Doctor Who and Torchwood items at Bonhams Entertainment Memorabilia Auction

Friday, 13 December 2013 - Compiled by Chuck Foster and John Bowman
A wide variety of items from Doctor Who and Torchwood are to be auctioned in London next week. Bonhams' entertainment memorabilia sale will be held at its Knightsbridge auction venue on Wednesday 18th December, starting at midday, with viewings taking place every day from Sunday 15th December up to the sale.

Out of the 417 lots in the sale, 55 relate to the two series, with items ranging from scripts and artwork to costumes, props, and a signed postcard from Patrick Troughton while he was the Doctor.

Lot 147: Captain Jack Harkness, a collection of part costumes

Television Memorabilia: Torchwood: John Barrowman as Captain Jack Harkness, a collection of part costumes, 2006-2009, comprising a full-length RAF blue Great Coat, double-breasted with domed gilt RAF-style buttons with raised wings and crown motif and Group Captain epaulettes, shortened for running scenes, labelled in the inside jacket pocket Angels, handwritten in blue ink John Barrowman, May '07, with attached BBC stocknumber; together with from unknown episodes, four pairs varying style grey wool trousers, four navy blue Ralph Lauren Polo Sport t-shirts, four cotton shirts, in varying blue and navy weaves (13)
Lot 168: A Taran Wood Beast Costume

Television Memorabilia: Doctor Who: The Androids of Tara - A Taran Wood Beast costume, November - December 1978, comprising: a mask in the formed as scaled face, protruding eyes and teeth, of synthetic fur, papier-mache, foam, latex, plastic and polystyrene, with tieing straps, with body/ jump suit, of synthetic fur effect fabric, and foam, with detachable section to reverse, with padded hands, and attached claws, house on a wicker mannequin, together with a reproduction image featuring the piece, head width approximately 20 inches (51cm)
Lot 173: Original handwritten postcard addressed to Henry Soskin from Patrick Troughton

Television Memorabilia: Doctor Who / Patrick Troughton: An original handwritten postcard addressed to Henry Soskin (Henry Lincoln) from Patrick Troughton regarding his authorship, circa 1968, believed to relate to The Web of Fear, in blue ink 'Dear Henry, Sooper (sic) Script specially (sic) No.6. Very Happy. Thank You. Do Some More Please. Please. Pat. T.

SALEROOM NOTICES: Please note: From information provided by the vendor, this lot relates to the episode Doctor Who and the Abominable Snowman not The Web of Fear as stated in the catalogue.
Lot 179: The Web of Fear - an original Yeti homing device prop

Television Memorabilia: Doctor Who/Patrick Troughton - The Web of Fear - An original Yeti homing device prop,
1968
, the hollow figure of stained mix media resin, on base, together with a reproduction image featuring the piece, height 4¾ inches (11.5cm)

FOOTNOTES: Provenance: From the Estate of Bob Slatford, BBC Visual Effects Department between 1986-1974. Working alongside Jack Kine and Bernard Wilkie.

Full list of related auction items


Torchwood:
LotDescriptionEstimate (£)
127Collection of part costumes worn by John Barrowman as Captain Jack Harkness in Series 3350-550
128Model flayed corpse250-350
129Pair of prosthetic Weevil masks300-500
130Collection of prosthetic corpse body parts and torsos300-500
131Costume for Eve Myles as Gwen Cooper in Sleeper250-300
132Collection of part costumes worn by John Barrowman in Series 2350-550
133Collection of part costumes worn by Kai Owen as Rhys Williams in Series 2300-500
134Collection of part costumes worn by Gareth David-Lloyd as Ianto Jones in Series 2400-500
135Costume worn by Eve Myles in A Day In The Death250-300
136Three-piece part costume worn by Freema Agyeman as Martha Jones in Dead Man Walking250-350
137Two part costumes worn by Demetri Goritsas as Franklin and Ethan Brooke as Gray in Adam300-500
138Costume worn by Eve Myles in Meat300-500
139Assorted props including severed head300-500
140Various costume parts worn by Naoki Mori as Toshiko400-600
141Collection of costume parts for Eve Myles in Out of Time250-350
142Part costume worn by John Barrowman in They Keep Killing Suzie400-600
143Collection of costumes worn by Eve Myles300-500
144Costume worn by Eve Myles in Countrycide300-500
145Two part costumes worn by Eve Myles in Ghost Machine250-350
146Collection of part costumes worn by Burn Gorman as Owen Harper300-500
147Collection of part costumes worn by John Barrowman, including RAF blue great coat700-900
148Costume worn by Eve Myles in End of Days250-300
149Collection of part costumes worn by John Barrowman, including 'Belstaff' beige bomber jacket400-600
150Collection of part costumes worn by John Barrowman, including RAF blue great coat600-800
Doctor Who:
LotDescriptionEstimate (£)
151Helmet-less Cyberman from Silver Nemesis1000-1500
152Destroyed Dalek, believed to be from Remembrance of the Daleks4500-5000
153Studio floor plan from The Trial of a Time Lord, plus assorted photos100-150
154Sharaz Jek head cowl from The Caves of Androzani700-900
155Rehearsal scripts for "Planet of Fear" (aka Planet of Fire)200-300
156Scripts and related material from Snakedance350-450
157Neman and Katura costume designs from The Keeper of Traken800-1200
158Seron and Tremas costume designs from The Keeper of Traken800-1200
159Varsh's dagger from Full Circle300-500
160Scripts and other material from Castrovalva300-400
161Original artwork for Doctor Who Annual 1980 (Reluctant Warriors)600-800
162Original artwork for Doctor Who Annual 1980 (Reluctant Warriors)600-800
163Original artwork for Doctor Who Annual 1979 (The Power)1000-1200
164Original artwork for Dalek Annual 1978 (The Castaway)500-600
165Original artwork for Dalek Annual 1978 (Davros - Genius or Madman?)500-700
166Original artwork for Dalek Annual 1978 (The Castaway)500-600
167Original artwork for Doctor Who Annual 1977 (The Body Snatcher)1000-1200
168The Taran Wood Beast costume from The Androids of Tara1500-2000
169Dove Pan magic trick prop from The Talons of Weng-Chiang700-900
170Set of four camera scripts for The Time Warrior1000-1500
171Camera script/shooting schedule for episode 3 of The Curse of Peladon250-300
172Rehearsal scripts for episode 1, 2 and 5 of Doctor Who and The Dominators1200-1800
173Postcard to Henry Soskin (Lincoln) from Patrick Troughton500-800
174Camera scripts for episodes 1, 2, 4, 5 and 6 of The Web of Fear2500-3500
175Carbon copy letter from Henry Lincoln to Mervyn Haisman about The Abominable Snowmen, plus script pages250-350
176Rehearsal scripts for episodes 1-5 of The Web of Fear2500-3000
177Draft scripts for episodes 1-6 of The Abominable Snowmen, hand annotated by Henry Lincoln4000-6000
178Rehearsal scripts for episodes 1-6 of The Abominable Snowmen3000-5000
179Original Yeti homing device prop from The Web of Fear2000-3000
180Original TARDIS prop model (1960s)2000-3000
181Original hollow Yeti homing device prop from The Web of Fear2000-3000

It should be noted that some lots are subject to shipping and handling restrictions.




FILTER: - Doctor Who - Torchwood - UK - Auctions - Patrick Troughton

TARDIS app Released

Friday, 13 December 2013 - Reported by Marcus
Following the successful launch of the Official Doctor Who Sonic Screwdriver App which topped the entertainment charts in Australia, New Zealand, US and UK on its release, BBC Worldwide Australia and New Zealand and Australian developer Useless Creations have released a second app with the latest augmented reality technology putting you in control of the TARDIS.

Virtual TARDIS mode allows you to use the motion of your device to land and take off, fly the TARDIS in the real world or move fast to enter the time vortex. In Real World mode you can see the TARDIS spinning above you, or touch the ground where you'd like it to land and watch it materialise before your eyes. Rotate and scale the TARDIS to line up the perfect photo, then take and share your images on Twitter #DoctorWho #VirtualTARDIS, Facebook or Flickr.

There are six different models of the TARDIS to choose from, including the original one from the '60s, which turns everything black and white, just like the early Doctors' adventures. Tap the TARDIS to open the door and see inside.

Helen Pendlebury, Head of Brand Licensing and Live Entertainment, said:
This latest fun app puts the TARDIS in fans' pockets, enabling them to fly to the planet Skaro – or just to the end of the garden path. And with the photo-sharing facility we look forward to seeing where the TARDIS ends up!
The app is available from iTunes.
Doctor Who News is also available, now with access to the Doctor Who Guide, free for the iPhone/iPad.




FILTER: - Doctor Who - Games

The Time of the Doctor: More details and pictures

Thursday, 12 December 2013 - Reported by John Bowman
A video interview with Matt Smith plus question-and-answer sessions with Jenna Coleman and Steven Moffat form part of a media pack released today to promote the forthcoming Christmas special The Time of the Doctor.

Also in the pack is a question-and-answer session with Orla Brady, who plays the character Tasha Lem.

In his interview, Smith reflects on his last episode playing the Doctor and how it felt emotionally.


A partial transcript has also been made available:
Can you first tell us a little bit about the Christmas special?

The Christmas special for me is a bitter-sweet episode because I'm leaving, but Steven [Moffat] has written a brilliant, adventurous, funny episode and I'm really thrilled with it. It feels wonderfully Christmassy.

What did you want from your last episode?

I think it's good for the Doctor to go out with a bang, a crash and a wallop. I'm pleased it's really funny and mad. When I got to the last 20 pages and it was quite a hard read for me, but I hope it's going to be a belter.

We've got a great director in Jamie Payne and some really lovely double-hand stuff with me and Jenna [Coleman]. Steven's managed to tie in plot points and narratives that have been threaded through over years and I think that's ingenious.

Emotionally, how did it feel to be doing your final performance?


It felt very emotional to be doing my final episode. My mother is mortified, honestly she was at the front of campaigning for me to stay and wasn't happy when I said I was going to leave. But, when you've got to go, you've got to go.

Of course, it's very sad for me in many ways because everything is the last time. It's the last read-through, the last time I put on the bow tie and the last scene in the TARDIS. But the show is about change and I had lunch with Peter Capaldi shortly after the announcement and I think he's just going to be incredible. He has the most brilliant ideas. As a fan, I'm genuinely excited to see what he's going to do because I think he's going to do something extraordinary.

So you're still going to be a fan?

Yeah, absolutely. I'll be a fan. I'm very grateful to Steven Moffat and that whole team up in Wales for the past four years and you know I want the show to go from strength to strength, which it will. It might take me a couple of weeks to get my head around it. I think it was the same for David and I think it was the same for Karen, when she watched Jenna come in. I don't think it's easy, but it's not my show, it's the fans' show, so I'll be a fan and then it will be my show.

Have you been given anything by the fans as a leaving present?

I was doing a promo shoot for the 50th and these two girls came on set. They had made me this book which must have had 50 or 60 letters in, saying thank you for Doctor Who, for being part of it. Things like that are amazing. I've said it before, the fans of this show are really spectacular and they've made this an extraordinary journey for me and I'm very, very grateful. I don't think there's another set of fans like it.

Can we expect some nods to past series with this Christmas special? Are we referencing old specials?

With Doctor Who you're always looking back and forward at the same time, because you tend to be jumping around. I don't want to give too much away, but obviously when you look at my tenure over the last four years, there are stories and plot points and villains in there that are particular to my Doctor and I think he's got to face all that.

Steven Moffat sets the scene for the special, reflects on Matt Smith's era, and looks ahead to the new one.
Can you set the scene for this Christmas episode?

It's his final battle and he's been fighting it for a while. The Doctor is facing the joint challenge of a mysterious event in space that has summoned lots of aliens to one place and helping Clara cook Christmas dinner. There are also elements from every series of Matt's Doctor, which will come to a head in this special. Things that we've laid down for years are going to be paid off.

How was the read-through?

It was emotional. I think possibly the beginning of the end is more emotional than the actual end. It was the same with "The Angels Take Manhattan", when Karen and Arthur left. The read-throughs are the moments that tend to get people because obviously the shoot dissolves into what we hope will be a tremendously exciting wrap party.

Did you know what you wanted Matt's last words to be?

I didn't think I would go that way, but a couple of months before I wrote it I did say to Mark [Gatiss] that I thought I knew what his last moment would be. And indeed his last line. But if it didn't fit the scene I wouldn't crowbar it in. I've had the vague storyline in place for a long while.

What episodes or scenes do you think will define Matt's time as the Doctor?


I think "The Eleventh Hour" was such an extraordinary debut. Everybody for a year of poor Matt Smith's life had been saying, "Total mistake. He's far too young." Then he came in and he was brilliant. "Vincent And The Doctor" was also such a lovely episode and I was thrilled Richard Curtis was able to write for the show. There's the physical comedy that Matt has brought and of course fish fingers and custard. I think his relationship with his own TARDIS in "The Doctor's Wife" was gorgeous.

What do you think distinguishes Matt from the other Doctors?

I think he does old Doctor better than anybody else. It's not an accident. It's something he very, very consciously thought about. Because he was the youngest Doctor Matt said, "He's only got young skin. Nothing else is young." I think Matt makes you think very believably that he is this ancient being.

The Christmas special will introduce the next Doctor, played by Peter Capaldi. What was it about Peter that you thought was right for the role?

He's one of the best actors in the country and is very beloved. I was at the BAFTAs shortly before we were contemplating Peter and heard the cheer he got from the audience. Nobody has a bad thing to say about him and that's not a minor issue when it comes to casting a Doctor. They've got to be lovely. And he's a huge fan of Doctor Who. So we asked and he was incredibly excited to come and audition. We didn't tell him that he was the only person auditioning because that would be oddly pressuring.

Did you deliberately aim to cast an older Doctor?

It wasn't the reason I cast Peter but I do think if we'd cast another Doctor as young as Matt - because Matt's been so good at being The Young Doctor - I'm not sure what another one would have done. They'd have to have either been deliberately different or just repeat him.

Jenna Coleman talks about how tough it was to say goodbye, what she'll miss about working with Matt Smith, and her reaction to hearing that Peter Capaldi had been cast as the next Doctor.

How did you find the readthrough? Was it emotional?

It was a very emotional read-through. Just going through the process of saying goodbye was difficult. The script itself is very emotional, but also joyous. But saying those words and saying goodbye was never going to be easy.

Is there a sense from the start of the episode that we're moving towards a regeneration?

It's very much an adventure, but it goes off on a different track. People watching will know that it's Matt's last episode, but it doesn't loom over from the start.

We were introduced to Clara as the impossible girl last year. Are we going to find out more about her family background?

Absolutely. I think there had to be a sense of mystery last year to make the plot work. What's really interesting is that it does feel like we're starting again and we get to see her home life as well as her life with the Doctor.

From a few pictures that have been released there are some of you cooking Christmas dinner. Have you ever done that in real life?

My mum does the Christmas cooking. It couldn't be any other way.

Are you looking forward to filming next year with Peter?


It will be a different show next year. We have a bit of a gap before we start filming the new series, so I have time to get my head around it all. Me and Peter will get together before Christmas to start rehearsing and the scripts will start coming in. I think when I came in there was just a week off in production where Arthur and Karen left, so that would have been a strange shift.

This episode is very much about Matt and the 11th Doctor and Clara and the 11th Doctor and their last adventure together. I have no idea where we're going to next series!

Where will you be watching the special this year? Will you be at home?

Yeah, I think so. Last year the whole family got a cottage together where mum still did the Christmas cooking. We'll definitely all be together.

What was your reaction when you heard the next Doctor was Peter Capaldi?

It was kind of that moment "Of course, makes sense." It's funny as I don't think he was one of the names that was originally being speculated about and it wasn't until the week before that his name came up. He's going to be so different to Matt and take the show in an interesting direction.

When were you told?

Matt and I were told together during the royal visit to Roath Lock studios. We could tell something was going on and we managed to pin the producers down and get it out of them!

How hard was it to keep the secret?

I think I've learnt my lesson in that the best thing to do is not to tell anybody and then you don't have your own paranoia that you've let something out.

What will you miss about working with Matt?

Everything! When you're reading a scene with him he can turn anything on its head. He's so inventive, clever and very funny. There's just so much that I'll miss about him.

Orla Brady talks about her character and what it was like working with Matt Smith.

What drew you to the role of Tasha Lem?

So you're sitting in your dressing room on an ordinary day (well, ordinary for an actress) playing a normal person who makes breakfast and loses her purse sometimes. Then along comes a call to play a galactic nun and whizz around the universe with Matt Smith. Now what girl wouldn't be drawn to that?

Can you tell us anything about how we first meet your character?

The Doctor goes to see Tasha as they are old friends. He needs her help and knows he will find it with her, as although she is fearsomely powerful she is loyal to her friend.

What can you tell us about your costume and make-up? Did you work closely with the costume designer?

The designer Howard Burden knows the Doctor Who world inside out and had an image of Tasha that I loved from the start, so there was very little need for me to suggest anything. I just climbed into it really. Emma Cowen created a look that was a little spooky, referencing "Blade Runner" a little. We both wanted her to look as she is described in the writing: imposing, human, but with a touch of alien.

In this special a whole host of the Doctor's most famous enemies come together, including Cybermen, The Silence, Weeping Angels and Daleks - how did you find filming opposite these monsters? Have you had to do anything similar for previous roles?

Most of my acting life I have played ordinary women so obviously monsters haven't factored much. However, I did love getting to face off with one of this lot in "The Time Of The Doctor".

How did you find working with departing Doctor Matt Smith?

Joyous. I had heard through friends that he was a nice guy - and he is - but what struck me most is how enthusiastic and engaged he was in his role, in every single scene we played. It so often happens that someone playing a character for years sits back a bit. He didn't. He was as full of energy and inventiveness as someone on their first day and it was truly good to be around.

Did you meet the next Doctor Peter Capaldi?

Yes. Peter came to set for the first time and it was good to see him again as we had briefly played boyfriend and girlfriend years ago and he was hilarious. He has an air about him, that man. Can't wait to see what he will do with his Doctor.

How was it filming in Cardiff?


Would it be obvious to say rainy? It was a place I had never been to, I didn't know anyone and was staying in a hotel which can be a bit glum. However, the thing I discovered about Cardiff is that it is the friendliest place I have ever been. Ever. The Capital of Friendly. I could live there now I think . . . but I would buy a new raincoat.

And finally, where will you be watching the Christmas special?

My mum and brothers are insisting on watching it on Christmas Day, but I find it excruciating to watch things I'm in with other people, so I will go for a pint with a friend.

In addition, seven more pictures from the episode were released, shown above and here:
Weeping Angel. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersDaleks. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersCybermen. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersSilent. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersArt. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersArt. Image: BBC/Adrian Rogers




FILTER: - Steven Moffat - Time and the Doctor - Matt Smith - Jenna Coleman

Doctor Who Magazines

Thursday, 12 December 2013 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who Magazine 468 Doctor Who Magazine joins in the festive spirit with a bumper-sized 100-page Christmas issue. And to celebrate the fact that Christmas Day will see the broadcast of the 800th episode of Doctor Who, the mag comes complete with a double sided-poster – one side celebrating Matt Smith's years as the Doctor, and the other featuring images from every single episode – all 800 of them! – since the series began.

ALSO INSIDE THIS ISSUE:
  • The Time of the Doctor – a preview of the Christmas Special, with exclusive new photographs.
  • Steven Moffat talks exclusively to DWM in an in-depth interview.
  • The life and times of Doctor Who's first writer, Anthony Coburn.
  • DWM tells the previously unknown story of one of the men instrumental in the creation of Doctor Who: CE 'Bunny' Webber.
  • The DWM Review of 2013.
  • The Watcher’s Guide to the Eleventh Doctor.
  • A look back at the Doctor Who Celebration at the ExCeL.
  • A Christmas Carol – an in-depth guide to Matt Smith's first Christmas Special.
  • Production Notes – showrunner Steven Moffat talks candidly about the biggest day of his career.
  • Pay the Piper Part 1 – a brand new comic strip.
  • Author Jacqueline Rayner looks back on Doctor Who's Christmas past.
  • The Time Team watch 2007's Voyage of the Damned.
  • The Watcher’s Fiendishly Festive Christmas Quiz!
  • Competitions, puzzles, and much more!
It's time for Christmas with DWM 468, out now.

Doctor Who Adventures 335

Doctor Who Adventures’ Christmas issue is packed with festive fun! There's an exciting preview of the Christmas special episode, loads of Doctor Who facts, top 10 festive frights, a special Christmas comic, a Blippar feature to watch their comic artist draw the Doctor, fun puzzles, drawing challenges, quizzes and terrifying posters. Plus, it comes with free Alien Attax cards and a free exclusive Dalek Card, only available in Doctor Who Adventures magazine!

Issue 335 of Doctor Who Adventures magazine is out now.




FILTER: - DWM - DWA

Odds on a Who Christmas

Thursday, 12 December 2013 - Reported by Chuck Foster
With less than a fortnight to go until Christmas Day, bets over which show will top the overnight ratings for the day are well under way, with Doctor Who currently placed as fourth most likely to be most popular at 11/1. EastEnders is the bookies' runaway favourite at present at 1/2, with Coronation Street at 5 3/4, closely followed by Mrs Brown's Boys at 5 4/5.

                                   Ladbrokes  Coral   William Hill   Betfair

BBC1 5:00 Strictly Come Dancing 14/1 25/1 16/1 69/5
ITV 5:15 Paul O'Grady 100/1 100/1 100/1 -
BBC1 6:15 Call The Midwife 33/1 20/1 20/1 35/1
ITV 6:15 Emmerdale 100/1 66/1 33/1 -
BBC1 7:30 Doctor Who 16/1 8/1 10/1 10/1
ITV 7:30 Coronation Street 6/1 5/1 6/1 73/12
BBC1 8:30 EastEnders 2/5 4/6 4/7 10/21
ITV 8:30 Downton Abbey 25/1 6/1 12/1 19/1
BBC1 9:30 Mrs Brown's Boys 6/1 6/1 5/1 69/11


The winning programme will be the one that achieves the highest BARB overnight rating.





FILTER: - Specials - UK - Time and the Doctor - Betting/Odds

Say What You See app game created

Wednesday, 11 December 2013 - Reported by John Bowman
A Doctor Who game app has been launched with 150 puzzles across three canvases.

Created by UK-based app developer Big Ideas Digital and published by BBC Worldwide, Say What You See consists of cryptic pictures suggesting words or phrases that can be characters, gadgets, episode titles, or monsters. Solving a puzzle rewards players with a trivia-filled fact file, including exclusive never-before-revealed secrets.

Available on iOS, Android, and Kindle Fire, it boasts retina-quality screens that have been painted by ex-Rare game studio concept artist Ryan Firchau, with the artwork taking players on a journey through three iconic Doctor Who locations: Gallifrey, Totter's Lane, and inside the TARDIS.

Big Ideas Digital director Jon Hamblin said:
There have been many Doctor Who games in the past but this is the first that covers the entire span of the show's history, referencing episodes, characters and monsters from every one of its 50 years. If this isn't the first game to appeal to old-school, hard-core fans just as much as younger fans of modern Who then I'll eat my Tom Baker scarf!
The answer to the above example is given here:
Captain Jack [Cap, Tin, Jack]

There are hints for every puzzle and a sonic screwdriver function that lets players scan the canvas for hidden hint coins, plus a "Stuck" button that reveals a handful of answers to get started.

Game download links: iOS, Android, Kindle.




FILTER: - Games - BBC Worldwide

The Time of The Doctor: full trailer

Wednesday, 11 December 2013 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The BBC and BBC America have now released the full trailer for the forthcoming The Time of the Doctor.





FILTER: - Online - Time and the Doctor - Publicity

Murray Gold included in new Who's Who

Wednesday, 11 December 2013 - Reported by John Bowman
The composer and dramatist Murray Gold has received the prestigious accolade of being included in the 2014 edition of Who's Who.

The publication, which has been brought out annually since 1849, is a directory and source of information about living noteworthy and influential people who are considered to have an impact on British life. It now has more than 33,000 biographies, with about 1,000 new entries added every year. Each entry is written by the subject themselves, and an invitation to appear in Who's Who is seen as the recognition of lasting distinction and influence.

Some entrants, eg, MPs and senior judges, are invited to be included as a matter of course, since their appointments are considered to be of general public interest. Others, for example in the arts field, are chosen by a selection board.

The website of Who's Who states:
Prominent figures in numerous fields are considered by the Board on the basis of their continuing achievements, and ultimately selected due to their exceptional pre-eminence.
The Wall Street Journal once wrote:
What is it that really puts the stamp of eminence on a modern British life? Two things count today: having an entry in Who's Who and being asked to choose your eight favourite records on BBC's Desert Island Discs.
Once a person has been included in Who's Who, they remain in it for life, with their entry updated over the years. It is then transferred to Who Was Who when they die.

Among his film and TV work, Gold rearranged the theme for Doctor Who when it returned in 2005 and has composed its incidental music ever since. He also created, arranged, and orchestrated the special live concert Doctor Who: A Celebration at the Millennium Centre in Cardiff in 2006, while the Doctor Who Proms of 2008, 2010, and 2013 - at the Royal Albert Hall in London - featured his music for the series. In addition, he composed the theme for spin-off series The Sarah Jane Adventures plus the theme and incidental music for Torchwood.

In January this year at the BBC Audio Drama Awards, his BBC Radio 3 drama script Kafka the Musical, starring David Tennant, won the Tinniswood Radio Drama Award 2012 for best original radio drama.

His radio play Electricity won the 2001 Imison Award for best original radio drama script by a writer new to radio after its broadcast on Radio 3 in December 2000. It then transferred to the West Yorkshire Playhouse in 2004, with Christopher Eccleston in the lead role.

Gold also provided the music for Russell T Davies' TV series Queer As Folk, The Second Coming (starring Eccleston), and Casanova (with Tennant as the lead).

His work for Queer As Folk, Casanova, Doctor Who, and the 1998 BBC adaptation of Vanity Fair - with cast members including David Bradley - has been BAFTA-nominated, and in 1999 Gold was nominated in the Royal Television Society Awards for Best Music - Original Score for both Vanity Fair and Queer As Folk, winning it for the latter.

In addition, he provided the music for the 2000s revival of Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased), co-starring Tom Baker.

Gold's entry reads as follows:
GOLD, Murray Jonathan; writer and freelance composer; b Portsmouth, 28 Feb.

1969; s of Lenny and Suzanne Gold. Educ: Corpus Christi Coll., Cambridge (BA

Hons Hist. 1991). Composer: for films: Beautiful Creatures, Wild About Harry, 2000;

Miranda, 2002; Kiss of Life, 2003; Alien Autopsy, Mischief Night, 2006; Death at a

Funeral, I Want Candy, 2007; for television: Vanity Fair, 1998; Queer As Folk, 1999

(RTS Award for Best Original Score); Randall & Hopkirk (Deceased), 2000–01;

Clocking Off, 2000–02; Shameless, 2004–11; Casanova, 2005; Dr Who, 2005–12;

Torchwood, 2006–11; Sarah Jane Adventures, 2007–11; The Devil's Whore, 2008;

Single Father, 2010; Scott & Bailey, 2011–13; Last Tango in Halifax, 2012; writer:

plays: Resolution, Battersea Arts Centre, 1994; 50 Revolutions, Whitehall, 2000;

Electricity, Radio 3, 2001[sic], W Yorkshire Playhouse, 2004 (Michael [sic] Imison Award for

Best New Radio Play, 2002); radio play, Kafka the Musical, 2011 (Tinniswood

Award for Best Original Radio Drama, 2013). Address: c/o Cathy King, Independent

Talent Group Ltd, 40 Whitfield Street, W1T 2RH; c/o Becky Bentham, Hot House

Music, Abbey Road Studios, 3 Abbey Road, NW8 9AY.




FILTER: - People - Murray Gold - Books

The Time of The Doctor: latest images

Wednesday, 11 December 2013 - Reported by Chuck Foster
A variety of new images have been released by BBC America to promote the forthcoming The Time of The Doctor, featuring Matt Smith and Jenna Coleman, Orla Brady as Tasha Lem, Rob Jarvis as Abramal, Tessa Peake-Jones as Marta and Jack Hollington as Barnable, plus a number of old enemies ...

The Doctor and Clara (played by Matt Smith and Jenna Coleman). Image: BBC/Adrian RogersThe Doctor (played by Matt Smith). Image: BBC/Adrian RogersBarnable (played by Jack Hollington). Image: BBC/Adrian RogersVillagers. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersAbramal and Marta (played by Rob Jarvis and Tessa-Peake Jones). Image: BBC/Adrian RogersAbramal (played by Rob Jarvis). Image: BBC/Adrian RogersMarta (played by Tessa-Peake Jones). Image: BBC/Adrian RogersWeeping Angel. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersTasha Lem (played by Orla Brady). Image: BBC/Adrian RogersDaleks. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersDaleks. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersDaleks. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersCybermen. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersCybermen. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersSilent. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersSilent. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersDoctor art. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersDoctor art. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersDoctor Puppet Show. Image: BBC/Adrian RogersDoctor Puppet Show. Image: BBC/Adrian Rogers




FILTER: - BBC America - Time and the Doctor - Publicity

The Time of the Doctor - New Zealand transmission confirmed

Tuesday, 10 December 2013 - Reported by Paul Scoones
Prime New Zealand logo
New Zealand's Prime television channel will screen the 2013 Christmas Special The Time of the Doctor on Boxing Day, 26th December, at 8:30pm.

The New Zealand showing will commence exactly twelve hours after the special first screens in the UK.

Prime will also screen two 'marathons' comprising the two most recent Christmas specials and the whole of Series Seven, on 25th and 26th December.

The Christmas Day marathon runs from 9:45am to 3:45pm and includes The Doctor, The Widow And The Wardrobe, the first five episodes of Series Seven (Asylum Of The Daleks to The Angels Take Manhattan) and The Snowmen.

The Boxing Day marathon runs from 8:05am to 4:00pm and includes the remaining eight episodes of Series Seven (The Bells of Saint John to The Name of the Doctor).




FILTER: - Time and the Doctor - New Zealand