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Showing posts with label Norman Kay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Norman Kay. Show all posts

Monday, 3 February 2014

007 - The Sensorites

Doctor Who: The Sensorites
Broadcast:
20th June - 1st August 1964
Doctor:
William Hartnell
Companions:
Ian, Barbara, Susan
Adversary:
Sensorites
Written by:
Peter R Newman
Director:
Mervyn Pinfield, Frank Cox
Music:
Norman Kay
Script Editor:
David Whitaker
Producer:
Verity Lambert
Average Viewers:
6.92m (7.9, 6.9, 7.4, 5.5, 6.9, 6.9)
Summary: Sensitive telepaths hold humans captive in their space craft while facing conspiracy and ilness on their own planet. There is good and bad on both sides of each problem and the Doctor must resolve it all before he can regain access to his TARDIS

The Sensorites has become a bit of a minor story over the intervening years as very few records remain in the archives and it simply doesn't get talked about. This is evident in the DVD extras (or relative lack thereof) and the brief career of its writer adds to that. It should not be completely overlooked however, as it contains some real quality and valuable points of canon and heritage - It is very possible that we would not have the Ood today if we didn't have the Sensorites first.

Essentially spanning July of 1964, The Sensorites came at a busy time in world history. No single major global incident, but plenty of events around the world that are worth noting. For example, American President Lyndon Johnson introduced the Civil Rights Act which abolishing racial segregation, there were six days of race riots in Harlem, and race riots in Singapore (between ethnic Chinese and Malays) while the Vietnam War was only approach its half way point. Malawi was given independence from the UK (and changed its name from Nyasaland) and former Prime Minister Winston Churchill retired from the House of Commons at the age of 89. In lighter news, the first close-up photographs of the Moon were taken by Ranger 7 - a thousand times clearer than anything ever seen from Earth, the British Grand Prix at Brands Hatch was won by Jim Clark, the Warner Brothers Cartoon Division was shut down, and the Post Office Tower in London was completed - it would not begin operation until October 1965 but would go on to feature heavily in The War Machines in 1966. In music, country singer Jim Reeves died in a small plane crash, the Beatles returned home from America to an estimated crowd of 150,000 people which left 300 injured. At number one were Roy Orbison "It's Over", Animals "House Of The Rising Sun", Rolling Stones "It's All Over Now" and the Beatles's "A Hard Day's Night" began a run of three weeks at the top following the release of their film of the same name. Other films in the cinema included star studded black comedy What A Way To Go! and Seance On A Wet Afternoon which, in retrospect, has a number of elements that take an eerie turn when you think of the Moors Murders that were taking place at the time and searches that followed later (though it would be more than a year before they came to light)

Finally, before the review itself, between the broadcasts of episodes 4 and 5, on the 22nd July future companion Bonnie Langford was born, and on the 25th July straight after episode 5 viewers could see Carole Anee Ford on the Juckbox Jury panel for the third and final time! (It's also worth noting that episode 3 had been deliberately delayed to make way for an extended edition of Grandstand (hence the serial's seven week run when it only had six episodes)

Sunday, 19 January 2014

005 - The Keys Of Marinus

The Keys Of Marinus
Broadcast:
11th April - 16th May 1964
Doctor:
William Hartnell
Companions:
Ian, Barbara, Susan
Adversary:
Voord
Written by:
Terry Nation
Director:
John Gorrie
Music:
Norman Kay
Script Editor:
David Whitaker
Producer:
Verity Lambert
Average Viewers:
9.07m (9.9, 9.4, 9.9, 10.4, 7.9, 6.9)
Summary: In a search spread across the land, the travellers face hallucinations, fast growing vines and booby traps, frozen knights, and an accusation of murder

Doctor Who was fast becoming a Saturday afternoon staple and The Keys Of Marinus was the first adventure commissioned after broadcasts had begun. Circumstances and shifts in thinking meant that existing commissions either weren't working or were no longer suitable and a replacement six parter was needed quickly. As a reliable writer and following the immense success of The Daleks, the job went to Terry Nation who completed the scripts in just four weeks, creating a different scenario for nearly all episodes.

In the news during the broadcast period of The Keys Of Marinus, Nelson Mandela made his influential "I Am Prepared to Die" speech at the opening of the Rivonia Trial, seven of the eleven Great Train Robbers were sentenced to 30 years in prison and the head of the Little Mermaid statue in Copenhagen went missing (Henrik Bruun apparently confessed to friends in 1997 claiming it to have been a protest). West Ham won the FA cup for the first time, ITV broadcast the very first Seven Up! documentary and Terence Conran opened the first Habitat. Meanwhile, in America masses of students staged protests against the war in Vietnam and the Beatles continued to dominate the with a record breaking 14 singles on the Billboard 100 and their second album was at number one. In the UK charts, their "Can't Buy Me Love" eventually gave up the top spot to "World Without Love" (Peter And Gordon) followed by "Don't Throw Your Love Away" (The Searchers) and the Rolling Stones released their first album. Play School became the first program broadcast on BBC2, following the channel's aborted launch the night before due to power cuts (and would go on to be the first program broadcast in colour three years later), while cinema releases included Nightmare, Woman Of Straw and The Bargee.

Saturday, 23 November 2013

001 - An Unearthly Child

Doctor Who: An Unearthly Child
Broadcast:
23rd November - 14th December 1963
Doctor:
William Hartnell
Companions:
Ian, Barbara, Susan
Adversary:
Cavemen
Written by:
Anthony Coburn
Director:
Waris Hussein
Music:
Norman Kay
Script Editor:
David Whitaker
Producer:
Verity Lambert
Average Viewers:
6.3m ([4.4] 6.0, 5.9, 6.9, 6.4)
Summary: Two teachers find that their strange teenage pupil is living in a scrap merchants and her equally unusual grandfather, fearful of the consequences of this discovery, traps them and they end up fighting for their lives when they meet cavemen trying to make fire!

I'll take you right back to the start, this is the very beginning of a TV legend, day one of the longest running Sci-Fi series. Fifty years ago today at a quarter past five, the first episode of Doctor Who was broadcast on BBC Television. To set the scene, Summer Holiday, The Great Escape and The Birds have been big in the cinema and Sean Connery is currently playing James Bond in From Russia With Love. The Great Train Robbery was hot news just a few months ago and The Beatles were producing hip new sounds from Liverpool. Number one singles for the duration of this adventure were "You'll Never Walk Alone" (Gerry And The Pacemakers), "She Loves You" (The Beatles) and "I Want To Hold Your Hand" (The Beatles)

Sadly the world had just been shocked by the assassination of American President John F Kennedy on 22nd November so this new and exciting show was being broadcast to a sombre and subdued audience. There were also power cuts in parts of the country! As a result of these two combined factors, the first episode was repeated the following week just ahead of episode two, to give it a better launch and it gained almost 2 million viewers.