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Doctor Who: The Cancelled Years Wiki
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Incarnations of The Doctor
First Doctor; Second Doctor; Third Doctor; Fourth Doctor; Fifth Doctor; Sixth Doctor; Seventh Doctor; Eighth Doctor; Ninth Doctor; Tenth Doctor; Eleventh Doctor; Twelfth Doctor; Thirteenth Doctor; Fourteenth Doctor; Fifteenth Doctor; Sixteenth Doctor

Originally a man with the demeanour Of a light-hearted buffoon, The Seventh Doctor darkened into a mysterious cunning manipulator to combat Fenric's return.

Though he delighted in humorous reverie, it was only the surface of his true nature. Beneath he was a Machiavellian and sombre genius of frightful calibre who could tactically use his mind to manipulate almost any situation into his favoured outcome. Despite this every action he did “For the greater good,” as this incarnation sought out evil to vanquish he could also show profound warmth and affection to his companions and built a strong connection with all of them.

Initially the Seventh Doctor traveled with his predecessor's final companion Melanie Bush. After several adventures with the new Doctor, she left to go travel with Sabalon Glitz, prompting him to travel with Ace McShane, a troubled teenager from Earth in the 1980s, treating her as both a protegé and initially as a pawn in Fenric's game. He did his best to heal Ace's psychological wounds by helping her come to terms with her past misdeeds and fears, aiding her in maturing and supporting her in moments of difficulty. Although he initially planned on taking Ace home, The Doctor ended up enrolling her in the Time Lord Academy on Gallifrey after being put through a test by the Time Lords.

After traveling alone for a brief time the Doctor befriended Raine Cunningham, a posh Safecracker, who's father was friends with the Doctor. He and Raine then traveled together for a short while.

The Seventh Doctor finally regenerated into his next incarnation on the planet Alixion after being imprisoned by the Abbot and having his mind consumed by Time Beetles.

Biography[]

Post-Regeneration[]

After the laser attack, the TARDIS was caught in the Rani's tractor beam, and forced to make a landing on Lakertya's surface, where the Rani and her Tetrap servant, Urak, boarded the TARDIS and abducted the Doctor as his regeneration concluded, taking him to the Rani's laboratory. Awakening in the Rani's lab, the Doctor immediately recognised her, but was knocked out by Urak and injected with an amnesia-inducing drug, which allowed the Rani to trick him into assisting her with her project by pretending to be Mel. Upon regaining consciousness again, the partially amnesiac Doctor first decided to choose a new look, before returning to work on the Rani's machine, having been convinced by "Mel" that he had been working on it before an accident caused him to regenerate.

However, as the Doctor found what was wrong with it, the real Mel snuck into the lab and the two convinced each other of their identities, exposing the Rani's lies. Escaping, the Doctor discovered that several other geniuses from throughout time, including Albert Einstein and Hypatia, had been captured to act as components of the Rani's "time brain". Forced to become the final component, the Doctor's still recovering mind caused it to spout nonsense, though he also inadvertently provided the brain with the means to determine the needed substance: Loyhargil. The Lakertyan leader, Beyus, then sacrificed his life to destroy the brain and delay the launch long enough for the rocket to miss the asteroid. Rescuing the captives, the Doctor took them back to their own times. (TVTime and the Rani)

New adventures with Mel[]

Travelling to Paradise Towers so Mel could enjoy its swimming pool, the Doctor found that the staff and residents residing within the Towers had all become either anarchist Kangs, cannibalistic Rezzies or pompous Caretakers. Accused of being the "Great Architect" that built the Towers, the Doctor was nearly killed by the Chief Caretaker, who wanted the Tower to run the way he wanted. The real architect, Kroagnon, a madman who killed anyone who moved into his creations to keep them perfect, was still within the complex, and had been using the Cleaners to murder residents. As the Doctor and Mel investigated, Kroagnon became concerned, and transplanted his disembodied mind into the Chief, going on a murderous rampage through the complex. He was defeated when Pex, the only remaining male resident, pushed him to his death down a lift shaft, sacrificing himself to prove his bravery. (TVParadise Towers)

Winning a free vacation from G715, the Doctor and Mel found themselves part of an alien expedition to experience the Earth's "rock 'n' roll years" at 1959 Disneyland. After the tour was detoured to South Wales, the Doctor discovered that the last Chimeron queen, Delta, was amongst their party, hiding with her newborn from the vicious Bannermen, mercenaries set on genocide. After defeating the Bannermen by causing their leader, Gavrok, to fall into his own trap, he bid goodbye to Delta, her daughter and a human, Billy, who had fallen in love with Delta, as they departed for the Chimeron hatchery. (TVDelta and the Bannermen)

The Doctor and Mel travelled to Iceworld, where they joined Sabalom Glitz and Ace, a teenage girl from 1987 Earth, on a search to find a treasure guarded by the "dragon" living in the caverns. The group discovered that the dragon was in fact a biomechanoid tasked with guarding the Dragonfire, a power source sought by exiled criminal Kane to power Iceworld, his prison ship, and return to his home planet to get revenge. However, Kane committed suicide when the Doctor showed him his planet no longer existed and that there was no-one for Kane to enact vengeance upon.  Deducing that Ace had been deposited on Iceworld by his old foe Fenric, (TVThe Curse of Fenric) he gained Ace as a new companion, offering to take her back home to Perivale through "the scenic route". (TVDragonfire)

Early travels with Ace[]

Ending the Dalek Civil War[]

The Doctor returned to Shoreditch in November 1963 to take care of events he had set in motion during his first incarnation, first by retrieving the Hand of Omega. His mission was disrupted by the Renegade and Imperial Daleks, despite him anticipating one faction showing up, placing the Doctor, Ace and the Intrusion Counter-Measures Group in the crossfire of the Dalek Civil War, prompting the Doctor to join forces with Counter Measures leaders, Group Captain Ian Gilmore and Professor Rachel Jensen.

Discovering that Davros was now the Dalek Emperor, the Doctor used the his fanatical desire to give the Daleks the power of time travel against them, by goading Davros into using the Hand to create a new Eye of Harmony, but instead resulted in Skaro's sun going supernova, destroying Skaro, as the Doctor had pre-programmed the stellar manipulator to do. With only the Supreme Dalek of the Renegade faction left to deal with, the Doctor managed to convince it that it no longer held a purpose, and it self-destructed. (TVRemembrance of the Daleks)

Further travels with Ace[]

On Terra Alpha, where citizens were being executed by the Kandyman if they did not follow Helen A's happy dictatorship, the Doctor arranged the death of her beloved pet Stigorax to show Helen A that true happiness could only exist if balanced with negative emotions like sadness. Leaving citizen Daisy K and visiting Blues musician Trevor Sigma to help restore order to Terra Alpha, the Doctor and Ace departed. (TVThe Happiness Patrol)

Arriving in 20th century Windsor, the Doctor found the Nemesis statue, which he sent off into space every twenty five years, had returned. Deciding to end the chaos it caused, the Doctor intended to find its bow and arrow for his plan to be rid of it for good. During his search, he encountered Lady Peinforte and the Cybermen. Taking a trip back in time to see how Lady Peinforte got to the future, the Doctor discovered a chess board in her study, (TVSilver Nemesis) and realised that Fenric was responsible. (TVThe Curse of Fenric) Pretending to comply with the Cyber-Leader's orders, the Doctor prepared to send the Nemesis statue straight into the Cyberfleet, prompting Peinforte to merge with it, before launching it into space, where it exploded, destroying the Cyberships. (TVSilver Nemesis)

While travelling in the TARDIS, the Doctor received "junk mail" advertising the Psychic Circus. Deciding to attend after Ace admitted to her fear of clowns, the pair discovered that the circus had been taken over by the Gods of Ragnarok, who were forcing the patrons to perform for them until they were no longer amusing and killed. The Doctor took the fight to their home dimension, where he performed for them. Once he ran out of tricks, he used a medallion to reflect the Gods' blast back at them, destroying them. Their business concluded, the duo departed, leaving the sole-surviving troupe member, Kingpin, and the werewolf-like Mags to rebuild the Psychic Circus. (TVThe Greatest Show in the Galaxy)

Growing darker[]

Tracing a signal being broadcast from another universe, the Doctor was reunited with the Brigadier as he joined forces with UNIT. Becoming embroiled in an adventure involving the inhabitants of an alternate Earth who mistook him for Merlin, the Doctor discovered that the sorceress Morgaine was waiting for a final battle with King Arthur. After the Brigadier defeated the Destroyer, the Doctor realised that Arthur was dead, and, informing Morgaine, prevented her from firing a nuclear missile by appealing to her sense of honour. (TVBattlefield)

After learning of Ace's guilt over burning down a “haunted” mansion called Gabriel's Chase, The Doctor brought her to the house a hundred years before its destruction. There they found a menagerie of strange creatures, including a dangerously mentally unstable entity called Light. Light had slept for millenia, and upon discovering that its inhabitants had evolved while he had been in hibernation, rendering the exhaustive catalogue he had compiled centuries ago worthless, planned to destroy the planet, ending its constant change forever. Able to use Light's childish logic against him, The Doctor convinced him to destroy himself as he was constantly evolving as well. The Doctor then explained to Ace that the reason she had burned down the house was because of the residual presence of Light, ending her guilt. (TVGhost Light)

Landing in a military base in 1943, the Doctor accidentally caused Ace to meet and interact with her Grandmother and infant mother. After revealing to her that he knew her arrival on Iceworld and Peinforte's time traveling had been arranged by Fenric, an evil entity he had encountered before and trapped in another dimension. The Doctor discovered that it had managed to manipulate those who had come into contact with the flask that contained it, and witnessed its escape. Plagued by a hoard of Haemovores it had set loose on the base. The pair discovered that the creatures were repelled by faith, and managed to engage Fenric in a final contest. Convincing the Ancient One, one of Fenric's Haemovore servents, to kill his host in revenge for tricking it into creating its own apocalyptic future, The Doctor was forced to break Ace's faith in him in order to allow it access to Fenric, revealing this to her the Doctor regained her trust. (TV: The Curse Of Fenric)

The Doctor took Ace back home to Perivale. They found out that people had been disappearing and that strange cat-like creatures called Kittlings were on the prowl. The Doctor soon discovered that The Master was trapped on the Cheetah World and had been infected with the Cheetah virus. Planning to escape by bringing people there, allowing them to partially change into Cheetah people and then using them to return to Earth, The Master kidnapped Ace along with many of her friends. The Doctor fought with The Master but refused to continue when he saw the destruction of the Cheetah world had begun. He managed to escape and return to Earth, leaving The Master trapped on the exploding planet. (TVSurvival)

After arriving in Ancient Egypt, 40 BC, the Doctor was blinded by a flash of light and suddenly found himself in London, 1665 with a somewhat confused Nyssa. The Doctor attempted to use his fifth incarnation's TARDIS, but found that it didn't work. Realising that somebody was messing with his timeline, the Doctor began to investigate, but soon, he and Nyssa discovered that the Rani was attempting to create a nerve that she planned to unleash across the planet. The Doctor defeated her, but accidentally released the gas into the atmosphere, creating the great plague.

The Doctor was soon contacted by his Fourth incarnation, who revealed that the Master was the one meddling with his timeline. After the Fourth Doctor unfroze the Doctor's TARDISes, the Seventh Doctor and Nyssa took the Fifth Doctor's TARDIS to a planet, where he reunited with Ace and met five of his other incarnations. The Rani suddenly arrived and attempted to throw the remaining Doctors into the pocket universe, but the Seventh Doctor, along with his other incarnations combined the forces of their minds and threw the Rani into the pocket universe instead, which also freed the First and Second Doctors. After saying goodbye, he and Ace departed in his own TARDIS. (TV: The Eight Doctors)

Final adventures with Ace[]

The Doctor and Ace went undercover on board the Space Vessel Vancouver with the Doctor posing as the Medical Officer and giving advice to Ace, who was posing as the captain. The Vancouver was traveling to another ship, the Lilliput in order to collect a shipment of grain and take it to the planet Safensthome. After boarding the Lilliput with a boarding party and Ace and finding it deserted except for Victor. the Doctor soon discovered that a race known as the Grub had stowed away in the grain silo on the Lilliput after being kicked off their home world Safensthome by the Metatraxi Who were created by the Great Mother after they had devoured the food supply. The Doctor eventually gained communication with the planet, thanks to Victor who was working with the Metatraxi. After the Grub were returned to the planet, the Great Mother ordered the Metatraxi and Grub to share. After this the Doctor and Ace departed. (TVEarth Aid)

The Doctor took Ace to  London in 1967 as part of a test to assess her potential to join the Time Lord academy. This test involved the Ice Lord Hhessh and his quest to resurrect the legendary Martian Warlord Sezhyr. During this, the Doctor met Sam Cunningham and Sharon Graves, who were aiding Hhessh in his quest. Sharon was also pregnant with Sam's child. After being taken on board the Ice Warrior's ship and helping to deliver Sharon's baby, as she was being possessed by Sezhyr, the Doctor was forced to leave with Sam and the baby by the Time Lords. Ace passed the test and the Doctor was allowed to go to Gallifrey to make his goodbyes, he also apologised for not telling Ace about the test and the two parted on good terms. (TVThin Ice)

Time alone[]

The Doctor spent some time visiting a young girl named Raine Cunningham who was the baby he had delivered in 1967. He was made Raine's godfather. TVThin Ice, Crime of the Century)

Nearing the end and uniting with Raine[]

The Doctor traveled to Raine Cunningham's future in 1990. She was now a skilled thief, who the Doctor hired to steal back items owned by her father, that he had been forced to sell due to financial difficulties. The Doctor enlisted Raine to help him retrieve an alien device known as the Fabergé, that was now in the hands of a private military group in the UK, but it soon turned out that the Soviet leader Vadim Senkin, planned to retrieve the weapon and give it to a race of aliens known as the Sharandos, who have promised to give Senkin materials that would make Russia the most powerful country on the planet.

After Raine is taken prisoner by Senkin, the Doctor retrieves the Warpstone, and after locating Raine, he discovered that the Sharandos wished to use the weapon to destroy the cosmos. The Doctor, knowing the true nature of the warpstorm, gave it to the Sharandos in exchange for Raine. When the Sharandos attempted to use the device, their ship exploded. After returning to Sam's house, Raine asked the Doctor if she could come travelling with him, and after Sam gave his approval, the Doctor accepted. (TV: Crime of the Century)

Death[]

The Doctor and Raine arrived on the planet Alixion, where they found that the two races, the Alyx's and the Akrons lived in peace, and had discovered the secret to immortality by drinking a mysterious elixir created by their leader: known as the Abbot, who used Time Beatles. Wanting to know how the elixir was made, the Doctor and Raine met the Abbot and discovered that the Time Beatles helped produce the elixir by consuming the minds of living Akrons, who were hooked up to a machine. After learning that the Abbot wished to harvest the powers of the TARDIS, the Doctor attempted to expose the Abbot to the planet council, but after being dismissed due to lack of evidence, the Doctor and Raine decided to infiltrate the Abbot's laboratory and get evidence.

The two were then ambushed by several guards, and while Raine escaped, the Doctor was captured.

The Abbot attempted to gain the secrets of the TARDIS from the Doctor, but failed. He eventually hooked the Doctor up to the machine, and soon, the Time Beatles began to consume the Doctor's mind, driving him mad. Eventually, he was rescued by Raine and a group of Akrons. Raine took the Doctor back to the TARDIS, the Doctor managed to take off before collapsing to the floor. He explained the concept of regeneration to Raine: telling her that 'My successor will need all the help he can get' before dying and regenerating into his next incarnation. (TV: Alixion)

Legacy[]

As the Tenth Doctor was dying, he saw illusions of this incarnation, along with his Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eighth and Ninth incarnations, who spoke to him. As he began to regenerate, the illusions faded away. (TV: The Day of Vengeance)

Alternate timeline[]

The Valeyard used a device known as the Reality Device to erase the Doctor from history; resulting in the first eight incarnations of the Doctor fading out of existence. When the Thirteenth Doctor used the Reality Device, all twelve of his predecessors were restored to the timeline. (TV: The Fall of the Doctor)

Personality[]

The Seventh Doctor was originally light-hearted and prone to clownish behaviour, (TV: Time and the Rani, Paradise Towers, The Greatest Show in the Galaxy) However, as he matured, he became a grumpy and melancholy manipulator who saw the battle between good and evil as a game of chess or a stage play, and everyone around him as pawns in the game of fighting evil that he directed, (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks, Silver Nemesis, The Curse of Fenric)

The Seventh Doctor was a consummate fan of chess, to the point of treating his companions and enemies as pieces on a chess board, (TV: The Curse of Fenric) Despite his tendency toward a dark personality, the Doctor was known for his use of words to resolve problems instead of violence, (TV: Dragonfire, Remembrance of the Daleks, Silver Nemesis, Battlefield, Ghost Light, Survival) Although his more whimsical tendencies disappeared over time, the Doctor maintained a fondness for idiosyncratic speeches that occasionally referred to literature, ordinary places and even food and drink amidst the weightier concerns on his mind. (TV: Survival) Other times, he would sombrely reflect the ramifications of time, and the consequences of interfering in history. (TV: Dragonfire, Remembrance of the Daleks)

The Seventh Doctor actively sought out villains to vanquish and dictatorships to dethrone, as opposed to his previous incarnations, who would stumble upon trouble by happenstance, (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks, The Happiness Patrol) However, he was not totally unfeeling, appearing apprehensive about his decision to destroy Skaro, (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks) was genuinely agonised that he had to convince Ace that he did not care about her, (TV: The Curse of Fenric) and felt guilty about not telling Ace that the Time Lords were testing her. (TV: Thin Ice)

The Doctor "[couldn't] stand" burned toast, loathed bus stations, calling them "terrible places full of lost luggage and lost souls", and hated unrequited love, tyranny, cruelty, (TV: Ghost Light)

He could also be critical of human nature, stating that humans had "the most amazing capacity for self-deception, matched only by [their] ingenuity when trying to destroy [themselves]", (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks) that "among all the varied wonders of the universe, [there was] nothing so firmly clamped shut as the military mind", (TV: Battlefield)

In direct contrast to his previous incarnation, the Seventh Doctor was opposed to violence of any sort, although he proved capable of rendering an opponent unconscious with a touch (TV: Battlefield, Survival)

the Seventh Doctor did care for his companions, (TV: Battlefield)

the Doctor developed a paternal relationship with Ace, (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks, Silver Nemesis, The Greatest Show in the Galaxy, Ghost Light, The Curse of Fenric, Survival)

Ace had once described the Doctor as an "aging hippy", once during their early travels (TV: The Greatest Show in the Galaxy)

Habits and Quirks[]

Speaking with a Scottish accent, the Seventh Doctor occasionally rolled his R's and empathised his P's And I's, and displayed a tendency to mangle and combine Earth idioms, creating Dundreyrisims. (TV: Time and the Rani)

The Doctor was fond of using the term "grubby" when explaining his mission to keep an artefact away from his adversaries, such as when keeping the Hand of Omega out of the Daleks' "grubby little protuberances", (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks)

The Doctor would often raise his hat to greet new people, smiling as he did so, (TV: The Greatest Show in the Galaxy, Survival) or when he was departing from company. (TV: Paradise Towers)

As a show of affection, the Doctor would gently press his forehead against a friend's forehead, (TV: Time and the Rani) or tap their nose. (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks, The Greatest Show in the Galaxy, The Curse of Fenric)

Skills[]

The Seventh Doctor was a grand manipulator, often utilising his choice of words to persuade others into a decision of his choosing, (TV: Paradise Towers, The Happiness Patrol) or devising an unscrupulous scheme to defeat his adversaries. (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks, The Curse of Fenric) He had a tendency to play the long game in his schemes, preferring to keep his plans subtle and "behind the scenes". When his plans went awry, or an unexpected element developed, the Doctor was efficient at improvising around it. (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks)

Despite his stature, the Doctor was capable of both directly and indirectly taking control of situations involving strangers, using his greater intelligence to assess and direct events. (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks, The Happiness Patrol) While he loathed violence, the Doctor also showed a skill at unarmed combat, being able to briefly overpower a judo trained Mel, (TV: Time and the Rani)

Physical Appearance[]

The Seventh Doctor was a short man who initially appeared to be in his mid-forties, (TV: Time and the Rani)

With an animated face, the Doctor appeared to have expressive bulgy eyebrows. (TV: Time and the Rani)

Hair and grooming[]

After his regeneration, the Doctor had a full head of dark brown hair. (TV: Time and the Rani)

Clothing[]

After many failed attempts to find a new look, The Seventh Doctor eventually settled on a single breasted-off white safari style jacket with a red paisley handkerchief in his left pocket, a red/black tartan scarf under his lapels with a yellow pullover adorned with red question marks and turquoise zigzag patterns, with sand-coloured tweed plaid trousers and a pair of red braces either pulled over, (TV: Time and the Rani) or tucked under the pullover. (TV: Paradise Towers) Under the pullover he wore a white shirt with a red paisley necktie, and completed his outfit with a pair of two-tone white and brown, brouged spectator shoes. He also had a chained fob watch attached to his left lapel while the watch rested in his upper left breast pocket. After loosing his tartan scarf during his clash with The Rani, (TV: Time and the Rani), he replaced it with a paisley one. (TV: Paradise Towers)

As he matured into more of a schemer, The Doctor began wearing a chocolate brown jacket and changed his hatband, handkerchief and necktie into more somber shades of brown. (TV: Ghost Light) and burgundy. (TV: The Curse of Fenric) He would wear a tan brown duffle coat when caught in the rain or in cold weather. (TV: The Curse of Fenric, Thin Ice)

On his head the Doctor wore a battered cream colonial-styled Panama hat with an identical paisley handkerchief folded into a hatband and an upturned brim. (TV: Time and the Rani), he later replaced his battered hat with a new one. (TV: Remembrance Of the Daleks) he also wore a black tank-styled wristwatch on his right wrist, (TV: Time and the Rani) which he later replaced with a sportier round one, (TV: Silver Nemesis) And then with a rectangular faced tank watch. (TV: Battlefield)

Umbrellas[]

After his regeneration stabilised, the Doctor took to carrying round an umbrella as part of his day- to- day outfit, using them as physical props, usually to trip opponent, (TV: Paradise Towers, Battlefield, Survival, Ghost Light) as well as using them as grappling hooks, (TV: Dragonfire) And as measuring rods. (TV: Remembrance Of The Daleks)

He initially carried his previous incarnation's multi coloured umbrella but was forced to leave it in the Rani's base on Lykertya where it was destroyed. (TV: Time and the Rani) He replaced it with a black umbrella with a whangee handle. (TV: Paradise Towers)

The Doctor acquired a new umbrella, with an elaborate in the shape of a large red question mark. (TV: Delta and the Bannermen)

Other Information[]

  • The Seventh Doctor is the first incarnation to regenerate with golden regeneration energy.
  • The Seventh Doctor holds the title of joint-third longest reigning incarnation with the First Doctor.
  • The Seventh Doctor, along with the Third, Fifth, Sixth, Tenth, Eleventh, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth and Sixteenth incarnations, are the only incarnations to finish their reigns with the producer they started with.

Parodies and Pastitches[]

  • In the BBC medical soap opera Doctors (2000-2024), McCoy guest-starred as Graham Capelli, an actor who had played the titular role in The Amazing Lollipop Man, a cult 1980s children's television series. The character of the Lollipop Man had many similarities to the Doctor.
  • An Easter Egg referencing the Seventh Doctor appears in the seventh episode of the first season of the Nickelodeon children's horror series, Are You Afraid of the Dark? (1991-96, 1999-2000), "The Tale of the Captured Souls" . The Seventh Doctor's hat and coat can be seen hanging from a hatstand at two points in the episode.

Behind the Scenes[]

Casting[]

Actors considered for the role of the seventh incarnation before Sylvester McCoy was cast included Rowan Atkinson, McCoy's mentor Ken Campbell, Chris Jury, Tony Robinson and Alexei Sayle. Sayle had previously played the DJ in TVRevelation Of the Daleks. Furthermore, Andrew Saches and Dermot Crowley auditioned for the role.

Cartmel Master Plan[]

Season 25 and 26 had broad hints that the Doctor was not simply a Time Lord, as previously shown and stated. This overarching plot, conceived by Script Editor Andrew Cartmel, and referred to by fans as the Cartmel Masterplan, was meant to restore an element of mystery in the Doctor and his true nature as in the stories of his first and second incarnations. The Cartmel Master Plan concluded with the Season 29 story Lungbarrow, which hinted that the Doctor is a reincarnation of The Other, one of the founders of Time Lord society.

Departure[]

McCoy initially only wanted to play the Doctor for three seasons, but John Nathan-Turner convinced him to do a fourth season by saying that they wouldn't give him a third season.

Miscellaneous[]

  • In order to convay the concept of the first eight incarnations being erased from history in The Fall of the Doctor, archive footage was used and edited to show the Doctors vanishing; footage from Battlefield was used for the Seventh Doctor.

List of Appearances[]

Doctor Who[]

Season 24[]

  • Time and the Rani
  • Paradise Towers
  • Delta and the Bannermen
  • Dragonfire

Season 25[]

  • Remembrance of the Daleks
  • The Happiness Patrol
  • Silver Nemesis
  • The Greatest Show in the Galaxy

Season 26[]

  • Battlefield
  • Ghost Light
  • The Curse of Fenric
  • Survival

Season 27[]

30th Anniversary Special[]

40th Anniversary Special[]

  • The Day of Vengeance (cameo)
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