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[[{{SUBPAGENAME}}]] about ''[[{{TOPLEVELPAGE}}]]'' include:
* Of the 253 episodes of "Doctor Who" that were produced in the 1960s, 106 no longer exist in the BBC Television Archives due to an archive purge in the 1970s.
 
== Non-Trope Trivia ==
* Of the 253 episodes of "''Doctor Who"'' that were produced in the 1960s, 106 no longer exist in the BBC Television Archives due to an archive purge in the 1970s.
** In addition to 106 episodes that no longer exist, some episodes no longer exist in their original format. Four episodes only survive in an edited state — ''[[Doctor Who/Recap/S2/E09 The Time Meddler|The Time Meddler]]'': "Checkmate", ''[[Doctor Who/Recap/S3/E07 The Celestial Toymaker|The Celestial Toymaker]]'': "The Final Test", and ''[[Doctor Who/Recap/S3/E10 The War Machines|The War Machines]]'' episodes 3 and 4. Furthermore, twelve episodes only survive in black and white whilst originally filmed in color — ''[[Doctor Who/Recap/S7/E03 The Ambassadors of Death|The Ambassadors of Death]]'' episodes 2, 3, 4 and 7, ''[[Doctor Who/Recap/S8/E02 The Mind of Evil|The Mind of Evil]]'' (all six episodes), ''[[Doctor Who/Recap/S10/E04 Planet of the Daleks|Planet of the Daleks]]'': Episode 3, and ''[[Doctor Who/Recap/S11/E02 Invasion of the Dinosaurs|Invasion of the Dinosaurs]]'': Part 1 (also titled "Invasion").
*** ''Planet of the Daleks'' episode 3 has been restored to colour by a technique which can actually extract the original colour information from a black-and-white videotape, with a LOT of manual tweaking and colourising, for its DVD release. The result is impressive to say the least. Unfortunately this is unlikely to be feasible for most of the remaining episodes.
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** And the first to get its own [[Foe Yay]] page.
** A scene in ''Remembrance of the Daleks'' involving Ace inspired the creation of the [[Crowning Moment of Awesome]] section, which dropped the "Crowning" later on.
** First live-action TV show on this site to get its very own [[Gushing About Shows You Like (Sugar Wiki)/Live-Action TV/Doctor Who|gush]] page since it's so beloved.
 
== Trivia "tropes"Tropes ==
 
== Trivia "tropes" ==
* [[Acting for Two]]:
** William Hartnell as the Doctor and the Abbot of Amboise in "The Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Eve".
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** Executive Meddling is why Susan was the Doctor's granddaughter: it looked too odd otherwise.
** K-9 was kept on after [[Doctor Who/Recap/S15/E02 The Invisible Enemy|The Invisible Enemy]] because the production team saw his potential appeal with younger children. [[Breakout Character|And they were right]].
** [[Executive Meddling]] actually made Tegan have the [[Eighties Hair]], amusingly enough. Producer John Nathan-Turner somehow thought that fans might somehow mistake Janet Fielding<ref>dressedDressed in a purple pastel outfit.</ref> for ''Adric''<ref>...who was a boy wearing bright yellow and dull greens.</ref> in long shots. It's a miracle that Ms. Fielding didn't take the guy's head off.
*** Similarly, Turlough had red hair to differentiate Mark Strickson (schoolboy outfit) with [[Peter Davison]]'s Fifth Doctor (cricketing uniform).
** Kamelion was originally going to be played by a series of humans, as he was a ''shape-changing'' robot. Instead turned into a real mechanical prop, which was then shelved when ''the only person on the planet'' (and we mean the real planet Earth) who knew how to operate the blasted thing ''died without telling anyone else how to work it.''
** A reference that Ace lost her virginity to Sabalom Glitz never made it past the censor.
** Executive producer John Nathan-Turner demanded the Sixth Doctor's becoming "totally tasteless" in terms of fashion sense, rather than the Ninth Doctor-esque dark clothes and jacket [[Colin Baker]] wanted. And thus, the multicolouredmulticolored suit was born.
* [[Executive Veto]]: Midge's somewhat unexplained death in ''"Survival''" is because the original script had the Master inciting the other youths to tear him limb from limb for showing weakness, which was vetoed as too horrific even for ''Doctor Who''.
* [[Fake American]]:
** The classic example is Bill Filer in ''"[[Doctor Who/Recap/S8/E03 The Claws of Axos|The Claws of Axos]]''". He even has his own fan-produced spinoff. This includes even major characters like American companion Peri, whose accent alone gives away that Nicola Bryant is not actually from the States. The newer series has improved significantly on this, if not totally averted it, however. Most American parts are finally being played by real Americans. However, several actors in "Daleks in Manhattan"/"Evolution of the Daleks" still come from the UK.
** British father and son W. Morgan Sheppard and [[Mark Sheppard]] play old and young Canton Delaware in "The Impossible Astronaut"/"Day of the Moon".
* [[Fan Nickname]]:
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** Eleven is the "Cosmic Nine Year Old" thanks to his childlike actions.
* [[Hey, It's That Guy!]]:
** Cowardly Vila from ''[[Blake's 7]]'' is in ''"The Sun Makers''" as a ruthless criminal.
** Carlos Scarlioni? Richard the Lionheart? More like [[Star Wars|General Veers!]] Also [[Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade|Walter Donovan]] and [[For Your Eyes Only (film)|Ari Kristatos]]. [[Rule of Three|Hat Trick of Evil]] for the win!
** Hey, it's [[John Cleese]]! (Lookinglooking very much like Basil Fawlty, for the excellent reason that he did the cameo between scenes of ''[[Fawlty Towers]]'', which was being shot in the same studios.)!
*** In the [[Big Finish]] version of ''Shada'', ''Manuel'' is trying to take over the universe.
**** And [[Harry Potter|Oliver Wood]] is Chris Parsons. Also, [[Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (film)|Veruca Salt's father]] is Prof. Chronotis.
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** John Lumic in "Rise of the Cybermen"/"The Age of Steel" is [[Only Fools and Horses|Trigger.]] And [[The Vicar of Dibley|Owen.]] Or for international audiences, [[Harry Potter (film)|Barty Crouch, Sr.]].
*** Particularly interesting, considering the Doctor at the time was [[David Tennant|Barty Crouch Jr.]]
** In "Love & Monsters", [[Discworld/Hogfather|Mr. Teatime]] realises he's in love with [[Harry Potter (film)|Moaning Myrtle]].
** The Empress of the Racnoss is played by [[Blackpool|Natalie Holden]].
** "Daleks in Manhattan" has Jo from ''[[Spooks]]'' and [[Highlander (TV series)|Kastagir]]/[[The Phantom Menace|Captain Panaka]].
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*** She was also Alison Chaney, companion to the Ninth Doctor in ''Scream of the Shalka''.
** Mia Bennett from "[[Doctor Who/Recap/S30/E16 The Waters of Mars|The Waters of Mars]]" is played by [[Gemma Chan]], who was also in Soo Lin Yao in ''[[Sherlock]]'', Female Sulu and Ivana in ''[[The IT Crowd]]'', and Charlotte in ''[[Secret Diary of a Call Girl]]''.
** And of course, Ten is [[Harry Potter and Thethe Goblet of Fire (film)||Barty Crouch Jr.]]
* [[Hey, It's That Voice!]]:
** [[David Tennant]] himself is one of these, being such an unrepentant fan of the show that he lent his voice to several [[Expanded Universe]] audio productions and narrated a special documentary aired before the first episode of the 2005 revival, prior to finally landing his dream job.
** The voice of the brain in ''Time and the Rani'' is [[Blake's 7|Peter Tuddenham]].
** Bernard Cribbins is beloved throughout Great Britain as the voice of The Wombles.
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* [[Keep Circulating the Tapes]]: The 1993 charity special ''Dimensions in Time'', a crossover with ''[[Eastenders]]'', was created on the condition that it'd never be rerun or released on home video. You can find it on [[YouTube]], however.
* [[Lying Creator]]: The BBC website [https://web.archive.org/web/20110907020954/http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/dw/news/bulletin_110412_01/The_Cybermen_Return made it sound] like the Cybermen would be major enemies in "A Good Man Goes to War". In reality, they're merely [[The Teaser|cold open]] cameos.
* [[Meaningful Release Date]]: "The End of Time", "The Big Bang", and "The Impossible Astronaut" are set on their airdates (accounting for British time zones).
** The first episode of the McCoy-era "Silver Nemesis" aired the day before it was set.
* [[Official Fan-Submitted Content]]: A few monster designs, among other things.
** In Series 8, the title sequence is based on an immensely popular fan-made sequence.
* [[The Other Darrin]]: Generally averted in favor of [[The Nth Doctor]].
** It's been played straight, however, with multiple recastings of the First Doctor, originally played by the late William Hartnell, with Richard Hurndall in ''"[[Doctor Who/Recap/20th AS the Five Doctors|The Five Doctors]]''", and then David Bradley in "The Doctor Falls" and "Twice Upon a Time".
* [[Playing Against Type]]:
** Then-known for his comedic talents and funny voices, Jon Pertwee subverted his own screen persona with the no-nonsense performance of the Third Doctor.
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** On the subject of ad-libbed kisses, so was Eleven grabbing Rory and kissing him in "Dinosaurs on a Spaceship". Arthur Darvill was as surprised as Rory!
* [[Troubled Production]]:
** "The Invasion of Time". Firstly, the original writer gave the production team a set of scripts that would have been impossible to realize on a ''film'' budget, resulting in the producer and script editor having to come up with a totally new storyline in just a few days. Then the UK's economy imploded due to the Winter of Discontent, rendering the British Pound nearly worthless and leaving [[No Budget]] for the serial. On top of all that, virtually every department of the BBC went on strike at the same time, resulting in a hasty studio session filmed with sets left over from "The Deadly Assassin", followed by location filming at anywhere which would let them shoot, just so that they could get everything in the can. Not to mention the producers didn't believe that the actress playing Leela really wanted to leave, so they delayed writing in her exit and had to add a hastily written romance with Andred.
** "Warriors of the Deep". The production schedule lost two weeks due to an early Parliamentary election, which explains many of the serial's shortcomings. The other shortcomings stem from the set designer, who wanted everything brightly lit to show off his work, and the director, who wanted everything dark and moody for atmosphere, preceding a similar situation on ''[[Aliens]]'' by two years.
** After the location filming for "The Greatest Show in the Galaxy" had been completed, the studio sessions were cancelled because of asbestos contamination. At first it was thought that the serial would have to be abandoned, but eventually it was found possible to erect a tent in the car park at Elstree Studios and film there. (Itit was actually very fortuitous that they were working on that particular serial because the tents made this arrangement possible. With any other serial around that time they might have had to simply throw out the location footage, but John Nathan-Turner was desperate to avoid another "Shada" debacle and arranged the makeshift solution.).
* [[Unintentional Period Piece]]: Unavoidable, given its age. This can even be observed within the revived series -: you can tell "Rose" is still early 2000's because Rose has to visit her boyfriend to look something up on the Internet, and "Blink" came out around the end of DVD rental stores.
* [[Viral Marketing]]: There have been, at various times, an actual Cybus Industries website, a conspiracy site based on the one from the first revival episode, and another telling you to vote for Mr. Saxon.
* [[What Could Have Been]]:
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** One of the more recent... before [[Alex Kingston]] took the role of River Song, the producers had [[Kate Winslet]] in mind.
** Similarly, when RTD was writing "The Waters of Mars," he wrote the character of Adelaide Brooke with [[Helen Mirren]] in mind.
** The Ood were created for "The Impossible Planet" / "The Satan Pit" because the prosthetics were cheap — originally the Slitheen would've filled the role. Later in "The Doctor's Wife", an Ood again appeared because there was no budget for the new original alien [[Neil Gaiman]] had designed.
** Adric's character was originally conceived as "an [[Artful Dodger]] [[In Space]]," though largely in terms of his relationship with the Doctor. While wisps of this concept crop up in Adric's abilities once in a blue moon, the student-mentor dynamic more or less runs headlong into a brick wall after the Fourth Doctor regenerates.
** Bernard Cribbins and [[Peter Cushing]] were considered to play the Fourth Doctor before [[Tom Baker]] won the role.
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** [[Steven Moffat]] wanted [[John Barrowman]] to appear in "A Good Man Goes to War", but he was unavailable due to filming ''[[Torchwood: Miracle Day]]''. Yes, that's right, the Doctor's army would have included ''Captain Jack''.
** [[Simon Pegg]] was originally slated to play Rose's father, Pete Tyler. However, Pegg was unavailable during the filming of "Father's Day", so his role was transferred to that of the Editor.
** Many proposed episodes - often proposed by some of the show’s best writers - never get past the screenplay or pitch stage, and some rejected ideas have been leaked, although in hindsight, [[Hilarious in Hindsight| many sound kinda… weird:]]
*** Mark Gatiss, the mastermind behind episodes like “Victory of the Daleks”, “Night Terrors”, and “Robot of Sherwood”, had an idea for a story during Series 4 called “The Suicide Exhibition”. This blockbuster epic of a story would have taken place during [[World War II]], had [[Those Wacky Nazis]] as the bad guys, and would have been an adventurous romp where the Tenth Doctor assumed the role of that dashing [[Adventure Archaeologist]] everyone loves. Yes, Galiss actually admitted he wanted the Doctor to assume an [[Indiana Jones]] role, complete with a temple full of puzzle-themed deathtraps, and to be honest, that seemed right up the Tenth Doctor’s alley. Unfortunately, it never saw fruition.
*** Vampires are always cool, right? Sure! And they've appeared a few times in the franchise as a result. But Paul Cornell (writer of “Father’s Day”, “Human Nature”, and “The Family of Blood”, along with many Doctor Who novels and audio stories) wanted to take the concept further, and one proposal for a script involved the Twelfth Doctor actually becoming a vampire. A real one. The story would have involved a group of [[Friendly Neighborhood Vampire| vampires trying to live peacefully in London]], leading to the Doctor showing a darker, more sinister nature, but unfortunately, this idea never got past the pitch stage. Still, for what’s it’s worth, most fans agree that for an actor like Peter Capaldi, playing a vampire wouldn’t have been difficult. Cornell also proposed a Christmas Episode involving the Doctor protecting a young boy and an episode called “Pride and Prejudice and Daleks”, but both never saw the light of day.
*** Everyone who has seen ''[[The Thing]]'' knows why it is so scary; an unseen monster that is slowly infecting and assimilating your allies, so you don’t know who’s on your side and who isn’t until they actually strike… Pure [[Nightmare Fuel]], and the series almost did the same thing in the 70s, with an episode that would have been called “The Shape of Terror”. This story would have featured the Third Doctor, his companion Jo, and a bunch of [[Red Shirts]] facing off against a shapeshifting alien called the Energit in an abandoned research base, the Energit attacking and assimilating them much like the Thing would. (note this was years before the first appearance of the Zygons, a more well-known race of shapeshifting villains) It was never made, but it seems much of “The Shape of Terror” [[Recycled Script| was recycled into]] the episode “The Curse of Paladon”.
*** The First Doctor - or rather, the actor who played him, William Hartnell - had the idea of the Doctor having a son. [[Antagonistic Offspring| Whom he didn’t like at all.]] Hartnell even had the idea of this son looking exactly like the Doctor, [[Acting for Two| meaning he’d play both roles]]. The episode where this evil offspring would be introduced (working title, “The Son of the Doctor”) would likely have aired during Hartnell’s third or fourth season, but again, it was never made.
*** Most Companions come and go, but the TARDIS has been with the Doctor from the start. Unfortunately, while a few episodes revolve around exploring its interior, it doesn’t really do much except act as his base and a [[Time Machine]]. However, writer James Henry wanted to expand its role with an episode where it was given a battle mode, able to fight alien ships like some [[Cool Spaceship]] armed with high-tech phasers and photon torpedoes! While this sort of TARDIS has appeared in a few comic books, it sadly never made it to live action.
*** It has been established that the reason the Doctor has Companions is because he needs emotional support to keep from going truly mad. Thus, the proposed episode “Sealed Orders” would have given him a very [[Sadistic Choice]] to make. Scripted by Christopher Priest (the novelist who wrote ''[[The Prestige]]'') this episode was described as a political thriller where the Fourth Doctor would receive orders from the Time Lords to kill Romana. The story would also involve a few paradoxes, an alternate version of the Doctor, multiple TARDIS-es inside one another, and a non-linear storyline, ending with Romana’s departure. This got as far as a screenplay, but was never produced.
*** Tom MacRae is credited with writing three episodes, the Cyberman two-parter from Series 2, and the iconic “The Girl Who Waited” from Series 4. His third project (also for Series 4) was called “Century House”, which was never produced. This episode was Companion-lite, the Tenth Doctor being on [[Show Within a Show| a paranormal reality show called ''Most Haunted'']], where the Doctor [[Who You Gonna Call?| was investigating sightings of a specter called the Red Widow]] with the only involvement by a Companion being Donna watching the broadcast at home. Executive producer Russel David was unsatisfied with the script and passed it over in favor of “Midnight”, another Companion-lite episode that did rather well.
*** [[Big Creepy-Crawlies| GIANT ANTS!]] Wait, wait, what’s so special about giant ants? After all, the Doctor has dealt with such monsters before, in “The Web Planet”. But, those were actually aliens that looked like ants, and they weren’t very bright. “The Ants”, however, was a different type of plot Based on an idea by Roger Dixon, this would have involved the Second Doctor and Jamie [[Shrink Ray| shrunk to a height of a tenth of an inch tall]] and menaced by real ants, who were super-intelligent and wanted to take over the world! Still, as novel as that was, it was never produced.
*** Doctor Who meets [[Harry Potter]]! Well... why not? In the Aught Years, these were the two most popular British [[Cash Cow Franchise|Cash Cows]] and ''Doctor Who'' was arguably in its Golden Age, so who wouldn’t love an “official” crossover? Initially, Russel David had the idea of not only making the 2008 Christmas episode a crossover, but having [[J. K. Rowling]] herself write the script. Then he thought of a different approach - having Rowling appear on the actual show [[As Herself]] in an episode set in 1997, right after ''[[Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (novel)|Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone]]'' was published, when she was still struggling to write a follow-up story. Then they’d bring in some sort of alien-parasite bug thingie [[Reality Warper| that could alter reality]] using the imagination of a human host as a model, and… You see where this is going, right? Oh, and this would still be [[An Asskicking Christmas| a Christmas episode]]. Unfortunately, actor David Tennent wasn’t as thrilled about the idea, and it was eventually abandoned.
*** Paul Abbot - better known for his work on ''[[Shameless]]'' , another popular British show - scripted an episode for series 1 that would reveal (dead serious here, btw) that Rose was not a real human, but had been created by the Ninth Doctor in an experiment to create the perfect companion. The plot would further involve Jack discovering this and facing the moral dilemma of [[Cloning Blues| telling her she wasn’t real or letting her believe the lie]]. This idea actually got pretty far but was cancelled at the last minute, possibly because David figured there wasn’t enough suspension of disbelief among fans to justify that the Doctor (even one as unstable as the Ninth, thank you ''so'' much Time War) would lie and manipulate Rose after creating her to be his plaything. Probably a wise decision too, given how much this would have changed the entire franchise from that point.
 
* [[The Wiki Rule]]: The [https://tardis.wiki/wiki/Doctor_Who_Wiki Tardis Wiki].
** And the [https://doctorwho.neoseeker.com/wiki/ ''Doctor Who'' Wiki].
 
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[[Category:Doctor Who]]
[[Category:Trivia]]