Doctor (Doctor Who)
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A Doctor Who character
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Twelve faces of the Doctor in chronological order Doctor Race Time Lords Home Planet Gallifrey Home Era Rassilon Era Age Over 2000 (The Twelfth Doctor) Appears in The Unearthly Child by Whom played by William Hartnell
Richard Harndall
Patrick Troton
Jon Pertwee
Tom Baker
Peter Davison
Colin Baker
Sylvester McCoy
Paul McGann
John Hurt
Christopher Eccleston
David Tennant
Matt Smith
Peter Capaldi
The Doctor (eng.
The Doctor is the main character in the BBC science fiction television series Doctor Who.
At the moment, thirteen[1] [specify] actors played his role.
The changes in appearance are explained by the ability of representatives of his race the Time Lords to regenerate with the approach of death.
The British newspaper The Daily Telegraph called the Doctor the most popular alien in Britain.[2]
Content
1 General overview 1.1 Childhood 1.2 Family 1.3 Age 1.4 Enemies 1.5 At the beginning of the series
2 Physiology 3 Doctor Who?
4 Changing actors 4.1 Numbering order 4.2 Regeneration 4.3 Meetings of different incarnations
5 Notes 6 References
General overview[edit / edit wiki text]
The Doctor is an alien from the planet Gallifrey, traveling through time and space in his time machine the TARDIS[3].
Its name is an abbreviation of Time And Relative Dimension In Space (time and relative dimension in space).
In the 1996 film, it is said that the Doctor's mother was a human.[4]
The doctor explores the universe, traveling to various places and times and often getting into trouble.
Knowledge of science, technology and history helps him to save himself.
It helps those who get into trouble, unless it happens at an "unchangeable point" in space time[5].
In the series "War Games" it is claimed that the Doctor stole his TARDIS, and in the episode "The Name of the Doctor" the moment is shown where the First Doctor and his granddaughter steal a faulty time machine and in the episode "The Time of the Doctor" he confirms this information, being under the influence of the truth field from Gallifrey.
One or more companions usually travel with the Doctor, which, as a rule, are ordinary people.
Most of them have consciously made the decision to wander with him, but some are casual passengers; this is especially true of the classic series.
Childhood[edit / edit wiki text]
There is not much information about the Doctor's childhood.
In the classic series, it is often recalled that he studied at the Gallifrey Academy and at that time his name was Theta Sigma.
One of his teachers was Borusa, and among his other students are the Master and Rani, who eventually become his enemies.
The Eighth Doctor in the feature film was the first who remembered his childhood.
He told Grace Holloway that he liked to watch the meteor shower with his father.
In the first episode of the third season ("Smith and Jones"), when Martha asks if he has at least one brother, the Doctor answers: "No more" (English not anymore), in the series Слушай Listen》it turns out that he had several brothers.
In the episode "The Girl in the Fireplace", the Marquise de Pompadour observed the Doctor's childhood during a telepathic session and said that it was very lonely.
Also in childhood, the Doctor and the Master were best friends.
However, they remain them, although at the same time they are enemies.
In the episode "Time Monster", the Doctor reports that he grew up in a house on the mountainside.
He also says that a hermit lived under a tree near his house, who comforted him when he was depressed.
The Doctor met this hermit, also a Time Lord, in the series "Planet of Spiders".
At the same time, the hermit regenerated.
In the episode" Drum Roll", the Doctor reveals that at the age of eight, the Time Lords undergo an initiation during which the children of Gallifrey must look into the time vortex.
According to him, this sight inspires some, scares others, and drives someone crazy (like, for example, Masters).
About himself, he said that he was among those who escaped and is still running.
Family[edit / edit wiki text]
References to the Doctor's family are extremely rare in the series.
During the first two seasons, the Doctor wandered with his granddaughter Susan Foreman.
As noted above, he may have had a brother.
The second Doctor said that his family is in his memory when he wants them to be, and at other times they are asleep ("The Tomb of the Cybermen").
In the episode "The Curse of Fenrik", the Seventh Doctor, when asked if he has a family, answers that he does not know.
Probably, it means that their current fate is unknown to him.
In the 1996 film, it is said that the Doctor's mother was a human, however, the Tenth Doctor tells Donna Noble that the combination "human Time Lord" is impossible.
In the episode "Be Afraid of her", the Doctor tells Rose that he was once a father, but immediately changes the subject.
He repeats the same thing to Donna in the episode "The Doctor's Daughter", when she believes that the Doctor has a classic "daddy shock".
He also claims that he lost his family during the Time War.
In this episode, Jenny was created from the stolen genetic material of the Doctor, technically the Doctor's daughter (her role was played by Georgia Moffett, who is the daughter of Peter Davison (the Fifth Doctor) and the wife of the performer of the role of the Tenth Doctor David Tennant).
In the episode" The Empty Child", the doctor Konstantin tells the Doctor: "By the beginning of the war, I was both a father and a grandfather.
But not now.
I'm just a doctor."
To this, the Ninth Doctor replies: "Yes.
I know that feeling."
In the episode "Donot Blink", he says that "I've never felt good at weddings, even at my own."
In the special episode "The End of Time", a woman was shown, presumably the Doctor's mother, the role was played by Claire Bloom[6].
In the episode "Vincent and the Doctor", the Doctor says that he had a "two headed boring godmother with a terrible smell from two mouths".
In the episode "River Song's Wedding", the Doctor marries River Song.
In the episode" Death in Heaven", Clara, pretending to be a Doctor, says "I was born on Gallifrey, the constellation of Casterborus.
I am a Time Lord, but after I stole a time capsule and escaped, my privileges were revoked.
Now I'm piloting a type 40 TARDIS.
Four marriages (we only know about three, with River Song in the series "The Wedding of River Song", with Elizabeth I in the series "The Day of the Doctor", with Marilyn Monroe in the series A Christmas Carol) children, grandchildren have disappeared and, I believe, died, I have a daughter created by passing the gene ("The Doctor's Daughter")."
Age[edit / edit wiki text]
The exact age of the Doctor is unknown.
The Doctor himself at various times claimed that he was 450 years old (The Tomb of the Cybermen, 1st episode of season 5), 800 years old ("Doctor's Day", the anniversary issue for the fiftieth anniversary of the series), 900 years old ("Rose", 1st episode of season 1), 903 years old ("Paths diverge", 13th episode of season 1), 906 years old ("The End of time. Part two", the 18th episode of the 4th season), 907 years ("Flesh and Stone", the 5th episode of the 5th season), 909 years ("The Impossible Astronaut", the 1st episode of the 6th season), 953 years ("Time and the Rani", the 7th Doctor, season 24, episode 1), 1200 years ("A city called "Mercy", the 3rd episode of the 7th season), 1200 years plus, motivated by the fact that I lost count ("Doctor's Day", the anniversary issue for the fiftieth anniversary of the series).
Taking into account the events of the Doctor's Time series (the Doctor stayed on Trenzalore for about 900 years), the approximate age of the Doctor is 2100 years, which he himself confirms in the Deep Breath series: "I am a Doctor, I have lived for more than two thousand years."
In the penultimate episode of season 9 ("With diabolical persistence") The Doctor has been in the confessional disk for 4.5 billion years.
Enemies[edit / edit wiki text]
Main Article - List of Doctor Who creatures and aliens
Title Image of the appearance of the home planet Doctor Daleks Daleks (The Daleks) The Dalek Invasion of Earth (The Dalek Invasion of Earth)
The Chase
Mission to the Unknown
The Daleks ' Master Plan
The Power of the Daleks
The Evil of the Daleks
Day of the Daleks
Planet of the Daleks
Death to the Daleks
The Origin of the Daleks (Genesis of the Daleks)
Destiny of the Daleks
The Five Doctors
Resurrection of the Daleks
Revelation of the Daleks
Remembrance of the Daleks
Doctor Who (Doctor Who) (mention)
Doctor Who and the Curse of Mortal Death (Doctor Who: The Curse of Fatal Death)
Dalek (Dalek)
Bad Wolf
The paths diverge (The Parting of the Ways)
Army of Ghosts
Doomsday (Doomsday)
Daleks in Manhattan
Evolution of the Daleks
The Stolen Earth
The end of the journey (Journey's End)
Victory of the Daleks (Victory of the Daleks)
Pandorica opens (The Pandorica Opens)
The Big Bang
The Wedding of River Song
The Dalek Insulator (Asylum of the Daleks)
The Day of the Doctor
The Time of the Doctor (The Time of the Doctor)
Into the Dalek
The Magician's Apprentice
The Witch's Familiar
Skaro all incarnations of Cybermen The Tenth planet (The Tenth Planet) Moonbase (The Moonbase)
The Tomb of the Cybermen (The Tomb of the Cyberman)
The Wheel in Space
The Invasion
Revenge of the Cybermen
Earthquake
The Five Doctors
Cybermen Attack
Silver Nemesis
Rise of the Cybermen
The Age of Steel
Army of Ghosts
Judgment Day
A good man goes to war
Time is running out
Silver Nightmare
Doctor's Time
Dark Waters
Death in Heaven
Mondas Telos
Marinus
Parallel Earth
Cyberiad
all incarnations (except,
maybe the Eighth,
Military and Ninth) Master Terror of the Autons The Mind of Evil
Axon Claws
A colony in space
Demons
Devils of the Sea
A temporary monster
The Cosmic Border
A merciless killer
The Guardian of Thrackan
Logopolis
Castrovalva
The King's Demons
Five Doctors
Planet of Fire
The Trial of the Time Lord: The Last Enemy
Survival
Doctor Who
Utopia
Drumming
The Last Time Lord
End of time
Deep Breath (cameo)
Inside the Dalek (cameo)
The Caretaker (cameo)
The Plane (cameo)
In the Forest that Grew Up Overnight (cameo)
Dark water
Death in Heaven
Wizard's Apprentice
The Witch's Familiar
Gallifrey Third, Fourth, Fifth,
Sixth, Seventh, Eighth,
The Tenth and Twelfth Sontarans 200px Time Warrior Sontaran Experiment
Temporary intrusion
The Sontaran Plan
Poisoned sky
The Big Bang
The pandorica opens
A good man goes to war
Crimson Horror
Doctor's name
Doctor's Time
Take a deep breath
Sontar The Third, Fourth, Sixth,
The tenth,
The Eleventh, The Twelfth Weeping Angels Donot blink The time of the angels
Flesh and Stone
Angels take over Manhattan
The Time of the Doctor (cameo)
With Diabolical Persistence (cameo)
missing; appeared on Earth, Alphava Metraxis, Trenzalore and Gallifrey Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth Silurians 200px Doctor Who and Silurians Hungry Earth
Cold blood
A good man goes to war
Snowmen
Doctor's name
Take a deep breath
Earth Third, Fifth, Eleventh, Twelfth Autons / Nestina Spearhead from outer space Terror of the autons
Rose
The pandorica opens
Polymos The Third, Ninth, Eleventh Ice Warriors Ice Warriors Monster of Peladon
The Cold War
Mars The Second, The Third, The Eleventh Great Mind Terrible snow people The web of fear
Snowmen
The Bells of St. John
Doctor's name
Second, Eleventh Rani Mark Rani Time and Rani
Measurements in time
Gallifrey Sixth, Seventh; at
informal participation
The First, Second, Third,
The Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Raksakorikofallapatorians Aliens in London The Third World War
A bustling city
Raxacoricofallapatorius The Ninth Zygons 200px Terror of the Zygons The Day of the Doctor
The Zygon Invasion
The Transformation of Zygons
Fourth, Tenth (in the film "The Day of the Doctor"),
The eleventh,
Twelfth
Judy Smith and Jones Stolen Land
A good man goes to war
Doctor's Time
The Wizard's Apprentice (cameo)
The Tenth, the Eleventh
At the beginning of the series[edit / edit wiki text]
The image of the Doctor was invented by director Sidney Newman[7].
The first script, which was later destined to grow into the script of the Doctor Who series, was called The Troubleshooters.
In March 1963, the idea was developed by S. E. Webber, who was invited to help the project.
In Webber's version, the main character was described as "a mature man of 35-40 years with some eccentricities in behavior."
However, Newman created an alternative image of an old man who wanders in a stolen time machine, which he called "Doctor Who".
Thus, Doctor Who has existed since May 1963.
The first actor to play the Doctor was William Hartnell. [3]
But three years later, he was forced to leave the series due to health problems, and the role went to Patrick Troton.
To this day, it is believed that thirteen actors played the Doctor (although in 1983, when Hartnell had already died, Richard Harndall played the role of the First Doctor in the special "Five Doctors", and thus there were fourteen actors who played this role).
At the beginning of the series, nothing is known about the Doctor — not even his name.
In the very first episode ("Unearthly Child"), the attention of two teachers (Barbara Wright and Ian Chesterton) is attracted by one student, Susan Foreman, who demonstrates outstanding knowledge in all subjects.
They follow her to a dump of old cars, where they hear her voice and the voice of a man coming from a place that looks like a police box.
When they enter it, they find that the booth is much more spacious inside than it seems from the outside.
An old man, whom Susan calls grandfather, kidnaps teachers so that they will not give their location to anyone, and goes to the prehistoric era.
Subsequently, they begin to travel together.
Physiology[edit / edit wiki text]
Although outwardly the Time Lords look like people, their physiology is very different from human.
For example, they have two hearts[2] (a double cardiovascular system), a "bypass respiratory system" that allows them to go longer without air.
Such a system once saved the Fourth Doctor from death in the series "Pyramids of Mars" The internal body temperature is 15-16 degrees Celsius.
The Doctor often demonstrates superhuman endurance.
In addition, it can absorb and release some types of radiation.
He has telepathy.
In some episodes, it also turns out that the Doctor can easily withstand very low temperatures.
However, Time Lords also have weaknesses that are not inherent in humans.
In the episode "The Mind of Evil", the Doctor claims that an aspirin pill can kill him.
In the series "Cold Blood", the Doctor says that if you remove all the terrestrial microorganisms from him, he will die — perhaps that is why antibiotics are so dangerous for the Time Lords.
In the sixth season, the Second Doctor claims that the Time Lords could have lived forever if not for accidents.
When they happen, they regenerate.
In the series "Merciless Killer", the Doctor says that regeneration is possible twelve times.
In the opening part of the 1996 film, the Doctor confirms that the Time Lords have thirteen lives, and the Master used them all.
In addition, regeneration is not mandatory — in the episode "The Last Time Lord", the Master refuses to regenerate and dies in the Doctor's arms.
But also the cause of regeneration may not be an accident: in the series" The Fate of the Daleks", Roman regenerates for no apparent reason.
In the "Death of the Doctor" series of the spin off "The Adventures of Sarah Jane", the Eleventh Doctor says that the Time Lords have 507 regenerations, but most likely this statement is a joke.
Doctor Who?[edit / edit wiki text]
In the first episode of the series, Barbara calls the Doctor Dr. Foreman, using the surname that his granddaughter took for herself.
However, when he says that Foreman is not his last name, Jan asks Barbara: "Then who is he?
Doctor Who?".
In the fifth episode of the episode "The Armageddon Factor" of the 16th season, the Time Lord Drax, who studied with the Doctor, calls him Theta Sigma, but this is just a school nickname.
In the first episode of the updated series, Rose Tyler finds information about the Doctor on a website called " Doctor Who?".
In the episode "Let's kill Hitler", the Eleventh appears in a suit with the remark "You said the Doctor was your victim.
Doctor?
Doctor Who?".
In the episode" The Wedding of River Song", Dorium says that the oldest question in the universe that cannot be answered is "Doctor Who?".
In the series "Dalek Isolation Ward", after deleting all information about the Doctor, making him incognito, all the Daleks ask the question "Doctor Who?".
In the episode" The Bells of St. John", Clara asks the same question, and the Doctor says that he never noticed that this is his favorite phrase.
The doctor periodically uses the human name John Smith (the most typical English first and last name).
For the first time, Jamie McCrimmon uses it, naming the name he saw on a medical container during the interrogation (the series "Wheel in Space").
As it turned out in the series "The Time of the Doctor", this question was at all times sent to every point in space by someone from Gallifrey who was trying to return the planet to its home universe.
Changing actors[edit / edit wiki text]
Doctor Actor First appearance Last appearance Date Age Series Date Age Series First Doctor William Hartnell November 23, 1963 55 "Unearthly Child" October 29, 1966 58 "The Tenth Planet" Second Doctor Patrick Troughton October 29, 1966 46 "The Tenth Planet" June 21, 1969 49 "War Games" Third Doctor John Pertwee January 3, 1970 50 "Edge from Outer Space" June 8, 1974 54 "Spider Planet" Fourth Doctor Tom Baker June 8, 1974 40 "Spider Planet" March 21, 1981 47 "Logopolis" Fifth Doctor Peter Davison March 21, 1981 29 "Logopolis" March 16, 1984 32 "Androzani Caves" Sixth Doctor Colin Baker March 16, 1984 40 "Androzani Caves" December 6, 1986 43 "The Perfect Enemy" Seventh Doctor Sylvester McCoy September
7, 1987 44 "Time and the Rani" May 27, 1996 52 TV Movie Eighth Doctor Paul McGann May 27, 1996 36 TV Movie November 14, 2013 53 "Night of the Doctor" Ninth Doctor Christopher Eccleston March 26, 2005 41 "Rose" June 18, 2005 41 "Paths Diverge" Tenth Doctor David Tennant June 18, 2005 34 "Paths diverge" January 1, 2010 38 "The End of Time" The Eleventh Doctor Matt Smith January 1, 2010 27 "The End of Time" December 25, 2013 31 "The Time of the Doctor" The Twelfth Doctor Peter Capaldi December 25, 2013 55 "The Time of the Doctor" — — —
In the special edition of "Five Doctors", the role of the First Doctor was played by Richard Harndall.
The role of a Military Doctor in the series "The Name of the Doctor" and "The Day of the Doctor" was played by John Hurt.
Numbering order[edit / edit wiki text]
Steven Moffat insists that he does not change the numbering order of Doctors, and John Hurt's Military Doctor from the mini episode "The Night of the Doctor" does not affect anything.
He explains this in an issue of Doctor Who Magazine: "I was really very careful with the numbering of Doctors.
John Hurt's Doctor is very special: he doesnot take the Doctor's name.
He doesnot call himself that.
He is the same Time Lord, the same being as the Doctors before him, but he is the only one who says, " I am not a Doctor."
So the Eleventh Doctor is still the Eleventh, the Tenth is still the same Tenth... "
He adds: "Technically, if you really considered regeneration, David Tennant's Doctor is two Doctors, taking into account the meta of the crisis Doctor ("The End of the Journey").
But the point is not to count the regenerations, but to count the faces of the Time Lord who called himself the Doctor.
And, thus, we have only a Doctor Anomaly who has crawled into a hole somewhere.
In the "Day of the Doctor" scenario, Matt's Doctor was the Eleventh, and David's Doctor was called the Tenth.
So the Doctor numbers remain exactly the same — we all call Peter Capaldi the Twelfth Doctor."
Regeneration[edit / edit wiki text]
The change in the Doctor's faces is explained by the Time Lords ' ability to regenerate.
Regeneration was invented in the series so that the actors could be replaced (as a rule, they leave themselves).
The main purpose of regeneration within the series is the biological rejuvenation of the body.
In the episode "The Time of the Doctor", the Doctor received a new cycle from someone from Gallifrey from an unknown number of regenerations.
Meetings of different incarnations[edit / edit wiki text]
Sometimes it happened that different incarnations of the Doctor met with each other.
Below is a list of such meetings.
Doctors Series Explanation The first, Second, Third "Three Doctors" At first it was planned that the role of Hartnell would be greater, however, due to his health condition, he was unable to actively participate.
The First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth [8] "Five Doctors" The first Doctor was played by Richard Harndall.
Tom Baker refused to take part in the episode, explaining that too little time has passed since he left the series.
To portray the Fourth Doctor, we used cuts from the unproven episode "Shada" The second, Sixth "Two Doctors" The first, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh "Dimensions in Time" Special issue for the 30th anniversary of the series.
Clips were used to depict the First and Second Doctors.
The fifth, Tenth "Split in time" Special issue for the program "Children in need".
The eleventh, Military Doctor "The Name of the Doctor" is the final episode of the seventh season of the revived series.
Military Doctor, the Tenth Doctor, the Eleventh Doctor[9] "Doctor's Day" Special issue for the 50th anniversary of the series.
Notes[edit / edit wiki text]
↑ The Doctor himself in the series "The Doctor's Time indicates such a number of main incarnations" ↑ 1 2 Dr Who profile: Britain's favorite alien (English), Daily Telegraph (4 July 2008).
Checked on July 29, 2012.
↑ 1 2 Peter Tyulenev, Ekaterina Sark.
Enemy of the Worlds: portrait of a hero.
doctor who.
Publishing house "Technomir" (May 2004).
Verified on July 22, 2013.
Archived from the original source on August 17, 2013.
↑ BBC - Doctor Who Classic Episode Guide - Doctor Who: The TV Movie - Details.
BBC.com.
↑ Time Lords Feel Whether the "Unchangeable Point" Is ↑ 20 Things We Learned from The Writer's Tale: The Final Chapter (January 10, 2010).
Archived from the original source on June 17, 2012.
↑ Howe David J.
The Handbook: The First Doctor – The William Hartnell Years 1963–1966.
— London: Virgin Publishing, 1994.
— ISBN 0-426-20430-1.
The Fourth Doctor is only mentioned as a participant in the events, however, he does not take direct part.
↑ In the scene in the orbit of Gallifrey, all 13 incarnations participate, playing a key role
Links[edit / edit wiki text]
whoisdoctorwho.co.uk (English)
On the IMDB website (English) The chronology of the Doctor (English) Adam Troepolsky Who are you, Doctor?
review article in the magazine "World of Fiction" Polina Khanova Doctor Who: Genocide for dummies Logos magazine No. 6 (102) 2014
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Unofficial Doctor from "Doctor Who and the Daleks" • Shalka Doctor
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Source — "https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Doctor_ (Doctor Who)&oldid=82687549"
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