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 Doctor Who: The New Audio Adventures The Inside Story

In 1999, after over two years of petitioning the BBC for the rights, Jason
Haigh-Ellery and his cohorts at the largely fan-run audio production outfit
Big Finish Productions launched a new series of official and original
Doctor Who audio plays. The author chronicles the making of the first
fifty Doctor Who audio stories, plus several spinoff releases such as the
Dalek Empire and Sarah Jane Smith series, going behind the scenes of the
writing process, production, post-production and even fan reaction to
individual titles.

It almost seems anticlimactic to think about it now that Doctor Who has made an impressive return to the top of the British
television ratings, but a mere six years ago, Big Finish's Doctor Who
audio productions were almost more than the fans ever could have hoped for.
And with the recent broadcast of some of the eighth Doctor audio plays
starring Paul McGann on BBC Radio 7, things appear to have come full
circle: the BBC has more or less branded these plays-on-CD as bona
fide Who.
It wasn't an easy road though. The Inside Story deals frankly
with that, as the story begins with Big Finish's head honchoes vying for
the rights to do "real Doctor Who" and running into the BBC's wariness of
fan-made audio and video productions such as those made by Bill Baggs. For
an entire decade, fandom's only Who fix came in the form of novels (which
some fans felt, and not always unjustifiably so, betrayed the premise and
tone of the original TV series) and those unofficial,
Doctor-Who-in-everything-but-name fan videos and audios. The BBC's
reluctance is somewhat understandable, when fan entrepreneurs like Baggs
were releasing audio plays casting Sylvester McCoy as the time-traveling
"Professor" with Sophie Aldred as "Alice," making decent money from the
sales, and not owing a cent to the BBC because, more or less, only the
names were changed. When the BBC's editors heard Big Finish's existing
(and officially licensed) audio plays revolving around former Doctor Who
novel companion Bernice Summerfield, however, things changed: not only did
Big Finish demonstrate quality production values, but they were dealing in
an above-board manner, securing the rights to do Bernice Summerfield audio
stories instead of taking Baggs' "near-beer" approach.
Each story is given a generous page count of coverage, though quite a
bit of that space is given over to photos. Surprisingly, for something
published by Big Finish itself, the text isn't always an exercise in
self-back-patting - author Benjamin Cook acknowledges that some stories
were, perhaps, less than well-received by the fans, and puts fairly frank
questions to the writers, directors, and even actors involved. He usually
gets some frank answers too - though it's pretty clear that some of the
writers can be rather touchy about the subject.
There's a lot of new information to be found as well. Before reading
The Inside Story, I was unaware quite what lengths Big Finish had
gone to in trying to court Tom Baker to join the ranks of their "audio
Doctors"; stories such as The Holy Terror, The Stones Of Venice and
The Spectre Of Lanyon Moor were all originally pitched as fourth
Doctor/Sarah stories, but were later redistributed among the other Doctors
when Baker declined the invitation. (I was also unaware of the degree to
which Baker has apparently criticized Big Finish in public - I'm not quite
sure what to think there.) Big Finish's attempt to bring Anthony
Ainley back as the Master is similarly fraught with missteps - the actor
demanded creative input in exchange for his involvement. The quest to get
Paul McGann on board, while not quite so epic, is another one of
those things that was nearly derailed by a misunderstanding. The book also
answers my long-standing question about what happened to Alistair Lock, who
was almost ubiquitous as composer and sound designer on the first three
years' audios and then seemed to vanish (and didn't participate in the
interviews for the book either). And there's a fairly honest retelling of
some of the discussions that just won't go away - the place (or lack
thereof) of verbal profanity in Doctor Who, whether or not to acknowledge
the New Adventures novels beyond a couple of appearances by Bernice, and
more. Effectively serving as executive producer of the series in its audio
form, the buck usually stops at Gary Russell, and for the most part it's
easy to admire his rather conservative stance on these issues.
Also covered in the book are the out-of-continuity Unbound audio stories, the linked
trilogy of Excelis stories,
the Dalek Empire and Sarah Jane Smith
spinoff series, and the process of creating the cover art. Every story has
a trivia sidebar, and more than half of the stories include at least one
interview with an actor, writer or some other participant in the making of
a given story. My singular beef with the book is a halftone dot gradient
pattern running across the top of every page - maybe it's just my
eyes, but that pattern plays hell with my vision, and from a design
standpoint, that's the only problem with the book. And that's just about
the only problem, period - it's a very fair, even-handed book editorially,
and one gets a sense of the personalities and the work ethic in play.
It's almost easy to overlook the Big Finish audio plays' place in Who
history now that the TARDIS is on television again (and, despite the
honestly appreciative foreword by one Russell T. Davies, one wonders what
will happen to Big Finish because of that TV revival). But these plays
have redeemed the sixth Doctor, extended the life of the seventh, and have
brought Paul McGann back to the role of the Doctor after the still
hotly-debated 1996 TV movie,
lending a little more credibility to the George Lazenby of the Time Lord
set. Yes, many of the stories carry some of the soap-opera-ish undertones
that began to creep into the TV series during the 1980s (no small wonder,
as it's the 80s Doctors that the audios have revived), and sure, they
haven't all been great. But recently the BBC itself turned around - having
granted a license to Big Finish to do eighth Doctor audio plays several
years ago - and then bought the rights to broadcast some of those eighth
Doctor stories on Radio 7, lending them yet another layer of credibility
in the official continuity of the series. It's hard to tackle the question
of how vital Big Finish was in the TARDIS' trek back to TV; this book
barely even touched on that, having been published around Christmas of 2003
when the announcement of the new series was still quite fresh. But it's
hard to argue that Big Finish has kept the series alive for fans, giving us
new stories to listen to in during the wilderness years and in the
months between new seasons; in a similar vein, one can't help but notice
the big Roman numeral I on the book's
spine; undoubtedly there are more stories to tell behind the scenes too.
Reviewed by Earl Green
theLogBook.com webmaster

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- Year: 2003
- Author: Benjamin Cook
- Genre: non-fiction / behind the scenes
- Publisher: Big Finish
- Pages: 278 pages
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