Friday, 12 December 2025

Doctor Who Vs. Coronation Street @ 65, Part 8: 1979-1982

1968: Carson photographed in
Moss Side by John Madden
By the end of the Seventies, Corrie
had scant competition in its prime-
time slot. But some critics suggested
that the programme had grown com-
placent, whilst moving away from
 socially aware storylines, and was
again accused of portraying a dated view of working-class life. The late
1970's however, saw the show's
popularity grow, and the Street
regularly topped the TV ratings.
The series was again affected by
industrial action when the whole ITV
 network was blacked out for 75 days,
 from August 10th to October 24th
1979. The early 1980's would prove
 to be one of the soap's most popular
periods, and earned its highest view-
ing figures since its heyday. Ena Sharples (played by Violet Carson since
1960) left Corrie in 1980, and the wedding of Ken Barlow and Deirdre
Langton in 1981 was watched by over 24 million viewers.
 Then in 1982, a brand-new exterior set finally replaced the original,
which was little more than a dated facade. These four years on the
cobbles featured a total of twenty Doctor Who cast connections:
  • Michael Melia (Cummings) was the Terileptil leader in The Visitation
  • Bill McGuirk (Wilson here; DC Banks, 1984) was a Guard in The Enemy of the World, and Policeman in (episode 3 of) Terror of the Autons
  • Paul Seed (Harris) was the Graff Vynda-Ka in The Ribos Operation
  • Christian Rodska [born Rodskjaer] (Newton) voiced Laan Carder for Big Finish's Faith Stealer (2004), and Reverend Small for AudioGo's The Dead Shoes (2009)
  • Sue Wallace (Mrs. Fletcher here; Jean, 2005) voiced Mrs. Baddeley for The Chimes of Midnight, Edith for Season of Fear (both 2002), and Mertil for The Whispering Forest (2010)
  • [Max] Richard Shaw (Johnson) was Lobos in The Space Museum, Cross in Frontier in Space, and Lakh in Underworld
  • Jonathan Caplan (Cheveski) was Roskal in Planet of Fire
  • [Walter] Tenniel Evans (DI Vaughan) was Major Daly in Carnival of Monsters
  • Kenny McBain was director of The Horns of Nimon too
  • Paul Lowther (Jackson) was a Knight in The King's Demons, and Orderly in Frontios
  • Gilbert Wynne (Dodds) was Thara in The Krotons
  • Brian [Reginald] Miller (Elliott here; Pughes, 2012) [husband of Elizabeth Sladen and father of Sadie Miller] was Dugdale in Snakedance, provided Dalek voices for Resurrection of the Daleks, Remembrance of the Daleks and Time Streams, and was Barney in Deep Breath
  • Graham Seed (Solicitor) voiced Bevan for The Forgotten Village (2014), Pyrepoint for The Romance of Crime (2015), Gramoryan 2/Taverner/Squire for Divorced, Beheaded, Regenerated (2019), Franz for The Gloaming (2024), and Sir Gordon Carmichael for The Caller (2025)
  • David [John] Simeon [born Townsend] (Simpson here; Dr. Bird, 1998) was Private Latimer in Inferno, and Alastair Fergus in The Daemons (1)
  • Dave Hill (Hurst) voiced Nessican for Death Comes to Time
  • Tony Osoba (McGregor here; Peter Ingram, 1990) was Lan in Destiny of the Daleks, Kracauer in Dragonfire, and was Duke in Kill the Moon
  • Philip Jackson (Smitty) voiced Laxton for Valhalla (2007), Peabody for The Contingency Club (2017), and Harry Price for The Dalby Spook (2022) 
  • Brian Capron (Worthington here; Richard Hillman, 2001-03; Dickie in A Knight's Tale) voiced Lesley Kulcade for Subterfuge (2020)
  • Mark Eden [born Douglas John Malin] (Randle here; Alan Bradley, 1986-89) and Lesley [Ann] Manville (Jill) both appeared in An Adventure in Space and Time, as Donald Baverstock and Heather Hartnell - Eden was also the eponymous Marco Polo

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