Master"? The Master: [seductively] I'll explain later..."
 * The Rani apparently ships Doctor/Master, too, in addition to having Foe Yay with both: You and the Doctor are a well-matched pair of pests. This isn't an isolated comment -- she spends most of the episode making cracks about how she wishes the Doctor and the Master would take their courtship elsewhere and leave her to her experiments.
 * At the end of the parody special, The Curse Of Fatal Death, the Doctor regenerates into a female body. She and the Master take quite a liking to each other...

"Doctor (on recording): *giggle* -- You have reached the good ship TARDIS. *giggle* We're rather -- *giggle* -- busy at the moment, *giggle* *giggle* so leave a message after the beep and we'll try to get back to you before you called. *giggle* -- Stop that! *giggle* *giggle* Master: We really should change that message."
 * In the non-canon webcast Scream of the Shalka, the Master has had his consciousness transferred into an android that was (probably) created by the Doctor to save his life. They are now living together semi-peacefully on the TARDIS. Complete with marital bitching and a rather suggestive outgoing message on their answering machine.

"Euros Lyn: Why didn't the Master kill the Doctor? Russell T Davies: Because he loves him. Honestly, I think he does."
 * The author has admitted that this was intentional.
 * The same author wrote the Seventh Doctor book "Human Nature" in which the Doctor recalls "A boy in [his] class who so hated and loved [him] that he kept upsetting [his] experiments." Given Three specifies that they *both* did this, the implications run a little deep.
 * Then there's the scene with a sobbing Doctor cradling in his arms in Last of the Time Lords. It's nigh identical to any number of scenes from any number of programs where the hero holds his  love interest in his arms.
 * And the Master keeping the Doctor in a dog kennel? Kinky...
 * The Doctor also seemed very admiring of  back when he didn't know who he actually was.
 * RTD said it himself (spoilers for the 2009 Christmas specials) :
 * Also, this quote from Doctor Who Magazine 417:

"The Master: You are my life, Doctor."
 * The second part of The End of Time includes
 * To which the Master softly replies "Yeah." With John Simm visibly tearing up as he says it.
 * What with the Doctor saying that
 * And the Master makes some quite catty comments about the Doctor's fondness for earth girls throughout both parts, and seems unduly pleased with himself when he turns the Doctor's entire favourite species into...himself. Jealous, much?
 * On a related note, there's the Master cannibalizing the TARDIS into a Paradox Machine, especially since Doctor / TARDIS is now pretty much canon. He really doesn't know how to share, does he?
 * What about that scene in the Paul McGann film where the Master tackles the Doctor to the ground and tells him:

"Won't you show mercy to your own...[burns]"
 * AHistory, a book that attempted to put in chronological order all the events in Doctor Who published material up to 2006 made note of the line uttered by the Master as he burned in "Planet of Fire"


 * They note that people think the final word is "brother" but another, less common guess is "husband".
 * In the interests of balance (i.e. being a spoilsport), it could just as easily have been 'Kind'.
 * People, he and the Doctor used to run through the red grass together, calling to the sky! Granted, were they under the age of twelve it would merely be a Friendship Moment. Otherwise...
 * An old favorite from the past: The Sea Devils starts with the Doctor visiting The Alcatraz where he put the Master during their last encounter (While making sure he would be comfortable since he was going to be there for quite some time) for no other reason than to make sure he was doing all right - the fact that he happened to stumble on the mystery of the month was a pure coincidence. The Master on his hand plays the role of the model prisoner, makes polite conversation with his guards and claims to have seen the error of his ways. He has a polite conversation with the Doctor and ends it with wishing that the Doctor would visit more often so he can have some intelligent discussions. He then reaches out his hand in friendship. The Doctor reaches for it, changes his mind, and awkwardly waves a goodbye to the Master. Argh!
 * Four episodes later, when shit has hit the fan and the Master is his usual evil self, he keeps the captured Doctor alive for a convoluted reason. And then when his allies betray him, they end up sharing the same hole together, chummily/sarcastically chatting amongst themselves until rescue arrives.
 * And then there's The Time Monster, where the Doctor and the Master's TARDISes end up inside each other. Yeah. And then it ends with the Master on his knees, begging the Doctor for mercy.
 * The whole serial is one huge Doctor/Master slashfest, honestly. It starts with the Doctor having a nightmare about the Master. Wherein he lies on a chaise longue and wakes up to a giant Master looming over him, calling out to the Doctor: "Welcome! Welcome to your new Master!"
 * The Fifth Doctor serial The King's Demons is made of this. "You have always been my greatest stimulation, my dear Doctor, but now you inspire me."
 * Martha and the Master had shades of this as well. "Come out, little girl, and face your Master."
 * You have to wonder, too, why the Master went through all the trouble of helping the Fifth Doctor heal from his recent regeneration in Castrovalva before revealing his evil plan.
 * Because then he couldn't keep feeding the Doctor what basically amounts to a date-rape drug (i.e. valerian).
 * The date-rape drug comparison isn't inaccurate: the Portreeve's healing tonic includes valerian (sedative, euphoric, attaches to the same receptors as benzodiazepines such as Rohypnol), rosemary (a powerful muscle relaxant) and sanicle (a herb used to staunch... anal bleeding). Honestly.

Other
"War Chief: [Having just made sure he's alone with the Doctor] You may have changed your face, but I know who you are. Hines: "... my wife!""
 * The War Chief in The War Games is all over the Doctor, with lines such as "We are two of a kind" and "We need each other". This is one reason why some fans believe he's an earlier Master. Noted on the DVD commentary by Frazer Hines:

""Ah", said the Doctor, "˜I see I was standing too close. Invading your personal space. Of course, even from over here I'm invading your personal space. [...] All nestled up under your ribs. Quite intimate, really. Yet we hardly know each other. Love songs have been written about less." [...] "˜I kept wondering where my heart had got to. [...] Had it joined a club for other lonely ones of its kind? Was it achy? Or breaky? Did it now belong to someone named Daddy?" Sabbath had turned his attention to some papers. The Doctor suddenly stretched out across them, like a cat taking over a computer keyboard. He gazed soulfully into Sabbath's eyes. "˜Shall I call thee Father?"[...] Sabbath left the room. "I've got you under my skin", the Doctor warbled after him."
 * The Eighth Doctor Adventures novels introduce an Anti-Villain called Sabbath. Things are quite civil between him and the Doctor at first, and they even go to the opera together early on. Then he steals the Doctor's heart. Literally. (And that's not all he does with it, as the quote below alludes to.) The Doctor, being quite a Pungeon Master, finds it amusing, although, in the spirit of a "Take That!" Kiss, mostly does this to get Sabbath's goat.

"The Doctor gazed up at him limpidly. [...] Sabbath stared at the beautiful, unreadable face."
 * In the same book, the Doctor manages to give them a shared Dream Sequence, in which the Doctor turns into a seal and kisses Sabbath. After he turns back, an attack by a giant time squid rocks the boat they're on in this dream sequence, they fall over, and the Doctor ends up on top of Sabbath, panting.

"‘There is that,’ sighed the Doctor. He pulled his feet out of the water and drew his knees up under his chin, wrapping his arms around them, his pale eyes fixed on the foaming falls. There were bits of twig and green leaf in his dishevelled hair. Silva daemonium, thought Sabbath with ironic erudition. To him, at that moment, the Doctor looked much younger than that fool he travelled with. A sick boy. Sabbath wondered idly whether the loss of his heart, which had saved his life, would in the long run kill him."
 * And then there's this strangely tender scene, by a waterfall in a forest, after which we are still supposed to believe they only get along grudgingly (it Makes Just as Much Sense in Context):

""‘I’m not exactly proud of the fact,’ Sabbath went on [...] ‘but I must confess I have grown more than a little fond of you, Doctor.’"
 * Sabbath also seems unreasonably resentful of the Doctor's Heterosexual Life Partner, Fitz. And, what's more, he actually averts Cannot Spit It Out and admits to having some kind of feelings for the Doctor:


 * Another non-Master example: the Doctor and Rosanna in "The Vampires of Venice". It doesn't last long, but..."think of the children."
 * In Cassandra's first appearance, the Doctor blows her to pieces. In her second appearance, she... realizes he's hot and makes out with him.