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Last Updated: 15/01/2009 11:40:04
What The Doctor Did Next
(1/2)
By James Marsters
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(1/2),
(2/2),
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So, we all know by now that The Eleventh Doctor will be played by none other than
household name Matt Smith. Okay, okay, so maybe he's not a household name now but
what will the future hold for the 26-year old once he has hung up his sonic
screwdriver and given back the keys to the TARDIS?
Judging by the other ten
actors to have played the Time Lord, it's anyone's guess.
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For inspiration, Matt Smith could do worse than follow in Tom Baker's footsteps.
Cast as The Fourth Doctor in 1974 after a few bit-parts in fairly high profile series,
Baker then went on to star as Sherlock Holmes in 1982's The Hound of the Baskervilles.
Since then, he's appeared in Blackadder, The Chronicles of Narnia (the TV series),
Randall & Hopkirk (Deceased) and Monarch of the Glen. But surely his biggest
post-Doctor Who role came in 2003 when he was cast as the narrator in TV smash
Little Britain, ensuring his distinctive voice was introduced to a whole new
generation, even if none of them knew what he looked like.
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But it's not just Tom Baker who has done well from the series; his predecessor,
Jon Pertwee had a few comedy stage and film roles before hitting our TV screens
as The Doctor in 1970, but it was this part which led to him taking the title
role in Worzel Gummidge in 1979, a programme whose final episode was as recent as 1995.
Fans of other 80s kids' TV shows might be interested to know that he also provided
the voice for Spotty in the series Superted.
Not bad, but arguably the actor to have milked the most from his appearance as
The Doctor is the current star, David Tennant. |
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Again, someone who was relatively
new to TV screens when he was cast (although he had starred in the
Stephen Fry film Bright Young Things and in hit BBC3 series Casanova,
written by Doctor Who stalwart, Russell T Davies), Tennant has propelled his
way to all sorts of roles since first stepping into the TARDIS.
Credits include leading roles in TV series such as Recovery, Learners and
Einstein and Eddington, alongside Andy Serkis of Gollum fame. But it's his
work with the RSC, including his high-profile turn as Hamlet, which seems to
have earned him the most praise.
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Who else should young Matt Smith be looking to for motivation? Like Smith,
Peter Davison was, at the time of his casting, the youngest actor to have
played The Doctor, but unlike Smith, Davison was already rather a household
name, thanks to his role as Tristan Farnon in All Creatures Great and Small.
Despite his status as housewives' favourite, Davison opted to play
The Fifth Doctor for only three years to avoid being typecast and
moved on to starring in TV series such as A Very Peculiar Practice,
At Home with the Braithwaites and, most recently, ITV's The Last Detective.
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The Second Doctor, Patrick Troughton, was also a recognisable figure after appearing as
the lead in the 1953 series Robin Hood. After Doctor Who, he went on to star in programmes
such as The Six Wives of Henry VIII and the original version of Survivors.
Similarly, Paul McGann had made his name in other roles before stepping into
The Eighth Doctor's shoes.
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The acclaimed star of TV series The Monocled Mutineer
and film Withnail and I, played the Time Lord only once in the 1996 TV movie but
nevertheless moved on to roles in the vampire film Queen of the Damned and TV series
True Dare Kiss.
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Articles - If Hull Were Gaza, 3rd January 2009 By Martin Deane
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If Hull were Gaza there would be some 384 casualties of family and friends, with about 64 dead.
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Prologue:
It is New Years Day 2009. I just left my hospital, the same one I trained in 18 years ago. I've only changed the names of those I like. Everyone else can screw off.
November 1990
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