After sixteen successful years of the revived incarnation of
Doctor Who, the wilderness years of the 1990s seem a distant
memory. Only fandom and a nostalgic minority supported this
iconic but neglected property.
No one then could have envisaged a re-imagined, awards-laden
series that is now Britain's best-loved drama, the BBC's flagship
export, a mainstay of the festive TV schedule, and one of the
world's biggest television franchises.
Not only is it difficult to imagine a time when Doctor Who wasn't
in production and being broadcast regularly, but from the show's
inception in 1962, it faced many obstacles just to be realised.
It seems that the old-guard within the BBC of the early Sixties
were determined for Doctor Who to fail, and only for its biggest
defenders Sydney Newman and Verity Lambert, then the
embryonic show would have fallen at the first hurdle - their
struggle was dramatised in Mark Gatiss' brilliant and moving
BBC Two biopic, An Adventure in Space and Time.
Fast forward to the first Dalek story's transmission, and the
powers-that-be thankfully reacted by abandoning the show's
intended thirteen-week lifespan.
Only after reading the production notes on The Rescue DVD did
I learn that by August 1964, Donald Baverstock again wanted
to revert the new series' contract to just three months, and cancel
the show when all remaining stories were due to finish in January
1965.
Only when Lambert and William Hartnell's agent dug in their
heels did Baverstock finally agree to another, twenty-six-week
run, by which time the programme's long term future was
secured. The threat of cancellation would however revisit the
show in times of crisis.
As The War Games concluded the black and white era in 1969,
the BBC considered a six year run to have been a good innings
and there was some internal debate about whether to axe
Doctor Who.
The lowest point in the show's history was the 'hiatus' of
1985 when Michael Grade 'rested' the Doctor's adventures
for eighteen months, then the end finally came in 1989 with
outright cancellation.
It is inconceivable now to believe that the programme could
have ended after just fifty-one episodes (with the transmission
of The Dalek Invasion of Earth), and was so close to becoming
a footnote in TV history.
No comments:
Post a Comment