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 Doctor Who: The Sixth Doctor Handbook

In only the second volume of the outstanding series of non-fiction Doctor Who
Handbooks, the troubled reign of Colin Baker, the sixth actor to play the role
of the Doctor, is covered. From the inception of this new take on the character,
to the cancellation that aborted an entire season about to enter production
(and forced the show's makers to hastily concoct a new series of stories in its
stead), to the untimely termination of Baker's contract, the tumultuous
three-year period is examined, even including a glimpse at
some of the plans that were in place had he continued in the role.

Perhaps the single most fascinating volume in the Handbook series, the Sixth
Doctor Handbook finally dishes up some long-overdue behind-the-scenes dirt
on the most troubled phase of the show's history.
Normally, I'm not up for a lot of gossip in books like these, but let's face
it, the Colin Baker era has so much drama in it - not counting
that which wound up on videotape or film - that it's hard to sidestep it. This
book tackles it head-on, and at least the authors do it fairly - the factual
narrative remains unbiased, and points out the various reasons that were given
by the parties in power at the time of both the cancellation and Colin Baker's
dismissal. In the same spirit of that fairness, the authors tried to interview
as many people on either side of the issue, the most visible interviewee being
script editor Eric Saward, who left his post suddenly in the middle of the
making of the Trial Of A Time
Lord season.
Some of the most fascinating material covers episodes never made. The unmade
season 23 episodes are discussed in depth, including those which haven't
been novelized. Apparently, the first of those stories was only a week away
from going before the cameras when the order came from BBC 1 Controller Michael
Grade to end the show (the same Michael Grade, incidentally, who has been
recently installed as the BBC's Director General now that Doctor Who is back in
production, just in case you still need a reason to feel nervous about the
future of the show). And even when the eventual shape of that season was
decided, there were some stories that were still rejected - some of them, from
the thumbnail story sketches offered, that sounded positively surreal. And this
theme continues with a discussion of where the show could have gone with
Baker still on board as the Doctor, with an intentional arc to soften his quirky
character following the sixth Doctor's introduction as a borderline unlikeable
character. To some degree, one can credit Big Finish Productions and their audio adventures for demonstrating how successful
- and likeable - Baker's Doctor could have been.
A secondary focus is given to Nicola Bryant who, as Peri, arguably shared a
greater percentage of screen time with Baker than any other Doctor/companion
combination before or since. Bryant discusses her likes and dislikes about the
role and the show with candor - she enjoyed it tremendously, though she admits
that her character was impractically costumed and implausibly
written.
An absolutely gripping read, this one - part of me thinks there's almost a
great fictional story waiting to be written about this amazingly troubled
period in the history of a beloved TV icon, only some of the twists and turns as
they actually happened would probably be edited out of a screenplay for
sheer implausibility. One has to read it to believe it.
Reviewed by Earl Green
theLogBook.com webmaster


- Year: 1993
- Authors: David J. Howe, Mark Stammers, Stephen James Walker
- Genre: non-fiction / behind the scenes
- Publisher: Virgin
- Pages: 250 pages
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