To mark the 50th anniversary of
Doctor Who,
Puffin Books has asked some children's authors to come up with a series of stories - one for each of the Doctor's eleven incarnations - which will be published as e-books monthly throughout the year, prior to the release of a printed anthology in November. The identity of the authors has been swathed in secrecy, but the stories which have appeared so far are by
Eoin Colfer,
Michael Scott and
Marcus Sedgwick.
When they asked me, just before Christmas, whether I'd like to do one, I was very flattered but thought it probably wasn't for me - my knowledge of
Doctor Who is patchy, and my feelings about the current TV show distinctly mixed. But when I realised that they wanted me to write about the 4th Doctor, played by
Tom Baker, I decided that this was something I could do after all.
I came late to
Doctor Who, so Tom Baker is the first actor I saw in the role - and, consequently, the 'real' Doctor as far as I'm concerned. I think the couple of years when I watched the show regularly must have roughly coincided with Douglas Adams's spell as script editor; I remember the scripts being full of irreverent humour, helped by Tom Baker's brilliant, barking mad performance.
By way of research I watched the DVDs of a couple of stories,
City of Death and
The Sun Makers, and was surprised at how well they've aged - and at how detailed my memories of them were, right down to lines of dialogue. There wasn't a lot of SF available to me in the late seventies, so I must have watched each half-hour episode of
Doctor Who with intense concentration, probably studying the props and costumes to see if there was anything I could replicate in my own Super-8mm movies.
And I expect I found plenty that I could: one of the pleasures of these old episodes is how cheap they are, and how little it matters. The guards in
The Sun Makers carry space guns which are clearly made from old bits of plank with a length of pipe glued to the top, while the clunky futuristic computers have big knobs and dials which were presumably jig-sawed out of plywood. But TV drama in those days was much closer to theatre than to film, and the fact that the sets wobble and the interior lighting doesn't begin to match the exteriors no more spoils the story than would the fact that Elsinore is obviously a painted backdrop when you see
Hamlet at the National Theatre: the set-dressers give you the cues, and your imagination does the rest.
|
Tom Baker as the Doctor, Louise Jameson as Leela |
I've tried to keep my
Doctor Who story,
The Roots of Evil, something that the programme makers of the late 70s could have done without too much trouble. My approach to writing was pure nostalgia: I just tried to imagine myself back in 1978, lying on the carpet in front of the telly in my parents' living room, and visualised the
Doctor Who story I'd like to watch. My favourites were always the ones set in far flung futures rather than the present day, so I had my imaginary set-builders get busy with planks, pipes and plywood, and sent a mental memo to the BBC special effects department to construct a Convincing Miniature of a gigantic living space-station called the Heligan Structure, grown from a single, genetically modified tree...
Of course the Doctor can't resist visiting such a strange place, but as he explores he starts to realise that it's a Doctor trap, devised by people who have a 900-year-old grudge against him. Leela features as his companion (she's the first companion I remember - I believe the story where she met the Doctor was the first one I ever watched) and there's also a brief walk-on (or roll-on) part for K9, though the story is only 10,000 words long, so for simplicity's sake I had to leave him in the TARDIS.
The Roots of Evil e-book will be released on 23rd April, and is available from Amazon (
UK and
US) and I-tunes (
UK or
AU). The paperback anthology will be released on 23rd November.
(All pictures copyright BBC)