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"The Doctor Who Programme Guide" is the complete guide to every "Doctor Who" story shown on television. The stories are listed in order of broadcasting, starting with the first episode broadcast in 1963. Each entry includes the storyline, the cast list, and the names of the producer, script editor, writer and director, and the details of novelizations, video and audio cassette releases. This indispensable guide first appeared over twenty years ago, and immediately established itself as the single, most important reference work about "Doctor Who," "THE bible to an entire generation of ["Doctor Who"] fans on both sides of the Atlantic." --Andrew Pixley, "Celestial Toyroom" "A real treat for "Doctor Who" buffs." --David McDonnell, "Starlog" "It sits invaluably upon every fan's bookshelf and is a constant source of reference." --Gary Russell, "Doctor Who Monthly" "A remarkable work of...dedicated scholarship." --Barry Letts, Producer, "Doctor Who"… (mais)
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Back in 1981 it seemed like centuries since the last Doctor Who reference book had come out (it was three years since the second edition of The Making of Doctor Who). We fans grasped eagerly at the two rather slim volumes produced in the break between the Fourth and Fifth Doctors. The first volume is a recapitulation of cast, crew and plot from the first eighteen seasons of Who; the second an A-Z of characters, creatures and concepts in the Whoniverse up to that point in time.
They are pretty thin by even the standards of the day. Characters and events from the less fashionable end of the Hartnell and Troughton eras get pretty short shrift (eg the entry in volume 2 for Ping-Cho, whch reads, in its entirety, 'Chinese girl').
The two volumes are a good model for how to do a comprehensive guide for Who, but not a brilliant example of the execution. (Numerous misprintls - poor John Abineri!) ( )
Informação do Conhecimento Comum em inglês.Edite para a localizar na sua língua.
To my wife, Randy
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Informação do Conhecimento Comum em inglês.Edite para a localizar na sua língua.
Foreword:
When a BBC producer is a 142 year old (or does it just feel like that?), he regenerated and turns into an Executive Producer, or so they say; and then people from all over the world write and ask him questions; and he gets the answers wrong...
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Informação do Conhecimento Comum em inglês.Edite para a localizar na sua língua.
Some of the concepts - the Planet Karn, the psychic battle between the Doctor and the Master of Karn, etc. - were later used by Terrance Dicks in the story The Brain of Morbius (4K).
"The Doctor Who Programme Guide" is the complete guide to every "Doctor Who" story shown on television. The stories are listed in order of broadcasting, starting with the first episode broadcast in 1963. Each entry includes the storyline, the cast list, and the names of the producer, script editor, writer and director, and the details of novelizations, video and audio cassette releases. This indispensable guide first appeared over twenty years ago, and immediately established itself as the single, most important reference work about "Doctor Who," "THE bible to an entire generation of ["Doctor Who"] fans on both sides of the Atlantic." --Andrew Pixley, "Celestial Toyroom" "A real treat for "Doctor Who" buffs." --David McDonnell, "Starlog" "It sits invaluably upon every fan's bookshelf and is a constant source of reference." --Gary Russell, "Doctor Who Monthly" "A remarkable work of...dedicated scholarship." --Barry Letts, Producer, "Doctor Who"
They are pretty thin by even the standards of the day. Characters and events from the less fashionable end of the Hartnell and Troughton eras get pretty short shrift (eg the entry in volume 2 for Ping-Cho, whch reads, in its entirety, 'Chinese girl').
The two volumes are a good model for how to do a comprehensive guide for Who, but not a brilliant example of the execution. (Numerous misprintls - poor John Abineri!) ( )